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Good Old Hawaii
submitted by Greg & Gerri Delos Santos
When you could buy one big sack of See Moi for a nickel... and
then you ate the whole thing and licked the bag... Gramma said, you go
Chinese School, you say "NO!" she said, you go, I buy you see moi, you
say OK.
Windward side... taro patches... rice paddies...water buffalo...
When you mentioned Kaneohe, everyone knew you were talking about the
pupule house... When the tallest building in Honolulu was the Aloha
Tower... Radio personalities like.. J. Aku Head Pupule on KGMB in the
mornings saying "OK, all you SLOBS, it's time to GET UP!!!" Hey, no
foget Lucky Luck's "Lucky you come Hawaii!" and remember Don Chamberlin
and "Don in the fishbowl" from Fran's Drive Inn.. When you lived in
Honolulu, T.H.... Signs on vacant and private property that said KAPU...
When the site of AlaMoana Shopping Center was a big swamp.
Waialae-Kahala was mostly pig farms. and the area next to the airport
was a neighborhood called Damon Tract...
Kids chanting... Ching Chong Chinaman, Sitting on a fence,
Trying to make a dollah, Out of fifteen cents... Red, White and Blue,
Stahs ovah you, Mama say, Papa say, you pake... Grade school JPO's...
Junior Police Officers in their white shirts, khaki pants, polished
black shoes, red helmets and arm bands... 25 cents going Saturday
Matinee, Queen's Theater..I remember 9 cents at Varsity Theater and 25
cents could get you movie, soda, and popcorn at Golden Wall
Theatre....Wearing Band-Aids and a "limp" to get into the Saturday
matinee without shoes... Flipping milk caps on the sidewalk during
recess... and deciding who got to go first by playing Jung Ken Po... And
when you did something dumb everybody yelled..."Bakatare You!" And when
you did something naughty they shook their finger and said..." A hana
koko lele!"
Moonlight swimming... Bonfires on the beach... Strumming
ukuleles, singing and everyone knew the words to all the old Hawaiian
songs... You were greeted with... Ei, bu!... Ei buggah, how you stay?..
or Ei, blah-lah... Going to Maunakea Street to buy ginger leis... The
old Pali road with the hairpin turns... and if it was really windy, the
hood of the car blew open...
The bestest freshest poi at Ono's on Kapahulu Ave...Also bestest
Laulau, Kalua Pig, Opihi, sticky rice, Lomi Salmon, Pipikaula, Na'au
Puaa, Haupia...Broke da mout'! Dollar bills with HAWAII printed across
them...I still got some...
Going to high school football games at the ole stadium ---
lovingly called the Termite Palace.
Guys getting their kicks sparking the wahines from under the
stands... soggy bags of boiled peanuts sold by squatting sellers...and
Football players smothered with leis and lipstick walking off the
field... Harry Bridges, Teamsters Union leader, calling union dock
strikes...causing food shortages... Sad Sam Ichinose... Kau Kau Korner,
the meeting place with the "Crossroads of the Pacific" sign out front,
the most photographed sign in the world... The waitresses wearing short
skirts, soda hats and skates bringing your order to the car on a window
tray...How good those hamburgers smelled! "Aloha Oe... eat fish and
poi"...
When those lucky people who lived in Waikiki sold their lots for
$5.00 a square foot and we all thought they were getting rich...
Everyone discussing the "Mauka Arterial" and when it was finally
completed we all got lost because we didn't know East from West... All I
knew was Ewa side and Diamond Head side... Mauka and Makai. Holding the
49th State Fair year after year...and finally becoming the 50th state in
1959... Looking at Diamond Head... when all you could see from Waikiki
was the Natatorium and the Elk's Club... Hey, don't forget the Town &
Country Club Riding Stables and the taro patches. Old Chinese ladies
with bound feet shuffling along wearing dark grey tunics and trousers...
Japanese men in Kimonos carrying a towel and a bar of soap walking to a
stream in the evening.. Filipino men from Waipahu on the bus with their
game cocks in cages.. Elderly Japanese squatting, waiting for the bus...
Trying to find the coins wrapped in red paper and pieces of tissue (with
holes in them that the evil spirits had to go through)...from Chinese
funerals... Watching Duke Kahanamoku surfing at Waikiki and shaking
hands with him.
