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List of Punahou School alumni

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This is a list of notable graduates, students who attended, and former faculty of Punahou School, a private, co-educational, college preparatory school in Honolulu, Hawaii. An asterisk (*) indicates a person who attended Punahou but did not graduate with senior class. Parents and children of alumni are noted only if they have made significant achievements in the same field or activity.

Numerous athletic, educational, cultural, business, and government leaders of significance to the State of Hawaii have been excluded, as well as most University of Hawaii and other State of Hawaii educators, and Hawaii-based entertainers, and artists.

Olympic athletes, medalists and other world champions

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Beach volleyball

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Diving

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Dressage (equestrian)

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Kayaking

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Sailing

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Surfing

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  • '10 Carissa Moore, first Olympic gold medal in women's short board surfing in 2020

Swimming

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Warren Kealoha, 1920 and 1924 gold medalist in swimming
Buster Crabbe, 1928 bronze and 1932 gold medalist in swimming, then Hollywood leading man
Lindsey Berg, two-time silver medalist setter for US Volleyball, 2004, 2008, and 2012

Volleyball

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Water polo

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Track

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Other world champion athletes and recent All-Americans

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Professional athletes

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Football

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Norm Chow, former NFL offensive coordinator
Manti Te'o, NFL rookie linebacker
Michelle Wie, LPGA winner

Baseball

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Volleyball

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Fred Hemmings, state senator and world surfing champion, 1968
Carissa Moore, surfing champion, 2011

Tennis

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Golf

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Surfing

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Mixed martial arts

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Leading medical doctors

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Professional society and government leaders

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Other prominently published medical researchers and research faculty

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  • '53 John Maesaka (Harvard)—emeritus director of nephrology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center and Winthrop University[58]
  • '63 William R. Sexson[59] (Air Force Academy)—clinical dean and professor of pediatrics at Emory[60]
  • '69 Dale T. Umetsu[61] (Columbia)—endowed professor of pediatrics at Harvard[62]
  • '71 Jan H. Wong (Stanford)—professor of surgery at UCLA[63]
  • '79 Theodore R. Cummins[64] (Swarthmore)—professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Indiana
  • '79 Mahesh Mankani[65] (Stanford)—professor of surgery at UCSF
  • '79 Arno J. Mundt[66] (Stanford)—chair of radiation oncology at UCSD
  • '79 Annabelle A. Okada (Harvard)—Fulbright Scholar, professor of medicine at Kyorin U (Tokyo), Practical Manual of Ocular Inflammation[67]
  • '79 Leanne Brooks Scott (Rice)—dean of research at Baylor College of Medicine[68]
  • '79 Karen K. Takane[69] (Michigan)—research professor of medicine at U Pittsburgh
  • '79 Hal F. Yee[70] (Brown)—head of gastroenterology and interim chief of medicine at UCSF
  • '79 Alan R. Yuen[71] (Berkeley)—professor of medicine at Stanford Medical
  • '80 Daniel C. Chung[72] (Harvard)—professor of medicine at Harvard
  • '84 Jason T. Kimata[73] (Carleton)—professor of microbiology at Baylor

Other clinical faculty at top medical schools or clinically notable M.D.s

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  • '32 Andrew S. Wong (Yale)—clinical professor of ophthalmology at Yale[74]
  • '37* M. Neil MacIntyre (Michigan)—professor of anatomy and human genetics at Case Western (attended 1931–35)[75][76]
  • '50 Ray Maesaka (Harvard)—director of dentistry at Indiana, Maesaka Award (Indiana University School of Dentistry)[77][78][79]
  • '52 Wilfred Morioka (Princeton)—professor of surgery at UCSD, President of Otolaryngologic Society, and United States Navy Captain[80]
  • '64 Stephen W. Wong[81] professor of ophthalmology at Temple[82]
  • '72 Nancy Morioka-Douglas[83] (Stanford)—chief of family medicine at Stanford[84]
  • '77 Sidney Ontai (Harvard)—professor of family medicine at USC[85][86]
  • '78 Dimitri Voulgaropoulos (Harvard)—professor of anaesthesiology at Arizona[87]
  • '78 William Loui (Brown)—assistant clinical professor for the University of Hawaii’s Cancer Center and John A. Burns School of Medicine[88]
  • '79 Scott Oishi (Washington University in St. Louis)—professor of surgery at University of Texas Southwestern Medical School[89]
  • '80 Elizabeth Blair[90] (Creighton)—professor of surgery at U Chicago[91]

Other leading educators and researchers

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General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, founder of Hampton University, one of many heroes at Gettysburg

