Punahou School

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Punahou School
Seal of Punahou School
Location
1601 Punahou St.
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96822

USA
Information
Affiliation(s) Non-Sectarian
President Dr. James Kapaeʻalii Scott '70
Students 3,700 (approx.)
Faculty 292 teachers
Type Private Preparatory Day (Primary and Secondary)
Grades K-12
Campus Urban
Athletics conference ILH (Interscholastic League of Hawaii), Division I
Mascot "Buffanblu" The Blue Buffalo
Color(s) Buff and Blue
Established 1841
Nickname "Buffnblu"; colloquially "Puns" or "Buff 'n Blue"
Newspaper Ka Punahou
Yearbook Na ʻOpio (K-8)
The Oahuan (9-12)
Homepage
The school was originally called Oahu College, and the main gate at the corner of Wilder and Punahou Street reflects this.
The school was originally called Oahu College, and the main gate at the corner of Wilder and Punahou Street reflects this.

Punahou School, once known as Oahu College, is a private, co-educational, nonsectarian college preparatory school located in Honolulu in the U.S. State of Hawaii. With about 3,700 students attending the school, in kindergarten through the twelfth grade, it is the largest independent school in the United States.[1] In 2006, Punahou School was ranked as the nation's "greenest" school in America.[2]The student body is diverse, with student selection based on both academic and non-academic considerations.[3] In 2008, its sports program is ranked by Sports Illustrated as the best in the country out of 38,000 high schools.[4]

Along with academics and athletics, Punahou also offers visual and performing arts programs. Students have access to a jewelry studio, a pottery studio, a photography darkroom, and glass-blowing facilities. The Punahou marching band goes on a trip once every four years, and most recently they participated in the 2007 Rose Bowl Parade, and the student yearbook, The Oahuan, has won national awards from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association[citation needed] and the American Scholastic Press Association[5], including the first Columbia Gold to be awarded in the State for the 2002 Oahuan[citation needed].

Tuition is $16,675 for the 2008-2009 school year[6][7], not including optional and mandatory fees. Tuition charges do not cover the entire cost of the education of a student, and this "deficit" is met by the school's endowment.[8]

The 115801 Punahou is an asteroid named in the school's honor.[9]

Contents

[edit] History and tradition

Founded in 1841, Punahou School was originally a school for the children of Congregational missionaries serving throughout the Pacific region. It was known as Oahu College from 1859 to 1934.

The land on which Punahou School sits (colloquially known as Ka Punahou) was given as a gift from Oahu's Governor Boki and his wife, Liliha (as suggested by Queen Kaʻahumanu) to the Rev. Hiram Bingham, the first Christian missionary in Hawaiʻi. The first class was held on July 11, 1842 and consisted of only fifteen students. The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.[10] Many traditional events take place on the campus. On the first Friday and Saturday of each February, the campus hosts the annual Punahou Carnival, whose proceeds benefit the Financial Aid program.[11] The campus also hosts the Alumni Luau Weekend, where alumni come together and meet. The new graduates were invited as well.

[edit] Case Middle School

Before plans were made for a new middle school complex, America Online founder and Punahou School graduate of 1976 Steve Case donated ten million dollars. [12] This led to construction of a new middle school for grades six through eight.[13] The Case Middle School was actually named in honor of Steve Case's parents.

The middle school was designed and built by John Hara Associates Inc. Some time into the project, the school learned about Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. The school then hired a design consultant, John Hara ('57)[14] for sustainability[15] and found out that they could earn the LEED Gold certification.[16] [17] At the time, few projects anywhere had earned this rating.

The middle school also won the Energy Project of the Year award in the Seventh Energy Efficiency Awards, sponsored by Hawaiian Electric Company.[18][19]

Different methods were used in addressing issues of sustainability within the building. Installed sensors shut off air conditioners if windows are opened to let in the breeze; the buildings are situated to take full use of the tradewinds, with the help of the Venturi effect. There are also sensors in place that turn the lights on or off depending on whether motion is detected, and dim the lights on sunny days or brighten them on overcast or cloudy ones. More efficient fluorescent lamps are used, saving 75% of the energy and lasting 13 times as long as incandescent ones.