Beach boys with da kine, ho'omalimali and Hawaiian music under
the palm trees at the Royal Hawaiian and the Moana... Surfers with 8
foot boards that weighed a ton... Waikiki sand always washing away and
having to be replaced by sand from the windward side... Old Chinese men
playing mah-jongg under the hau trees at Kuhio Beach... Saint Louis boys
singing "We get ten tousand men steel yet, we gonna ween dees game you
bet... " My friend wen go St. Louis but I no tink he remember this.
Rubbing maunaloa seeds on the sidewalk until they got hot enough to burn
somebody's arm... The excitement of the Lurline coming in... Lei sellers
everywhere... "Carnation lei... fifty cents, plumieria.. .three for
dollah".. Local boys diving for coins... big beautiful jelly fish... a
tangle of streamers from ship to shore... passengers tossing leis
overboard as the ship pulls away... if they floated toward shore, they
would return...
When KGMB and KGU were the only radio stations... Lots of Mynah
birds on the sidewalks... mongoose living in a neighborhood tree...
Going Pali lookout to "spahk da moon"... "I took my wahine holo holo
kaa, I took her up the Pali, she say "too muchee faa." Pull down the
shade, try to make the grade... Lei ana ika.. black eye!" Going Diamond
Head or Ala Moana to watch the submarine races... Swimming in the
streams and whacking each other on the head with shampoo ginger... Never
driving over the Pali with pork in your car...you going get stuck... No
need test...I wen test for you and the car engine wen maki. Going to
"First Vue" at the Waikiki theater! ...eating crackseed..the palm trees
and flowers that looked so real. .the usher who wore a feather cape and
helmet and ever smiled...Every Friday night at 10:15 and you had to make
reservations. Talking mynah birds...I had one dumb minah bird...never
did speak to me. Lights out... clack, clack, clack. what's dat?...turn
on lights... one BIG centipede! Alfred Apaka... Kalima Brothers... Gabby
Pahinui...slack key...steel guitars... Don' forget Auntie Genoa Keawe.
Surfing at Waikiki and watching the outrigger canoes along side
of you full of mainland tourists wearing bathing caps... Surfing Waikiki
all day without eating, getting red eyes... going back again the next
day.. because when you caught those waves and rode them all the way
in... it was worth it! Underwater... trying to catch a ride on the back
of a turtle... Underwater... trying to look at fish and eels without a
mask...
Swimming at Fort DeRussy... trying not to get stung by da
Portuguese Man-o'-War...There was a pier behind the Moana Hotel There
was a jungle between the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and Kalakaua. And you can
go catch Samoan Crab, White Crab, Hawaiian Crab and dig for Oysters and
Clams in West Loch. The big tidal wave from Japan that washed up
over Kalakaua Avenue... Being able to tell what month it was by the color
of Diamond Head... When inside Diamond Head was open ed to the public
again.. hiking inside and finding big cannons sticking out of concrete
pukas. 1949... auwe!... a big underwater shelf broke off and shook the
whole island!
Webley Edwards with his mike walking along the beach and talking
to the tourists... and taking the mike down to the ocean to let everyone
listening on the mainland hear the sound of the waves at Waikiki... on
Hawaii Calls... When all the tourists were mostly movie stars or rich
and came on Matson ships and stayed at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and wore
furs in the evenings!.. Walking down Waikiki Beach and sparking movie
stars without their toupees, wigs and make-up... And sell them coconut
hats for $10 per hat. Trader Vic's... Don the Beachcomber's... the Zebra
Room all painted with Zebra stripes outside... Seeing painfully
sunburned and peeling tourists at Waikiki... Doing the Hula in the "May
Day is Lei Day in Hawaii" celebration... Using the uli-uli's, ili ili's
and pu'ili's... making our own hula skirts out of ti leaves... splitting
the ti leaves with our thumb nails and having green hands for a week...
4 digit phone numbers? No, I remember 5 digits.
English standard schools...Japanese language lessons...
When nobody locked their houses or cars..."Right on the
kinipopo"... When anything that said "Made in Japan" was junk... When
everyone called Plumerias "Graveyard Flowers"... (MAKE' MAN!!) When
restaurants were called either Cafes or Grills... Wooden sided station
wagons filled with bananas... "Banana Wagon"... Buying Sushi cones on
way home from school from the Sushi man and his cart on the corner...
Sunday morning, December 7, 1941... masks... air raid drills... backyard
bomb shelters... 442nd, "Go for Broke"... "bobbed wiah" on da beaches...
KILROY WAS HERE... Eating lots of Spam...
Kaimuki red dirt...everything you bought white turned reddish
brown... your sheets, your underwear... Surfing in your palaka bathing
suit... Fitted Holokus with long trains with a loop for your wrist...
