
The race pits the top one-man paddlers from Hawaii, who qualified by finishing among the leaders of last May's Kaiwi Challe-
nge, a tandem race from Molokai to Oahu. Six teams have been invited to the event, with each team allowed as many crew changes as desired.
The teams are: brothers John and Jim Foti; Mark Rigg and Walter Guild; Courtney Seto and Chris Kincaid; Steve Cole and Pat Erwin; Michael Smith and Rich Lambert, and Todd Bradley and Todd Hart.
The Fotis were members of the winning Molokai Hoe crew from Lanikai Canoe Club last October. Recently, John Foti won the Hamilton Island, Australia, sprint race while Jim Foti was the marathon race winner.
Rigg is the defending Bankoh Molokai Kayak Challenge champion. Guild doubled up in Australia with victories in the sprint and marathon masters races.
Seto was on the winning Kaiwi Challenge crew in 1994 and Kincaid finished second in the 1995 Molokai Kayak Challenge.
Cole, from Kauai, won the 1995 Kayak Challenge. Kailua's Erwin won the '94 Kayak Challenge.
Smith and Lambert were on the Lanikai crew in the 1996 Molokai Hoe. Bradley and Hart have been on previous Molokai Hoe winning crews from Outrigger.
Kendrick set BYU records for most games won (16) and innings pitched (148) in 1981. This also was the year the left-hander beat the University of Hawaii in both ends of a doubleheader in Provo, Utah, as BYU won the Western Athletic Conference championship.
He finished his BYU career with a 29-8 record and 3.08 ERA.
Kendrick works for the Boeing Commercial Airplane Company as a tool design engineer.
Parker McLachlin posted the local group's best score with a 4-over-par 76. Co-leaders Andy Miller of Napa, Calif., and Boyd Summerhays of Farmington, Utah, posted 64s.
Ian MacNaughton was at 79.
In the girls' division, Anna Umemura had an 83, 17 strokes behind Candy Hannemann of Brazil.
Donner won the middleweight division title, then went on to defeat women's champions in the lightweight, heavyweight and openweight fighting (kumite) karate divisions to win the grand-champion crown.
The first races on Saturday and Sunday start at 8:30 a.m. and competition will continue until 2 p.m.
There are 16 teams and over 300 participants entered from Hawaii, Saipan, Japan and San Francisco.
She is the seventh freshman (including two redshirt freshmen) and third Oahu Interscholastic Association all star to sign with HPU this year.
Fifty professional and amateur teams will compete for the title and $6,000 in prize money.
One of the top entries is the team of Hawaii's Henry Somerville and Anand Amritraj, a 16-year Association of Tennis Professional pro tour player.
Amritraj led India into the Davis Cup final in 1974 and 1977 and won 27 ATP and WCT titles.
Qualifying matches run from July 28 to Aug. 2, with the main draw beginning play on Aug. 4. The final is set for 6 p.m., Aug. 10
There is no admission fee.
Bejgrowicz, a 5-foot-8 outside hitter, was an Interscholastic League of Honolulu first-team selection in both volleyball and basketball and was named HBA's outstanding female athlete.
The fee is $100 per person. Tee sponsorships are available.
For additional information, call Keith Ching at 836-0037 or Russell Kuwaye at 839-0557.