Air conditioning for the buildings is provided by three ice-making plants, one for each grade level's section. The units freeze and accumulate ice at night when electricity is cheaper, and allow the ice to melt during the day to cool the air.

The whole school cost more than $50 million USD and was made possible solely through donations.[17] The new middle school opened on January 4, 2005, although the sixth graders had been using their buildings since the beginning of the 2004–2005 school year.

Case Middle School consists of nine color-coded buildings—green for sixth grade, blue for seventh, and red for eighth—on the lower east side of Punahou campus.

One of the nine new Case Middle School buildings on the Punahou Campus.
One of the nine new Case Middle School buildings on the Punahou Campus.


[edit] Legends

During the Second World War, a complex system of tunnels was built beneath the entirety of the school's campus. Today students and faculty make passing mention to "the tunnels," for they have fallen into common albeit obscured lore, even though the question of their existence has yet to be satisfied. Whether the tunnels remain, in part or in whole, has no real consensus. Some confidently claim that the network still exists in tact, others explain that it was filled with concrete decades ago, after it lost its use, but most are simply unsure. Students have yet to find an entrance to the alleged passages, an aspect of the legend that has added mystique and variant tall descriptions and tellings of an underground scene no known person alive on campus has actually experienced. Stories of what remains of and in the tunnels have been passed down by word of mouth since the late 1970s, after unexplained construction sites on campus stirred curiosity about the old wartime tunnels.


[edit] Athletics

The Punahou athletics program is the most successful in the state and one of the most successful in the nation, having won more state championships (322) than any other high school in the nation.[20] In 2005, it was named the #4 U.S. high school athletics program by Sports Illustrated. Three years later, Punahou was recognized as the #1 high school athletics program by Sports Illustrated. [4] Athletic facilities include the heated Waterhouse Pool, holding an Olympic-sized swimming pool, and the Atherton Olympic size 8-lane Mondo track surface. The school also has a fieldhouse for competitive athletics, a gymnasium for physical education and intramural sports, and a tennis center with 9 hard surface courts.[21]

Punahou students have the opportunity to compete in 22 sports, including air riflery, baseball, basketball. bowling, canoe paddling, cross country, cheerleading, football, golf, gymnastics, judo, kayaking, riflery, sailing, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo, and wrestling. Punahou has approximately 120 sports teams. The school is a member of the Interscholastic League of Honolulu.

Punahou has a tradition of sending athletes to the Olympic Games, contributing seven gold, five silver, and three bronze medals, competing in nine of the past ten games, and over half of the modern games. Punahou alumni include 2008 Olympic hopefuls Noa Sakamoto and John Flanagan (swimming), and Mike Lambert and Stein Metzger (volleyball). High school junior Christel Simms has qualified to swim for the Philippines.

Punahou's Sports teams go by the name The "Buffanblu." This is after the schools colors, and also in honor of the Blue Buffalo of the television series Kikaida.

[edit] Religion and Ethics

Punahou requires all students (K - 12) to attend Chapel once every 6-day cycle. [22]

[edit] Notable students and faculty

Main article: Punahou School alumni

Punahou people in the news include Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama, AOL-founder Steve Case and eBay-founder Pierre Omidyar (Omidyar attended and is on the Board of Trustees, but graduated from a different high school). On television, Carrie Ann Inaba is a judge on Dancing with the Stars and Dance War: Bruno vs. Carrie Ann; Sarah Wayne Callies recently played Dr. Sara Tancredi on Prison Break; and Kelly Preston has been a guest on Medium. Inaba just appeared on the People Magazine 2008 Most Beautiful list. Graduate Rod Lurie produced Commander in Chief (TV series) and Deterrence (film) portraying the first woman President and the first Jewish President of the United States. Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense Ryan Henry was the Bush administration's point man when the U.S. accidentally delivered nuclear missile components to Taiwan. Wendy Lee Gramm is the spouse of Texas Senator Phil Gramm who is currently co-chair of John McCain's Republican Presidential campaign.