Tita dress: cuffed up Levis, Aloha shirt with the sleeves rolled up
twice, ear rings and slippahs... Wearing a white sailor hat.. Wooden
slippahs with two slats of wood across the bottoms...we called them
"clop-clops"... when you could buy sox and tennis shoes that came
in-between the big toe and the rest of your toes... Waking up with mo'os
in your bed, sometime dead because you slept on them and sometime just
their tails were left behind... Shave Ice on a hot day... Finding
Japanese green, white and lavender glass fishing balls in various sizes
floating in to the beaches on the North shore... "Calabash cousins"...
Watching sea weed being harvested on a weekend... Torch fishing at
night...
Example of a "dumb haole"... driving up Tantalus and Round Top
Drive and haole says, "I bet these roads are really dangerous when it
snows"... Listening to Hawaii Calls... Playing around the mouth of
Blow-Hole... trying to guess when it would blow... so you could run...
Playing on top of the Reservoir in Kaimuki... When there were so many
palm trees that coconuts were falling on people's heads... and owners
cutting them down for fear of getting sued... Arthur Godfrey playing his
ukulele... Hale Loki... "Hawai-ya, Hawai-ya, Hawai-ya?" and
Chesterfields... Listening to the Japanese radio station and hearing
Japanese men grunting...The traffic cop in a little booth in the middle
of the street with an umbrella over it... Uku-pile-a-roaches and FLIT
GUNS... later to be replaced by...the SLIPPAH.. Servicemen...
complaining about "life on the rock", drinking, swearing, hitchhiking,
making passes, driving too fast, and sometimes getting blown off the
Pali on their motorcycles... Manoa Valley... swiping painted candles
from the Chinese Cemetery...laying on the graves to see what it felt
like to be dead.. looking at all the photos on the gravestones and
wondering about their lives... sliding down the ti leaf slide and going
home covered with mud... going "mountain apple-ing"...hiking to the
falls in the rain through the bamboo when there was no trail... "liquid
sunshine" everyday about the same time... fire crackers and smoke
filling the valley and the houses on Chinese New Year... When everyone
had a pune'e and at least one old Koa table in their home... When
Nu'uanu Valley was a thick, lush, tropical rain forest.. with many
upside down falls... the monkeypod tree in the middle of the road at
Nu'uanu and Vineyard...
Kapiolani Drive-In... Fran's Drive In ..KC Drive In (for Waffle
Hot Dogs & Orange Freeze -- umm ono!) alongside the Ala
WaiCanal...Kelly's Drive In... When Kalakaua Ave. was a two-way
street... Admission to the Honolulu Zoo and the Aquarium was free...
Waialua, Ewa, Kahuku and Waianae sugar plantations...working in the cane
fields... cane trains... the irrigation system was up on wooden
stilts... Honolulu Airport was on the Diamond Head side of the runway...
Jumping into the water holding a Hau leaf in your mouth so the water
wouldn't go up your nose... Working in the pineapple factory and the
fields... Riding horses in Kapiolani Park... When the Natatorium was
called the Tank... The Manapua Man...The Lunch Truck at Ala Moana Beach
and their ONO chow fun and the curry beef stew over rice when you're
cold from swimming. The Japanese neighborhood vegetable wagon. Lau Yee
Chai was on Kuhio Ave. and set off firecrackers every Saturday evening
at 6...
Going to dances at the Ala Wai Clubhouse and dancing under the
stars (and sometimes raindrops!). Riding the electric boats on the
fragrant Ala Wai Canal.
Going to the Saimin Stand for a bowl of saimin for 15 cents and
BBQ stick for 10 cents... wonton mein for 25 cents. And, big cone sushi
for 5 cents a pc.
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Photo Memories...
 J Aku Head Pupule Radio Show.
 Construction of Ala Moana Shopping Center.
 Canlis Restaurant…how many of you ate here after an event?
 The "Termite Palace", where most of our football games were held…
 Where everyone would meet to see where the outlaw races were going to be at that night?
 Tearing down the Civic Auditorium…
 Another hot spot after staying up all night dancing at all the different clubs…
 The downtown area…
 Enjoying "Gabby's" music…
 The hula dancers at our airport…
 The Lucky Luck Show…
 How many of us worked at the Dole Cannery for extra money…
 The Dole landmark tower…
 It use to be called the Wailalae Shopping Center…and now it's the Kahala Mall…
 Another great spot for food and drinks…
 For great parties and good Chinese food…
 A great Drive-In for movies, until the faceless ghost came along…
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