A Section Mon 04-27-15
Transcription
A Section Mon 04-27-15
Buckle up! Fatalities CraSHES 1 LOCAL HIGHWAYS 01-01-15 to date 256 LOCAL HIGHWAYS 01-01-15 to date office of highway safety Galeai seeks gov’t subsidy for Poly Air flight to Ofu 5 C M Y K Leai se tali Satele fa’aiuga a le Kovana fa’asaga ia te ia 17 Members of the ASCC student cast rehearse a scene from the theatrical production “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” which will be staged this Wednesday and Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Lee Auditorium. See inside today’s issue for more details with story and [Photo: J. Kneubuhl] photos. online @ samoanews.com Daily Circulation 7,000 PAGO PAGO, AMERICAN SAMOA Monday, April 27, 2015 $1.00 Lafo e Tuiasina le tofi Senatoa a le Itumalo ia Satele SATELE: TUIASINA, O OE LAVA O LE TOA tusia Ausage Fausia Alapati Heatman A’asa did it again, winning his seventh professional fight on Saturday night at the Samoa Sports Center in the main event of the evening against Ioane Taulamago of Samoa.The boxing matches occurred before a packed audience, who cheered on both fighters. A’asa in black cornered Taulamago during the second round in which the fight was then called off by the referee as Taula[photo: Jl] mago was unable to continue the fight. Na fa’ateia le fonotaga a le afioaga o Vailoa i le fa’aiuga o le vaiaso na te’a nei, lea na fonoa ai le malae i Asotau, o le maota e afio ai Satele le Alo o Salamasina, ina ua lafo atu e le afioga i le ali’i Senatoa ia Tuiasina Sosene Esera le tofi Senatoa o le Itumalo o Tualatai, i le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina ia Satele Galu Satele. Na talia ma le agaga fa’afetai e le afioga a Satele le fa’aaloalo maualuga a Tuiasina, peita’i, sa ia toe lafo le tofi o le Itumalo ia Tuiasina fa’atasi ai ma lana fa’amanuiga e fa’apea, “Tuiasina, fa’afetai mo lau fa’aeaea, le tofi lena o le itumalo, alo e fa’aauau le tofi, ae o le aso ua ou iloa ai, o oe lava o le Toa”. Na tutulu le afioga i le ali’i senatoa ia Tuiasina, i le taimi na saunoa ai e lafo le tofi o le itumalo (Faaauau itulau 18) Lolo: final decision on fautasi race ensures a peaceful community by Fili Sagapolutele Samoa News Correspondent C M Y K Author Lani Wendt Young will be in American Samoa this week to launch her new adult romance novel set in Samoa. “Scarlet Lies” is the first in a new series. See story inside for [courtesy photo] details of her visit. Gov. Lolo Matalasi Moliga says the Fautasi Race Committee’s decision was to split the total amount of money allocated for the race among all fautasi that competed last Monday, but he made the decision “to uphold the results of the race to maintain peace in our territory.” The governor was responding to Sen. Galeai Tu’ufuli’s comments made in a news conference he called last Thursday. Galeai told reporters that his greatest disappointment was the involvement of the governor in the decision making process of this committee. Asked why he got in involved in the final decision, Lolo told Samoa News last Friday that the committee couldn’t make the final decision and therefore “somebody had to make the final decision, which should have been made by the committee right after the race — but not a day later — in which the committee passed the matter on to me for that decision.” “This is the best decision I can make to ensure that the community remains peaceful,” Lolo said in a phone interview. “We cannot just leave the outcome of the race without a final decision, as the community and fautasi teams and crews were waiting for it.” Lolo said the committee came to him with their decision to split the money prizes evenly among all the fautasi who raced. “But the question that came up was: is it fair to the winner, the second place and third place fautasi to get the same amount of money as the other fautasi?” he asked. “I made the decision to uphold the results of the race to maintain peace in our territory, and among fautasi teams and villages.” He says the committee told him that there was no dispute regarding the winning fautasi, Manulele Tausala I, second place Don Bosco 200 and 3rd place Fealofani Samoa. “I don’t think it’s fair to these fautasi if the money was split evenly among all the nine fautasi,” he pointed out. Lolo acknowledged that there was a lot of criticism following the race, as well as the recommendation from Galeai, who suggested that in the future the government not get involved in the race, but have it run by a private organization such as the Yacht Club, which members include “people who know the sea — the positive and negative of the sea” and are not politically involved in government. Lolo says he welcomes all recommendations and advice, as this can be used to improve future races. He also noted that there will always be criticism in these events and that everyone has their own take on what happens on the day of the race. “The recommendations from everyone we can use to hopefully improve the race next year,” he said. Galeai had also told reporters that as chairman of the Senate Government Operations Committee he plans to “demand” a complete financial report of Flag Day — in which both public and private donations were used for prizes and other expenses. Lolo said they are waiting for all bills from the Flag Day celebration to come in. “We have to pay these bills to get a complete picture of the revenue and expenditures of the Flag Day celebration,” he said. See last Friday’s Samoa News edition for Galeai’s thoughts on the race. Page 2 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Rescuers struggle to reach remote Nepal as toll rises People look at the debris of one of the oldest temples after it was damaged in Saturdayís earthquake, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Sunday, April 26, 2015. The earthquake centered outside Kathmandu, the capital, was the worst to hit the South Asian nation in over 80 years. It destroyed swaths of the oldest neighborhoods of Kathmandu, and was strong enough to be felt all across (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) parts of India, Bangladesh, China’s region of Tibet and Pakistan. KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — The death toll from Nepal’s earthquake soared past 3,700 Monday, and how much higher it would rise depended largely on the condition of vulnerable mountain villages that rescue workers were still struggling to reach two days after the disaster. Reports received so far by the government and aid groups suggest that many communities perched on mountainsides are devastated or struggling to cope. Udav Prashad Timalsina, the top official for the Gorkha district, near the epicenter of Saturday’s quake, said he was in desperate need of help. “There are people who are not getting food and shelter. I’ve had reports of villages where 70 percent of the houses have been destroyed,” he said. He said 223 people had been confirmed dead in the district but he presumed “the number would go up because there are thousands who are injured.” Saturday’s magnitude 7.8 earthquake spread horror from Kathmandu to small villages and to the slopes of Mount Everest, triggering an avalanche that buried part of the base camp packed with foreign climbers preparing to make their summit attempts. Timalsina said his district had not received enough help from the central government, but Jagdish Pokhrel, the clearly exhausted army spokesman, said nearly the entire 100,000-soldier army was involved in rescue operations. “We have 90 percent of the army out there working on search and rescue,” he said. “We are focusing our efforts on that, on saving lives.” Nepal police said in a statement Monday that the country’s death toll had risen to 3,617 people. That does not include the 18 people killed in the avalanche, which were counted by the mountaineering association. Another 61 people were killed in neighboring India, and China reported 20 people dead in Tibet. Well over 1,000 of the victims were in Kathmandu, the capital, where an eerie calm prevailed Monday. Tens of thousands of families slept outdoors for a second night, fearful of aftershocks that have not ceased. Camped in parks, open squares and a golf course, they cuddled children or pets against chilly Himalayan nighttime temperatures. (all ANSWERs on page 14) (Continued on page 14) Official request to be made from Senate to recoup “illegal payouts” samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 3 PRE-MOTHER’S DAY PLANT SALE Saturday, May 2, 2015 • 7am - 3pm “Bring the best exotic tropical plants to you” Come and Check out our Tropical Plants to delight and satisfy your gardening experience SEN. Galea’i: Not Lolo’s fault; “It was the other guy who paid himself & left town” by Fili Sagapolutele Samoa News Correspondent Sen. Galea’i Tu’ufuli has confirmed that the Fono’s legal counsel is drafting a resolution making an official request from the Senate for the Lolo Administration to look into the nearly $1 million in payouts to the previous Togiola Administration and asking that all money owed the government be recouped. Speaking at a news conference he called last Thursday, Galea’i said the resolution — which requires Senate approval — would be introduced in July when the Fono convenes for the 2nd Regular Session of the 34th Legislature. Before holding the news conference, Galea’i said he met with legal counsel, who are drafting the resolution dealing with the payouts for former directors and top leaders of the previous Togiola Administration. Former governor Togiola Tulafono and former lieutenant governor Faoa Aitofele Sunia also received payouts, and this has been the subject of a probe by the Senate Government Operations Committee, chaired by Galea’i, who reminded reporters that the Senate launched the probe after Gov. Lolo Matalasi Moliga raised the issue in his January 2013 State of the Territory Address to the Legislature. “We looked into these payments, and we asked the administration to recoup that money. So we’ve done our job, and it’s now up to the Executive Branch,” Galea’i said, and noted that the Committee held a closed door meeting earlier this month with Attorney General Talauega Eleasalo Ale, who “admitted that there were overpayments in paying [annual] leave and sick leave.” Additionally, “there was some compensatory time that was overpaid, whereas the law says all [political] appointees are not entitled to compensatory time,” said Galea’i of the committee’s meeting with Talauega. “Political appointees are not entitled to comp time payment. They’re entitled to take leave to compensate for their time, instead of monetary payment.” He explained that the draft resolution would request that the governor look into this matter and “recoup the money” for the government. “And then there is the case of the former governor and former lieutenant governor. Now that’s a serious [issue] because it clearly violates the law,” Galea’i said and reiterated what he had previously told Samoa News — which is, that these two top ASG officials are entitled to annual salaries, a housing allowance and use of government cars as outlined in the law. “Any other benefits shall be prescribed by law — which requires legislation,” Galea’i pointed out. “The current law providing benefits to employees, such as annual leave and sick leave are for career service employees only. Not political appointees, an outgoing an governor or an outgoing lieutenant governor.” Galea’i insisted that his committee will “keep after this issue until next year” and will not give up easily. He also wanted to make clear that the payout issue was not Gov. Lolo’s doing. “It was the other guy who paid himself and left town,” he said, referring to Togiola. According to the Treasury Department’s payout report submitted to the committee in 2013, the final check — after taxes — for Togiola was $39,406 and the final check for Faoa was $34,812. Galea’i told Samoa News more than a week ago that Talauega had told the committee that it was “common practice” when it comes to payouts for outgoing governors and lieutenant governors in past years. “And I told the attorney general that we need to put a stop to this practice. This common practice is an ‘illegal practice’ that needs to stop,” he said. LOCATION: Leone-Sogi Road across from Ripley Guest House Call 733-5596 or 733-5989 for direction to the Plant Sale Woman who broke into judge’s house is given a second chance Seven years jail time, deportation suspended by Joyetter Feagaimaali’i-Luamanu Samoa News Reporter A woman who broke into a judge’s residence, and stole two ice blocks, leaving with the judge’s pair of sandals and coins valued at $40 was sentenced to serve jail time. Elega Sauaso of Tafuna was facing charges of burglary first degree and stealing, however in a plea deal with the government she pled guilty to an amended burglary charge. In return the government dismissed the stealing count. During sentencing, Sauaso apologized for her actions and requested another chance to return to her family to take care of her mother. She also apologized to her family and Associate Judge Fa’amausili Pomele and his wife for breaking into their house and removing items that belonged to them. She further apologized to her parents for being disobedient, which she said led to her appearance in court and brought shame to her family’s good name. Assistant Public Defender Mike White, who represented Sauaso stated that she has alcohol problems and she needs help in that area. He recommended that she undergo alcohol counseling. Assistant Attorney General Tiffany Oldfield pointed out that despite this being her first time in the High Court, she’s not new to the District Court, as she appeared there three times for public peace disturbances involving alcohol, for which she’s been placed on probation. The prosecutor said the defendant broke into a residence at night and stole properties that were not hers, and ate their food while the woman who owns the house was sleeping. Oldfield asked the court to sentence Sauaso to 12 months in jail as part of her seven years probation. Chief Justice Michael Kruse, who was accompanied by Associate Judge Muasau Tasina Tofili, said that it appears that placing Sauaso on probation does not work. The defendant has been under probation twice, yet she continues to consume alcohol. However, the court opted to give the defendant a second chance, and if she does violate the law again the court will not hesitate to give her a harsher penalty. Sauaso was sentenced to seven years in jail, however execution of sentencing was suspended and she’s placed on probation under certain conditions. Kruse ordered that Sauaso serve nine months in jail, and that she remain a law abiding citizen. She is also to apologize to the judge and his wife and also to the police officers that she swore at. Another condition of her sentencing is that she will return to her home country of Samoa, however the court has stayed that order, given her good behavior and abiding by the conditions of probation. Kruse told Sauaso that if she violates her probationary terms she’ll be jailed for seven years and then she’ll be returned back to Samoa. According to the government’s case, the incident occurred in May 2014 where police received a call about the alleged burglar. It’s alleged that when police arrived at the residence, they met with the woman who owns the house, who told them what had happened and what had been taken. Police interviewed the victim’s neighbor where one witness said she saw the defendant heading home in the early morning of May 18, 2014 and her pockets were filled with coins. The defendant apparently told the neighbor that same day that she had broken into the victim’s house, and told the neighbor not to tell anyone. The next day May 19, 2014 police interviewed the defendant where she admitted to what she did and that she had been drinking, according to the court filings. Page 4 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Letter to the Editor “50-MILE ISSUE” Dear Editor, The Government, Fono, Alia owners and longliner owners on the 50-mile issue has gotten to the point that no one is thinking clearly anymore. Here are some points that can make this a win-win situation for all. A good businessman knows that a good practice for an investment is to know where, how and the feasibility of the project. Several factors are on the table, and no one is looking at them. First, the Westpac is trying to open the 50-mile zone, and one of the reasons they say is “to collect data that has not been collected for more than 10 years”. Second, the local alias say that they don’t longline anymore, because there is not enough fish in the area. They are not prohibited to go beyond 12 or even 50 miles, but they don’t do it. So, they don’t know what is there. They don’t want to take the risk. Third, the longliners say that they need those waters to follow the fish and catch it and hopefully save themselves. They don’t know and want to find out if this solves their situation. Fourth, the government is ready to invest $2million plus in 10 super alias to fish inside the 50-miles without knowing if this is profitable or not. There is no data available on such a venture, but they’re willing to take this risk. Fifth, the Westpac says that the amendment is not set in stone and it will be reviewed every year. With what they have now, they cannot move on as the super alia project has no basis, no feasibility study. If we put all of these points together, the results are: a) The government is planning to invest $2million plus without knowing in reality what is happening in this area. Where is the money going to come from without a feasibility study or a survey of this area? b) The Westpac in reality is making a survey using the longliners to collect this data without spending extra money in surveys. Minimum time has to be 2 to 3 years. c) If the super alia is going to be bought by investors, with this survey, they will see if this investment is feasible, and they can use the data to find the money, unless the government is going to pay for these super alias, but they claim they don’t have any money. d) The longliners will have the opportunity to see if staying in the US EEZ is worth it or not, and if necessary, plan their way out and move to better waters. e) The government will have some data to get the money from USA, from the canneries or banks for this project that they wont have without a survey. f) The canneries will have the American fish for the US federal programs. I really don’t understand where this can cause damage to the future or present generations. This is a decision that can be seen as a win-win situation for all. Business-wise, the idea of letting the longliners use those waters to survey and find out the feasibility of any project is a good one. Of course, this is looking from the business side, because looking from the political side, I don’t know, because I am not a politician. Signed, Carlos Sanchez LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Samoa News welcomes and encourages Letters to the Editor. Please send them to our email [email protected] Box 909, Pago Pago, American Samoa 96799. Contact us by Telephone at (684) 633-5599 Contact us by Fax at (684) 633-4864 or by Email at [email protected] Normal business hours are Mon. thru Fri. 8am to 5pm. Permission to reproduce editorial and/or advertisements, in whole or in part, is required. Please address such requests to the Publisher at the address provided above. © Osini Faleatasi Inc. reserves all rights. dba Samoa News is published Monday through Friday, except for some local and federal holidays. Please send correspondences to: OF, dba Samoa News, Box 909, Pago Pago, American Samoa 96799. Telephone at (684) 633-5599 • Fax at (684) 633-4864 Email advertisements to [email protected] Email the newsroom at [email protected] Normal business hours are Mon. thru Fri. 8am to 5pm. Permission to reproduce editorial and/or advertisements, in whole or in part, is required. Please address such requests to the Publisher at the address provided above. Please visit samoanews.com for weekend updates. TELESA author to visit soon (PRESS RELEASE) — Author Lani Wendt Young has released the first book in a brand new series – and she’s coming to American Samoa to launch it. SCARLET LIES is an adult contemporary romance novel set in Samoa available in both e-book and paperback. Hosted by Christinna Lutu-Sanchez and the Lalelei Store, Lani will be visiting several schools in the territory, as well as the ASCC College, to speak about her journey as an author, and to share her insights and advice for aspiring writers. The Feleti Barstow Public Library will also be holding an “Author Talanoa” with Lani on Friday, May 1st, where she will talk about her wildly popular TELESA Series and welcome questions from the audience. The event starts at 6.30pm and is a free event open to the public. On Saturday 2nd May, Lani will be meeting readers and signing their books at the Lalelei Store, located in the Laufou Shopping Center complex from 10a.m. to 1p.m. A limited number of copies of her new book Scarlet Lies, and all the books in the TELESA Series will be available for purchase. This is an incredible opportunity for readers in the territory to meet the international bestselling author whose TELESA Series has been optioned for a movie and whose stories of Samoa are helping to fuel a love for reading in countless Pasifika youth worldwide . The full program for Lani’s visit Thurs 30 April – Samoana High, Tafuna High, Nu’uuli Vocational Tech. Fri 1st May – Leone High, ASCC (12.30 and open to public) Fri 1st May, 6.30pm – Author Talanoa, Feleti Barstow Library, Utulei Sat May 2, 10am – Book Signing, Lalelei, Laufou Shopping Center complex. For further info about Lani’s visit, contact Ms Lutu-Sanchez, Ph. 252-2222. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 5 Galeai will seek gov’t subsidy for Satele Galu Polynesian Airlines flight to Ofu Satele — “God knows the truth…” by Fili Sagapolutele, Samoa News Correspondent Sen. Galeai Tu’ufuli plans to pursue a government subsidy for Polynesian Airlines in order to provide at least one flight a week to Ofu while the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) has granted another 30-day exemption from cabotage laws in order for the Samoagovernment owned airline to operate Manu’a air service. Ofu Airport, which serves Ofu and Olosega islands, has been without commercial service for many years, and ASG requested Polynesian Airlines to provide service to Ofu for at least once a week, since it is already flying into Fitiuta Airport on Ta’u Island in Manu’a. As previously reported by Samoa News, ASG had denied Polynesian’s subsidy request of $100,000 annually to guarantee ten seats on the weekly flight. Port Administration director Taimalelagi Dr. Claire Poumele told Samoa News two weeks ago that ASG just does not have the money for a subsidy. (See Samoa News edition of Apr. 13 for details.) However, Galeai told reporters last Thursday that he will work in the Senate on getting that subsidy in order for Polynesian to operate “at least one weekly flight to Ofu Airport. I’m going to see to it that Polynesian gets some help from our government, because it’s worth it,” Galeai said during a news conference. He said $100,000 “is not a lot of money. Look at how they — ASG — spend other money. I think it’s more appropriate for the people of Ofu to get at least one flight a week. If we have to subsidize that, fine. I have no problem with that.” The Manu’a senator says that residents traveling by boat from Ta’u island to Ofu do so at times when seas are rough, which is “very hazardous” and therefore Ofu and Olosega residents deserve to get air service. Galeai said the proposed subsidy will be included under the Special Program budget category of the annual budget. “I just feel that Ofu people need some help,” he said referring to commercial air service. The fiscal year 2016 budget, which begins Oct. 1, 2015 is the priority for the Fono when it re-convenes in July for the 2nd Regular Session of the 34th Legislature. Galeai agreed, when asked by reporters about Ofu service and tourism — that air service to Ofu would further improve tourist visits — as they would be able to see and enjoy the National Park of American Samoa on that island. Galeai says he is very thankful to Polynesian Airlines and the government of Samoa for operating flights to Manu’a under a cabotage exemption from the USDOT. He also says that he is working on a resolution for introduction in the Senate, when the Fono convenes in July thanking Polynesian and the Samoa government “for their kindness and their support of the Manu’a people.” “It’s a good thing the federal government allows Polynesian to operate under the cabotage waiver, because they see the need for that, until we have a local airline,” he said and noted that travelers to Manu’a are happy with Polynesian because the airline keeps a regular schedule for its service. As reported by Samoa News in February this year, Polynesian conducted test flights into Ofu Airport and early last month Polynesian Airlines operated a charter flight to Ofu Airport for a group of tourists who are members of the National Park Traveler’s Club. The club has as their goal to visit as many of the just over 400 park sites in the U.S. National Park system as possible, and last year due to no dependable flights were not able to visit Manu’a. The group made their own arrangements and paid for the charter. ANOTHER USDOT WAIVER Last Friday, USDOT’s assistant secretary for aviation and international affairs Susan L. Kurland approved Polynesian’s request for another 30-day cabotage waiver — from Apr. 30 to May 29 — to operate Manu’a flights. The approval came following an Apr. 10 request from Polynesian, which states that no other U.S. carrier is available to operate American Samoa’s domestic flights and Polynesian remains the only one. “Based on the record in this proceeding, we concluded that no U.S. carrier had aircraft available that could be used to conduct the operations at issue here,” Kurland wrote in her decision. translated by Joyetter Feagaimaali’i-Luamanu Samoa News Reporter It’s been weeks since Governor Lolo Matalasi Moliga removed Satele Galu Satele as Secretary of Samoan Affairs, and for the first time Samoa News was able to speak with Satele in person, after seeking comment as to the reason for his removal. However, Satele refused to say anything publicly about what happened, but he did congratulate the newly sworn in Secretary of Samoan Affairs, Paramount Chief Mauga Tasi Asuega. Earlier this month Lolo issued a letter executing his authority under the constitution of American Samoa and appointed an Acting Secretary of Samoan Affairs, and noting that Satele “is no longer serving” as Secretary of Samoan Affairs. Satele told Samoa News in Samoan “Satale does not want to say anything about what happened, God knows the truth about what happened,” when asked for a comment regarding his removal. Samoa News further asked Satele about allegations regarding the disagreement he had with the governor, and in response Satele said he does not want to dwell in the past. Continuing to speaking in Samoan, Satele quoted a verse from the Bible in which Jesus told his Father in heaven to forgive those, for they “know not what they do.” Some of the Chiefs of Vailoa told Samoa News that it was not pleasant news hearing that their Paramount Chief had been removed from his post by the governor. F L A G DAY D E A L S ! 