Punahou has produced leaders in the government of Hawaii (e.g., Sanford Dole who was President of the brief Republic of Hawaii, then Justice and Governor of the Territory; Lawrence M. Judd was also a Governor). It has produced U.S. senators from Illinois and Connecticut (Obama and Hiram Bingham III, who is alleged to be the model for Indiana Jones). Otis Pike, who attended Punahou, is known for the Pike Committee investigations of Richard Nixon while he was a Congressman from New York. At least three alumni made their names in civil rights leadership, the Educator of the Disenfranchised,[23] an Unlikely Hero,[24] and the Uncommon American[25]: General Samuel C. Armstrong fought at the Battle of Gettysburg, led U.S. Colored Troops, and founded Hampton University to educate the freed slaves and Native Indians in the way that his father had educated the Hawaiians (and no doubt, as the Hawaiians had educated him); Judge Elbert Tuttle led the federal courts that desegregated the South; and Secretary John W. Gardner, who attended, was Lyndon Johnson's architect of the Great Society. The Anti Defamation League names its jurisprudence award for Tuttle. Tuttle and Gardner were awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

In professional sports, Norm Chow developed many NFL quarterbacks while coaching at USC, and is now with the UCLA Bruins after a few years with the Tennessee Titans. Punahou has produced seven NFL linemen and three running backs, including Mark Tuinei who played fifteen years for the Dallas Cowboys. The current Punahou football coach, Kale Ane is son of Pro bowler Charley Ane, and nephew of Herman Clark and Jim Clark; the four combined for a total of 260 NFL games over twenty seasons for the Packers, Chiefs, Lions, Redskins, and Bears. LPGA golfer Michelle Wie is a well known Punahou graduate, though many golf fans also know of rising golfers Bridget Dwyer and Parker McLachlin.

In medicine, Punahou graduates have helped found and lead societies such as Physicians for Social Responsibility, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and Infectious Diseases Society of America. In academia, Punahou can point to endowed professors at Berkeley, Stanford, UCLA, Duke, Illinois, Notre Dame, and Boston U. At Berkeley, there are currently three Professors of Law (Andrea Peterson, Linda Hamilton Krieger, and Ian Haney-Lopez), the anthropologist Patrick Vinton Kirch, and a Dean of International Studies (John Lie) from Punahou. Reverend Father Robert Spitzer is the president of Gonzaga University and Marie Mookini has been admissions director for Stanford and its business school for over two decades. A former student founded the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center. Elizabeth Bennett Johns has been a Guggenheim Fellow. Mount Rex is named for a former student who studied and funded atmospheric research.

Punahou has a connection to Mills College through its former president, Cyrus Mills, who helped found the college with his wife, Punahou alumna Susan Tolman Mills. Queenie B. Mills was a Kindergarten director who helped design the Head Start program. Another connection is anthropologist Laura Thompson.

In the arts, Kevin McCollum (attended) directs a Broadway production company that claims ten Tony Awards and a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and Allan Burns was a 6-time Emmy Award-winning writer and creator, known for such shows as The Munsters, Get Smart, Mary Tyler Moore Show, and Rocky and Bullwinkle. Ken Peterson animated Snow White, One Hundred and One Dalmatians, and Sleeping Beauty. Buster Crabbe, who had won a gold medal in the 1932 Olympics, portrayed Tarzan, Flash Gordon, and Buck Rogers in film. Gerry Lopez is well known for surfing, but is also known as Subotai in Conan the Barbarian. Three danced for the early Martha Graham. Leilani Jones won a Tony Award on Broadway. Amanda Schull had the lead role as an aspiring ballerina in Center Stage. The Kingston Trio had two Punahou founders, Dave Guard and Bob Shane, producing ten top-40 hits and a #1 Grammy-winning single. Robin Luke was a Rockabilly Hall of Fame act.