Administrators and general subjects

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Law and business

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  • '31 Ronald B. Jamieson[104] (Harvard)—Emeritus Lecturer of Law at University of Washington who certified 1960 United States presidential election for Kennedy after close recounts, cited in Bush v. Gore decision[105][106][107]
  • '33 Honorable Samuel P. King—Federal District Court Judge, Ninth Circuit; co-author, Broken Trust: Greed, Mismanagement and Political Manipulation at America's Largest Charitable Trust
  • '48 Isaac Shapiro[108] (Columbia)—Professor of Law at NYU and Columbia, Working but Poor: America's Contradiction, The Soviet Legal System
  • '54 Robert M. Seto[109] (Saint Louis U)—Emeritus Professor of Law at Regent University, federal patent and contracts judge
  • '60 Evan L. Porteus[110] (Claremont)—Endowed Professor of Business at Stanford, Foundations of Stochastic Inventory Theory
  • '61 William Ouchi (Williams)—Endowed Professor of Business at UCLA, U Chicago, and Stanford, Theory Z and Making Schools Work, Chief of Staff of LA Mayor Richard Riordan

‘65 Robert Klein (Stanford)-Associate Justice Supreme Court of Hawaii

  • '70 Andrea L. Peterson[111] (Stanford)—Professor of Law at UC Berkeley
  • '72 Linda Hamilton Krieger[112] (Stanford)—Professor of Law at UC Berkeley and UH, Reinterpreting Disability Rights
  • '74 Warren R. Loui[113] (MIT)—Lecturer in Law at USC
  • '82 Ian Haney-Lopez[114] (Washington University in St. Louis)—Professor of Law at UC Berkeley, The Chicano Fight for Justice and The Legal Construction of Race

Science

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  • '33* Daniel F. Rex (MIT)—lieutenant commander at Office of Naval Research and NCAR, Mount Rex (Antarctica), Troposphere and Stratosphere (attended 1929–30)[115]
  • '42* John Killeen (Berkeley)—Emeritus Professor of Physics at UC Davis, founding director of National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, Computational Methods for Kinetic Models of Magnetically Confined Plasmas[116][117][118] (attended 1934–36)
  • '46 Alison Kay (Mills)—malacologist and Fulbright scholar, Shells of Hawaii, Natural History of the Hawaiian Islands
  • '54* Michael J. Holdaway[119] (Yale)—Emeritus Professor of Geology at Southern Methodist University (attended 1943–48)[120]
  • '54 David W. Steadman[121] (Harvard)—director of art and natural history museums, expert on birds and extinctions, e.g. IMAX film Galapagos
  • '61 Herbert M. Austin[122] (Grove City)—Professor of Marine Biology at William & Mary
  • '64 Henry W. Lawrence, Jr.[123] (Yale)—Professor of Geosciences at Edinboro University, City Trees
  • '64 Lynn A. Sherretz (St. Olaf)—Chief Meteorologist at NOAA, Preliminary Study of Ocean Waves[124]
  • '66 J. Vann Bennett[125] (Stanford)—Endowed Professor of Cell Biology, Biochemistry, and Neuroscience at Duke University[126]
  • '69 John W. Newport[127] (Reed)—Professor of Cell Biology at UCSD[128]
  • '71 Marcy Uyenoyama[129] (Stanford)—Professor of Biology at Duke
  • '71 Howard W. Walker[130] (UH)—Naval research chemist, seven patents on silicon processes
  • '74 Shannon Crowell Atkinson[131] (UH)—Professor of Marine Biology at U Alaska
  • '74 William D. Thacker[132] (MIT)—Professor of Physics at Saint Louis University
  • '79 Laura S. L. Kong[133] (Brown)—director of International Tsunami Information Center
  • '79 Jonathan V. Selinger[134] (Harvard)—Ohio Eminent Scholar and Professor of Chemical Physics at Kent State University, Assoc. Editor of Physical Review E