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AT402-2Burners Hi Pressure Woks HC700B-2Burners GB01-CAST IRON 15% - 20% OFF LpgasAGR2200AAW -20inch Lpgas-AMANACROSLEY-30inch Four burner stoves Lpgas- Lantern & 2kg, 4kg full SELECT ITEMS Lpgas-2burners BBQ GRILL NOW $60.00 & $70.00 Was $382.95 NOW $160 Limited Stocks Limited Stocks WAS $101.25 & $113.58 CK107 –Single Bnr Lpgas – Instantaneous Hot Water Heater RINNAI-5.5LTR RINNAI-10LTR WAS $549.25 WAS $749.00 NOW $400.00 NOW $500.00 CALL into origin energy gas showroom at tafuna industrial park 699-9740 Page 6 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 With the month of April dedicated to National Autism Awareness Month, level eight students and teachers from Pago Pago Elementary School along with their parents, were out last Friday, April 24 in front of their school conducting a wave in support of this awareness campaign. The medical website, www.medicalnewstoday.com states, Autism is known as a complex developmental disability. Experts believe that Autism presents itself during the first three years of a person’s life. The condition is the result of a neurological disorder that has an effect on normal brain function, affecting development of the person’s communication and social interaction skills. According to the autism website www.autismspeaks.org, this past April 2, President Barack Obama issued a White House proclamation recognizing World Autism Awareness Day (April 2), declaring that “everyone deserves a fair shot at opportunity” and celebrating the work of “advocates, professionals, family members and all who work to build brighter tomorrows alongside [photo: Jeff Hayner] those with autism.” Guam’s tourism plan raises concerns regarding funds HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — Is the Guam Visitors Bureau’s goal to raise tourist arrivals from 1.3 million to 2 million in a year, starting in 2020, too many, and too soon? The question was raised at the island sustainability conference hosted by the University of Guam last week, and a local businessman hopes to get the community discussions on the topic to continue, the Pacific Daily News reported Monday. Sonny Ada, former Guam Visitors Bureau chairman and president of Ada’s Trust, is advocating for the continued discussion on the topic because he said it impacts the quality of life of Guam residents. With GVB’s goal, Guam’s tourist volume would increase by about 50 percent in just five years, Ada said. If each additional visitor uses just one disposable cup, that means an additional 700,000 cups ending up in the landfill in a year, he said. Ada said raising the question isn’t meant to be critical of the plan; it’s aimed to help stir discussions about whether there’s a better way to grow the economy without the massive volume of tourists being aimed for. UOG President Robert Underwood said he hopes the discussions at the 6th Regional Island Sustainability Conference at the Hyatt Regency Guam on April 15 have provoked conversations. The goal for 2 million tourists a year is stated in the Guam Visitors Bureau’s Tourism 2020 plan. That goal isn’t new; the island tourism industry had aspired for that number in the ‘90s, Underwood said. The discussion on visitor arrivals should include how the island will be challenged with the additional strain to its limited resources, Underwood said. “I am not opposed to growth, or to economic development, but is there a way to pursue economic development where you have a different calculation?” Underwood asked. Instead of aiming for 2 million tourists, who might spend $100 a day in the local economy, the goal could shift to aiming for fewer, but higher-spending tourists, he said. One million tourists who spend $300 a day in the local economy bring better results to the host community, because there’s lesser strain on the island’s resources, he said. Underwood mentioned Palau as an example. Palau has calculated the value of protecting a shark at around $1 million in tourism dollars because tourists from all over the world visit the island republic for its ecosystem, Underwood said. The island republic has also realized that killing a shark results in a short-term gain of about $10,000, he said. UOG and Ada’s Trust joined efforts in holding a video and essay contest among UOG students to foster the public discussion. The winners of the video essay contest are Marcel Jardeleza, first place, who received a $1,000 prize; and Francis Valencia, second place, who won a $500 prize. The winners of the written essay contest are Huy Tran, first place, who received $500; and Aguarin Iriarte, second place, who received $250. Underwood said the question being asked seems critical of GVB’s goal, but many of the essays came up with the conclusion that 2 million tourist arrivals might be doable. So the answer to the question is not clear-cut, Underwood said. Ada said he hopes the contest will be expanded next year to include high school students. He said it’s important for the community to discuss the issue because elected officials can’t just go along with the tourism businesses without weighing the pros and cons to the host community. Tourism is like any other business -- it’s about supply and demand, Ada said. After Guam’s hotels went through years of tourism slowdown, they’re currently in a “sweet spot” with higher hotel rates and more tourists to fill their rooms, Ada said. If Guam is flooded with additional hotel rooms, and another international crisis causes the island’s tourism industry to slump, hotel properties and the people who work there will go through another tough economic time, Ada said. Tourism to the National Park of American Samoa creates $900K+ in economic benefits (PRESS RELEASE) — PAGO PAGO, American Samoa — A new National Park Service report shows that 13,952 visitors to the National Park of American Samoa in 2014 spent $782,500 in villages near the park. That spending supported nine jobs in the local area and had a cumulative benefit to the local economy of $952,500. “The National Park of American Samoa is proud to welcome visitors from throughout American Samoa and around the world,” said Acting Superintendent Barbara Alberti. “We are delighted to share the story of this place and the experiences it provides. We also feature the park as a way to introduce our visitors to this part of the South Pacific and all that it offers. National park tourism is a significant driver in the national economy— returning $10 for every $1 invested in the National Park Service, and it’s a big factor in our local economy as well. We appreciate the partnership and support of the villages and are glad to be able to give back by helping to sustain local communities.” The peer-reviewed visitor spending analysis was conducted by U.S. Geological Survey economists Catherine Cullinane Thomas and Christopher Huber and National Park Service economist Lynne Koontz. The report shows $15.7 billion of direct spending by 292.8 million park visitors in communities within 60 miles of a national park. This spending supported 277,000 jobs nationally; 235,600 of those jobs are found in these gateway communities. The cumulative benefit to the U.S. economy was $ 29.7 billion. The National Park Service cares for special places saved by the American people so that all may experience our heritage. According to the 2014 report, most park visitor spending was for lodging (30.6 percent) followed by food and beverages (20.3 percent), gas and oil (11.9 percent), admissions and fees (10.2 percent) and souvenirs and other expenses (9.9 percent). To download the report visit www.nature.nps.gov/ socialscience/economics.cfm. This report includes information for visitor spending at individual parks, states, and territories. To learn more about the National Park of American Samoa and how the National Park Service works with the American Samoa villages to help preserve local history, conserve the environment, and provide outdoor recreation, go to www.nps.gov/ americansamoa. Truckers could stay home from nation’s biggest port complex LOS ANGELES (AP) — Truck drivers who haul goods from the nation’s busiest port complex in Los Angeles and Long Beach could stay home Monday in a long-running labor dispute. The results of a weekend vote from Teamsters are set to be revealed and could lead to a partial work stoppage at the ports, officials said. About 16,000 drivers work at the ports, most of them independent contractors for trucking companies. The truckers say they face shrinking wages and want to become employees of the trucking companies, which they say would mean better wages and workplace protections. It was too soon to say what, if any, effect a work stoppage would have on business, said ports representatives. Earlier this year, tough contract negotiations with dockworkers nearly closed 29 seaports from San Diego to Seattle, causing major delays in the delivery of billions of dollars of imports and exports. The drivers have been subjected to “persistent wage theft,” said Teamsters spokeswoman Barb Maynard. Trucking companies have argued that driver pay is good and picketing at the ports did not represent the majority of drivers. They object especially to the timing of the unrest as the port is still recovering from a dockworkers strike. “I believe now is a horrible time to introduce any slowdowns to the supply chain,” Weston LaBar, executive director of the Harbor Trucking Association, said in a statement late last week. “If they want to be a part of the real solution perhaps they should suspend these efforts until we get closer to a normal flow of cargo in the San Pedro Bay. We don’t want to put any more jobs in our region in jeopardy.” The Southern California ports are the primary West Coast gateway for hundreds of billions of dollars of annual trade with Asia. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 7 Join us for We are open: HAPPY HOUR TUESDAY – THURSDAY 4:00PM – 12:00AM Tuesday – Friday 4:00pm – 7:00pm. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 4:00PM – 2:00AM • FREE Karaoke • Silver Brothers Band Fri & Sat 9:00pm-2:00am • Drink Specials • For those with an APPE-tite, try our APPE-BREAKER menu • 4 flatscreen TVs for your viewing pleasure “Come break the ice at Ice Breakers” “Located on Iliili, Airport Road (Former Runway Bar & Grill) • Call us today to book your functions 699-6969, 258-9040 or 252-5037 LIMA FESOASOANI QUICK FINANCIAL SOLUTIONS PO Box 308, Pago Pago, AS 96799 Tel: (684) 699-3848 or 633-3848 Fax: (684) 699-3849 or 633-3849 E-mail: [email protected] The following account holders are encouraged to visit or contact our Collection Representative, Masi Manila at 699-3848 at our Tafuna Office, regarding your delinquent account. Aetui, Ernest Samoa Afoa, Oganiu Agae, Lameta Siapu Ah Ching, Faanaitaua Ah Mu, Johnny Aisau, Ioasa Ala, Oliana Alaelua, Kapeteni Aliivaa, Taumasina Allen, Lidwina Allen, Mathew Waldie Allen, Stoechkict Alosio, Tuloto Asiata, Muese Atiae, Faatamalii Atonio, Jason Auelua, Uaite Auvele, Atimalala Auelua, Caroline Avia, Elaine Correia, Martina Crosby, Miriama Esau, Masua Esau, Steven Esera, Tauva Eti, Lopa Faaatuatu, Upuese Faalii, Kalala Faatamalii, Army Fatitauai, Tesimale Faaiu, Faletusiesile Faaulusau, Iva Faavae, Meaalofa Falanai, Hana Faamafi, Talamoa Failauga, Mavaeao Faumuina, Peniamina Fetaui, Mollyvina Fiaalii, Niko Foleni, Faafua Fruean, Saena Samuelu Fuimaono, Esther Fuimaono-Masaniai, Manino Fuimaono, Michelle Fuimaono-Porotesano, Tuumafua Fulu, Alamai Gaoteote, Dalton Gaoteote, Tafaoata Gaoteote, Tupouamoa Grey, Augustine Grey, Mark Hun Fen, Fagaalofa Husseini, Judy Iaulualo, Therisa Ilimaleota, Levelevei Ilimaleota, Mikaele Ioasa, Aisau Isaia, Monte Iupeli, Elvis Iupeli, Pepelini Filemu Kaisa, Johnny Kerisiano, Sale Kerisiano, Sivao Kosene, Chevette Kuresa, Faavela Kuresa-Sokimi, Christina Lake, Faasisina Lalau, Taase Laloulu, Toese Laulu, Fuaao Leaoa, Talavai Leapai, Poe Leasiolagi, Galen Lefotu, Dora Leilua, Selesitina Leituala-Misiuepa, Ufanafana Leo, Crystal Leo, Tuisamoa Leota, Imoa Leota, “PJ” Pule T Lepolo, Taleni Letoa, Aloni Levu, Jordan Lilio, Ualesi Limutau, Chanel Loa, Tuanai Loa, Winnie Loe, Simo Lokou, Poni Lolani, Pope Paulo Luaifoa, Diane Melesete Luapo, Sesilia Luavasa, Leua Lui, Fiso ‘Isabella’ Maanaima, Fereti Maea, Lui Maeataanoa, Sarai Mafua, Barbara Magalei, Seugatalitasi Mageo, Precious Maiava, Filisi Maiava, Fitiuta Makiasi, Simativa Maloata, Tugaluea Malolo, Oliva Malosi, Pola Maligi, Taumanupepe Maluia, Tiresa Manaea, Chester Mao, Pito Mapu, Loreta Mapu, Sineti Mapu, Vitale Marques, Aveta Masaniai, Manino Masui, Junior Masunu, Toloa Matalima, Alieta Matamu, Kelemete Matau, Esau Matau, Faletui Matau, Tikeri Mauga, Hokiana Mckenzie, Saofaiga Meredith, Anthony Mika, Utumoeaau Milo, Pala Minoneti, Lusila Misa, Levei Misi, Susau Misioka, Miliama Misiuepa, Suluifaleese Misivila, Sophia Moe, Lagisolia Moemoe, Tailua Monaco, Thomas Mose, Junior Moors, Harry Moors Jr, Misimoa BUSINESS HOURS: 10:00am - 4:00 pm • Monday to Friday Moors, Matauaina Muao, Ropeti Muliau, Samasoni Mulitalo-Ieremia-Foster, Anna Musa, Sinatulaga Navelika, Onosa’i Netane, Luki Niukini, Renee Noa, Jr. Lautele Nu’usoalia, Lokeni Jr. Nu’usoalia, Lokeni Sr. Nuutai, Petaia Nyel, Naomi Ofoia, Sose Onosai, Saisavaii Onosai, Savelina Osoimalo, Samoa Paepule, Lemusu Palepoi, Faleata Paselio, Fiapapalagi Passi, Simamao Katherine Pati, Apelu Patu, Falealo “Johnny” Peric, Taofegauiai Pene, Ann Peni, Suetena Petelo, Anitelea Poleki, Alofagia Poloai, Elisapeta Poloai, Fa’afetai Puipuifatu, Malua Puni, Ioane Pule, Talosaga Puletu, Monika Ripley, Faamalele Tagoai Sagapolutele, Frank Sakaria, Paese Salueletaua, Lemo Samifua, Lemiga Sanele, Vicky Sani, Taetuli Sao, Kuini Saolele, Petelo Satele, Suafai Sauaso, Joyce Saufoi, Lauina Sauta, Paul Savali, Liatama Scanlan, Penina Schwenke, Hanna Semeatu, Ernest Thomas Semeatu, Meleane Sialofi, Taupale Siaosi, Sean Siofaga, Fetalaiga Siliga, Eneliko Siliga, Roina Sio, Lyno Sooto, Prescilla Solia, Genevieve Sotoa-Leota, Otilia Spitzenberg, Rose Sua, Faasasalu Sua, Finau Sualoa, Tuipine Sue, Victoria Suiaunoa, Brian Suisala, Taulua Jr. Tafaese, Onoiva Tagaloa, Titae Ta-Grey, Florence Tago, Faasolo Malo Tagovailoa, Valasi Aulava Talopau, Toelau Talosaga, Melesaini Tapu, Fatu Tapu, Luafitu Tauanuu, Faatiuga Tauai, Elena Tauese, Keresoma Taulafoga, Barbara Taulamago, Iuliana Taulelei, Tupuivao Taumua, Pago Pago Te’i, Lafoaina Teve, Fa’aolaina Thiel, Mathew Vincent Tiapula, Lenora Tiapula, Raymond Timo, Lupi Tini, Timena Tinoifili, Kanana Tipoti, Mike Tiumalu, Nafanua Tiumalu, Saimua Toala, Suilefaiga Toatelegese, Nofoagatotoa Toeava, Spencer Toilolo, Allen Togi, Alipapa Togiaso, Patisepa Togiola, Yolanda Toomalatai, Vaesavali Toomata, Afereti Tua, Alofagia Tua, Epi Tua, Meleane Tua, Seneuefa Tuiasosopo, Saufaiga Cecilia Tuiletufuga, Fonotaga Tuiloma, Isaia Tuiolemotu, (Lee Chee) Lovi Tunu, Laia Tupua, Mekiafa Tupuola, Calvin Tusi, Sa Tuufuli, Tuufuli Tuupo, Doris Ufuti, Tilomai Uikirifi, Krystellen “Faga” Va’a, Sala Va’a, Liva Vaeao, Naomi Vaesau, Asisione Vaieli, Maselino Vaifanua, John Vaina, Misionare Vaivao, Benjamin Ve’a, Joseph Viliamu, Seiaute Viliamu, Uili Visesio, Pelenatete Wanjau, Ruta Aitulagi Bldg 2nd Floor, Fagaima Road • Ph: 699-3848 Fagatogo Square, Suite 208B • Ph: 633-3848 Page 8 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 ASCC to stage “Joseph & the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” By James Kneubuhl, ASCC Press Officer Members of the ASCC student cast rehearse a scene from the theatrical production “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” which will be staged this Wednesday and Thursday at [Photo: J. Kneubuhl] 7 p.m. in the Lee Auditorium. For the first time since its highly successful production of “The Lion King” in 2009, the American Samoa Community College (ASCC) Fine Arts Department is mounting a major theatrical production, “Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” which will be performed on Wednesday, April 29 and Thursday, April 30 at the Gov. H. Rex Lee Auditorium (fale laumei). Doors open at 6 p.m. and the performance will begin at 7 p.m. With the student cast having been in rehearsal for the duration of this semester, “Joseph” will offer a lively evening of drama, dance and music sure to entertain family members of all ages. “The play is based on the biblical story of Jacob, his favorite son Joseph and his 11 brothers,” said music instructor and Fine Arts chairman Mr. Kuki Tuiasosopo. American Samoa Community College FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT PR ESE N TS A Spring Semester Musical Production Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber & Lyrics by Tim Rice W ednesday, A pril 29, 2015 & T hursday, A pril 30, 2015 L ee A uditorium Door O pens at 6pm Show begins at 7pm $5 G eneral A dmission F ee T ickets will be sold at ASC C L e Bookstore also available at the door of the L ee A uditorium during show nights “The play is not a serious drama, but rather a comedy. However, the message of the story remains the same as in the scriptures. The entire play is driven by music composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber, with lyrics by Tim Rice, and has absolutely no spoken dialogue.” Notable in the composition of the music is the variety of styles used by Lloyd Webber including French ballads, rock and roll, country, Charleston, Calypso and more. As with previous ASCC Fine Arts stage productions, “Joseph” is an artistic collaboration among its various faculty. Mr. Tuiasosopo has taken the role of director, putting the student cast through its paces as they fine tune the staging of the play. Visual Arts facilitator Ms. Regina Meredith and her students will create the appropriate backgrounds for the production, Mr. Tuiasosopo’s fellow music instructor Mr. Poe Mageo is working with the chorus on their singing parts. In addition, the ASCC Orchestra, under the direction of Mr. Mageo, will entertain the audience during the play’s intermission. Mr. Tuiasosopo explained that a number of factors account for “Joseph” being the first ASCC stage production since “The Lion King.” “Our department has had some faculty move on and others join,” he said, “so in the interim we’ve basically been focusing on other aspects of the Fine Arts. This semester we felt we had the necessary components in place to revisit a stage production. A play requires a substantial commitment of time and attention from both the faculty and the students involved, plus staging it offcampus adds another layer of complexity, but we think the public will find the end results well worth all the effort.” He added that the pending completion of the College’s Multi-Purpose Center, which will include a performance space appropriate for theatrical productions, bodes well for future ventures in this area. The student cast includes Hertha Aumoeualogo Lutu, Warren King, F.D. Seiuli, Mathew Choi, George Mose, Jermaine Tuiasosopo, Keith Metuli, Quenton Burgess, Edmund Manoa, Jocco Asotau, Pale Lefiti, Al Leafa, Lelei Tago, Ilena Williams, Lama Vaisagote, Anneliese Haleck, Lottie Haleck, Mona Iakopo, Etenauga Voight, Tisa Migi, Anna Sewell, Iloa Tavui, Jeeyon Cho, Alton Faasala, Harota Auvaa, Rosanna Faagata, Josephine Tupuola and Iosia Pati. For more information on “Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” call ASCC at 699-9155 and ask for Mr. Tuiasosopo at extension 329. C M Y K C M Y K samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 9 Alofa’aga ma Sa’afi’afiga Susuga i le Sa’o C M Y K NAMU TUAMASAGAISAUTE LEOTALEULUA’IALIITO’OMALATAI ALE TOM AETUI SUNRISE: Sept 18, 1947 SUNSET: April 09, 2015 “Ua ou tau le taua lelei, ua i’u ia te a’u le tausinioga ma ua ou taofi i le fa’atuatua” -2 Timoteo 4:7 C M Y K FAASOLOGA SAUNIGA MALIU SAUNIGA AIGA (Family Service) Aso Gafua: Aperila 27, 2015 @ 5:00 pm- LBJ Chapel SAUNIGA MALIU Aso Lua: Aperila 28, 2015 7:30 am Funeral procession from LBJ Hospital to Paepaetele (Maota o Namu) in Futiga. 