Punahou has a striking list of military alumni. Francis Wai won a posthumous Medal of Honor, Killed in Action in the Battle of Leyte Gulf. The school can claim at least nine Army Generals, two Rear Admirals, a Marine Major General, and six Air Force Generals. Many of the students were children of high level commanders, e.g., a Marine Commandant Wallace M. Greene, Jr., stationed in the Pacific, and many had their family reassigned before graduation. This includes General Edward Timberlake, Colonel Red Reeder, General Donald Booth, and General Walter Johnson, all of whom graduated from West Point, and all of whom had important WWII commands. Colonel Farrant Turner, Major Alex McKenzie, and Major John Johnson commanded the Nisei 100th Infantry Battalion, the latter being Killed in Action at Cassino. The Destroyer, USS Chung-Hoon (DDG-93) is named after Punahou football star, Gordon Chung-Hoon, who survived the attack on the USS Arizona (BB-39). Charles L. Veach was an astronaut on two shuttle missions.

Henry Wells Lawrence, who taught computing, was among the first pilots in the air during the Attack on Pearl Harbor (his pistol is fired at an attacking plane in Pearl Harbor (film)). In addition to Bingham and Lawrence, Brewster Morgan's story is told in The Great Escape and Robert Alexander Anderson's story is told in The Dawn Patrol (both were downed pilots); a third pilot, Ted Withington, had his letters published as Flight to Black Hammer. Charlie Wedemeyer's story is told in the Emmy-award winning film Quiet Victory. Armstrong, Tuttle, Gardner, and Obama have had formal biographers. James Michener's story Hawaii and the film, Hawaii (film), refer directly or indirectly to the historical acts of Lorrin A. Thurston, Sanford Dole, Hiram Bingham I, Henry Baldwin, and Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole in the transition from monarchy to US territory. Their classmates, such as Alexander Cartwright III, were important early players of baseball, as initiated in the islands by Alexander Cartwright, Jr., the official inventor of the game.

Briefly attending Punahou in historical times were Sun Yat-Sen, the founder of the Republic of China, and Paul Linebarger, whose father helped advise the Chinese revolution of 1911, and who himself befriended Chiang Kai-shek and advised John Kennedy on intelligence and foreign policy.

Punahou alumni appear across the political spectrum, from Ronald Reagan's "favorite economist" Wendy Lee Gramm and Robert Silberman, Assistant Secretary of the Army for George W. Bush; to centrist Ray Schoenke, a former Democratic candidate for Maryland Governor who founded the American Hunters and Shooters Association (an alternative to the NRA); to animal rights activist Taimie Bryant, environmentalists such as Otis Pike, and Jerry Berman, chief counsel of the ACLU.

[edit] Alma Mater

[edit] Oahu'a

Oahu'a, Oahu'a
Punahou, our Punahou;
O Mau a Mau, O mau a mau,
Punahou, our Punahou.
Through all the years we've shown our light,
We glory in Oahu's might;
The Buff and Blue's a glorious sight,
Punahou, our Punahou.

The song is sung to the tune of Maryland, My Maryland also known as "O Tannenbaum". The spelling is from the original words to "Oahu wa" written in 1902 by a student.

[edit] School Shout

Ready? Okay!
Strawberry Shortcake, Huckleberry Pie
V - I - C - T - O - R - Y
Are We In It? Well I Guess!
Punahou, Punahou, Yes, Yes, Yes!

