![]() ![]() In Hebrew, Akamu means “red dirt” or “of the earth.” Akamu: Hawaiian for Adam, and being a black rhino, it would be similar to the DC Comics character, Black Adam.The public can choose from three names selected by zoo staff: He has just recently been allowed to explore the outdoor habitat, and visitors can now see parents and baby in the zoo’s African Savanna. Zoo staff says the male baby rhino is healthy and growing. All donations go to the Honolulu Zoo Society to support enrichment for the baby rhino.Zoo staff will select the name that earns the most donations.People can vote in-person via a voting donation box or online.The public is invited to vote for one of three proposed names for the zoo’s newest Eastern black rhinoceros by July 9."It's a great hill, but the speeding is the concern of all the neighbors," he said. Nick Batchelor, 34, said that in the three years he has lived in that neighborhood, he has seen a moving truck that had fallen over on its side, a car flipped upside down and a garage that someone drove through. Kuhn said something needs to be done to curb the speeding. "It's very steep there, and I think people's brakes just give out," she said. His wife, Jean, said their house has never been hit, but "a couple times, people have ended up on our lawn." "It may be just an impression, but I think it's accurate," he said. Halsall's neighbor Harvey Gochros said he has lived on Halekoa Drive for 30 years and that it seems like there have been more accidents in the past two years than there were in the previous 20. However, residents lobbied to prohibit parking on one side of the street. "It did slow traffic down because you had to wind your way through the parked cars," he said. Ron Halsall, who lives about a block up from the accident site, said his house has been hit several times, and someone recently hit a tree in his yard as she was driving up the hill.Īt one point, parking was allowed on both sides of the two-lane street, Halsall said. She said there have been three traffic accidents recently, including a head-on collision that killed two people. There's so many blind curves going down or coming in." Kristen Lozada, 17, said: "If you don't know the hill, there's a lot of surprises. Some residents go door to door to talk to their neighbors about speeding, and someone recently posted a sign on an electrical box that said, "Need traffic cam here."Īlthough the cause of yesterday's accident has not been determined, Anna Kuhn, who lives three doors down, said that people who saw it said the man was obviously trying to step on his brakes, but they failed him. Neighbors who gathered near the accident scene to watch the investigation said traffic accidents occur frequently in the area. His identity was not released as of last night.įirefighters searching residences and the nearby hillside found no evidence of passengers, he said. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene. The victim was ejected from the Chevrolet van, which came to a rest on its side, Tejada said. ![]() when the van went across the upward-bound traffic lane, just missing a garage at 1835 Halekoa and then over the hill. Kenison Tejada said the victim was traveling down Halekoa Drive at about 1:35 p.m. The driver was pronounced dead at the scene.īy Treena man was killed yesterday when the van he was driving veered off the steep mountain road that climbs Waialae Nui ridge in East Honolulu, crashed through a wall and fell 30 feet onto a neighboring lawn. FL MORRIS / firefighters surveyed the scene where a van crashed through a wall yesterday at 1835 Halekoa Drive and ended up below in the backyard of 1829 Halekoa Drive. ![]()
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