12:00 pm Funeral Service LDS Pavaiai Ward Burial Service will be at his Resting Place immediately after (Falelauasiga i lona oliolisaga tumau i Fatuolelupe, Futiga) Alofa’aga e le mavae mai ia Su’eatuinu’umamao Asuega Aetui, Fanau ma le Aiga. Page 10 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 American Samoa Community College Annual Schedule of Course Offering FALL SEMESTER 2015 # Course Alpha Sec. Course Title Days AGRICULTURE AND LIFE SCIENCE 1 AGR 100 I 01 Practical Job Experience MW 2 AGR 152 01 Survey of Community and TR Natural Resources 3 ANS 150A 01 Animal Science T 4 ANS 150B 01 Animal Science R 5 AGR 197 / 01 Polynesian Culture & TR MSC 197 Natural Resources Learning Project 6 NRS 180 01 Forests and Agroforestry MWF 7 NRS 180L 01 Forests and Agroforestry Lab F 8 NRS 250 01 Environmental Studies TR 9 NUT 150 01 Nutrition MW ARTS AND HUMANITIES 1 ART 150 01 Art History Survey I TR 2 ART 160 01 Design Fundamentals MWF 3 ART 170 01 Drawing I MWF 4 ART 172 01 Painting I TR 5 DRA 150 01 Introduction to Drama MWF 6 DRA 151 01 Drama Workshop TR 7 MUS 150 01 Music Fundamentals MWF 8 MUS 160 01 Music Literature TR 9 MUS 165 01 Music of the World MWF 10 MUS 170 01 Concert Choir MWF 11 MUS 180 01 Band TR 12 MUS 181 01 Samoan String Band TR 13 MUS 187 01 Beginning Orchestra TR 14 SPH 153 01 Introduction to Speech MWF 15 SPH 153 02 Introduction to Speech TR 16 PHIL 150 01 Introduction to Philosophy TR 17 REL 150 01 World Religions MWF BUSINESS 1 ACC 150 01 Principles of Accounting I MWF 2 ACC 151 01 Financial Accounting TR 3 ACC 152A 01 Payroll and Income Tax TR 4 ACC 210A 01 Managerial Cost Accounting MWF 5 ACC 220 01 Automated Accounting MWF 6 BUS 103 01 Introduction to Business MWF 7 BUS 150 01 Financial Math MWF 8 BUS 160 01 Business Communication MWF 9 BUS 170 01 Ethics in the Workplace TR 10 BUS 180 01 Applied Business Statistics MWF 11 BUS 260 01 Business Law MWF 12 ECO 250B 01 Principles of Macro Economics TR 13 MGT 250 01 Principles of Management TR 14 MKT 195 01 Principles of Marketing TR COLLEGE LIFE PLANNING (CLP) 1 CLP 150 01 College Life Planning MWF 2 CLP 150 02 College Life PlanningDays MWF CRIMINAL JUSTICE 1 CJ 150 01 Introduction to Criminal Justice TR 6 CJ 190 01 Juvenile Delinquency TR 7 CJ 210 01 Constitutional Law MWF 8 CJ 215 01 Foundations in Criminology MWF 9 CJ 220 01 Survey of Law MWF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES 1 HEA 140 01 Introduction to Health Occupation MWF 2 HEA 150 01 Introduction to Health Sciences MWF 3 HEA 151 01 Medical Terminology MWF 4 HEA 152 01 First AID and CPR TR 5 HEA 250 01 Introduction to Developmental TR Disabilities 6 HEA 299 01 Health Science Practicum / TR Work Experience 7 PH 102 01 Essentials of Public Health TR Functions and Primary Health Care HISTORY 1 HIS 150 01 American History I MWF 6 HIS 162 01 Pacific History MWF 7 HIS 162 02 Pacific History TR 8 HIS 170 01 World Civilization I MWF 9 HIS 170 02 World Civilization I TR 10 HIS 171 01 World Civilization II MWF 11 HIS 171 02 World Civilization II TR LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE 1 ENG 150 01 Introduction to Literature MWF 3 ENG 150 03 Introduction to Literature MWF 4 ENG 150 04 Introduction to Literature MWF 5 ENG 150 05 Introduction to Literature MWF 7 ENG 150 07 Introduction to Literature TR 8 ENG 150 08 Introduction to Literature TR 10 ENG 151 02 Freshman Composition MWF 11 ENG 151 03 Freshman Composition MWF 12 ENG 151 04 Freshman Composition MWF Time CR Room Instructor 14 ENG 151 06 15 ENG 151 07 16 ENG 151 08 17 ENG 250 01 18 ENG 250 02 19 ENG 250 03 20 ENG 250 04 21 ENG 250 05 22 ENG 251 01 24 ENG 251 03 25 ENG 251 04 26 ENG 251 05 27 LIT 274 01 MATHEMATICS 1 MAT 151 01 2 MAT 151 02 3 MAT 151 03 4 MAT 151 04 5 MAT 151 05 6 MAT 151 06 7 MAT 151 07 8 MAT 155 01 9 MAT 250 01 10 MAT 250 02 11 MAT 250 03 12 MAT 250 04 13 MAT 280 01 NURSING 1 NUR 100 01 Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Survey of Literature Survey of Literature Survey of Literature Survey of Literature Survey of Literature Sophomore Composition Sophomore Composition Sophomore Composition Sophomore Composition Pacific Literature TR TR TR MWF MWF TR TR TR MWF MWF TR TR MWF 08:00-09:20 09:30-10:50 11:00-12:20 09:00-09:50 01:00-01:50 02:00-02:50 08:00-09:10 11:00-12:20 09:00-09:50 02:00-02:50 09:30-10:50 02:00-03:20 11:00-11:50 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 26 26 26 A5 18 26 8 8 27 27 19 26 27 MTAAMU MFIAUI MFIAUI MTAAMU VTAAMU MTAAMU JSIOLOGA JSIOLOGA JSIOLOGA JSIOLOGA VMATUU VMATUU JSIOLOGA Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Intermediate Algebra Vocational Tech College Algebra & Trigonometry College Algebra & Trigonometry College Algebra & Trigonometry College Algebra & Trigonometry Calculus I MWF TR MWF TR TR MWF TR MWF TR MWF MWF TR MWF 01:00-01:50 09:30-10:50 10:00-10:50 11:00-12:20 09:30-10:50 08:00-08;50 02:00-03:20 08:00-08:50 11:00-12:50 10:00-11:20 01:00-02:20 02:00-03:50 02:00-03:40 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 A5 A1 A1 A40 A40 A5 A40 A1 A5 A35 A35 A35 A1 AMOEFIAINU AFELISE AFELISE TLEIATO LLIUFAU AMOEFIAINU AFELISE AFELISE TLEIATO LLIUFAU TLEIATO LLIUFAU LLIUFAU M-F 03:00-04:30 4 M-F 04:30-06:00 2 S 08:00-02:30 2 MT WR 09:00-02:30 07:00-04:00 9 7 4 NUR 180L 01 Clinical Lab F 08:00-02:00 7 5 NUR 203 01 Maternal Newborn 6 NUR 203L 01 Clinical Lab MT W F MT R F 09:00-01:50 07:00-04:00 08:00-12:00 09:00-01:50 07:15-04:00 08:00-12:00 4 2 4 2 2 TR TR MWF MWF MWF MWF MWF MWF TR 09:30-10:50 11:00-12:20 02:00002:50 04:00-04:50 09:00-09:50 11:00-11:50 03:00-03:50 10:00-10:50 02:00-03:20 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 GYM GYM GYM GYM GYM GYM GYM GYM GYM MWF 06:00-06:50 MWF 08:00-09:20 TR 08:00-09:20 1 3 3 ROTC 1 MMOANA ROTC 1 MMOANA ROTC 2 MMOANA TR 08:00-09:20 MWF 02:00-02:50 MWF 08:00-08:50 3 3 3 M4 M4 M4 TMCHEUNG EFELETI EFELETI MWF MWF MWF MWF TR TR TR MWF MWF 09:00-09:50 10:00-10:50 03;00-03:50 02:00-02:50 11:00-12:20 09:30-10:50 02:00-03:20 11:00-11:50 01:00-01:50 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 M4 M4 M4 M4 M4 M4 M4 M4 M4 ANUUSILA ANUUSILA TCAUSAGE ANUUSILA EFELETI ANUUSILA TCAUSAGE TMCHEUNG EFELETI MWF W MWF M MWF W TR R 10:00-10:50 01:00-03:50 09:00-09:50 11:00-01:50 10:00-10:50 11:00-01:50 09:30-10:50 02:00-04:50 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 208 208 A45 A45 A45 A45 A30 A30 IFAASAVALU IFAASAVALU MGOPALAN MGOPALAN MGOPALAN MGOPALAN RDEWEES RDEWEES MWF 09:00-09:50 3 A30 RDEWEES 09:30 - 10:50 1 10:00 - 11:20 3 210 210 PMCFALL PMCFALL 02:00 - 03:50 2 02:00 - 03:50 2 08:00 - 09:20 3 208 208 208 OHANSELL OHANSELL IFAASAVALU 08:00 - 08:50 01:00 - 03:50 09:30 - 10:50 08:00 - 09:20 3 1 3 3 208 208 208 210 IFAASAVALU IFAASAVALU IFAASAVALU PMCFALL 02:00-03:20 10:00-11:50 01:00-02:50 09:30-12:30 08:00-08:50 09:30-10:50 02:00-02:50 09:30-10:50 10:00-10:50 09:00-09:50 02:00-03:20 08:00-08:50 11:00-12:20 09:00-09:50 11:00-12:20 09:30-10:50 11:00-11:50 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 3 3 3 3 B8 B8 B8 B8 29 9 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 19 8 8 RMEREDITH RMEREDITH RMEREDITH RMEREDITH PMAGEO PMAGEO KTUIASOSOPO KTUIASOSOPO KTUIASOSOPO PMAGEO PMAGEO KTUIASOSOPO Nurse Aide training PMAGEO KTUIASOSOPO 2 NUR 100L 01 Clinical Lab MTAAMU LTEMESE TTAGO 09:00-09:50 09:30-10:50 08:00-09:20 03:00-03:50 10:00-10:50 11:00-11:50 09:00-09:50 08:00-08:50 02:00-03;20 02:00-02:50 01:00-01:50 11:00-12:20 11:00-12:20 09:30-10:30 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 20 20 23 20 23 23 23 23 23 20 23 23 20 23 ITAUAI ITAUAI ITAUAI ITAUAI ITAUAI LLAMYUEN FFAATOAFE FFAATOAFE FFAATOAFE LLAMYUEN LLAMYUEN FFAATOAFE LLAMYUEN LLAMYUEN 09:00-09:50 10:00-10:50 3 3 7 7 ALEI AVASAI 09:30-10:50 11:00-12:20 09:00-09:50 10:00-10:50 01:00-01:50 3 3 3 3 3 18 18 18 18 19 RAHCHEE RAHCHEE RACHEE RACHEE RACHEE 01:00-01:50 11:00-11:50 09:00-09:50 03:30-04:50 04:00-05:20 3 3 3 1 3 A1 A1 A1 A1 7 DCHANG DCHANG DCHANG DCHANG TTUPUOLA 06:00-08:50 2 A1 DCHANG 04:00-05:20 3 8 RFAUMUINA 10:00-10:50 01:00-01:50 09:30-10:50 08:00-08:50 08:00-09:20 02:00-02:50 02:00-03:20 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 RBAKER TTAGO TTAGO RBAKER RBAKER RBAKER RBAKER 09:00-09:50 10:00-10:50 12:00-12:50 01:00-01:50 09:30-10:50 11:00-12:20 10:00-10:50 11:00-11:50 12:00-12:50 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 26 26 27 26 27 27 27 20 26 VMATUU MFIAUI VMATUU MFIAUI BGOODWIN BGOODWIN BGOODWIN MTAAMU BGOODWIN 3 NUR 180 01 Intro to Adult Health 7 NUR 204 01 Nursing of Children 8 NUR 204L 01 Clinical Lab PHYSICAL EDUCATION 1 PED 150M 01 Men’s Basketball 2 PED 151M 01 Men’s Weight Training 3 PED 151W 01 Women’s Weight Training 4 PED 152 01 Beginning Aerobics 5 PED 154 01 Golf 6 PED 155M 01 Men’s Volleyball 7 PED 155M 02 Men’s Volleyball 8 PED 155W 01 Women’s Volleyball 9 PED 156 01 Introduction to Tennis RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 1 MSL 100 01 Introduction to Physical Fitness 2\ MSL 101 01 Introduction to Military Science I 3 MSL 201 01 Intermediate Military Science I STUDIES OF SAMOA & THE PACIFIC 1 SAM 101A 01 Conversational Samoan I 2 SAM 101B 01 Conversational Samoan II 3 SAM 111 01 Introduction to the Samoan LanguageDays 4 SAM 151 01 Freshman Samoan 5 SAM 151L 01 Freshman Samoan Laboratory 6 SAM 152 01 Introduction to Samoan Culture 7 SAM 154 01 Introduction to Samoan Literature 8 SAM 204 01 Samoan Mythology 9 SAM 251 01 Sophomore Samoan Composition 10 SAM 261 01 Samoan Oratory 11 SAM 271 01 Samoan Creative Writing 12 SAM 281 01 Translation SCIENCE 1 BIO 155 01 Ecology 2 BIO 155L 01 Ecology Laboratory 3 BIO 180 01 Biology I 4 BIO 180L 01 Biology I Laboratory 5 BIO 180 02 Biology I 6 BIO 180L 02 Biology I Laboratory 7 BIO 250 01 Anatomy and Physiology I 8 BIO 250L 01 Anatomy and Physiology I Laboratory 9 CHM 150 01 Chemistry I N2 AHMU/ LONGNECKER/TAUILIILI N2 AHMU/ LONGNECKER/LBJ/ DOH/TAUILIILI N2 AHMU/ LONGNECKER/LBJ/ DOH/TAUILIILI N2 AHMU/TAUILIILI LBJ/DOH AHMU/FUGA/ MAREKO N2 AHMU/ LONGNECKER N1 LONGNECKER LBJ/DOH R-LONGNECKER N1 F-TAUILIILI N1 LONGNECKER LBJ/DOH R-LONGHECKER N1 F-TAUILIILI EIMO EIMO SSAMOA LWADE SSAMOA SSAMOA EIMO EIMO SSAMOA Continued next page Course # Alpha Sec. Course Title Days 10 CHM 150L 01 Chemistry I Laboratory W 11 MSC 202 01 MOP Seminar F 12 MSC 150 01 Introduction to Oceanography TR 13 MSC 150L 01 Introduction to Oceanography Lab F 14 MSC 160 01 Natural Marine Resources TR 15 MSC 200 01 Introduction to Aquaculture TR 16 PHSCI 150 01 Physical Science TR 17 PHSCI 150L 01 Physical Science Laboratory T 18 PHSCI 150 02 Physical Science TR 19 PHSCI 150L 02 Physical Science Laboratory R 20 PHSCI 150 03 Physical Science TR 21 PHSCI 150L 03 Physical Science Laboratory T SOCIAL SCIENCES 1 GEO 160 01 Introduction to Geography MWF 2 POL 150 01 Introduction to American Government LTEMESE 3 POL 170 01 Introduction to Public Policy MWF 4 POL 250 01 Comparative Politics MWF 5 POL 251 01 International Relations TR 6 PSY 150 01 Introduction to Psychology MWF 7 PSY 150 02 Introduction to Psychology TR 8 PSY 150 03 Introduction to Psychology MWF 9 PSY 250 01 Human Development MWF 10 SOC 150 01 Introduction to Sociology TR 11 SOC 150 02 Introduction to Sociology MWF TRADES AND TECHNOLOGY 1 ABR 100 01 Introduction to Automotive Collision TR 2 ABR 100 02 Introduction to Automotive Collision TR 3 ADT 140 01 Residential House Wiring MWF 4 ADT 150 01 Architectural Drafting I MWF 5 ADT 160 01 Introduction to AutoCAD TR 6 ADT 251 01 Electrical Designs MWF 7 AUTO 100 01 Fundamentals of Automotive MWF Mechanics 8 AUTO 100 02 Fundamentals of Automotive MWF Mechanics 9 AUTO 178 01 Automotive Electrical & Electronics MWF 10 AUTO 178L 01 Automotive Electrical & Electronics MWF 11 AUTO 250 01 Advanced Auto Engine Performance TR 12 AUTO 250L 01 Advanced Auto Engine Performance TR 13 BPR 200 01 Blueprint Reading TR 14 CARP 100 01 Hand and Power Tools TR 15 CARP 100 02 Hand and Power Tools TR 16 ELE 150 01 Electronic I MWF 17 ELE 202 01 Computer Systems TR 18 ELE 299A 01 Electronic Systems Practicum R 19 ETP 100 01 Basic Electrical Therory I MWF 20 ETP 100 02 Basic Electrical Therory I MWF 21 ETP 120 01 Basic Electrical Therory II TR 22 ICT 150 01 Introduction to Computers MWF 23 ICT 150 02 Introduction to Computers MWF 24 ICT 150 03 Introduction to Computers MWF 25 ICT 150 04 Introduction to Computers TR 26 ICT 150 05 Introduction to Computers TR 27 ICT 150 06 Introduction to Computers MWF 28 ICT 150 07 Introduction to ComputersMWF MWF 29 ICT 150 08 Introduction to Computers TR 30 ICT 155 01 IT Essentials MWF 31 WLD 100 01 Welding Fundamentals and TR Metallurgy 32 WLD 100 02 Welding Fundamentals and TR Metallurgy Time 10:00-12:50 02:00-02:50 11:00-12:20 10:00-12:50 02:00-03:20 09:30-10:50 08:00-09:20 02:00-04:50 09:30-10:50 02:00-04:50 11:00-12:20 02:00-04:50 CR 1 1 3 1 3 3 3 1 3 1 3 1 09:00-09:50 MWF 3 8 TTAGO 08:00-08:50 3 7 C.A.P.P Schedule: Fall Semester: 1st & 2nd Session 10:00-10:50 01:00-01:50 02:00-03:20 02:00-02:50 11:00-12:20 09:00-09:50 11:00-11:50 08:00-09:20 12:00-12:50 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 19 8 8 8 9 19 9 19 18 LTEMESE LTEMESE LTEMESE DHELSHAM DHELSHAM DHELSHAM DHELSHAM DHELSHAM ACHEE 08:00-09:20 03:00-04:20 08:00-08:50 10:00-10:50 09:30-10:50 12:00-02:40 08:00-08:50 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 B18 B18 B18 B18 B18 B18 ATLA ATUIOLOSEGA ATUIOLOSEGA AESERA AESERA AESERA AESERA PNGLAM 03:00-3:50 3 ATLA PNGLAM 09:00-10:40 11:00-02:50 10:00-10:50 11:00-12:20 02:00-03:20 08:00-09:20 03:00-04:20 10:00-11:50 02:00-04:50 04:00-04:50 08:00-08:50 03:00-03:50 08:00-10:50 08:00-09:50 10:00-11:50 02:00-03:50 08:00-10:20 02:00-04:20 08:00-09:50 10:00-11:50 09:30-11:50 01:00-02:50 08:00-09:20 5 4 1 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 ATLA ATLA ATLA ATLA B18 B23 B23 B23 B23 OFF B23 B23 B23 LABB LABB LABB LABB LABB LABC LABC LABC LABA ATLB 03:00-04:20 3 ATLB DBRANDT 10:00-10:50 02:00-02:50 3 3 TED1 TTALAMOA TED 1 TTALAMOA 11:00-12:20 3 TED 1 SDELAROSA 08:00-10:20 02:00-02:50 4 3 10 SDELAROSA TED 2 FLAUILEFUE 08:00-09:20 1 SS 01:00-01:50 11:00-11:50 3 3 TED2 SDELAROSA TED2 FLAUILEFUE 11:00-12:20 1 SS ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUE: First Session 1 ENG 70 151 Beginning Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 2 ENG 70 152 Beginning Reading DAILY 09:30-10:50 3 ENG 70 153 Beginning Reading DAILY 12:30-01:50 4. ENG 71 151 Beginning Writing DAILY 08:00-09:20 5. ENG 71 152 Beginning Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 6. ENG 71 153 Beginning Writing DAILY 02:00-03:20 7 ENG 80 151 Intermediate Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 8 ENG 80 152 Intermediate Reading DAILY 09:30-10:50 9 ENG 80 153 Intermediate Reading DAILY 12:30-01:50 10 ENG 80 154 Intermediate Reading DAILY 11:00-12:20 11 ENG 80 155 Intermediate Reading DAILY 02:00-03:20 12 ENG 81 151 Intermediate Writing DAILY 08:00-09:20 13 ENG 81 152 Intermediate Writing DAILY 02:00-03:20 14 ENG 81 153 Intermediate Writing DAILY 12:30-01:50 15 ENG 81 154 Intermediate Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 16 ENG 90 151 Advanced Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 17 ENG 90 152 Advanced Reading DAILY 11:00-12:20 18 ENG 90 153 Advanced Reading DAILY 11:00-12:20 19 ENG 90 154 Advanced Reading DAILY 02:00-03:20 20 ENG 91 151 Advanced Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 21 ENG 91 152 Advanced Writing DAILY 08:00-09:203 22 ENG 91 153 Advanced Writing DAILY 09:30-10::503 23 ENG 91 154 Advanced Writing DAILY 12:30-01:50 MATH: First Session: 1 MAT 80 151 Preparatory Math DAILY 08:00-09:50 2 MAT 80 152 Preparatory Math DAILY 10:00-11:50 3 MAT 80 153 Preparatory Math DAILY 01:00-02:50 4 MAT 80 154 Preparatory Math DAILY 02:00-03:50 5 MAT 80 155 Preparatory Math DAILY 11:00-12:50 6 MAT 90 156 Preparatory Math DAILY 11:00-12:50 6 MAT 90 151 Elementary Algebra DAILY 08:00-09:50 7 MAT 90 152 Elementary Algebra DAILY 10:00-11:50 8 MAT 90 153 Elementary Algebra DAILY 02:00-03:50 ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE: 2ND SESSION 1 ENG 70 251 Beginning Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 2 ENG 70 252 Beginning Reading DAILY 09:30-10:50 3 ENG 71 251 Beginning Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 4 ENG 71 252 Beginning Writing DAILY 11:00-12:20 5 ENG 80 251 Intermediate Reading DAILY 08:00-9:20 6 ENG 80 252 Intermediate Reading DAILY 11:00-12:20 7 ENG 80 253 Intermediate Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 8 ENG 81 251 Intermediate Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 9 ENG 81 252 Intermediate Writing DAILY 02:00-03:20 10 ENG 81 253 Intermediate Writing DAILY 11:00-12:20 11 ENG 90 251 Advanced Reading DAILY 08:00-09:20 12 ENG 90 252 Advanced Reading DAILY 02:00-03:20 13 ENG 90 253 Advanced Reading DAILY 09:30-10:50 14 ENG 91 251 Advanced Writing DAILY 09:30-10:50 15 ENG 91 252 Advanced Writing DAILY 08:00-09:20 16 ENG 91 253 Advanced Writing DAILY 11:00-12:20 MATH: 2ND SESSION 1 MAT 80 251 Preparatory Math DAILY 08:00-09:50 2 MAT 80 252 Preparatory Math DAILY 10:00-11:50 3 MAT 80 253 Preparatory Math DAILY 01:00-02:50 4 MAT 90 251 Elementary Algebra DAILY 02:00-03:50 5 MAT 90 252 Elementary Algebra DAILY 08:00-09:50 6 MAT 90 253 Elementary Algebra DAILY 01:00-02:50 7 MAT 90 254 Elementary Algebra DAILY 02:00-03:50 8 MAT 90 255 Elementary Algebra DAILY 10:00-11:50 9 MAT 90 256 Elementary Algebra DAILY 12:00-01:50 C.A.P.P. - GENERAL REQUIREMENTS: 2ND SESSION 1 ENG 150 251 Introduction to Literature DAILY 08:00-09:20 2 ENG150 251 Introduction to Literature DAILY 12:30-01:50 3 ICT 150 251 Introduction to Computers DAILY 12:00-02:20 4 ICT 150 252 Introduction to Computers DAILY 02:30-04:50 5 MAT 151 251 Intermediate Algebra DAILY 02:00-03:20 6 MAT 151 252 Intermediate Algebra DAILY 09:30-10:50 7 SPH 153 251 Introduction to Speech DAILY 11:00-12:20 TEACHER EDUCATION - 2 YR PROGRAM 1 ED 150 2 ED 157 3 ED 215 4 ED 240 5 ED 257 6 ED 257P 7 ED 280 8 ED 285 9 ED 285P 01 Introduction to Teaching MWF 01 Introduction to Elementary MWF Curriculum & Instruction 01 Introduction to Exceptional TR Children 01 Instructional Technologies TR 01 Teaching Language Arts to Elem MWF School Teacher 01 Observation, Participation and TR Practicum 01 Introduction to Bilingual Education MWF 01 Teaching Samoan Language & MWF Culture 01 Teaching Samoan Language & TR Culture Practicum Room A30 A5 A1 A30 A5 A5 A45 A45 A45 A45 A30 A30 Instructor RDEWEES JNEWTSON JNEWTSON JNEWTSON JNEWTSON KTAGARINO MGOPALAN MGOPALAN MGOPALAN MGOPALAN RDEWEES RDEWEES FSUISALA FSUISALA FSUISALA FSUISALA AESERA DFAUMUI DFAUMUI JLEAE JLEAE MLEAU JLEAE JLEAE JLEAE RMOORE RMOORE RMOORE RMOORE RMOORE ESEIULI ESEIULI ESEIULI JMARTINEZ DBRANDT FLAUILEFUE FLAUILEFUE TEACHER EDUCATION - 4 YR PROGRAM (300 Course Level) 1 ED 300 2 ED 301 3 ED 305 4 ED 312 5 ED 319 6 ED 325 7 ED 330 8 ED 330P 9 ED 335 10 ED 335P 11 ED 340 12 ED 350 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 11 35 Foundations in Education 35 Educational Psychology 35 Foundations of Curriculum & Instructions(Elementary K-8) 35 Teaching Language Arts to Elementary Teachers II 35 Children’s Literature 35 Principles of Child Development: MWF 08:00-08:50 MWF 11:00-11:50 MWF 02:00-02:50 3 3 3 M7C M7C M7C LPURCELL LPURCELL LPURCELL MWF 04:00-04:50 3 TE1 LSCANLAN TR TR 04:00-05:20 02:00-03:20 3 3 TE1 M7C LSCANLAN FLAUILEFUE 35 Elementary Mathematics Methods 35 Elementary Mathematics Methods Practicum 35 Elementary Science Methods 35 Elementary Science Methods Practicum 35 Test Measurements 35 Health & Fitness Education for Elem. Schl. Tchrs MWF 08:00-08:50 TR 09:30-10:50 3 1 TED1 TTALAMOA SS TTALAMOA TR TR 02:00-03:20 11:00-12:20 3 1 TED1 TTALAMOA SS TTALAMOA MWF 02:00-02:50 MWF 04:30-05:20 3 3 10 SDELAROSA TED2 TMATUU 13 ED 350P 35 Hlth & Fitness Edu. For MWF 11:00-11:50 1 Elem. Schl Tchrs Practicum TEACHER EDUCATION - 4YR PROGRAM (400 Course Level) 1 ED 410 35 Elementary Social Studies MWF 09:00-09;50 3 2 ED 410P 35 Elementary Social Studies MWF 11:00-11:50 1 Practicum 3 ED 435 35 Creative Dramatics TR 08:00-09:20 3 4 ED 435P 35 Creative Dramatics Practicum TR 12:30-01:50 1 5 ED440 35 Elementary Samoan Language MWF 03:00-03:50 3 Methods 6 ED 440P 35 Elementary Samoan Language TR 09:30-10:50 1 Methods Practicum 7 ED 490 35 Student Teaching Seminar MW 04:00-04:50 2 8 ED 491 35 Student Teaching Field Work DAILY 08:00-03:50 10 SS TMATUU TED1 SDELAROSA SS SDELAROSA M7C LPURCELL SS LPURCELL TED2 FLAUILEFUE SS FLAUILEFUE M7A SS FALAINUUESE FALAINUUESE 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 M12B E1 E1 E1 M12B E2 E2 E2 E2 E2 E4 M12A E1 E3 M12A E3 E3 E4 E3 E4 E4 E3 E4 EZARRAGA EFAALAFI EFAALAFI EFAALAFI EZARRAGA EZARRAGA ESOKIMI SFAULKNER ESOKIMI LSAUNI LSAUNI SFAULKNER ESOKIMI SFAULKNER LSAUNI SROPETI JMAREKO FCALUMPANG FCALUMPANG SROPETI JMAREKO FCALUMPANG JMAREKO 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 M12C M12C M12C M12B M12A M12B A14 A14 A14 AMATAUTIA SMOSE ETOFILAU SMOSE MPORTER AMATAUTIA ETOFILAU AMOEFIAINU MPORTER 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 E1 E1 E2 E1 E2 E2 M12A E3 E2 E3 E3 E3 M12B E4 E4 E4 EFAALAFI EZARRAGA EFAALAFI EZARRAGA ESOKIMI FAULKNER LSAUNI ESOKIMI SFAULKNER LSAUNI SROPETI FCALUMPANG JMAREKO SROPETI FCALUMPANG JMAREKO 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 M12C A14 M12C A14 A14 M12A M12B M12C M12B ETOFILAU MPORTER AMATAUTIA SMOSE AMATAUTIA MPORTER ETOFILAU AMOEFIAINU SMOSE 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 A40 7 LABC LABC 7 M12A 29 BGOODWIN DAGA ESEIULI ESEIULI AFELISE LLIUFAU KTUIASOSOPO Page 12 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Fa’asao and Marist Prom Queen Kanoe S. Reid and and Prom King Ikaika Pasia Mahuka. FMHS had their 2015 Senior Ball at the Gov. H. Rex Lee Auditorium last Friday. [Courtesy Photo] Internet billionaires face off in renewed Texas space race VAN HORN, Texas (AP) — An isolated edge of vast West Texas is home to a highly secretive part of the 21st-century space race, one of two being directed in the Lone Star State by Internet billionaires whose personalities and corporate strategies seem worlds apart. The presence of Blue Origin, LLC, the brainchild of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, barely registers in nearby Van Horn, a way station along Interstate 10, a full decade after he began buying land in one of Texas’ largest and most remote counties. Few visitors are allowed beyond the “No Trespassing” sign and a remote-controlled gate and into the desert and mountain environment reminiscent of the Air Force’s renowned Area 51 in Nevada. The privileged who do get inside decline to describe what they’ve seen, typically citing confidentiality agreements. “No one gets in other than employees,” says Robert Morales, editor of the weekly Van Horn Advocate newspaper. At the opposite end — of Texas and the competition — is the highly visible SpaceX venture, led by PayPal co-founder and electric car maker Elon Musk. His company contracts with NASA to resupply the International Space Station and is building a launch site about 600 miles from Van Horn, on the southernmost Texas Gulf coast, with the much-publicized goal of sending humans to Mars. SpaceX and Blue Origin are among several U.S. companies engaged in the private space business. Both men have seemingly unlimited resources — Bezos’ wealth is estimated at nearly $35 billion, Musk’s at $12 billion — and lofty aspirations: launching a new era of commercial space operations, in part by cutting costs through reusable rockets. Texas’ glory days of space exploration, when “Right Stuff” Mercury astronauts trained in Houston and the city’s name was the first word spoken on the moon by Neil Armstrong, are long gone. The utilitarian Space Shuttle fell to budget cuts, depletion and age, leaving astronauts to hitch rides on Russian rockets. Any success by the newcomers would offer “significant potential for re-invigorating space research and development in the state,” said John Junkins, director of the Center for Mechanics and Control at Texas A&M’s Department of Aerospace Engineering. Earlier this month, Bezos announced his company’s new hydrogen rocket engine, designed for suborbital missions, had completed hundreds of tests at the West Texas site, adding, “soon we’ll put it to the ultimate test of flight.” That could come late this year. A more powerful engine for orbital flights, fueled by liquid oxygen and liquid natural gas, is being developed with United Launch Alliance, a venture of aerospace veterans Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. Blue Origin officials declined requests for an interview and site visit. “I’m so sorry,” spokeswoman Brooke Crawford said. “It’s just the way it is.” Bezos’ love of space originated in Texas in the 1960s when his family moved to Houston, which dubbed itself “Space City USA.” “For me, space is something that I have been in love with since I was 5 years old,” Bezos, 51, said in a September interview with The Washington Post, which he purchased in 2013. “I watched Neil Armstrong step onto the surface of the moon, and I guess it imprinted me.” Over the last decade, he has bought at least seven ranches, totaling 1,900 square miles, near the Texas-New Mexico border and Guadalupe Mountains National Park. Nuny Morriss, a Van Horn city council member and FedEx delivery driver, said the site includes a “big warehouse-looking building and some offices ... But they don’t let us go around in the back.” Blue Origin’s presence in Van Horn is minimal. Morriss recalled word getting out a few years ago about a scheduled launch. Traffic at the local airstrip suggested that VIPs were coming in, and local officials were eager to join them. “No one in town got invited,” Morriss said. By contrast, SpaceX is frequently in the headlines thanks to its nearly $2 billion federal contract. Attempts to reuse booster rockets have been rocky; it’s failed three times to land them on a platform off the Florida coast. SpaceX already has a rocket plant near Waco. With more than $15 million in state incentives, it’s also building a launch site at Boca Chica Beach, near Brownsville. Musk hopes for at least 12 rocket launches a year, starting late next year. David Kanipe, a former NASA division chief now teaching at Texas A&M, says Musk and Bezos were cool to his offers of assistance. All of the private space businesses have had setbacks, such as Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic, which lost a spacecraft and a pilot in October over California’s Mojave Desert. “There’s just a million ways it can go wrong,” Kanipe said. “I think it’s doable, but it’s just going to take a while.” Gay mentor, belief in dignity at roots of Kennedy’s views SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The Irish Catholic boy who came of age in Sacramento after World War II is an unlikely candidate to be the author of the Supreme Court’s major gay rights rulings. But those who have known Justice Anthony Kennedy for decades and scholars who have studied his work say he has long stressed the importance of valuing people as individuals. And he seems likely also to have been influenced in this regard by a pillar of the Sacramento legal community, a closeted gay man who hired Kennedy as a law school instructor and testified on his behalf at his high court confirmation hearings in Washington. With three major gay rights opinions to his name already, the 78-year-old Kennedy is the prohibitive favorite to write the Supreme Court decision in June that could extend same-sex marriage nationwide. Kennedy’s friendship with Gordon Schaber began in the mid-1960s when Schaber recruited the young lawyer to teach at the McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento. Schaber, who served as the school’s dean for 34 years, was in the process of transforming McGeorge from an unaccredited night school to a respected institution that now is a part of the University of the Pacific. Schaber never married and was widely believed to be gay, according to accounts from a dozen people who worked for him or were active in Sacramento’s political and legal communities. “Schaber’s sexual orientation was general knowledge among the Sacramento community and the law school community,” said Glendalee “Glee” Scully, the longtime director of McGeorge’s legal clinic, where students got practical experience by taking on cases for people who couldn’t otherwise afford a lawyer. Among those who worked at the school when Schaber was dean, not one could recall Schaber discussing his sexual orientation. “Generationally, it was not something gentlemen spoke about,” said McGeorge professor Larry Levine, himself openly gay. Scully said, “As close as he and Tony Kennedy were as friends, I would doubt they ever had a conversation about it. But how can’t it have helped to some degree Tony’s willingness to have an open mind?” Only nine years older than Kennedy, Schaber was a mentor to many of the young lawyers he brought to the school and looked after them in ways large and small. Schaber helped some become judges. Year after year, Kennedy reported the same gift from Schaber on his annual financial disclosures, $400 worth of shirts. Kennedy spoke at the dedication of the Sacramento courthouse in Schaber’s memory, but he has never talked about how Schaber has influenced his views on the bench. Kennedy declined to respond to questions for this story. Schaber died in 1997, just shy of his 70th birthday. By that time, Kennedy had written his first gay