[edit] See also

[edit] Further Reading

  • "Punahou School: a private school with a public purpose," Hawaii Business, September 1, 2003. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go2021/is_200309/ai_n9142055
  • A. Alexander, "Baseball at Punahou Thirty-Seven Years Ago," Oahuan, June 1906.
  • Mary C. Alexander, C.P. Dodge, William R. Castle, Punahou, 1841-1941, U. California Press, 1941.
  • John B. Bowles, Day Our World Changed: December 7, 1941; Punahou '52 Remembers Pearl Harbor, Ice Cube Press, 2004. ISBN 1888160020
  • T. K. Chow-Hoy, "An inquiry into school context and the teaching of the virtues," Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2001.
  • D. Cisco, Hawaii Sports: History, Facts, and Statistics, University of Hawaii Press, 1999.
  • Ethel Mosely Damon, The Seventy-Fifth Anniversary Pageant Punahou, published by the author, 1916.
  • Charlotte P. Dodge, Punahou, The War Years, 1941-1945, 1984.
  • Nelson Foster, ed., Punahou: The History and Promise of a School of the Islands, published by Punahou School, 1992.
  • James A. Michener, Hawaii, Bantam Books, 1960. ISBN: B0000CKM6G
  • Norris W. Potter, The Punahou Story, Pacific Books, 1969.
  • Punahou Class of 1957, Na Halia Aloha o Punahou Class of 1957, June 2007 http://www2.punahou.edu/pdf/Bulletin/Classof57BookWeb.pdf includes many historical photos and legend of founding.
  • M. Tate, "The Sandwich Island Missionaries Lay The Foundation for a System of Public Instruction in Hawaii," The Journal of Negro Education, 1961.
  • Kirby Wright, Punahou Blues, Lemon Shark Press, 2005. ISBN 0974106712

[edit] References

  1. ^ About Punahou. Punahou School. Retrieved on 2008-06-03.
  2. ^ The Top 10 Green Schools in the U.S.: 2006
  3. ^ Punahou: Admissions. Punahou School. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  4. ^ a b Murphy, Austin (20 May 2008). Fast Times at Punahou. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
  5. ^ Plass, Richard M.. Annual Contest/Review for Scholastic Yearbooks, Magazines and Newspapers; Yearbooks 2006 - FIRST PLACE. American Scholastic Press Association. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
  6. ^ Tanji, Melissa (17 June 2007). Tuition going up, but so is demand, at private schools. The Maui News. Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
  7. ^ Da Silva, Alexandre (25 February 2007). Private schools to raise costs 6%. Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved on 2007-07-20.
  8. ^ Punahou: Tuition and Payments. Punahou School. Retrieved on 2007-04-14.
  9. ^ 115801 Punahou (2003 UW236). JPL Small-Body Database Browser (21 March 2006). Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  10. ^ HAWAII - Honolulu County - Historic Districts. National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
  11. ^ A pirate’s life for all! Aarghh!. Honolulu Star-Bulletin (4 February 2005). Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
  12. ^ Duchemin, John (28 January 2000). $10 million grant from Steve Case energizes Punahou. Pacific Business News. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
  13. ^ Punahou Earns "Gold" LEED Certification. Punahou School. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  14. ^ Punahou Case Middle School. Herman Miller (2005). Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  15. ^ Zhang, Linda; Rigney, Lauren (27 November 2006). Service program focuses on environment, Punahou urges students to help the community. Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
  16. ^ McRandle, P.W.; Smith, Sara Smiley (15 August 2006). The Top 10 Green Schools in the U.S.: 2006. The Green Guide. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  17. ^ a b Shenitz, Bruce (11 July 2007). A Green Star. msnbc.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
  18. ^ Shining Stars- Punahou's Case Middle School wins award. Honolulu Star-Bulletin (16 January 2007). Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  19. ^ 2006 Energy Efficiency Award Winners Fact Sheet. Hawaiian Electric Company. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
  20. ^ Punahou School. SportsHigh.com (2002). Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  21. ^ Punahou Athletics Facilities. Punahou School. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  22. ^ Punahou: Chapel and Character Education
  23. ^ Engs’ book analyzes historical enigma - News
  24. ^ Amazon.com: Unlikely Heroes: Books: Jack Bass
  25. ^ PBS - John Gardner, Uncommon American: HOME

[edit] External links

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