Waimea is KIF Cheer Champs

KAPA‘A — The Waimea High School cheer squad under team captain Kyrie Linoz captured top honors during the Kaua‘i Interscholastic Federation cheer championships at the Bernice Hundley Gym on the Kapa‘a High campus.

Corregedore makes state medal count; Burgess finishes in Top 20

LIHU‘E — Bad weather conditions impacted the finish of the Honolulu Marathon Hawai‘i High School Athletic Association Cross Country Championships that unfolded under the mist and fog Saturday at the Hawai‘i Preparatory Academy on Hawai‘i Island.

Happy Camper for Wednesday, December 8, 2021

“The weather outside is frightful,” goes the line of a popular tune of the season. And yes, it was frightful with all that wind and rain, but mahalo to all the farmers who braved the elements to have the Pau Hana Market at Kukui Grove Center in Lihu‘e (even if it was just for an hour), and mahalo to all the shoppers who stopped by for their fruit and vegetable needs.

‘Kona low’ rains down on Kaua‘i

LIHU‘E — The heavy rain that lashed most of Kaua‘i throughout Monday was the precursor to moist and unstable conditions expected to last through Tuesday.

Final in-person collection closes for Kaua‘i Toys for Tots

LIHU‘E — People waiting to contribute to the Toys for Tots campaign are able to drop off their contributions at any of the Kaua‘i fire stations, said Capt. Rod Green of the U.S. Marine Corps League that coordinates the Toys for Tots campaign on Kaua‘i.

Kaua‘i officials anticipate rise in cases

LIHU‘E — Monday, the Hawai‘i State Department of Health Kaua‘i District Health Office reported 10 new cases of COVID-19. Two of these cases are of visitors and the rest are residents. All 10 cases are adults.

Trump gets wish in Georgia, sparks ‘a political civil war’

ATLANTA — Less than a year after losing the presidency, Donald Trump has set out to reshape the GOP in his image across the nation’s top political battlegrounds, sparking bitter primary battles that will force candidates and voters to decide how much to embrace Trump and his grievances.

Emmett Till investigation closed by feds; no new charges

JACKSON, Miss. — The U.S. Justice Department said Monday it is ending its investigation into the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till, the Black teenager from Chicago who was abducted, tortured and killed after witnesses said he whistled at a white woman in Mississippi.

Biden to warn Putin of economic pain if he invades Ukraine

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is ready to warn Vladimir Putin during a video call Tuesday that Russia will face economy-jarring sanctions if it invades neighboring Ukraine as the U.S. president seeks a diplomatic solution to deal with the tens of thousands of Russian troops massed near the Ukraine border.

US plans diplomatic boycott of Beijing Winter Olympics

WASHINGTON — The U.S. will stage a diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympics in Beijing t o protest Chinese human rights abuses, the White House confirmed Monday, a move that China has vowed to greet with “firm countermeasures.”

Desperation drives thousands of Afghans a day across borders

HERAT, Afghanistan — Over the course of an hour on a recent night, the bus waiting in the Herat station filled with passengers. Mostly young men, they had no luggage, just the clothes on their backs, maybe a bag with some bread and water for the long road ahead of them.

Beyond Ukraine, plenty of issues for Biden-Putin talks

WASHINGTON — Russia’s military buildup on the border with Ukraine will be the top focus of talks between President Joe Biden and Russia’s Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, but there are plenty of other thorny issues on the table as well, including cyberattacks, human rights, and US-Russian relations that a Kremlin spokesman says are overall in “a rather dire state.”