rights ruling on the Supreme Court, striking down a Colorado constitutional amendment that prevented local governments from enacting anti-discrimination protections for gays and lesbians. In 2003, Kennedy again authored the majority opinion in Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down state laws that made gay sex a crime. “It suffices for us to acknowledge that adults may choose to enter upon this relationship in the confines of their homes and their own private lives and still retain their dignity as free persons,” Kennedy wrote. “When sexuality finds overt expression in intimate conduct with another person, the conduct can be but one element in a personal bond that is more enduring.” Ten years later, Kennedy’s opinion for the court in U.S. v. Windsor struck down part of the federal anti-gay marriage law. “It seems fair to conclude that, until recent years, many citizens had not even considered the possibility that two persons of the same sex might aspire to occupy the same status and dignity as that of a man and woman in lawful marriage,” Kennedy wrote in the Windsor case. The decision left for another day the question of whether states can keep same-sex couples from marrying. That question is now before the court, with arguments set for Tuesday. So what are the roots of Kennedy’s views? Childhood friend Joseph Genshlea said the issue never came up at Stanford University, where they attended college together in the 1950s, or the Sacramento neighborhood in which both grew up and later raised their own families. “When we were in college, we didn’t even know there was a closet,” Genshlea said. “I don’t have an answer to it except that he’s a very bright guy and he certainly has thought through the issue.” Another longtime friend, former California Gov. Pete Wilson, (Continued on page 15) Technology and outdoor sports converge at drone conference Santa Cruz, Calif. (AP) — Surfers catching waves and mountain bikers pedaling through forests are used to the occasional low flying pelican or diving hawk, but these days outdoor recreationalists can find what’s up in the air isn’t a bird at all, it’s a drone. This week top dronemakers, along with investors, regulators and inventors, are gathering in one of the most popular regions for outdoor activity in the U.S., California’s Central Coast, to show off their devices, hear about new uses for airborne robots, and hit the waves and trails. Drones Data X Conference Santa Cruz, from May 1 to 3, will also feature experts explaining how unmannedaerial vehicles can map remote areas or rescue hikers or swimmers. Federal regulators, who are still sorting out drone rules, will be on hand with updates on regulations about whether operators need to keep a drone within their line of sight, how high they can go and whether they can fly directly above a person. Spending on unmanned aerial vehicles is projected to double over the next decade, from about $6.4 billion a year to $11.5 billion a year, according to industry analyst Teal Group. McNamara said about 90 percent of the venture capital flowing toward drone technologies comes from the nation’s high tech hub, Silicon Valley, about 30 miles from the conference. Santa Cruz economic development director Bonnie Lipscomb said the city hopes some firms will like what they see, from sandy beaches to redwood forests, as well as a university and tech startups. “It was a great opportunity to showcase not only our burgeoning tech scene but also our outdoor enthusiast paradise,” she said. Local mountain bike and kite surfing companies are loaning gear and expertise to the conference. Sergio Capozzi at the Society of Outdoor Recreation Professionals said there is both crossover and conflict between outdoor recreationalists and drone enthusiasts. “There is likely an appropriate time and place for drones in nature. The challenge comes in finding the right balance of when and where drones are appropriate,” he said. As prices go down and drone technology advances, park and wilderness visitors who want to use drones also need to make sure that everyone is having a safe and enjoyable experience, he said. He noted that, on the plus side, drones can be used to gather photos and videos that wouldn’t be accessible otherwise. “Sharing these experiences encourages others to seek out similar experiences, in particular on public landscapes,” he said. But Richard Dolesh, a vice president at the National Recreation and Park Association, said park managers aren’t paying enough attention to increased drone use. “Drones are going to be everywhere and people who are managing outdoor land and outdoor recreation are pretty clueless right now about what it’s going to take to effectively manage them,” he said. Dolesh noted that national parks banned drones after visitors complained about their noise. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 13 Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II stands with Prince Philip, left, and Prince William, right, during a ceremony at the Cenotaph to commemorate ANZAC Day and the Centenary of the Gallipoli Campaign in Whitehall, London, Saturday, April 25, 2015. The ANZAC Day memorial Saturday marks the 100th anniversary of the 1915 Gallipoli landings, the first major military action fought by the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps during World War I. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth) American Samoa Government DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS PUBLIC NOTICE American Samoa Government Federal Transit Administration (FTA) State Management Plan - Consolidated Grant For Title 49 U.S.C. Sections 5310, 5311, 5316, 5317 & 5339 Title 49 U.S.C. 5310(a)(1) authorizes funding for public transportation capital projects planned, designed and carried out to meet the special needs of elderly individuals and individuals with disabilities. Title 49 U.S.C. 5310(a)(2) provides that a State may allocate the funds apportioned to it to: a. Aprivatenon-profitorganization,ifpublictransportationserviceprovidedbyStateandlocalgovernmental authoritiesunderSection5310(a)(1)isunavailable,insufficient,orinappropriate;or b. A governmental authority that: 1. isapprovedbytheStatetocoordinateservicesforelderlyindividualsandindividualswithdisabilities;or 2. certifiesthattherearenotanynon-profitorganizationsreadilyavailableintheareatoprovidethespecial services. Title 49 U.S.C. 5311 Enhance the access of people in nonurbanized areas to health care, shopping, education, employment, public services and recreation. Assist in the maintenance, development, improvement, and use of public transportation systems in nonurbanized areas. Title 49 U.S.C. 5316 Address the unique transportation challenges faced by welfare recipients and low-income persons seeking to obtain and maintain employment. Title 49 U.S.C. 5317 Seeks to reduce barriers to transportation services and expand the transportation mobility options available to people with disabilities beyond the requirements of the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990. Title 49 U.S.C. 5339 Provides capital funding to replace, rehabilitate and purchase buses and related equipment and to construct bus-related facilities, or to transfer to supplement urban and rural formula grant programs. The American Samoa Government invites public comments on the Federal Transit Administration Consolidated Grant State Management Plan Draft. Public comments are invited for a 30-day period commencing on Monday, April 27, 2015 to May 26, 2015. A public meeting on the State Management Plan Draft will be held at the Public Works Conference room in Tafuna on Friday May 29, 2015 at 5:00 p.m. Translation into and out of Native Language (Samoan) that is widely spoken will be provided at the meeting. The Federal Transit Administration of American Samoa complies with 24 CFR 91.220 (i) and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Individuals with disabilities who may need auxiliary aids, services, or special modificationstoparticipateinthepublicmeetingortocommentontheStateManagementplandraftmaycontact Department of Public Works. This document is available in accessible formats upon request. Paper copies, emailed copy of this document as well as information regarding this plan may be obtained by contacting the Department of Public Works @ 699-9921 ask for Cathy Faoa-Danielson for assistance. Page 14 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 A Nepalese man cries as he walks through the earthquake debris in†Bhaktapur, near Kathmandu, Nepal, Sunday, April 26, 2015. A strong magnitude 7.8 earthquake shook Nepal’s capital and the densely populated Kathmandu Valley before noon Saturday, causing extensive damage (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) with toppled walls and collapsed buildings, officials said. ➧ Rescuers struggle to reach remote Nepal Continued from page 2 They woke to the sound of dogs yelping and jackhammers. As the dawn light crawled across toppled building sites, volunteers and rescue workers carefully shifted broken concrete slabs and crumbled bricks mixed together with humble household items: pots and pans; a purple notebook decorated with butterflies; a framed poster of a bodybuilder; so many shoes. “It’s overwhelming. It’s too much to think about,” said 55-year-old Bijay Nakarmi, mourning his parents, whose bodies recovered from the rubble of what once was a three-story building. He could tell how they died from their injuries. His mother was electrocuted by a live wire on the roof top. His father was cut down by falling beams on the staircase. He had last seen them a few days earlier — on Nepal’s Mothers’ Day — for a cheerful family meal. “I have their bodies by the river. They are resting until relatives can come to the funeral,” Nakarmi said as workers continued searching for another five people buried underneath the wreckage. Kathmandu district chief administrator Ek Narayan Aryal said tents and water were being handed out Monday at 10 locations in Kathmandu, but that aftershocks were leaving everyone jittery. The largest, on Sunday, was magnitude 6.7. “There have been nearly 100 earthquakes and aftershocks, which is making rescue work difficult. Even the rescuers are scared and running because of them,” he said. “We don’t feel safe at all. There have been so many aftershocks. It doesn’t stop,” said Rajendra Dhungana, 34, who spent Sunday with his niece’s family for her cremation at the Pashuputi Nath Temple. Acrid, white smoke rose above the Hindu temple, Nepal’s most revered. “I’ve watched hundreds of bodies burn,” Dhungana said. The capital city is largely a collection of small, poorly constructed brick apartment buildings. The earthquake destroyed swaths of the oldest neighborhoods, but many were surprised by how few modern structures collapsed in the quake. On Monday morning, some pharmacies and shops for basic provisions opened while bakeries began offering fresh bread. With power lines down, spotty phone connections and almost no Internet connectivity, residents were particularly anxious to buy morning newspapers. Huge lines of people desperate to secure fuel lined up outside gasoline pumps; prices were the same as they were before the earthquake struck. “We are not raising prices,” fruit seller Shyam Jaiswal said. “That would be illegal, immoral profit.” As aid began pouring in from more than a dozen countries, aid workers warned that the situation could be far worse near the epicenter. The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake was centered near Lamjung, a district about 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of Kathmandu. While not far away, poor roads and steep mountains make Lamjung difficult to reach. Even before the quake, it could take six hours to drive from Kathmandu to parts of the area. Now, many of the few roads are believed to be cut off by small landslides. The earthquake was the worst to hit the South Asian nation in more than 80 years. It and was strong enough to be felt all across parts of India, Bangladesh, China’s region of Tibet and Pakistan. Nepal’s worst recorded earthquake in 1934 measured 8.0 and all but destroyed the cities of Kathmandu, Bhaktapur and Patan. The quake has put a huge strain on the resources of this impoverished country best known for Everest, the highest mountain in the world. The economy of Nepal, a nation of 27.8 million people, relies heavily on tourism, principally trekking and Himalayan mountain climbing. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 15 Thousands expected at Monday’s funeral for Freddie Gray BALTIMORE (AP) — Thousands were expected Monday at a funeral for a man who died after sustaining serious spinal injuries while in the custody of Baltimore police. Funeral services were planned for 11 a.m. EDT Monday for Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who died April 19 after an encounter days earlier with police left him with grave spinal injuries. Pastor Jamal Bryant, who was to deliver Gray’s eulogy, said he expected Baltimore’s New Shiloh Baptist Church to be filled for the service. A cemetery burial was to follow. In Washington, the White House said the head of President Barack Obama’s initiative for young men of color would attend. Broderick Johnson, chairman of the My Brother’s Keeper Task Force and a Baltimore native, is to be joined by two other administration officials, a White House statement said. Mourners who didn’t even know Gray filed in a steady stream for hours into a funeral home for his wake Sunday afternoon. Some supporters stood outside the Vaughn Green East funeral home with signs that read, “We remember Freddie” and “Our Hearts Are With The Gray Family.” Inside, mourners passed by Gray’s silk-draped, white coffin where he lay dressed in a white shirt, black pants, white sneakers and an all-white Los Angeles Dodgers baseball cap. Above the lid to the coffin was a floral arrangement and inside the lid was a pillow with a screenprinted picture of Gray flanked by doves and the quote, “Peace, Y’all” at the bottom edge. Melissa McDonald, 36, who said she was Gray’s cousin, wore a shirt with “Freddie Forever” printed on the back. She described her cousin as a nonviolent person. “He didn’t deserve to die the way he did,” she said. Gray’s wake followed demonstrations Saturday that turned violent. Roughly 1,200 protesters rallied outside City Hall on Saturday afternoon, officials said. A smaller group splintered off and looted a convenience store and smashed storefront windows. A protester tossed a flaming metal garbage can toward a line of police officers in riot gear as they tried to push back the crowd. Earlier, a group of protesters smashed the windows of at least three police cars. Some 34 people were arrested, according to Baltimore Police Department, and six police officers sustained minor injuries. During a news conference Sunday, Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake called for protesters to be peaceful. “At the end of the day, we are one Baltimore. We need to support peaceful demonstration and continue to enforce in our communities that rioting, violence, and looting will not be tolerated in our city,” the mayor said. “Together we can be one Baltimore and seek answers as we seek justice and as we seek peace.” Gray’s death has prompted near-daily demonstrations. Gray was arrested one week before he died when officers chased him through a West Baltimore ➧ Gay mentor… Continued from page 12 said Kennedy always has evaluated people as individuals, not as members of a group. Kennedy, he said, sees everyone “based on their merits.” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg suggested in an interview last summer that one reason for changes in public opinion in favor of same-sex marriage was that, as gay Americans became more comfortable talking about the topic, people learned that they had gay friends and relatives, “people you have tremendous respect for.” She was describing what sociologists call the contact theory, the idea that the majority group’s interactions with a minority will break down stereotypes and enhance acceptance of the minority group. Helen Knowles, the author of a book about Kennedy’s jurisprudence, said she doesn’t place too much emphasis on this theory. “Having said that, I have difficulty believing that Kennedy’s friendship with Gordon Schaber didn’t affect his views,” said Knowles, a professor of government at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York. Her book is “The Tie Goes to Freedom: Justice Anthony M. Kennedy on Liberty.” Knowles and political science professor Frank Colucci of Purdue University Calumet in Hammond, Indiana, said the earliest indication of Kennedy’s views about the treatment of gays and lesbians can be found in a 1980 ruling that ironically upheld the Navy’s dismissal of gay sailors. “He rules in favor of the Navy policy, but it’s about as sympathetic as one could be to the plaintiff,” Colucci said. Kennedy was a judge on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at the time. “Upholding the challenged regulations as constitutional is distinct from a statement that they are wise. The latter judgment is neither implicit in our decision nor within our province to make,” he wrote then. neighborhood and dragged him into a police van. Police said Gray was arrested after he made eye contact with officers and ran away. Officers held him down, handcuffed him and loaded him into the van. While inside, he became irate and leg cuffs were put on him, police have said. Gray asked for medical help several times, beginning before he was placed in the van. After a 30-minute ride that included three stops, paramedics were called. Authorities have not explained how or when Gray’s spine was injured. Police acknowledged Friday that Gray should have received medical attention on the spot where he was arrested — before he was put inside a police transport van handcuffed and without a seat belt, a violation of the police department’s policy. Location: Room 209, Tedi of Samoa - Fagatogo Office Hrs. 9am to 2pm (684) 633-0179 Family owned & operated since 1998. We are American Samoa’s only full time Pest Control Company. We provide a very affordable and friendly service. Do you have ROACH, ANT, FLEAS, TICKS, TERMITE, RATS, AND OTHER PEST PROBLEMS? • Call for a FREE PEST EVALUATION OR NO OBLIGATION INSPECTION • We do GROUND TERMITE TREATMENT & CONSTRUCTION PRE-TREATMENTS • We provide services for Houses, Boats, Cars, Offices, Warehouses, Storage, Restaurants, Furniture pieces, stores and cafeteria and health clinics AMERICAN SAMOA GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES PAGO PAGO, AMERICAN SAMOA 96799 JOB ANNOUNCEMENT Department/Division: Governor’s Office/Medicaid-State Innovation Model (SIM) Grant Posting Date: April 22, 2015 Serial No.: 068-15 Closing Date: April 28, 2015 Announement No.: 068-15 GS: 15/$21,715 - $51,875 Pay Scale & Salary Rage: Type of Position: Temporary Appointment Posting Type: Employment Opportunity/Open to the Public Position Title: PROJECTD IRECTOR Note: This is exempted from the freeze as per the Governor’s General Memorandum General Desciption: The incumbent reports directly to the Medicaid Director and is responsible for the overall project management and the administrative and fiscal oversight of the SIM grant. Key responsibilities are to ensure full satisfaction of all project deliverables, sound fiscal management and personnel management to include that goals, objectives and tasks are on track and met according to the operational plan and stakeholder engagement plan. Key Duties and Responsibilities: • Provide effective fiscal management and oversight of SIM funds in the implementation of the grant requirements • Provide administrative management on the SIM project to ensure tasks and activities are provided adequate resources. • Conduct quarterly evaluations of project status and provide updates at Healthcare Transformation task force/SIM steering committee monthly meetings • Prepare and timely submit monthly progress reports to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and SIM project officer as required • Provide guidance to SIM staff in the implementation of the project • Prepare program and fiscal reports, presentation for executive leadership • Provides financial accountability and quantitative measurements of activities from evaluation and registries • Travel for meetings and training may be necessary and will be provided, as well as opportunities for advancement • All other duties and responsibilities as assigned Knowledge, Skill and Ability: • Knowledge of: • ASG financial system • grant planning and implementation • medicaid/medicare program state plan • healthcare system • Ability to: • have excellent communication and client relations skills • communicate effectively, both orally and in writing • provides financial accountability • supervise exempt/non-exempt, professional and/or technical employees • Skills in: • financial resources • management/supervisory • contracting/administrative Academic and Experience Requirements: • Applicant must have a Master’s degree in related field from an accredited college/university plus 4 years of work related experience; 2 years of which at a supervisory level OR a Bachelor’s degree in related field from an accredited college/university plus 5 years of work related experience; 3 years of which at a supervisory level. Years of progressively responsible working experience may be substituted for portion of the academic requirement. Salary will be adjusted according to experience. Complete information concerning this vacancy may be obtained from the Personnel Division of the Department of Human Resources, or please contact the Recruitment unit at 633-4485/633-5357. Fa’afetai tele, Sonny Thompson, Director Department of Human Resources Page 16 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 • Promotion begins at 12:00am on Wednesday, April 1 2015. • Promotion is for Prepaid Mobile Customers only. • Promotion valid for Bluesky Lifeline and Capped Plan numbers only. • Customer must have valid credit balance to make a call. • Promotion does not apply to bonus minutes. • Once a customer makes a call longer than 3 minutes, they will automatically be charged at zero per minute from the 4th – 18th minute. Customer will be charged normally on the 19th minute until the end of the call. • Talk for 3 to Talk for Free only applies to on-net (Bluesky Prepaid to Bluesky Prepaid & Postpaid mobiles) and excludes: Calls to ASTCA landlines and mobiles, Calls to International numbers, Calls to Directory and Calls to Bluesky short codes. C M Y K C M Y K Fa’atonu tama’ita’i talepe fale fa’a toese ali’i Fa’amasino ma leoleo samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 17 Lali Le tusia Ausage Fausia C M Y K C M Y K O le tama’ita’i lea ua ta’usala e le fa’amasinoga maualuga i lona ulufale fa’amalosi lea i totonu o le maota o le afioga i le ali’i Fa’amasino Lagolago ia Fa’amausili Pomele, ua poloaina e le fa’amasinoga ina ia alu e fa’atoese i le ali’i fa’amasino ma lona faletua. E le gata i lea, ua poloaina fo’i o ia ina ia fa’atoese i tama’ita’i leoleo e to’atolu sa ia palauvale i ai ma lafo i ai upu tau fa’amata’u, a o latou taumafai e fa’afilemu lona ‘ona i le aso na pu’e fa’apagota ai o ia i lenei mataupu. O ni isi ia o tuutuuga o le nofovaavaaia a Elega Sauaso na tu’uina atu e le fa’amasinoga maualuga i le aso Faraile na te’a nei, ina ua ta’usala o ia e le fa’amasinoga maualuga i le moliaga o le talepe fale i le tulaga lua. Na fa’atoese Sauaso i le fa’amasinoga e tusa ai o lana solitulafono sa faia, ma ia talosagaina ai se isi avanoa mo ia, se’i toe fo’i atu ai i tua i lona aiga e tausi lona tina. Sa ia fa’atoese fo’i i le afioga i le ali’i fa’amasino ia Fa’amausili ma lona faletua, i lona ulufale fa’amalosi i totonu o le la maota ma goai meatotino sa i ai. Na fa’ai’u lana fa’atoesega i lona tina matua, (lea sa alala atu i luga o le wheelchair i totonu o le potu fa’amasino), ina ia fa’amagalo o ia i lona le usita’i ma le faia o amioga mataga ua ta’uvalea ai lo latou aiga. Na taua e le ali’i loia fautua ia Michael White na tulai mo Sauaso e fa’apea, o le fa’afitauli numera tasi o lo o fetaia’i ma le ua molia, o lona le mafai lea ona taofi le tagofia o le ava malosi. E ui i le matuia o le gaioiga sa faia e Sauaso i lona ulufale fa’amalosi lea i totonu o le maota o le ali’i fa’amasino ma gaoi oloa sa i ai, ae na talosaga lana loia i le fa’amasinoga ina ia fa’asala o ia i se fa’asalaga nofovaavaaia, ina ia maua ai le avanoa e auai atu ai o ia i aoaoga e fesoasoani ai i lona tagofia o le ‘ava malosi. Na taua e le loia a le malo ia Tiffany Oldfield i le fa’amasinoga e fa’apea, e ui o le taimi muamua lenei ua tula’i ai Sauaso i luma o le fa’amasinoga maualuga, peita’i ua fa’atolu ona tula’i o ia i luma o le fa’amasinoga fa’aitumalo, ona o tu’uaiga i lona save’uina lea o le nonofo filemu o tagata, ae aofia ai lava le ‘ava malosi. Na taua e Oldfield e fa’apea, o le matuia o le gaioiga sa faia e le ua molia, o lona ulufale fa’amalosi lea i totonu o le fale a le ali’i fa’amasino i se taimi o le po, ma ia ave faagaoi ni meatotino sa i totonu toe ai ma meaai sa i ai, ae o lo o moe i totonu o le fale se tina matua e 63 tausaga. Na fa’ai’u le talosaga a le malo i finauina lea o le fa’amasinoga, ia fa’asala Sauaso i le toese mo le umi e 12 masina, o se tasi lea o tuutuuga o lana nofovaavaaia e 7 tausaga. Saunoa le ali’i fa’amasino sili ia Michael Kruse i le taimi na ia fofogaina ai le fa’asalaga a Sauaso e fa’apea, ua la manatu ma le afioga i le ali’i fa’amasino lagolago ia Muasau Tasina Tofili, e foliga mai e le toe