Hatada's Tv Inc

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334 Kilauea Ave
Hilo, HI 96720
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Premier Businesses in Hawaii, HI

Battery Bill's
  • • Battery Chargers
  • • Power Supply Batteries
  • • New Batteries
(808) 833-3797
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Law Office Of James J. Stone
  • • Medical Malpractice & Wrongful Death
  • • Brain Injury & Trucking Accidents
  • • Automobile Injury & More
(808) 223-7810
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Tree Surgeon Experts And Landscape Services
  • • 24-Hour Emergency Service
  • • Hauling & Cleaning Of Debris
  • • Tree Trimming, Lacing & Shaping
(808) 375-0890
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Andy's Car Care Service Inc
  • • Full-Service Radiators
  • • Repairs & Parts
  • • Annual Radiator Flush
(808) 845-6422
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Things To Do in Hawaii, HI

Honolulu Zoo Honolulu Zoo

The Honolulu Zoo features more than 1,230 animals in a 300-acre setting that comes from royal beginnings. The zoo was established by grants made by the sovereign monarch of King David Kalakaua. In 1877, the land in the area was beautified and opened as Queen Kapiolani Park in honor of Julia Kapiolani, Queen Consort of Hawaii.

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Ukulele Festival Hawaii Ukulele Festival Hawaii

Enjoy the sweet strains of the instrument that has come to symbolize Hawaii. At the Annual Ukulele Festival in Hawaii, guest artists and a ukulele orchestra of more than 800 schoolchildren entertain the thousands who attend each year in downtown Waikiki.

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The Honolulu Museum of Art The Honolulu Museum of Art

The Honolulu Academy of Arts was founded in 1922 and opened to the public on April 8, 1927. It was the vision of Anna Rice Cooke, a woman born into a prominent missionary family on O‘ahu in 1853. Growing up in a home that appreciated the arts, she went on to marry Charles Montague Cooke, also of a prominent missionary family, and the two settled in Honolulu. In 1882, they built a home on Beretania Street, on the site that would become home to the museum. In 1961, Thurston Twigg-Smith opened an art gallery—the Contemporary Art Center—within the Honolulu Advertiser building, which he owned. The gallery featured work from Twigg-Smith's collection and work by local artists. In 1988, the Twigg-Smith family donated Spalding House, which was built by Honolulu Academy of Arts founder Anna Rice Cooke, to create The Contemporary Museum, a private, nonprofit museum for contemporary art in Honolulu. In 2011, The Contemporary Museum gifted its assets and collection to the Honolulu Academy of Arts and in 2012, the combined museum changed its name to the Honolulu Museum of Art.

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