aoga se isi fa’asalaga fa’anofovaavaaia mo Sauaso, ona o lea ua fa’alua ona nofovaavaaia i luma o le fa’amasinoga fa’aitumalo, ae foliga mai o lo o ia tagofia pea lava le ava malosi. Ui l lea, na manatu le fa’amasinoga e toe tu’u tasi se isi avanoa o ia, afai loa na te le usitaia tuutuuga o lana nofovaavaaia lea, ona tu’uina atu loa lea o se isi fa’asalaga e sili atu ona mamafa mo ia. E 9 masina lea ua faasala ai Sauaso i le toese i Tafuna, o se tasi lea o tuutuuga o la na nofovaavaaia e 7 tausaga, i lalo o tuutuuga e ao ona ia usita’i i ai. O isi tuutuuga o lana nofovaavaaia e aofia ai le faasa lea ona ia toe soli se tulafono, fa’asa ona ia toe tagofia le ava malosi, fa’atoese i le ali’i fa’amsino ma lona faletua, atoa ai ma leoleo sa ia palauvale i ai. Ua poloaina fo’i e le fa’amasinoga le toe fa’afo’i o ia i le atunu’u na malaga mai ai, peita’i o lea tuutuuga o le a taofia lona fa’ataunu’uina, fuafua lava i lona usitaia o poloaiga uma ua tu’uina atu ia te ia. Na fa’ailoa e Kruse ia Sauaso, afai loa na te le usita’ia se poloaiga se tasi o poloaiga uma ua tuuina atu, a le o le loka o ia i le toese mo le 7 tausaga, o le a toe fa’afo’i o ia i lona atunu’u na malaga mai ai. Feso’ota’i mai i le tusitala ia [email protected] Le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina, Satele Galu Satele i le taimi o le fonotaga a le afioga i Vailoa [ata: AF] i le fa’aiuga o le vaiaso na te’a nei. Leai se tali Satele fa’aiuga a le Kovana fa’asaga ia te ia SATELE: MAUGA, IA MANUIA LAU NOFOAIGA tusia Ausage Fausia Na fiu le Samoa News e tu’i fesili le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina ia Satele Galu Satele i le fa’aiuga o le vaiaso na te’a nei, i sona finagalo e tusa ai o le fa’aiuga a le afioga i le ali’i kovana ia Lolo Matalasi Moliga, lea ua fa’amalolo mai ai o ia mai le tofi o le Failautusi o le Ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. Talu mai lava le aso na faia ai le fa’aiuga a le ali’i kovana fa’asaga ia Satele, sa to’atele le atunu’u na tu’u fesili i le mafua’aga o lenei fa’aiuga, a’o le a fo’i se saunoaga a le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina e uiga i lenei mataupu. Na fiu fo’i le Samoa News e tau saili se avanoa e feiloa’i ai ma le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina ina ua fa’atoa tula’i mai lenei mataupu, sa le i manuia, peita’i o le fa’aiuga o le aviaso na ta nei i lona maota i Asotau, na maua ai loa le avanoa o le Samoa News e feiloa’i ma talanoa ai ma le afioga Satele e tusa ai o lenei mataupu. “E leai se tala a Satele i lenei mataupu, pau le agaga o Satele, o lo o silasila le Atua o le lagi i le moni ma le fa’amaoni o lenei mataupu”, o le ulua’i saunoaga lea a le afioga i le Alo o Salamasina ina ua fesiligia e le Samoa News, i sona finagalo e tusa ai o le fa’aiuga a le ali’i kovana ua faia fa’asaga ia te ia. “Pau le agaga ia te a’u, ou te fa’amanuia atu i le afioga i le Maoputasi lea ua seei i le nofoa sa ou tauaveina, Mauga, ia manuia lau nofoaiga”, o le isi saunoaga lea a Satele. Na fesiligia e le Samoa News le afioga a Satele, i tu’uaiga e faapea, sa i ai ni “lafoga” sa ia lafo i le ali’i kovana i le aso mulimuli sa la fa’asoa ai e fa’atatau i le mataupu a lona afioaga, peita’i na saunoa Satele, e leai sana tala e faia i le mataupu atoa lava, e le mana’o fo’i e toe talanoa i mea ua tuana’i. “Pau le agaga o Satele, ou te aumaia le Fetalaiga a Iesu sa augani ai i lona Tama o i le lagi, lea sa ia fa’apea atu ai, Lo’u Tama e, lo’u Tama e, ia e fa’amagalo atu ia te i latou, aua ua latou le iloa le mea ua latou faia”, o le saunoaga lea a Satele. Na taua e ni isi o le afioga e fa’apea, e le i faigofie i le afioga ma le Itumalo le mataupu i le va o le Kovana ma Satele, ina ua salalau i le ea ma le atunu’u fa’amatalaga e fa’apea, ua fa’ate’a e le kovana le afioga a Satele mai le Ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. Na taua e ni isi o le afioga e fa’apea, sa i ai le manatu o le afioga ma le itumalo, o le a talia e le ali’i kovana le savali a le Fono Faitulafono sa alu atu ia te ia e fa’atatau i le mataupu ia Satele, peita’i o le itu na ofo ai le itumalo, ina ua fuli mai le savali a le Fono Faitulafono, ae fa’asaga le kovana ma fai lana tofiga fou, e aunoa ma le tu’uina mai o sana tali e tusa ai o le savali a le Fono sa alu atu ia te ia. E pei ona silafia e le atunu’u, o le sauniga o le sisiga fu’a a Amerika Samoa na se’i mavae atu nei, na fa’atauto aloaia ai le afioga i le Maoputasi ia Mauga Tasi Asuega, e avea ma Failautusi o le Ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. E le i finagalo Mauga e talanoa atili e uiga i le mataupu ia Satele ma le ali’i kovana, ina ua fesiligia o ia e le Samoa News i le aso na ia aloaia ai lona tauaveina o lenei tofiga fou. Pau lana saunoaga, o le a ia fa’atinoina tiute tauave uma sa fa’atinoina e Satele, o le puipuia lea o measina a le atunu’u, e pei ona tofia i ai le ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. Feso’ota’i mai i le tusitala ia [email protected] Page 18 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Vaavaai Galea’i tagata talafeagai tauva mo le tofi Kovana 2016 tusia Ausage Fausia Le afioga i le ali’i Senatoa mai le Itumalo o Tualatai, le afioga i le Sa’o ia Tuiasina Sosene Esera [ata: AF] ➧ Itumalo ia Satele… Mai itulau 1 ia Satele, a o fa’afofoga le paia o le afioga i Vailoa, lea na ia taua ai le mamafa o le mataupu lenei i lona loto, talu mai lava le taimi na faia ai le finagalo o le ali’i kovana, e fa’atula’i ese Satele mai le tofi Failautusi o le Ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. “Talofa e Satele i lau afioga, i lou loto alofa, fa’amaualalo ma lou fai nu’u lelei, sa e taumafai e fa’anonofo filemu lou nu’u, sa e manatu e te fautua ma le alofa ina ia lagona e le nu’u ma le Ekalesia lou si’ufofoga fa’a Tama, ae ua a nei, ua avea lou alofa, o lou loto maualalo ma lou agamalu ma itu ua faitauina ese ai oe, lea lava ua oo ina a’afia ai lou tofi i le malo ....” na motu fa’afuase’i i le taimi lea le saunoaga a Tuiasina ina ua tutulu. “Satele ...” o le isi lea saunoaga a Tuiasina, ona toe muta fa’afuase’i fo’i lea o lana saunoaga ina ua tutulu, “ ... o oe o le fa’aao o le Itumalo, e tutupu nei mea ao fea o i ai lou nu’u, e tuliesea oe mai le faigamalo, a o fea o i ai lou Itumalo, e satia oe i le ala a o fea o i ai lou aiga ma ou tagata, o le mea lea, le tofi lea o le Itumalo”. “O le tofi lea o le Itumalo sa e faa’alo’alo mai ai i se taimi ua sola, lea ua ou lafo atu i lau afioga, manuia lau nofoaiga”, o le saunoaga fa’ai’u lea a Tuiasina na vaaia ai le sapaia e le afioga o le fa’aiuga ua ia faia. Na taua e se tasi o tama matua o le afioga e fa’apea, “o lau fa’aaloalo Tuiasina i lenei aso, ua atagia mai ai o oe o le toa, e le mafai e se tagata ona fai lenei mea, ua atagia mai ai fo’i lou fa’aeaea i le Itumalo, fa’atasi ai ma lou agaga, e te tausi tupu ia Satele”. Na fa’afetaia e le afioga i le Sa’o ia Tuiasina Dr. Salamo Laumolia ia Tuisaina, e tusa ai o le fa’aaloalo ua ia fa’aeaea ai ia Satele, aemaise ai tulaga fa’aletonu e pei ona tula’i mai i le fa’aao o le Itumalo, lea ua fa’amalolo e le ali’i kovana ia Lolo Matalasi Moliga mai le tofi o le Failautusi o le Ofisa o Mataupu Tau Samoa. “O ai e fia vaai i sona tupu o fai fa’apea”?, o le saunoaga lea a Tuiasina ao fa’afofoga le afioga, le afioaga e afio ai le Alo o Salamasina ma Alo o Fanene, susu ai le Sa’o ia Tuiasina ma lou aiga Sa Tuiasina, ae puipui e le Fetalaiga i le Faletolu. “Soo se tagata Samoa lava, e fia puipui i lona aiga, o lona nu’u, atoa ai ma lona itumalo, lea la ua e lafo Tuiasina le fa’aaloalo ia Tuiasina, fa’amalo le fa’aeaea i le fa’aao o le itumalo, ua lava lena fa’aaloalo e ta’u atu ai i le faigamalo, tusa lava poo a mea e tutupu, tatou te fa’aeaea lava ia Satele”, o le saunoaga lea a Tuiasina Dr. Salamo Laumoli. Na fa’afetaia e Satele le afioga i le ali’i senatoa ia Tuiasina e tusa ai o lana fa’aaloalo maualuga, ua fa’ailoa atu ai lona amanaia o ia i le saofaiga a le afioga ma le itumalo, fa’apea le atunu’u atoa. “Fa’afetai Tuiasina i lou fa’aeaea, ua lava le tofa lea ua e fa’ailoa mai ua ou iloa ai o oe o le toa, fa’afetai atu i le tatou nu’u i lo outou fa’aeaea mai ia Satele, lea ua ou iloa i le aso, o outou lava o lo o malu ma lelei ai lo tatou nu’u”, o le saunoaga lea a Satele. Na taua e Satele i lona nu’u e faapea, e le faigofie le fa’aaloalo ua lafo atu e ali’i senatoa ia te ia, lea fo’i ua talisapaia e le afioaga atoa. Na saunoa fa’afetai Satele i le afioga, i lo latou amanaiaina o ia, talu mai lava le taimi na faia ai le fa’aiuga a le ali’i kovana ia te ia, seia oo mai i le aso o le latou fonotaga. Sa ia fa’ailoa i le nu’u e fa’apea, e ui i mea ua tutupu ia te ia, e le fa’avaivai ai lona loto, ae ua atili ai ona tele lona fatu ma fa’alagolago pea lava i le ta’ita’iga a le Atua. Na talia ma le agaga fa’afetai e Satele le tofi na fa’aaloalo atu ai le afioga i le ali’i senatoa ia Tuiasina, ae i le fa’aiuga o lana saunoaga, sa ia fa’apea atu ai ia Tuiasina, “Tuiasina, fa’afetai mo lau fa’aaloalo, o lea ua ou talia, ae sau ina alu e fa’aauau le tofi a le Itumalo”. Feso’ota’i mai i le tusitala ia [email protected] Na fa’alauiloa e le afioga i le ali’i senatoa ia Galea’i M. Tuufuli i se feiloaiga ma tusitala i le vaiaso na te’a nei, lona vaavaai lea i se tagata talafeagai ma agava’a e tauva mo le tofi kovana i le palota o le 2016. Ina ua fesiligia po o le a se ituaiga tagata o lo o ia vaavaai i ai, ae na saunoa Galea’i, “o se tagata e fa’amaoni ma fai le amiotonu, o se tagata e tautala i le fa’amaoni, ae savali ma ola ai, se tagata fo’i e lelei le mafaufau, e toa le loto toe alofa i tagata”. Ae ina ua fesiligia o ia e tusitala, po o le a sona finagalo i le ali’i kovana o lo o i ai nei, le tofa i le tootoo ia Lolo Matalasi Moliga, ae na saunoa Galea’i, o le ali’i kovana o lo o i ai nei, “o se tagata e lelei toe loto alofa i le atunu’u”. “Ua ou fa’alogo i le talanoa a Lolo, e talanoa mai i aiga, aganu’u ma le Atua, ua tosina ai fo’i lagona o le atunu’u i lana talanoa, ae le mafai ona fa’afoe se malo i ni auala fa’apena, pau le mea e tupu e i’u ina fa’aletonu ai ma le malo”, o le saunoaga lea a Galea’i. Na taua e Galea’i e fa’apea, o ia sa lagolago malosi ia Lolo i le taimi o lana fa’atosina, e oo mai lava i le taimi nei o lo o avea pea lava o ia ma lagolago malosi mo le ali’i kovana, peita’i, e i ai mea ua mafua ai ona sui lona mafaufau i le ali’i kovana, ina ua le sa’o le faiga o ni isi o ana fa’aiuga i tulaga o galuega fa’atino. Ina ua fesiligia Galea’i e aumai se fa’ata’ita’iga “o galuega e le o sa’o” ua mafua ai ona sui lona mafaufau ia Lolo, na saunoa le ali’i kovana, “O le faiga o le auala i Visa, e leai se tupe na pasia atu e le Fono e fa’atupe ai lea galuega a o lea lava e fai”. Sa ia talanoa fo’i i le tulaga ua i ai tupe o lo o alu i totogi o tagata faigaluega a le malo, lea ua matua mata’utia le maualuga, atoa ai ma le to’atele o tagata o lo o galulue i le ofisa o le kovana i lalo o konekarate, o le to’atele o i latou o lo o amata atu i le ta’i $40,000 totogi i le tausaga. “O le isi mea ua ou maitauina, o le tele o nei mau tama’i ofisa ua fa’apipi’i aga’i i le Ofisa o le ali’i kovana, ae sa le masani ai i nofoaiga ua mavae”, o le isi lea saunoaga a Galea’i. Na taua e le ali’i senatoa mai Manu’a e fa’apea, o le mea sa tupu i le nofoaiga a Togiola ma Faoa i le tele o tupe e alu i totogi o tagata faigaluega, o le mea fo’i lea sa tupu i le Fono i le taimi a o avea Lolo ma peresetene, ao avea ai le susuga a Iulogologo Joseph Pereira ma ana lagolago. Mo se fa’ata’ita’iga e pei ona saunoa le ali’i senatoa, o le suiga sa i ai le paketi a le fono i lea taimi, o le sui mai lea i le $2.8 miliona i le $6 miliona. Na fa’ai’u le saunoaga a Galea’i i tusitala i lona saunoa e fa’apea, “o le ituaiga ta’ita’i e fia vaai i ai, o se tagata e tautala i le fa’amaoni ma savali ai, e tausisi fo’i i upu ma folafolasaga sa ia faia i tagata ma le atunu’u”. Utah couple married 74 years dies within hours of each other SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Just after her mother died at age 94, Carol Bradford went to see her 95-year-old father and told him the news. “I leaned over and whispered in his ear, ‘Mom has passed, and she’s waiting for you in heaven.’ I think after that, he knew he had accomplished what he needed, and he felt that he could let go,” Bradford said. Shortly after her visit on April 7, Bradford’s father, Marcus Yensen, died of heart failure. Madelyn Yensen, his wife of 74 years, had died after suffering a seizure five hours earlier that day. “They were always together, and they were always very happy with each other,” she said. Her father always insisted her mother should die at home with proper care, Bradford said. The two married on Oct. 17, 1940, only a month after they met when he took a dance lesson from her at a studio. They had lived since 1949 in a quaint, brick home where they raised their three children. The couple’s son, Byron Yensen, said that while it was painful to lose both parents in a single day, it was comforting to know they weren’t apart from each other long. “It would have been very difficult for Mom or Dad to live without the other,” he told the Deseret News. “They really loved each other.” “He didn’t want to die and leave her here. He wanted to take care of her,” he added. Marcus Yensen was a World War II veteran and Union Pacific Railroad engineer, while his wife was a homemaker. A funeral service will be held May 9 at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Salt Lake City. Tulimata’i A’oga Maualuga i Faga’itua galuega lelei tusia: Leua Aiono Frost O le aso Faraile na te’a, Aperila 24, na tamau e le Pulega ma le vasega o Faia’oga i Faga’itua High, e tima’i ai le fanau a’oga i le Laumua o le Vikings i avanoa ma ituaiga o galuega eseese e mafai ona tausailia pe a mae’a latou a’oga, ma sa matagofie lea aso aua na to’atele sui mamalu o Matagaluega eseese o le Malo ma Pisinisi tuma’oti sa auai atu e tali lo latou vala’aulia. Na tofusia Ofisa ta’itasi ma pisinisi tumaoti sa auai, e 25 o i latou, ma le potu a’oga e fa’atautaia ai latou vasega. O le fa’amoemoe o Fagaitua High, sa auai uma tamaiti a’oga e 557 mai le vasega 9-12, mai itumalo e fa, Sua, Vaifanua, Saole ma le Ma’oputasi, lea o lo’o ao’oga latou alo i Fagaitua. I se va’aiga lautele, sa iloga ai le auai atu o le National Park American Samoa, Matagaluega o le Puipuiga o le Saogalemu Lautele, ASPA, DOC, Public Works, LBJ, ASCC, US Marines, NOAA Weather Station, Public Information KVZKTV, DHSS, Visitor’s Bureau, ASDOE, ASEPA, Homeland Security, OPAD, DHR, DMWR, Hawaiian, US Army, Blue Sky, Polynesian Airlines, South Seas Financial Services ma le Samoa News. O le tatalo ana amata ai faiva o i latou na fa’atino folasaga i potu a’oga, ma sa latou fa’aalia i le fanau ituaiga o avanoa faigaluega, tiute fa’atino ma tulafono fo’i e tausisia i lea ituaiga o faiva, ae maise o le maualuga o le atamai po’o tusi pasi e tulimata’ia e mautinoa ai ua e maua nei avanoa faigaluega. E ta’itolu vasega a nei sui e faia i le va o le 9-12:15 i le aoauli, ona toe fa’atasia lea mo se ‘aiga fa’afetai fa’apea fo’i le tali fa’afetai mai a le Laumua i Faga’itua. Na matua fa’aalia se lagona fiafia o se tasi o sui o le fanau a’oga na tula’i e fa’ailoa lana filifiliga ua faia, ina ua mae’a lenei fa’atasiga. “O a’u sa ou manatu ou te alu i le vaega a le Army, pe a manuia la’u su’ega peita’i, o lea ua ou filifili ou te alu i le vaega a le Maligi! Fa’afetai lava tufa mai ia te’i matou, ma ua fa’amautu ai la’u filifiliga i le fa’ai’uga o la’u a’oga i Fagaitua.” “Pe afai e tele maua lea avanoa mai le WIA, e talosaga atu i le pulega mo lea avanoa, ae sa tele tausaga o matou fa’afaigaluegaina nisi o le fanau talavou e amata tusitusi fa’apena, ma ua iloga le atamamai tele o ia fanau i a latou kosi o tau’avea i Iunivesite i lenei vaitau, peita’i e tatalia pea lupe o foaga o lo’o fa’alele, pe toe taliu mai afea, e suia le ‘au vaega o le a litaea mai lea matata i lenei vaitau.” O se tali atu lea a le sui na fa’afoea lea vasega. 3 young women jailed in Russia for twerking next to a monument… MOSCOW (AP) — A court in southern Russia has sentenced three young women to brief jail terms for making a video showing them twerking next to a World War II memorial. Russia celebrates the 70th anniversary of the Allies’ victory in the World War II next month, an emotionally charged holiday the Kremlin has been using for propaganda purposes. The sentencing in the Novorossiysk district court of a 19-year-old woman to 15 days in jail and two women in their 20s to 10 days comes after prosecutors launched a probe into a video showing a group of women twerking next to the memorial on the Black Sea. Twerking is a sexually provocative dance involving thrusting of the hips. Prosecutors said in a statement Saturday that five women were found guilty of “hooliganism” and two of them were spared jail because of poor health. Hooliganism is the charge that sent two members of punk band Pussy Riot to prison for two years for an impromptu protest at Moscow’s main cathedral in 2012. Prosecutors in Novorossiysk also said they were pressing charges against the parents of one underage girl who was twerking with the others girls for “the failure to encourage the physical, intellectual, physiological, spiritual and moral development of a child.” This is a second twerking scandal in Russia in less than two weeks. Investigators last week launched a probe into a dance school in the city of Orenburg after a YouTube video of female school girls dressed as bees and twerking in a sexually suggestive Winnie the Pooh routine sparked outrage. The dance school was temporarily shut down while officials in this southern city not far from the Kazakh border ordered an inspection of all dance schools in the region. I le vasega a le Blue Sky sa fa’atautaia to’alua e Lewis Wolman ma lana soa, sa la’ua fa’ailoa atu ai i le fanau, “O le tele o avanoa ua i ai nei e feso’ota’i lava ma lou malamalama lelei i le fa’aaogaina o ala o feso’ota’iga o lo’o i ai i luga o telefoni fe’avea’i, lua o atamai masani o lou iloa talileleia tagata gasolo atu mo le tautua a le Kamupani telefoni lenei, ma ua i ai fo’i avanoa e a’otauina ai oe, fa’alautele lou iloa i lau matata, pe afai e talia sau talosaga e te faigaluega ai i le Blue Sky.” I le mae’a ai o le fa’amoemoe, sa tali fa’afetai mai le Laumua i Fagaitua i tusi fa’ailo o lea aso iloga i le laumua, ina ua mae’a le tausamiga o le aoauli, ma taua’ao mai fo’i meaalofa e fa’afiafia ai i latou na fa’atautaia folasaga mo vasega e tolu o lea aso a’oga. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 19 FAASALALAUGA SUAFA “LEAPAGATELE” O NU’UULI O UPU A SAMOA UA TA’OTO’OTO A’O SE ALA UA OO I LE PAIA O LE ATUNUU MAI I LE TAI SAMASAMA O TUPU O SAMOA, SE’I PA’IA LE TAIULAULA O NAFANUA LEA NA SAILI IAI AO O MALO. TULOUNA IA LE PA’IA O LE AU FAIGALUEGA TOTOFI A LE ATUA, O LOO LATOU TAUASUINA IPU O LE VAI O LE OLA, AUA SAMOA IA MAUA SE NOFO FILEMU. AE PATINO TONU LENEI FAASILASILAGA I SULI MA FEOI O LE SUAFA “LEAPAGATELE” O NU’UULI. AEMAISE O SULI MA FEOI O LE LEAPAGATELE O MAUA MAI LENEI FAASALALAUGA I SAMOA NEI MA ATUNU’U MAMAO. TULOUNA LO’U NU’U PELE I LE AGAGA, I LE AFIFIO O MAOPU MA USOALII. ALALATA’I TAUMAFALOFI, A’O LE FETALAIGA MALU I LE TOAFA MA UPU I LE ITUAU MALOSI OU TE TALO ATU I FEOI MA SULI E TUSA AI MA LE FAAI’UGA O LE TATOU FONOTAGA I LUMA O LE MATAUPU TAU-SAMOA MA LE OFISA O LE FAAMASINOGA. INA IA TATOU SOALAUPULE. O LEA E TALO ATU AI MA LE FAAALOALO TELE, E TUSA AI MA LEA FAAMOEMOE, O LE A FAIA SE TATOU FEILOAIGA I LE MAOTA I PAEPAEULI I LE LAUFANUA E FAASINO TONU IAI LE SUAFA LEAPAGATELE, I LE ASO 16 O ME, 2015, I LE ITULA E 2 I LE AOAULI. O LOU LE AUAI O LE A LE TAOFIA AI LENEI FAAMOEMOE. IA ALOFAGIA E LE ATUA LO TOU SOIFUA MA SE FAAMOEMOE O LE A TATOU FEILOAI I LEA ASO UA ATOFAINA. MA LO’U FA’AALOALO TELE, SIAOSI F. L. WESTBROOK, SULI O LEAPAGATELE AKASINI AMERICAN SAMOA COMMUNITY COLLEGE Learning Resource Center EMPLOYMENTO PPORTUNITY Position Title: SOCIAL SCIENCE INSTRUCTOR Employment Status: Full Time 12 months (Career Service) General Description: Instructor will report directly to the Social Science Chairperson and will support the ASCC mission and core values. Instructor will provide instruction to fulfill the General Education requirements for all Associate of Arts and Associate of Science degree programs. Instructor will develop and implement assessment of student learning for improvements to instruction and learning. The skills acquired prepare students for both academic studies (college transferability) and the work place. Job Duties and Responsibilities: • Collect, prepare, and present instructional materials for all classes to be taught • Teach a full instructional course load of at least 15 credits or 225 instructional contact hours per semester. However, loads may vary between 14 and 16 credits hours per semester. • Prepare and distribute a comprehensive syllabi for all courses taught in a timely manner requested by Academic Affairs. • Teach each class as scheduled and supervise examinations, field trips, internships, service learning activities, and practicum • Maintain attendance and scholastic records and submit the required records to the Admissions and Records Office at the assigned date every semester / session. • Develop, implement, and assess Student Learning Outcomes (SLOs) for each course taught. • Use data collected from course taught on SLOs to share with department and other college stakeholders, and provide recommendations for improvement on student learning. • Academically advise assigned students regarding their chosen program of study • Assist and provide students with information on career, academic referrals, and transfer opportunities • Assist with registration process; participate in faculty orientation, commencement exercises, and professional development activities. • Provide safety measures and fully exercise the enforcement of these measures in the classrooms. • Actively participate in academic committees and extra-curricular functions • Assist and enforce all college rules and regulations • Post and maintain class schedules and office hours to assist students. • Perform other duties assigned by the Department Chairperson, Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Dean of Academic Affairs, or the Vice President of Student and Academic Affairs. Minimum Qualifications: • Master’s Degree in Education/History, and emphasis on World, U.S. and Pacific History, Political Science, Anthropology plus fifteen (15) credits of 200-400 level courses in these areas. Must have at least three years of experience of teach courses at a two or four year college. Must be computer literate. Salary: Salary to commensurate with experiences, qualifications and credentials. Application Deadline: May 6th, 2015 - no later than 4:00pm. Applications are available from American Samoa Community College, Human Resources Office. 6999155 Ext. 403/335/436 or email Silaulelei Saofaigaalii at [email protected] or Roxanne Moananu @ [email protected] “An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer And A Drug-Free Workplace” Page 20 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Philippines urges ASEAN to stop China in South China Sea A protestor, left, fights with a bar patron outside of a bar near Oriole Park at Camden Yards after a rally for Freddie Gray, Saturday, April 25, 2015, in Baltimore. Gray died from spinal injuries about a week after he was arrested and transported in a police van. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky) NEWS IN BRIEF Photographer says Baltimore police beat him during protest BALTIMORE (AP) — A photo editor for a Baltimore newspaper says he was beaten by police at a protest over the death of Freddie Gray. J.M. Giordano, who works at the City Paper, says Baltimore police “swarmed over” him and hit him repeatedly. A video posted to the newspaper’s website Sunday shows at least two police officers in riot gear hitting and kicking Giordano as the person filming screams, “He’s a photographer! He’s press!” The 41-year-old Giordano says his head hit the ground during the beating, which he says only stopped when someone pulled him out of the fray. Sait Serkan Gurbuz, a photographer with Reuters, says police detained him as he shot pictures of the scuffle. Reuters says Gurbuz was cited with failure to obey orders. Fountain Valley police fatally shoot man inside drug store FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — Police have shot and killed a suspected burglar who resisted arrest and grabbed an officer’s handgun in a Rite Aid store in Fountain Valley. A statement from the city’s police department said officers went to the store early Sunday after an employee said a man had broken through locked glass door and went inside. The statement said that officers found him standing on a ladder. When they tried to take him into custody, the suspect bit one of the officers on the arm and grabbed another officer’s handgun. After the man ignored orders to put down the weapon, the officer who was bitten fired a sing round at the suspect. The man was taken to a hospital where he died. His name was not released pending notification of relatives. Obama to send aide to funeral of arrested Baltimore man WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says the head of President Barack Obama’s initiative for minority males will attend the funeral of a Baltimore man who died after sustaining serious injuries while in police custody. Broderick Johnson, the chairman of the My Brother’s Keeper Task Force, will represent the administration at Monday’s funeral for Freddie Gray. Johnson is also the Cabinet secretary. Gray is the 25-year-old black man who died a week after an encounter with Baltimore police left him with grave spinal injuries. He is being buried Monday in Baltimore. The White House said Sunday night that Johnson, a Baltimore native, will be accompanied by two other officials. Mourners paid their respects before Gray’s coffin on Sunday, after a night of violent protests led to nearly three dozen arrests. Surfer critically injured by shark off southern Australia ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — A surfer was in critical condition after a shark attacked him Saturday in southern Australia, police said. The 26-year-old man suffered “serious leg injuries” when he was attacked 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Port Lincoln in South Australia state, police said in a statement. He was flown by helicopter in critical condition from a Port Lincoln hospital to the main hospital in the state capital, Adelaide, the statement said. Adelaide’s The Advertiser newspaper reported a witness’s description of a 6-meter (20-foot) great white shark biting off the surfer’s leg, which had an ankle strap attached to his surfboard. “I was just watching the shark go out to the ocean with his board still attached,” the witness told the newspaper. “The shark still had his leg and he was still swimming around with it.” The witness, a surfer, said he was about 50 meters (164 feet) from the shark at the time and could see its “massive” pectoral fin. Sharks are common off Australia’s beaches, but fatal attacks are rare. The country has averaged fewer than two deadly attacks per year in recent decades. Google executive among hundreds dead from Nepal quake NEW YORK (AP) — Dan Fredinburg, a Google executive who described himself as an adventurer, was among the hundreds who died in a massive earthquake that struck Nepal on Saturday. Google confirmed his death. Lawrence You, the company’s director of privacy, posted online that Fredinburg was in Nepal with three other Google employees climbing Mount Everest. The other three, he added, are safe. Google would not give further details. According to the technology blog Re/Code, Fredinburg was an experienced climber who co-founded, in his spare time, Google Adventure. The project aims to “translate the Google Street View concept into extreme, exotic locations like the summit of Mount Everest or the Great Barrier Reef off Australia,” according to Startup Grind, a global startup community. Fredinburg also helped start Save the Ice, an organization dedicated to raising awareness about global warming “through adventurous campaigns and events around the world,” according to its website. Fredinburg started at Google in 2007. He served as product manager and the head of privacy at Google X, the company’s secretive arm best known for “moonshot” projects such as the self-driving car. (Continued on page 21) KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — The Philippines on Sunday urged its fellow Southeast Asian countries to take immediate steps to halt land reclamation by China in the disputed waters of the South China Sea, warning that failure to do so will see Beijing take “de facto control” of the area. Malaysia’s foreign minister, however, said that the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations will avoid confrontation with China and continue negotiations with Beijing on a binding code of conduct that would govern behavior in the area. Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario told a meeting of ASEAN foreign ministers that if China’s construction of artificial islands on reefs claimed by other countries is allowed to be completed, Beijing will impose its claim over more than 85 percent of the sea. Rosario urged the grouping to “stand up” to China by urging it to halt its reclamation work, which threatened to militarize the region, infringe on rights of other states and damage the marine environment. He warned that China, which has been dragging its foot on ASEAN’s push for a code of conduct, will aim to complete its reclamation activities before it agrees to conclude the code. If this happens, he said the code will legitimize China’s reclamation. “The threats posed by these massive reclamations are real and cannot be ignored or denied,” he said. “ASEAN should assert its leadership, centrality and solidarity. ASEAN must show the world that it has the resolve to act in the common interest.” China, Taiwan and ASEAN members Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Brunei have overlapping claims in the South China Sea, which includes busy sea lanes and rich fishing grounds, and is believed to have large undersea deposits of oil and natural gas. ASEAN has maintained a cautious stand in the dispute to avoid angering China, a key trading partner. Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman told reporters that ASEAN is “very much concerned” about the reclamation, but that sending an ultimatum to China to stop work could backfire and hurt peace and stability in the region. “It will be much appreciated if China can stop work and sit down with ASEAN countries to find a solution,” he said. “ASEAN must send the right signal and make the right move. We must avoid any measures that are counterproductive either to ourselves or to China.” Officials from ASEAN nations and China are scheduled to meet in May and June to discuss the issue, he said. The Philippines filed a case with an international arbitration tribunal in 2013 challenging China’s claim. Beijing has defended the reclamation, saying it is Chinese territory and the structures are for public service use and to support Chinese fishermen. Anifah has said that ASEAN leaders are expected to raise concerns over Chinese land reclamation at their two-day summit starting Monday and will seek to speed up plans for the code of conduct with China. Man driving motorhome leads Alaska State Troopers on a chase ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An Alaska man used a motorhome in a failed attempt to elude arrest by state troopers. Eligah Christian of Wasilla was arrested Friday morning, but not before he mashed the bulky vehicle into several patrol cars. Christian, 49, was being sought on a $100,000 warrant on charges of scheming to defraud, 15 counts of theft and 21 counts of issuing bad checks, troopers said in a release. An officer spotted him driving the 2014 motorhome and attempted to make a traffic stop. Christian ignored the trooper’s siren and flashing lights and took off at a high speed, troopers said. Other officers joined the chase. As Christian headed toward the busy Parks Highway, troopers attempted to use spike strips to stop the motorhome. As Christian tried turning the motorhome around, troopers said, he struck several patrol vehicles. He also hit the spike strips and was stopped outside a home, where he was arrested. Christian was charged with felony failure to stop at the direction of a peace officer, misdemeanor reckless driving and felony criminal mischief. He remained jailed Sunday at Mat-Su Pretrial Facility in Palmer. Online court records indicated he will be represented by the public defender agency, which does not routinely comment on pending criminal cases. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 21 ➧ NEWS IN BRIEF… Continued from page 20 Teen, missing for 4 days, lived off school’s fruit trees CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) — Authorities say a 17-year-old boy who went missing for nearly four days before he returned to his Northern California home told his family he hid on his high school campus, surviving on fruit from trees and drinking from the water fountain. The San Francisco Chronicle reports the boy went to his firstperiod class Monday morning and missed his remaining classes. His disappearance led law enforcement officers to search his school, shopping centers and local parks. They also contacted hospitals in the area. The teen’s parents said in a statement that their son came home during dinnertime Thursday. They said the teen “has expressed the deepest sorrow and regret for his actions.” The parents and the Santa Clara County sheriff’s officials didn’t say why he decided to go into hiding. San Jose officer charged with stashing pot in storage locker SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — A San Jose police officer with 21 years on the force has been charged with marijuana possession nearly a year after fellow officers found more than 12 pounds of pot inside of a storage locker rented in his name. Santa Clara County Deputy District Attorney Patrick Vanier said 44-year-old Son Vu was booked on felony charges of possession with intent to sell and maintaining an illegal stash location, charges that carry a maximum prison term of three years and eight months, if the officer is convicted. Vanier says Vu has been on paid administrative leave since last June, when the storage center’s owner had the locks on the locker cut because the rent had not been paid, saw the marijuana and summoned police. Jail records show Vu was being held without bail on Saturday and is scheduled to appear in court on Monday. Dog reunited with Utah family after 2 years apart OGDEN, Utah (AP) — A dog has been reunited with a Utah family, two years after it went missing in Lexington, Kentucky. Jennifer Lowe of Ogden says her family was thrilled to learn the Beagle mix named Tilly was found in Lexington days ago and identified through an implanted microchip with information about the animal’s owners. She told KUTV-TV of Salt Lake City the family thought they would never see Tilly again after they moved from Lexington to Ogden. After the dog wandered away in 2013, nobody turned Tilly in to an animal control center. But after the beagle recently got loose again, someone took her to a facility where she was identified. Christine Stoops of the Facebook group “Lost and Found Pets of Lexington, KY” drove to Utah with Tilly and gave her to the Ogden family on Friday. The dog was a gift to Lowe’s daughter, Phoenix, after her father returned from military duty in Afghanistan. Quacking duck ringtone helps firefighter rescue ducklings SLIDELL, La. (AP) — Quack! Quack! A duck call ringtone helped a Louisiana firefighter rescue six ducklings from a storm drain. Spokesman Chad Duffaut of St. Tammany Fire District #1 says even with realistic quacking sounds coming from his cellphone, it took Firefighter Cody Knecht about 90 minutes to catch the first four baby mallards in the southeast Louisiana community of Slidell. Duffaut says Knecht rescued the others after giving them about an hour to calm down. All six ducklings were reunited with their mother Saturday in the canal behind a home, where residents had reported seeing the ducklings go into the drain. Duffaut says it was fire station’s second duck rescue in a week. On April 19, firefighters rescued a duck that got stuck in a chimney. Police: NYC airplane cleaner pocketed 1,429 liquor bottles NEW YORK (AP) — Police say an airplane cleaner has been arrested on charges she pocketed nearly $15,000 worth of contraband from planes grounded in New York City, including nearly 1,500 unopened bottles of liquor. A spokesman for Port Authority of New York and New Jersey police says Juanette Cullum has been charged with grand larceny and criminal possession of stolen property. The spokesman, Joe Pentangelo, says a witness told American Airlines security officials that the 48-year-old Brooklyn woman was stealing property at John F. Kennedy International Airport. He says detectives interviewed Cullum and searched her apartment, finding 1,429 bottles of unopened liquor, seven iPads, two laptops, 19 Kindle tablets and toiletries. Calls Friday to American Airlines and Cullum’s employer, AirServ, weren’t immediately returned. It wasn’t clear if Cullum has an attorney who could comment on the charges. (Continued on page 22) American Samoa Government DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH PUBLIC NOTICE The American Samoa Department of Health Early Intervention Program “Helping Hands” would like to inform the public that the Annual State Application under Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act as amended in 2004 for Federal Fiscal Year 2015 is available for public comment for a period of 60 days. A copy of the document is available to review at the American Samoa Department of Health Main Office in Fagaalu as well as the DOH Helping Hands Office in Fagaima. Please call the DOH Helping Hands office at 699-4990 if you have any questions regarding this public notice. Signed, Ruth Te’o, DOH Part C Coordinator AMERICAN SAMOA GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES PAGO PAGO, AMERICAN SAMOA 96799 JOB ANNOUNCEMENT Position Title: COMMUNITY OUTREACH COORDINATOR Department/Division: Governor’s Office/Medicaid-State Innovation Model (SIM) Grant Posting Date: April 22, 2015 Serial No.: 069-15 Closing Date: April 28, 2015 Announement No.: 069-15 Pay Scale & Salary Rage: GS: 09/$10,617 - $28,167 Type of Position: Temporary Appointment Posting Type: Employment Opportunity/Open to the Public Note: This is exempted from the freeze as per the Governor’s General Memorandum General Desciption: The incumbent reports directly to the Program Director and will serve as an advocate for the SIM project; acting as a liaison between the SIM program and government and community stakeholders working cooperatively to promote SIM as well on assisting in developing marketing strategies that advertise SIM objectives to the community. In addition, responsible for presenting before stakeholders and coordinating outreach, leading meetings as required to all SIM stakeholders. Key Duties and Responsibilities: • Organize, attend, and/or participate in special events and promotions advocating SIM program activities • Serve as spokesperson for the SIM program at meetings, special and media events • Responsible for developing and implementing all outreach and marketing activities, campaigns, and strategies. This can be done through a combination of personal contacts, brochures, public presentations, special events and the Internet i.e. (Social Media, Website) etc. • Establish and maintain effective relationships with local, regional and federal agencies, and other parties • Develop and implement an annual outreach plan that includes promotional and educational strategies • other duties and responsibilities as assigned Knowledge, Skill and Ability: • Knowledge of: • Implementing outreach campaign and programs • Microsoft office programs/software • Standard office procedures, modern office equipment including computer, copiers, fax machines, etc. • Ability to: • have excellent communication and client relation skills • communicate effectively, both orally and in writing • implement and work under changing requirements • effectively prepare and present in front of various groups • Skills in: • hi-power-point presentations • analytical and organizational skills • customer service • educational and outreach Academic and Experience Requirements: • Applicant must have an Associate’s degree in related field from an accredited college/university plus 4 years of work related experience. Years of progressively responsible working experience may be substituted for portion of the academic requirement. Salary will be adjusted according to experience. Complete information concerning this vacancy may be obtained from the Personnel Division of the Department of Human Resources, or please contact the Recruitment unit at 633-4485/633-5357. Fa’afetai tele, Sonny Thompson, Director Department of Human Resources Page 22 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 ➧ NEWS IN BRIEF… Continued from page 21 Rescue workers remove debris as they search for victims of earthquake in Bhaktapur near Kathmandu, Nepal, Sunday, April 26, 2015. A strong magnitude earthquake shook Nepal’s capital and the densely populated Kathmandu Valley before noon Saturday, causing extensive (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) damage with toppled walls and collapsed buildings, officials said. Quake agony revealed quietly on the trip from Nepal airport KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Soon after landing at Kathmandu airport, the Thai Airways captain made a bizarre announcement to passengers: Nobody is in the control tower. That meant we could taxi no farther, and we were trapped on the tarmac. It took the pilot another half-hour to explain that air-traffic controller had left the tower because there had been an aftershock, one of several that has struck fear into this mountainous nation since Saturday’s massive tremor killed more than 2,500 people. Those moments and many others in my first hours in Nepal’s capital revealed that while much of Kathmandu appears to have been spared physical damage from the earthquake, other signs of trauma are everywhere. We waited while airport officials inspected the tarmac for damage and cracks. In the back of the plane, an argument broke out. A Thai airways staffer was telling a Chinese businessman to get off his cellphone. “I will not!” shouted Jun Sun. “I’m speaking to my family. This is important. “I need to know they are OK now. I need to know my wife and daughter are OK.” Sun, who works in the telecommunications industry, said he was returning from a conference in Bangkok. He tried to call his wife to find out how she and his 10-month-old daughter were, but could not get through because the network was so congested. He spoke to her “for a few seconds” on the Chinese social media service WeChat — it was just enough to know they were alive. On Sunday he was able to really talk to them for the first time. “They slept out in the open last night. I’m going to get them out of here,” he said. “It’s not safe yet. Something worse may yet happen.” He pulled out his cellphone and showed several images of destroyed homes in Kathmandu that colleagues had sent. “This is what we are worried about,” he said, pointing to a picture of a huge crack running up the side of the multistory apartment building he lives in. When our jet finally got the green light to move forward, well over an hour later, it taxied past a large Indian military cargo plane. Soldiers stood on the tarmac, unloading supplies and trolleys filled with fuel — which Kathmandu residents say is running precariously low. On the walk into the airport, we could see hundreds of people, mostly tourists, crowded behind the glass walls of a terminal building, clearly hoping for a flight out. One man’s face was covered with large bandages. Elsewhere, foreign rescue teams could be seen sitting in groups, planning missions into the city. Flights also resumed — we saw a gray cargo plane hurtling above. After customs, it was clear nothing was normal. The hotel reservations center was empty. The Yeti Money Exchange was empty. And in the parking lot outside the arrivals hall, no taxis waited. Instead, thousands of scared and frustrated Indian nationals stood in huge lines, hoping to get on evacuation flights their government was organizing. Tempers frayed as the wait dragged on. Ghan Shyam Son said he and his family had been on a four-day trip as tourists and were supposed to leave Saturday. “But our flight was canceled. We spent last night sleeping outside, in the open. We’re trying to leave here, we’re so afraid.” Pooja Bhandari, standing beside him, was blunt: “No water. No light. I am hungry. No drinking water. No sleeping well. Very disturbed,” she said. Another Indian national who had come to Nepal as a tourist sat forlornly on the curb. Two of her friends were missing, she said. As I drove out of the airport with an Associated Press team of journalists, the line of desperate Indians wrapped around the block and then some. Although the part of the city we drove through appeared largely undamaged, everyone, everywhere seemed to be sitting outside. The city’s old quarter lies in ruins, but from above, most of Kathmandu looked as it always did. Five-, 10-, 15-story buildings spread across terraced hills that stretch into the distance. Shops are shuttered, including Pizza Hut, Baskin-Robbins and Himalayan Java Coffee (“Serving Nepali Coffee Since 1999”). Grassy parks were full of distraught people, sitting, standing, talking. Many more congregated in groups, sitting on curbs, on steps, anywhere outside. They all fear another aftershock may bring down buildings yet. At the Hotel Annapurna, a two-story wall in front of reception has a large crack in it. The electricity is out. The hallways are dark. Foreign guests took blankets and pillows and cushions and sat down outside. This short trip from the airport merely hinted at the devastation this country has felt. The full story, told from vulnerable mountain villages, distant historic sites and other places, is still being revealed. Woman shot by California deputies dies SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) — A Northern California woman shot by deputies after a wild chase has died of her wounds. Santa Rosa police say Karen Janks died Friday at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital. The Santa Rosa Press Democrat reports the 46-year-old woman was critically injured after deputies opened fire on her car after she rammed into officials Wednesday night. Three deputies were injured. The incident began when someone called to report a motorist driving the wrong way in the northbound lanes of Highway 101 in Windsor. Authorities say deputies stopped Janks but then backed her car into a group of deputies. Multiple deputies opened fire and hit her an unknown number of times. Japan’s prime minister kicks off his u.s. visit in Boston BOSTON (AP) — Japan’s prime minister begins his second day of a U.S. visit with a stop at the Boston Marathon finish line. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his wife will visit the site Monday morning with Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh as a gesture of respect for the victims of the 2013 bombings that killed three people. Abe then visits Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab. At each he will meet briefly with students and university officials, including Japanese students and researchers. On Sunday night, Abe visited the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and attended a dinner hosted by Secretary of State John Kerry at his Boston home. Abe will travel on to Washington Monday afternoon for talks with President Barack Obama. Pentagon: US military sending aid to quake-ravaged Nepal WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon says a U.S. military plane has departed from the Dover Air Force Base in Delaware bound for earthquake-stricken Nepal. Onboard are 70 personnel, including a U.S. Agency for International Development disaster assistance response team, a Virginia-based search and rescue team and 45 tons of cargo to provide assistance to areas hit by Saturday’s massive quake that left more than 2,500 dead. The Pentagon says the flight is expected to arrive at Kathmandu on Monday. More than two dozen Defense Department personnel and a transport plane are currently in Nepal on a training exercise. All personnel are accounted for. The 7.8 magnitude temblor was felt in neighboring countries. UNICEF staff has reported dwindling water supplies, power shortages and communications breakdowns in the stricken areas. Nearly 17 million watch Jenner interview NEW YORK (AP) — Former Olympian Bruce Jenner reached an audience of just under 17 million people for his declaration in an ABC News interview that he identifies as a woman. The Nielsen company said Saturday 16.9 million viewers watched the interview on ABC’s “20/20” newscast Friday night. The audience was the biggest for a non-sports show on a Friday night since 2003, which would exclude Olympics broadcasts. Friday is generally a light night for television viewing because so many people have plans outside the house. It was also the biggest audience for ABC’s “20/20” newscast on a Friday night in 15 years. Nielsen said viewership peaked just after 10 p.m. with 17.2 million viewers. Nielsen Social also estimated that there were 972,000 tweets sent Friday night about the Jenner interview. Coyote collared after lower Manhattan police chase NEW YORK (AP) — A wily coyote is no match for the NYPD. Police collared the creature near a sidewalk cafe in downtown Manhattan on Saturday morning. The coyote was spotted shortly after 7:30 a.m. in the Battery Park City neighborhood. Officers tailed her up and down a marina and a Hudson River park for about an hour before using a tranquilizer dart to subdue her. She is being cared for at the Center for Animal Care and Control. Police say there were no injuries to humans or animals. It is unclear if the coyote was the same one that was spotted in Riverside Park on Wednesday. At least four coyote sightings have been reported in Manhattan this year. Bill under debate would limit farm antibiotics in Oregon PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — For decades, farmers have routinely fed antibiotics to livestock to fatten up the animals and protect them from illnesses amplified by confined conditions. But critics say repeated use of antibiotics has made bacteria more resistant to the drugs, resulting in people developing antibiotic-resistant infections. As public pressure mounts nationally against antibiotics, Oregon legislators are debating whether to curtail their use in agriculture. If the legislation passes, Oregon would be the first in the nation to mandate stricter rules on livestock antibiotics. Scientists, doctors and public health officials are unequivocal about the need to stop the spread of antibiotic-resistant superbugs. Some farmers — including industrial operations — have already made the switch. And many food chains and restaurants now offer antibiotic-free meat. (Continued on page 26) samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 23 HURRICANE SEASON – TAU AFA 2014-2015 November to April / Novema e o’o atu ia Aperila O saoasaoa o savili ma ‘upu ua fa’aaogaina i Amerika Wind speed and matching terminology during Samoa i taimi o tala o le tau. Ia utagia mai ona ua iai hurricane forecast in American Samoa. nei ‘ese’esega o fa’asalalauga o le tala o le tau i Take note that American Samoa and Independent Samoa now has different forecasting when it comes Amerika Samoa ma Samoa tu to’atasi i taimi o Afa. to hurricanes. O se fa’ata’ita’iga: E amata Matagi Malolosi i For example: American Samoa’s Tropical Storm Amerika Samoa pe a 40-50 le saoasaoa o savili, a’o starts when wind speed is at 40-50 MPH, where Independent Samoa starts its Category 1 or Cat-1 at Samoa tu to’atasi e amata ai lo latou Afa numera-1. Fa’aaoga lenei tapenaga e fesoasoani ai ia te oe i the same wind speed. Take note of this graph as an taimi o tala o le tau. aid to assist you in the event of a forecasted hurricane. For more information visit us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RipCurrentAS or call 699-0411 (ASDHS) / 699 9130 (NWS) A message from… ASDHS-TEMCO and NOAA NWS Page 24 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 GALEA’I: E tatau ona silafia e le atunu’u le fa’aaogaina o tupe tusia Ausage Fausia Le afioga i le ali’i Senatoa ia Galea’i M. Tu’ufuli [ata: AF] Na taua e le afioga i le ali’i senatoa mai Manu’a ia Galea’i M. Tu’ufuli, e i ai le aia o tagata o le atunu’u latou te silafia ai auala sa fa’aaoga i ai e le malo tupe a tagata totogi lafoga, atoa ai ma tupe sa fesoasoani mai ai pisinisi ma kamupani tua, i le fa’amanatuina o le fu’a a le atunu’u na faatoa mae’a atu nei. Ona o lea tulaga, sa ia taua ai le sauni o le komiti o le Fa’agaioiga o le malo a le Senate, lea o lo o ia ta’ita’ifono ai, e fesiligia se ripoti mai le malo e tusa ai o tupe sa fa’aaoga i le fu’a na se’i mavae atu nei. E pei ona silafia e le atunu’u, e ese mai i tupe lotoifale a le malo sa fa’aaoga i polokalame o le fu’a, sa i ai fo’i foa’i tupe mai kamupani tua ma pisinisi, lea na tu’uina atu i le malo e fesoasoani i polokalame o le fu’a o lenei tausaga. Saunoa le ali’i senatoa ia Galea’i e fa’apea, e to’atele tagata o le atunu’u sea telefoni atu ia te ia, ma fesiligia sona finagalo i auala o lo o fa’aaoga ai e le malo tupe e tagata totogi lafoga, aemaise lava ina ua le fiafia le atunu’u i le fa’aiuga a le Komiti o Tuuga Fautasi i le fa’aiuga o le tuuga, lea o lo o totogi i tupe a tagata totogi lafoga fa’ailoga, ae le o fa’amaoni le komiti i le fa’amalosia o a latou tulafono. “E le valea tagata, o a tatou tupe uma lea e fa’atupe ai polokalame o le fu’a ma tuuga fautasi, ae afai o ituaiga tuuga nei e faia e le malo, e sili ai pe a aua ne’i toe faia ni tuuga fautasi i le lumana’i”, o le saunoaga lea a Galea’i. E tusa ai o fa’ailoga tupe sa fa’alauiloa mai e le komiti o tuuga fautasi, e tusa ma le $89,000 le tupe na faalu i fa’ailoga o tuuga fautasi, ae ese ai tupe sa fa’aalu i meaalofa mo au siva ma pese fa’aleaganu’u, atoa ai ma ta’aloga kirikiti o le fu’a. Saunoa le ali’i senatoa e fa’apea, e tatau ona fa’aaoga tatau e le malo tupe a tagata totogi lafoga ma pisinisi o lo o ofo atu, e fesoasoani i le fa’aleleia atoa ai ma le fa’atinoina o polokalame o le fu’a, aemaise lava i tuuga fautasi, lea e tele ina tuli mata’i i ai le vaai a tagata i so o se tausaga e fa’amanatu ai fu’a a le atunu’u. Saunoa atili Galea’i e fa’apea, afai o le tulaga fa’aletonu lea e maitauina i tuuga fautasi, e sili ai loa pe a taofi le toe faia o ni tuuga fautasi i le lumana’i, po o le aumai fo’i o tupe e fai ai fa’ailoga o tuuga fautasi i taga a ta’ita’i o le malo. Sa ia taua, e sili atu ona alu lona loto i tagata o le atunu’u o lo naunau e fia maimoa i tuuga fautasi, a o lea e le sa’o fa’aiuga a le komiti o lo o aumai i le atunu’u. Ae ina ua fesiligia i sona finagalo e fa’atatau i tagata talafeagai e tatau ona latou fa’atautaia tuuga fautasi i le lumana’i, sa ia taua ai e fa’apea, o lana fautuaga lelei lava, e sili ai pe a aumai ni tagata e leai ni o latou sootaga ma nu’u o lo o fai fautasi, po o ni isi foi o lo o i totonu o Faalapotopotoga e masani i tulaga o le sami ma tuuga fautasi, o i latou tonu ia e talafeagai ona latou fa’atautaia tuuga fautasi, e leai se fa’aituau, e usita’i fo’i i tulafono latou te fa’atula’i. Saunoa atili Galea’i e fa’apea, o le itu e pito sili ona mataga i le tuuga fautasi na te’a nei, o le fa’atula’i e le komiti o a latou tulafono mo le tuuga, ae mae’a ane le tuuga ua le fa’aaogaina tulafono. C M Y K C M Y K samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 25 C M Y K C M Y K Page 26 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Hawaii poised to become 1st state to raise smoking age… HONOLULU (AP) — A bill that would make Hawaii the first state to raise the legal smoking age to 21 cleared the Legislature on Friday and is headed to the governor. The bill would prevent adolescents from smoking, buying or possessing both traditional and electronic cigarettes. “It’s definitely groundbreaking legislation,” said Jessica Yamauchi, executive director of the Coalition for a Tobacco-Free Hawaii, which pushed for the bill. “It’s amazing to be the first state in something. That’s very exciting for us.” Gov. David Ige hasn’t yet decided whether he will sign the bill, and his staff has to vet all bills for legal issues, he said. “The departments will be doing their review and then we’ll have the opportunity to look at it,” Ige said. Those caught breaking the rules would be fined $10 for the first offense, and subsequent violations would lead to a $50 fine or mandatory community service. Dozens of local governments have similar bans, including Hawaii County and New York City. According to the state Department of Heath, 5,600 kids in Hawaii try smoking each year, and 90 percent of daily smokers begin the habit before age 19. Meanwhile, 1,400 people die from tobacco use or exposure in Hawaii every year, according to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “Today we have the opportunity to change the paradigm,” said Democratic state Sen. Rosalyn Baker, who introduced the bill. Smoking prevalence would fall an estimated 12 percent if the minimum smoking age was raised to 21, according to a report by the Institute of Medicine, which is part of the National Academy of Sciences. The favorite flavors among teens who use electronic cigarettes are sweet tart and “unicorn puke, which is described as a combination of every flavor of Skittle in one,” Baker said. “While the industry is not allowed to directly market to children, it is still developing packaging and advertising products in ways that appeal to children,” she said. Sabrina Olaes, 17, got involved in promoting the legislation after finding herself in restrooms full of electronic cigarette fumes when her classmates vaped at her high school. “You feel like you want to hold your breath because you don’t want to smell what they’re smoking,” Olaes said. “It’s pretty sad to know that they’ve fallen under the addiction.” Opponents say it’s unfair that a military veteran returning from service could be prevented from smoking. “It is not right because you are deemed an adult when you turn 18,” said Michelle Johnston, owner of Sub Ohm Vapes in Kailua-Kona, on Hawaii’s Big Island. “You can sign up and be in the military and basically give your life for your country. You can vote,” she said. “Why shouldn’t you be able to choose if you want to buy tobacco products or vaping products, when you’re considered a legal adult?” Democratic Sen. Gil Riviere, who voted against the bill in the 19-4 vote, said if the state wants to eliminate smoking, it should ban it for everyone. “You can sign contracts, you can get married, you can go to war and lose an arm or lose an eye ... you come back and you’re 20 years old and you can’t have a cigarette,” Riviere said. WASHINGTON (AP) — With debate gearing up over the coming expiration of the Patriot Act surveillance law, the Obama administration on Saturday unveiled a 6-year-old report examining the once-secret program to collect information on Americans’ calls and emails. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence publicly released the redacted report following a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the New York Times. The basics of the National Security Agency program had already been declassified, but the lengthy report includes some new details about the secrecy surrounding it. President George W. Bush authorized the “President’s Surveillance Program” in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. The review was completed in July 2009 by inspectors general from the Justice Department, Pentagon, CIA, NSA and Office of the Director of National Intelligence. They found that while many senior intelligence officials believe the program filled a gap by increasing access to international communications, others including FBI agents, CIA analysts and managers “had difficulty evaluating the precise contribution of the PSP to counterterrorism efforts because it was most often viewed as one source among many available analytic and intelligence-gathering tools in these efforts.” Critics of the phone records program, which allows the NSA to hunt for communications between terrorists abroad and U.S. residents, argue it has not proven to be an effective counterterrorism tool. They also say an intelligence agency has no business possessing the deeply personal records of Americans. Many favor a system under which the NSA can obtain court orders to query records held by the phone companies. The Patriot Act expires on June 1, and Senate Republicans have introduced a bill that would allow continued collection of call records of nearly every American. The legislation would reauthorize sections of the Patriot Act, including the provision under which the NSA requires phone companies to turn over the “to and from” records of most domestic landline calls. After the program was disclosed in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, President Barack Obama and many lawmakers called for legislation to end that collection, but a bill to do so failed last year. Proponents had hoped that the expiration of the Patriot Act provisions on June 1 would force consideration of such a measure. A bipartisan group of House members has been working on such legislation, dubbed the USA Freedom Act. White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Friday that Obama is pleased the efforts are restarting in the House. “Hopefully, the next place where Democrats and Republicans will turn their attention and try to work together is on this issue of putting in place important reforms to the Patriot Act,” Earnest said. If no legislation is passed, the Patriot Act provisions would expire. That would affect not only the NSA surveillance but other programs used by the FBI to investigate domestic crimes, which puts considerable pressure on lawmakers to pass some sort of extension. The US unveils 6-year-old report on NSA surveillance ➧ NEWS IN BRIEF… Continued from page 22 Nigeria recalls diplomats from South Africa over attacks LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria is recalling its top diplomats in South Africa because of “ongoing xenophobia targeting foreigners,” according to a government statement. Seven people have been killed in the attacks in South Africa that began three weeks ago. Property has been destroyed and the violence “created fear and uncertainty in the minds of African migrants,” according to a Ministry of Foreign Affairs statement. Nigeria’s ambassador in Pretoria, South Africa’s capital, and the consul general in Johannesburg, the economic hub, will return to Nigeria for consultations, said the statement. The statement, dated Saturday, noted that some South Africans organized peace marches and that President Jacob Zuma condemned the attacks as did Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini, whose comments allegedly incited the violence. Fighting rages in Yemen’s 3rdlargest city, strikes continue SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Deadly street battles raged in Yemen’s third-largest city on Sunday, as airstrikes by the Saudiled coalition battling Shiite rebels struck targets in several cities, security officials said. The fighting in Taiz between government forces and rebels was heaviest around government and security buildings in the city center, killing some 20 civilians and wounding dozens more, they said, adding that indiscriminately fired mortar rounds hit several private residences and landed near a hospital at one point. Reached by telephone, Taiz residents described relentless artillery, tank and heavy machine gun fire blasting through the city as families sought shelter wherever they could. “It’s like our homes have become a military target, they are killing us in cold blood,” said resident Tawfiq Al Maamari. “We left our homes with our children because the missiles are raining down on us without mercy.” The continued airstrikes and combat between rival factions on the ground underline how a negotiated peace remains elusive in the Arab world’s poorest country, despite a Saudi announcement last week that coalition operations would scale down and shift to focus on diplomacy, humanitarian and counter-terrorism issues. Both sides have said they welcome a return to dialogue. Greenpeace spots 3-mile oil slick off Spain’s Canary Islands MADRID (AP) — Greenpeace has called on Spain’s government to dedicate more resources to cleaning up an oil spill rising up from a sunken fishing trawler off the Canary Islands after spotting a five-kilometer (3-mile) slick. The group said one of its planes had detected “thick oil” covering the ocean just above where the Russian fishing boat Oleg Naydenov sank on April 14, about 24 kilometers (15 miles) south of the tourist hot-spot of Gran Canaria. Development Ministry spokesman Julio Gomez acknowledged Sunday that slicks were being monitored; a day after the government activated an alert, saying oil could damage the islands’ vulnerable coasts. The trawler, which carried 1,400 metric tons of viscous fuel oil, sank after catching fire in an island port and being towed out to sea as a precaution. Police suspect 4 kids locked in philly basement overnight PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Police say four children ages 9 to 13 were rescued from the basement of a Philadelphia home where authorities suspect they’d been locked since the day before. Investigators say one of the children used a cellphone to dial 911 and crews went through a second-floor window to reach them on Sunday. The 13-year-old boy, 12-year-old girl, 10-year-old girl and 9-year-old girl were taken a hospital for evaluation. Police say they are trying to track down the children’s mother. Officials say heavy rains kill 37 in northwest Pakistan PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Heavy rains and strong winds tore through northwest Pakistan on Sunday, uprooting trees, collapsing buildings and killing at least 37 people, officials said. The storm also injured over 200 people, provincial Information Minister Mushtaq Ghani said. Winds reached up to 120 kph (75 mph), said Lutfur Rehman, a local disaster management official. “It was very unusual. It took people by surprise,” Rehman said. Pakistan typically experiences such rains during its monsoon season in June and July. An emergency was declared at all local hospitals in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where Peshawar is the capital, Ghani said. The rain started Sunday afternoon and caused heavy damage to the region’s infrastructure, city commissioner Munir Azam said. All flight operations at the Peshawar airport were suspended because more rain was expected overnight, he said. (Continued on page 27) ➧ NEWS IN BRIEF… Union: Judge won’t dismiss officer’s manslaughter case CLEVELAND (AP) — A judge declined to dismiss the voluntary manslaughter case against a Cleveland officer in the deaths of two unarmed people after a high-speed chase that ended in a 137-shot barrage, police union officials said Sunday. The Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association said the decision in the case against Patrolman Michael Brelo was expected and it looks forward to presenting his defense when the trial resumes Monday. Prosecutors allege Brelo fired “kill shots” through the car’s windshield at Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams after they were no longer a danger to anyone’s life. Brelo fired his final 15 shots while standing on the hood of Russell’s beat-up Chevy Malibu, according to prosecutors. Brelo’s attorneys have argued the shots at the end of the November 2012 chase were lawful because the pair was still a threat until the moment the patrolman reached into the car and removed the keys. Police union President Steve Loomis said the union has “every confidence in our judicial system.” In statement Sunday night, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty questioned how that could be when, he said, the union has been encouraging officers not to testify when subpoenaed, the Northeast Ohio Media Group reported. “Why are they hiding?” McGinty said. Syrian insurgents capture military base in northwest BEIRUT (AP) — Islamic insurgents overran a military base at a converted brick factory in northwestern Syria on Monday, carting off tanks and other weapons in the latest blow to President Bashar Assad’s forces in the region, activists said. The opposition offensive in Idlib province has captured the provincial capital, a strategic town as well as villages and military bases since it began last month. An array of anti-Assad armed factions from across the ideological spectrum has demonstrated a degree of sustained coordination previously unseen in northern Syria, contributing to the campaign’s success. After hours of heavy fighting on Monday, the opposition fighters seized control of the base at the brick factory northwest of the town of Ariha, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Jisr al-Shughour activist coordinating committee’s Facebook page said. The Observatory said the insurgents captured seven tanks, armored vehicles, heavy machine guns and ammunition. Hundreds of German cinemas refuse to show ‘Avengers’ film BERLIN (AP) — Several hundred movie theaters in Germany have refused to screen the new “Avengers” film in a dispute over rental fees with Disney. News agency dpa reported that 686 theaters in 193 mostly small towns refused to show “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” which opened on Thursday. It said the dispute was over a decision to raise the rental fee for the movie to 53 percent of ticket sales rather than the 47.7 percent usually charged to small-town theaters. Karl-Heinz Meier of I.G. Nord, a group representing cinema operators in northern Germany, said it would have been prepared to go as far as a 50 percent fee. He added: “Disney will have to do without 686 screens on which the film otherwise would have been shown.” Meier says moviegoers have expressed understanding. NYPD’s Bratton: Less tension between city officials, union NEW YORK (AP) — New York Police Commissioner Bill Bratton says there’s “much less tension” between the police union and city officials now than there was in the aftermath of the chokehold death of a Staten Island man last year. Bratton spoke Sunday on the CBS program “Face the Nation.” New Yorkers protested the death last July of Eric Garner after police placed him in a chokehold on a Staten Island street. The incident was a flashpoint triggering discord between New York City officials and the police union. Bratton says he thinks New York has mostly recovered from that. The police commissioner says there’s “much less tension, fortunately, in that regard.” Ceremonies mark liberation of 2 Nazi camps 70 years ago BERLIN (AP) — Holocaust survivors and officials gathered Sunday at the memorial site of the former concentration camp Bergen-Belsen in northern Germany in a solemn ceremony to commemorate the liberation of the camp 70 years ago. The camp was liberated on April 15, 1945 by British soldiers who found more than 10,000 dead bodies when they entered the Nazi camp. German President Joachim Gauck thanked the British soldiers for the liberation and honored them as “ambassadors of a democratic culture who were not looking for revenge.” Around 200,000 people were deported to BergenBelsen during the Nazi reign of terror. More than 70,000 people died here — among them the famous Jewish teenage diarist Anne Frank. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 27 Continued from page 26 White House to unveil Obama state china WASHINGTON (AP) — A hue of blue inspired by the waters of Hawaii is a prominent feature of the Obama state china service being unveiled by the White House. President Barack Obama is a Hawaii native who returns every Christmas for vacation. Michelle Obama’s office says the first lady chose what’s being called “Kailua Blue” to distinguish her family’s china from the red, green, blue and yellow used on more recent state services. A fluted band of Kailua Blue, framed by a textured gold rim and a simple gold inner line, appears on all pieces of the service, except the dinner and serving plates, according to a description provided by the White House. The solid white dinner plates are edged in gold; the service plates have a wide gold rim and the presidential coat of arms at the center. The Obama state china service consists of 11-piece place settings for 320 people. The Obama state china service was paid for with money from a private fund that is used to buy fine and decorative arts for the White House and is administered by the White House Historical Association. The cost was not disclosed. NOW HIRING! TMO HARDWARE is looking for a dependable, hardworking, “CASHIER/FLOOR-PERSON” with great customer service & cash-handling experience. Full-Time position available and must be able to work on Saturdays. Applications are available at the store. In The High Court of American Samoa FAMILY, DRUG & ALCOHOL COURT DIVISION FDA/JR No. 65-14 IN RE: A MINOR CHILD NOTICE/FAAALIGA TO: Mr. LOFI (unknown last name) Tafuna Village Pago Pago, American Samoa 96799 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the abovenamed respondent that a petition has been filed before the High Court of American Samoa to terminate your parental rights in a female child born on January 20, 2012 at LBJ Tropical Medical Center, Fagaalu, American Samoa. A hearing will be held after two months and ten days from the date of the first publication of this notice, in which the Court may enter an order that you have not acquired any parental rights to the minor child and place the child for adoption. If you have any objection, or wish to claim or assert your parental rights, you must appear within two months and ten days from the date of the first publication of this notice and file an objection or a claim with the Court. O LE FA’AALIGA E TUUINA ATU ia te oe, le ua ta’ua i luga, ua iai le talosaga ua failaina i le Fa’amasinoga Maualuga o Amerika Samoa e iloilo ai ou aia fa’a-matua i se teineitiiti na fanau o ia i le aso 20 o Ianuari 202, i le Falemai i Fagaalu, Amerika Samoa. O lea iloiloga e faia pe a tuana’i le lua masina ma aso e sefulu mai le aso o le ulua’i faasalalauga o lenei fa’aaliga, mae ono tuuina atu ai se poloa’iga a le Fa’amasinoga e faailoa ai ua leai ni ou aia fa’a-matua i lea teineitiiti. Afai e te tete’e, pe e te finagalo e faamaonia ou aia fa’a-matua, ia e failaina se talosaga tete’e i le Fa’amasinoga i totonu o le lua masina ma aso e sefulu mai le ulua’i faasalalauga o lenei fa’aaliga. Dated/Aso: February 25, 2015 In The High Court of American Samoa TRIAL DIVISION HCPR No. 9-15 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MOEAVEAVE IOSIA Decedent, By: LOLENI MOEAVEAVE, Petitioner NOTICE OF HEARING ON VERIFIED PETITION FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a Verified Petition for Letters of Administration has been filed in the High Court of American Samoa, Trial Division, Territory of American Samoa, by LOLENI MOEAVEAVE, for the ESTATE OF MOEAVEAVE IOSIA, Decedent, who died on March 5, 2006, in Los Angeles, California. A hearing on the Petition will be held July 10, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, before the Trial Divison of the High Court of American Samoa, at the Courthouse in Fagatogo, American Samoa. All interested parties may appear before the Court on said date to respond to this Petition. Dated: April 06, 2015 Clerk of Courts Clerk ofC ourts Published 3/25/2015 & 4/27/2015 Published 4/14, 4/20, 4/27/15 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Cost U Less is currently recruiting for the following role: MERCHANDISING MANAGER. Accountabilities: Ensure the Merchandising Department exceeds all standards of timely, accurate and safe receipt of merchandise. Manage the Grocery, General Merchandise and Receiving areas of the store. Guarantee safe operations of all equipment. All interested applicants, please submit resume to [email protected] Page 28 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 In this Thursday, April 16, 2015 photo, local tourists visit the Meroe pyramids in al-Bagrawiya, 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Khartoum, Sudan. Sudan’s (AP Photo/Mosa’ab Elshamy) tourism industry has been devastated by a series of economic sanctions imposed over the countryís civil war and the conflict in Darfur. Sudan’s pyramids, nearly as grand as Egypt’s, go unvisited AL-BEGRAWIYA, Sudan (AP) — The small, steep pyramids rising up from the desert hills of northern Sudan resemble those in neighboring Egypt, but unlike the famed pyramids of Giza, the Sudanese site is largely deserted. The pyramids at Meroe, some 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, are rarely visited despite being a UNESCO World Heritage site like those in Egypt. Sanctions against the government of longtime President Omar al-Bashir over Sudan’s long-running internal conflicts limit its access to foreign aid and donations, while also hampering tourism. The site, known as the Island of Meroe because an ancient, long-dried river ran around it, once served as the principle residence of the rulers of the Kush kingdom, known as the Black Pharaohs. Their pyramids, ranging from 6 meters (20 feet) to 30 meters (100 feet) tall, were built between 720 and 300 B.C. The entrances usually face east to greet the rising sun. The pyramids bear decorative elements inspired by Pharaonic Egypt, Greece and Rome, according to UNESCO, making them priceless relics. However, overeager archaeologists in the 19th century tore off the golden tips of some pyramids and reduced some to rubble, said AbdelRahman Omar, the head of the National Museum of Sudan in Khartoum. On a recent day, a few tourists and white camels roamed the site, watched by a handful of security guards. Sudan’s tourism industry has been devastated by economic sanctions imposed over the conflicts in Darfur and other regions. Al-Bashir’s government, which came to power following a bloodless Islamist coup in 1989, has struggled to care for its antiquities. Qatar has pledged $135 million to renovate and support Sudan’s antiquities in the last few years. But Omar said Sudan still receives just 15,000 tourists per year. In this Thursday, April 16, 2015 photo, a view of the historic Meroe pyramids in al-Bagrawiya, 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Khartoum, Sudan. The site once served as the principle residence of the rulers of the Kush kingdom, known as the Black Pharaohs. Their pyramids, ranging from 6-meters (20-feet) (AP Photo/Mosa’ab Elshamy) to 30-meters (100-feet) tall, are some 4,600 years old. samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 29 Michigan vote tests pothole angst vs. will to raise taxes ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Drivers in the state that put the world on wheels are flatout embarrassed by the state of their roads. Some are even scared. Mary Jo Walentovic was driving on a Detroit-area interstate in February when a car kicked up a large chunk of road that smashed through her van’s windshield, destroying the rearview mirror and an armrest. If it’d struck inches either way, the 50-year-old church ministries coordinator is convinced that she, her teenage daughter and other motorists would be dead. Fed up, she plans to vote for a 1-cent sales tax increase on Michigan’s May 5 ballot that would put an additional $1.2 billion a year into fixing deteriorating roads and bridges in the auto-centric state. “It’s the least of the evils,” Walentovic said. Other states have asked voters in the past year whether to raise taxes or shift revenue to pay for road needs no longer fully covered by fuel taxes. The problem is particularly acute in Michigan, which spends less on highway infrastructure, per capita, than any other state except Georgia and is a major trucking route to and from Canada, the U.S.’s largest trade partner. The business lobby complains that key commercial corridors, such as Interstates 94 and 69, are a patchwork of cracks that only will become more expensive to maintain with time. Roughly one-fourth of states increased transportation taxes or fees in the past two years. But results were mixed in states where voters had a say. Missouri defeated a threequarters cent sales tax for transportation while Massachusetts repealed a provision automatically tying future increases in the gasoline tax to inflation. Texas voters approved using half the funds flowing annually into the rainy day fund for roads. Michigan’s measure may have a harder time passing because it wouldn’t just increase road funding. It would also raise an estimated $600 million more per year for education, local governments, public transit and other services as part of a legislative compromise. “It’s got this other agenda stuff to it that really isn’t about fixing roads,” said Jerry Carpenter, who owns a car repair shop a half-mile from the Capitol. “Yeah, everyone’s tired of bad roads. But are they willing to give up more money?” Drivers can spend hundreds of dollars a year on wheel alignments and suspension fixes because of streets on which he’s been hesitant to ride his motorcycle for fear of being thrown off. Crummy roads are good business for Carpenter, but even he said “we’re all going have to give up something to get the infrastructure built back up.” He said he likely will vote no, though, until a better option is presented. Paul Mitchell, a conservative Saginaw-area businessman and former congressional candidate who leads a group opposing the measure, said “voters deserve better than a $2 billion tax hit, of which only 60 percent goes to transportation.” The measure’s backers span the political spectrum and include Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, legislative leaders, local chambers of commerce, businesses and labor unions. They warn that the vote is a one-shot deal with no viable legislative Plan B in sight. More than half of Michigan’s major roads will be in poor condition within a decade if nothing’s done, up from 38 percent in 2014 and 23 percent in 2006, according to The Road Information Program, a Washington-based research group sponsored by road interests. There’s scarce data showing how the roads stack up against other states’ infrastructure, partly because pavement conditions are measured differently around the country. But drivers here are jealous when they visit nearby Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin — which spend between $125 and $230 more per person on their highways. “It’s embarrassing to have people visit Michigan,” said Carol Blotter, a retired consultant in the computer software industry who lives in Chelsea, outside Ann Arbor. “People comment, ‘Your roads are really bad.’” Like Snyder and the influential Michigan Chamber of Commerce — which is neutral on the measure — she would have preferred straightforward gas and diesel tax increases he unsuccessfully pushed in the Legislature. She worries about the sales tax hike disproportionally hitting lowerincome people but also likes that schools would get more funding. “If you wait for the perfect bill, you’ll wait forever,” said Blotter, who’s leaning toward backing the proposal. Construction contractors and companies have poured millions into the sales tax campaign and have greatly outspent conservative activist groups. The advertising blitz is needed because voters last OK’d a net tax hike in a statewide vote 55 years ago. An EPIC-MRA survey conducted a month ago showed just 25 percent of 600 likely FINAL ESTATE NOTICE To All Vendors, Financial Institutions or Individuals seeking any claim to the Michelle Falanaoti Eneliko Estate. Contact Herman Gebauer, Administrator of the Michelle Falanaoti Eneliko Estate at (684) 258-2962. voters in support and 66 percent against, with 10 percent undecided. While campaigning around the state, Snyder holds up plywood used underneath some highway overpasses to protect vehicles from falling concrete. He emphasizes that putting the matter to voters was the only way to address a critique of how Michigan pays for roads. The state has among the country’s highest taxes at the pump yet spends less because the sales tax applied to fuel mostly goes to education and municipalities. Under Proposal 1, the sales tax would be removed from fuel and all taxes at the pump would go to transportation. “We don’t like our roads. Let’s do something about it. This is our big opportunity,” Snyder said. NOTICE FOR SEPARATION AGREEMENT TO Members of the FAAGATA Family and to all whom these present may come! NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that PAESE AU & MALO AU of FAGATOGO has offered for recording in this office an instrument in writing which seeks to separate a certain structure which is or to be erected, on land FAULOLOA, allegedly belonging to FAAGATA FAMILY of the village of FAGATOGO. Said land FAULOLOA is situated in or near the village of FAGATOGO in the County of MAOPUTASI, Island of TUTUILA, American Samoa. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that any interested person may object to the recording of such instrument by filing in the Territorial Registar’s Office in Fagatogo, a written objection to the recording of said instrument. Any objections thereto must be filed with in 30 days from the date of posting of this notice. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that if no such objections are filed within the said 30 day period, the instrument will be recorded and shall be valid and binding on all persons. The said instrument may be examined at any time at the Territorial Registrar’s Office. POSTED: APRIL 21, 2015 thru MAY 20, 2015 SIGNED: Taito S.B. White, Territorial Registrar FA’AALIGA O LE FEAGAIGA MO SE TU’U’ESEINA I tagata o le aiga sa FAAGATA, ma i latou uma e silasila ma lauiloaina lenei fa’aaliga! O le fa’aaliga lenei ona o PAESE AU & MALO AU o le nu’u o FAGATOGO ua ia fa’aulufaleina mai i lenei ofisa se feagaiga tusitusi e fa’ailoa ai se mana’oga fia tu’u’eseina o se fale ua/po o le a, fa’atuina i luga o le fanua o FAULOLOA e fa’asino i le aiga sa FAAGATA, o le nu’u o FAGATOGO. O lenei fanua e totonu pe latalata ane i le nu’u o FAGATOGO, itumalo o MAOPUTASI, ile motu o TUTUILA, Amerika Samoa. O le fa’aaliga fo’i e fa’apea, so o se tasi e iai sona aia i lenei mata’upu e mafai ona fa’atu’i’iese ile fa’amauina o lenei feagaiga pe a auina mai i le ofisa ole Resitara o le Teritori of Amerika Samoa i Fagatogo, sana fa’atu’ese tusitusia. O fa’atu’iesega uma lava e ao ona fa’aulufaleina mai i totonu o aso e 30 faitauina mai i le aso na faíaalia ai lenei fa’aaliga. Afai ole a leai se fa’atu’i’esega e fa’aulufaleina i totonu o aso 30 e pei ona ta’ua i luga, o le a fa’amauina loa lenei feagaiga e taualoaina ma ‘a’afia ai tagata uma. 04/27 & 05/11/15 Human Resource Department, Tafuna PO Box PPB, Pago Pago American Samoa 96799 Phone No: (684) 699-3033 Fax No: (684) 699-3046 Email: [email protected] American Samoa Power Authority PUBLIC JOB POSTING Position Title Department Division Position Type Reports To REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL LAND SURVEYOR Engineering Services Division Operations Contract for 2 Years Posting Date Deadline Pay Range Job Grade/Status April 27, 2015 4:00 PM, May 1, 2015 $55K to $60K per year L/9/A to L/11/B Engineering Services Division Manager Major Duties & Responsibilities Actively manage survey operations for projects through planning, conducting, and recording of surveys to support legal proceedings within ASPA. Plan and conduct surveys by identifying purpose of survey, such as, topographic, hydrographic, construction, legal, cadastral, and control; researching previous survey evidence, maps, deeds and related records; schedule travel arrangements; Locate and determine land by measuring and calculating points, elevations, lines, angles, areas, and contours; laying out roads and improvements; Keep records of survey by preparing notes, records, drawings; writing legal descriptions; applying computer aided design technologies; lead the Geographic Information systems (GIS) team in getting the water and waste water and other utility asbuilts corrected; assist in updating the asset management database for all existing ASPA assets. Prepare legally defensible findings by following American Land Title Association (ALTA) and American Congress on Surveying and Mapping (ACSM) guidelines and related federal/local laws and requirements; Support legal proceedings by collecting, analyzing, and interpreting evidence; serving as an expert witness; Complete projects by coordinating requirements with acquisition, planning, development, construction, and holdings improvement departments, and government agencies; Update job knowledge by tracking changes and developments in property law and boundary establishment and replacement; participating in educational opportunities; reading professional publications; maintaining personal networks; and participating in professional organizations;Contribute to the enhancement of ASPA reputation by accepting ownership for accomplishing new and different requests; and exploring opportunities to add value to job accomplishments; and Quality Control MinimumR equirements Education Bachelor of Science in Surveying Technology and /or has an American Samoa or U.S. Surveyor license Experience Qualified candidates must have 5 or more years of experience within the surveying field as a Registered Professional Land Surveyor. Skills, Abilities, Job Requirements Registered Professional Land Surveyor, knowledge and understanding of ADA requirements, surveillance skills, analyzing information, conceptual skills, map reading, reporting research results, informing others, verbal communication, documentation skills, legal administration skills, problem solving, and knowledge and understanding of most up to date survey equipment. Must be physically fit to traverse all types of terrain. Other Requirements: Be a self-starter, pick up on new things in this field & implement; be punctual, maintain excellent attendance record. Qualified applicants: Please submit a completed ASPA Employment Application with a copy of your resume to ASPA Tafuna (address listed above) by the deadline listed above. Please attach copies of credentials and transcripts. Candidates selected for hire must pass examinations (when applicable), pre-employment clearances & test negative on pre-employment drug test. ASPA reserves the right to waive education and experience requirements as necessary. No phone inquiries accepted. An Equal Opportunity Employer * A Drug Free Workplace Page 30 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Cost U Less is currently recruiting for the following role: CUSTOMER SERVICE SUPERVISOR. Accountabilities: Ensure the Front End exceeds all standards of customer service. Monitor the handling of company funds. Perform all tasks assigned by the Customer Service Manager. All interested applicants, please submit resume to [email protected] EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Cost U Less is currently recruiting for the following role: RECEIVING MANAGER. Accountabilities: Ensure the Receiving Department exceeds all standards of timely, accurate and safe receipt of merchandise. Ensure safe operation of forklifts and all other equipment. Train and develop employees. All interested applicants, please submit resume to [email protected] Volcano still active, but Chile no longer fears a major blast SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Authorities downgraded the likelihood of a major eruption at the Calbuco volcano, although the mountain remained active Saturday and the ash clouds it already ejected caused cancelations of more airline flights. Rodrigo Alvarez, head of the National Mining and Geology Service, told TVN television that Calbuco’s seismic activity had changed and experts no longer expected any additional eruption to exceed the two big blasts of Wednesday and Thursday. He stressed that the volcano was likely to remain active and said more eruptions are possible. Officials urged people to keep using masks or handkerchiefs to prevent breathing in dust and they warned against drinking water from surface springs that could have been contaminated by falling volcanic ash. A few airline flights were cancelled Saturday as ash from Calbuco spread over more of the southern half of South America, although most flights were unaffected. At the foot of the volcano, authorities allowed some of the 1,500 people who evacuated the town of Ensenada to return temporarily to their homes to carry out belongings and clean up damage from the heavy ash fall. Numerous buildings were damaged by the weight of ash blanketed Ensenada, which is the closest town to Calbuco. “Here there is nothing else to do, rescue the little that you can and move on. And there are no more words. All that happened is in sight and this house is no longer good for anything,” Andres Reyes said of his house. Residents also sought to care for their cattle, the main livelihood of the town. Interior Minister Rodrigo Penailillo, who visited the area around the volcano about 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) south of Chile’s capital, said the government would compensate farmers for losses from the eruptions. Fish farms, another major business for the affected area, also had significant damage, with ash fall choking thousands of fish in their tanks. More than 6,000 people have been evacuated and authorities are maintaining a 12-mile (20-kilometer) exclusion zone around the volcano. Calbuco roared back to life Wednesday afternoon, after lying dormant since a minor eruption in 1972. It billowed ash about 11 miles (18 kilometers) high in the initial blast, then several hours later produced a second, spectacular outburst that turned the nighttime sky reddish orange and caused huge lightning bolts to crackle through its ash plume. Love, cookies helped sisters lost in Michigan woods survive CRISP POINT, Mich. (AP) — Two sisters from Oklahoma and Nebraska said Saturday that they survived in a remote part of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on love for their family, melted snow and the little food they had in their snow-crippled SUV. A day after being spotted by a police helicopter in Luce County, Leslie Roy, 52, and Lee Marie Wright, 56, offered thanks to their rescuers and others involved in the nearly two-week search after they disappeared earlier this month. “Through the days and nights while in the woods, we survived using love and hope in our families,” they said in an emailed statement. “Our faith in God held our confidence that we would eventually be found. We took note of circling aircraft, available water resources, the supplies we had with us. These factors eased our mind and allowed us to stay alive for thirteen long days.” Roy, of Valley, Nebraska, and Wright, of Depew, Oklahoma, got stuck about 3 miles from Crisp Point Lighthouse along Lake Superior. They had been visiting relatives in Ishpeming, near Marquette in another part of the peninsula. The sisters had planned to head south on April 11. They had a reservation at a hotel in Mackinaw City but never showed up. Instead, they were trapped in snow on a little-used road until a police helicopter pilot noticed a reflection Friday off the Ford Explorer. There was no cellphone service and the vehicle eventually lost power. State police Detective Sgt. Jeff Marker told The Associated Press that Roy and Wright wore layers of clothing to stay warm, melted snow to drink and ate Girl Scout cookies and a bag of cheese puffs. The sisters were examined Friday at an area hospital and released. “Lee and I would like to thank everyone. Friends, family, strangers from afar for all of their thoughts and prayers,” they said in the statement. With legalization, lawyers turn to the business of pot SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Lawyers and pot dealers have long intersected in criminal court, but as marijuana goes mainstream, attorneys have been working to keep sellers and growers legit. Marijuana divisions are popping up at law firms to advise pot shops on where they can locate, what their websites can say and how to vet new clients. “It’s definitely something that established firms are dipping a toe into, though they are being very cautious, and rightly so,” said Sam Kamin, a professor at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law who teaches a class about representing the marijuana industry. Kamin said the firms see marijuana as a lucrative new industry, but still worry about the potential ethical and legal pitfalls — and how it will affect their reputations. Marijuana has become a multi-billion-dollar industry. California and more than 20 other states have legalized the drug for medical use, and the pot business has gotten a boost from more recent approvals of recreational use in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington state and Washington, D.C. Pot advocates hope growth continues, as they push for voters to approve recreational pot in California, Arizona, Nevada, Maine and Massachusetts next year. The drug remains illegal under federal law, however, and the American Bar Association’s rules of professional conduct prohibit lawyers from assisting in criminal conduct. With this in mind, attorneys say they focus on providing advice about what state marijuana laws do and don’t allow, and decline to answer questions about how clients can bend the rules. “We’re not your consigliere. We’re not an organized crime family,” said Khurshid Khoja, a legalization advocate and founder of San Franciscobased Greenbridge Corporate Counsel. “We’re legitimate business people.” Khoja’s firm is among a new crop dedicated solely to marijuana clients, including packaging companies and investors. But for law firms with other practice areas, there is also concern about how non-pot clients will view their marijuana work. At the Seattle, Washingtonbased law firm of Harris Moure, the marijuana practice group has a completely separate brand — Canna Law Group — with its own website. “It was a calculated defense mechanism against the potential legal and reputational concerns,” said Hilary Bricken, who heads up the group and boasts a unique accolade on her website — DOPE Magazine’s attorney of the year. Bricken started the practice group in 2010 and now brings in roughly $1 million of revenue to the firm each year, she said. Marijuana law, in many ways, is no different from other legal practices, attorneys say. It involves contracts, real estate transactions, trademarks and regulatory compliance. What is unique, though, is the constant prospect of running afoul of the law. “Everybody’s question can be summarized like this: How can I engage in this type of activity without going to prison,” said Aaron Lachant, an attorney at the Los Angelesbased law firm of Nelson Hardiman. The legal issues that come up also often have little or no precedent, said Dan Garfield, an attorney at Foster Graham Milstein & Calisher in Denver, Colorado. Garfield, whose firm got into the marijuana field several years ago, was recently working on an appeal of a federal court’s ruling that a couple did not qualify for bankruptcy protection because their assets largely stemmed from marijuana enterprises. “Lawyers don’t like to say, ‘I don’t know,’” Garfield said, but for marijuana clients, he’s says it far more often than for others. For marijuana entrepreneurs, legal guidance can bring peace of mind. Shy Sadis, 42, who has medical and recreational marijuana stores throughout Washington state, said Bricken has helped him trademark “The Joint,” one of his store names, locate properties that would comply with the state’s recreational marijuana rules and create forms that new patients must fill out. “I haven’t been shut down. I’m not in tax trouble,” he said. “She’s shown me the right way to run these businesses, so I don’t get into trouble.” samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 Page 31 FAASALALAUGA SUAFA “TUANA’ITAU” O PAVA’iA’i E muamua ona ou fa’atulou atu i le paia mai Saua se’ia o’o atu i Falealupo. Pa’ia foi i le Aufaigaluega a le Atua i fata faitaulaga e fia, Tulou, Tulou, Tulouna Lava. Ia fa’ata’alolo atu la’ia o pa’ia na. A’o lenei fa’asalalauga e fa’asino tonu i Suli moni uma o le Suafa “Tuana’itau” i le afioaga o Pavaiai. Le afioaga o afio ai le Afioga i le Sa’o ma ona Tei, Susu le Telesa, Susuga Ma’ava ma Taumafalofi, Fetalaiga i le Matua, Nofo a Tualauta, Salemeana’i ma le Lufilufi. O le a faia la tatou talanoaga i le Aso To’ona’i, Me 16, 2015 i le itula e 10:00 i le taeao, i le Maota talimalo o Tuana’itau i Pavaiai lava. E vala’au atu ai, ina ia tatou auai faatasi i lea aso ua atofaina. O lou le auai o le a le taofia ai finagalo o aiga. Faia ma le fa’aaloalo tele, TOLUAO SEUTA’ATIA 47 CHANNEL * (E) English Subtitles * (L)-Live Programming/News * (R)-Rerun *Note: If you need this Schedule, e-mail <[email protected]>. and I will send it to you every week!” “TRUTH of DOKDO!” <http://www.truthofdokdo.com> <http://www.forthenexgeneration.com> NATIONAL PACIFIC INSURANCE LIMITED “Working with the Community” TEL: 633-4266 • FAX: 633-2964 Page 32 samoa news, Monday, April 27, 2015 C M Y K C M Y K O se tasi o vasega sa fa’atautaia i le potu e a’oa’o ai le Gagana & Aganu’u a Samoa i Fagaitua High, na matua tumu ma tau masuasua lea vasega, ma sa fiafia tele i latou e talanoa e tusa o mea e tutupu i le tatou atunu’u fa’atasi ai ma ni agava’a e mafai ai ona avea i latou ma nisi e tusitala fa’asamoa. Igoa o le fanau aoga: Tomi Tuifaiga, Jack Aifili, PJ Fagaima, Toliniu Lui, Selaina Tuato’o, Deuteronomy Tafaovale, Laralena Aab, Finau Tuitea, Toreka Fa’alanu Galu, Taufaiula Tali Anoai, Eteuati Eteuati Jr, Shakinah Ga’opo’a, Meaalofa Tavita, Sebastian Auva’a, Jacinta Tavita, Oneil Leato, Regina S. Togia, Pesi Ta’alolo, Jedediah Manaea ma Zarrenathien Vaiula. [ata: Leua Aiono Frost]