Logic, philosophy, mathematics, computing and engineering

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  • '59* Robert M. Harnish[135] (Berkeley)—emeritus professor of philosophy at Arizona, twenty books, including Linguistics and Minds, Brains, Computers[136] (attended 1954–57)
  • '62 John Stephen Walther[137] (MIT)—Hewlett Packard developer of CORDIC
  • '65 Lynn Sumida Joy[138] (Harvard/Radcliffe)—professor of philosophy at Notre Dame, book on Pierre Gassendi
  • '69 John P. Richardson, Jr.[139] (Harvard)—professor of philosophy at NYU, four books including Nietzsche
  • '72 Bruce M. Ikenaga[140] (MIT)—professor of mathematics at Case Western and Millersville University
  • '72 Patricia Sullivan Kale[141] (Berkeley)—Lawrence Livermore computer scientist, one of the many thousands of researchers involved in the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium, contributing to final stages of the Human Genome Project[142]
  • '72 Michael C. Loui[143] (Yale)—IEEE Fellow, professor of electrical and computer engineering at U Illinois, department chairman, graduate dean
  • '72 Phillip M. Smith[144] (Cornell)—IEEE Fellow, director and Global Engineering Fellow at BAE Systems
  • '74 John Bear[145] (New Mexico)—SRI International computational linguist
  • '79 Ronald Loui (Harvard)—professor of computer science at Wash U, patent holder on packet processing hardware,[146] Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning and Legal Knowledge and Information Systems
  • '81 Robert C. Zak, Jr.[147] (MIT)—patent holder on variable-refresh DRAM,[148] other computing architectures
  • '82 Chau Wen Tseng[149] (Harvard)—professor of computer science at U Maryland, Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing and Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
  • '89 Herbie K. H. Lee III[150] (Yale)—professor of statistics at UC Santa Cruz, Multiscale Modeling and Bayesian Nonparametrics

Social science

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U.S. Senator from Connecticut Hiram Bingham III, Professor of History at Yale and explorer, possible inspiration for Indiana Jones
Secretary of HEW John W. Gardner, architect of the Great Society, Professor of Management, and Education at Stanford, awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom
U.S. President Barack Obama, formerly U.S. Senator from Illinois, Constitutional Law Lecturer at University of Chicago
  • '23 Laura M. Thompson[151] (Mills)—anthropologist who taught at UNC, NC State, CCNY, CUNY, SIU, SFU, and UH; Malinowski Award and honorary LLD from Mills College, Toward a Science of Mankind and Secret of Culture, spouse of Indian Affairs commissioner John Collier
  • '31* (?) Paul Linebarger, a.k.a. Cordwainer Smith—instructor in government at Harvard, Professor of Political Science at Duke and Johns Hopkins, fifteen books of science fiction, five nonfiction works including Psychological Warfare, Bronze Star, Army Major, helped form Office of War Information, advisor to CIA and John F. Kennedy, buried at Arlington National Cemetery (attended 1919–20)[152]
  • '43 Joyce Lebra Chapman (Minnesota)—Fulbright Scholar, Emerita Professor of History at Colorado, nine books on women and Asia
  • '62 Elise Kurashige Tipton[153] (Wellesley)—professor and chair of Japanese studies, University of Sydney (Australia), Modern Japan, Japanese Police State, etc.
  • '63 Jonathan M. Chu[154] (Penn)—Fulbright Scholar, professor of history at U Massachusetts Boston, Neighbors, Friends, or Madmen
  • '63 Christine Hamilton Rossell[155] (UCLA)—endowed professor of political science, Boston University, five books, including School Desegregation in the 21st Century
  • '65 Frederick E. Hoxie[156] (Amherst)—endowed professor of history at U Illinois, twenty books on Native American peoples
  • '66 Ellen Lenney[157] (UH)—professor of psychology at U Maine Orono, early researcher on gender roles, oft cited, e.g., Women Don't Ask
  • '68 E. Mark Cummings III[158] (Johns Hopkins)—endowed chair in psychology at Notre Dame U, five books on child development
  • '68 Patrick Vinton Kirch (Penn)—endowed professor of anthropology at UC Berkeley, elected to American Philosophical Society, nine books on oceanic and Polynesian prehistory
  • '68 Patricia A. Roos (UC Davis)—professor of sociology at Rutgers, Explaining Women's Inroads into Male Occupations, and Gender and Work, VP of American Sociological Association[159]
  • '70 James J. Moore[160] (Stanford)—professor of anthropology at UCSD
  • '78 John Lie (Harvard)—endowed professor of sociology at UC Berkeley and U Illinois, dean of international studies, six books on Korea, Japan, and two textbooks on sociology
  • '83 Jennifer Hickson Frankl[161] (Princeton)—professor of economics at Williams College
  • '84 Hugh C. Crethar[162] (Oklahoma)—endowed associate professor of counseling and counseling psychology at Oklahoma State University and co-author of Inclusive Cultural Empathy[163]
  • '89 Adria L. Imada[164] (Yale)—professor of ethnic studies at UCSD
  • '89 Devah Pager[165] (Wisconsin)—associate professor of sociology at Princeton University

Arts and humanities

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Civil rights leaders

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Honorable Judge Elbert Tuttle, brigadier general, leader of the federal court that desegregated the South, awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom

Other elected representatives, government appointees, judges

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United States Presidents

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US Senators

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Brian Schatz, US Senator and Hawaii Lieutenant Governor
  • 1892 Hiram Bingham (Yale)—Republican US Senator from Connecticut 1924–33, discoverer of Machu Picchu, lecturer at Harvard and Princeton, Professor of History at Yale, spouse to the Tiffany fortune heiress, buried at Arlington National Cemetery, possible inspiration for Indiana Jones
  • '90 Brian Schatz (Pomona)—Democratic US Senator from Hawaii, former Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii

US Congressional representatives

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Hawaiian Prince Kūhiō, 20-year delegate to the U.S. Congress
Interim Republican Congressman from Hawaii, Henry Baldwin
Democratic U.S. Congressman from New York for 19 years, Otis Pike, Pike committee investigator of Richard Nixon
Interim Republican U.S. Congressman from Hawaii in 2010, Charles Djou

Presidential appointees

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Honorable Judge Sanford Dole, first Governor of Hawaii
Honorable Judge Walter Frear, third Governor of Hawaii
Lawrence Judd, seventh Governor of Hawaii
Honorable Judge William Charles Achi, Jr., Territorial Judge
William Castle, Jr., Appointee of Presidents Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover

Local officials, other representatives and appointees

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Albert Francis Judd, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Hawaii
USMC major general Ross T. Dwyer, USMC Aide to the Secretary of the Navy

Military leaders and heroes

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Army

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US Army Captain Francis Wai, Awarded Medal of Honor in World War II
Lt General Donald Prentice Booth, commander of the Fourth US Army and High Commissioner of Okinawa
Lt General Stanley "Swede" Larsen, Deputy Commander, US Army, Pacific
US Army major general Stephen Tom, Chief of Staff, Pacific Command
US Army Lt Col Mark Solomons '79
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US Navy rear admiral Gordon Chung-Hoon
US Navy vice admiral Tom Copeman
US Navy rear admiral Alma Grocki

Marines

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Air Force

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Lieutenant General Ben Webster, NATO AIRSOUTH commander
Brigadier General C.B. Stewart, Ph.D. in nuclear physics
Air National Guard major general Gregory B. Gardner
Air National Guard major general Michael H. Tice

Entertainment

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Musicians and composers

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Conrad Herwig, Down Beat's 3-time #1 jazz trombonist
Bob Shane, Grammy Award-winning Kingston Trio guitarist
melody., J-pop 3-time top-10 artist

Broadway, stage, and dance performers

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Carrie Ann Inaba, dancer, choreographer, and reality show judge

TV and film performers

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Oscar nominee Joan Blondell
Actress and singer Teri Ann Linn
Leading actress Kelly Preston
Actress Sarah Wayne Callies

Other entertainment industry producers

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Film director and TV series creator Rod Lurie

Business leaders and philanthropists

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Major philanthropists

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AOL co-founder and philanthropist Steve Case
eBay founder and philanthropist Pierre Omidyar
  • '33 Maude (Ackerman) Woods Wodehouse[298] (UCLA)—philanthropist, America's #14 most-generous donor in 2003 according to Chronicle of Philanthropy ($80M in 2003)[299][300]
  • '39 Charles Gates, Jr. (MIT)—owner of Gates Rubber Company and Gates Corporation (owner of Learjet), often listed on Forbes 400, e.g., #186 in 1999, #209 in 2002, #222 in 2003, philanthropist through Gates Family Foundation ($147M over 60 years)
  • '65* James C. Kennedy (Denver)—director of Cox Enterprises and principal heir of the Barbara Cox Anthony estate, #49 in 2008 on Forbes 400, Atlanta philanthropist of the year 2003, conservation and education donor (attended '55-61)
  • '76 Steve Case (Williams)—co-founder and CEO of America Online and philanthropist, America's #19 most generous donor in 1999 according to Chronicle of Philanthropy ($40M in 1999), appointed to the Presidential Council on Jobs and Competitiveness
  • '84* Pierre Omidyar (Tufts)—founder of eBay and philanthropist, America's #20 in 2002, #13 in 2003, #7 in 2004, #9 in 2005, and #29 most-generous donor in 2006 according to Chronicle of Philanthropy ($403M, 2002–06), appointed to the Presidential Commission on White House Fellows (attended '79-81)

Other charitable and development business leaders

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  • '34 Richard Tam[301] (Stanford)—Las Vegas developer, honorary LLD from UNLV, Richard Tam Alumni Center (UNLV) named for him
  • '52 Hugh T. Murphy (Berkeley)—director at IRRI, Trustee of AsiaRice USA, development banker at World Bank[302][303][304]
  • '52 John Bowman O'Donnell (Stanford)—decorated USAID official, nonprofit fundraising[305][306]
  • '56* W. Robert Warne (Princeton)—president of Korea Economic Institute of America (attended 1953–55)[307][308]
  • '63 Christopher T. Prukop (Middelbury)—leadership gifts officer, World Society for the Protection of Animals[309]
  • '65 Erik Holtedahl[310] (Oslo)—chairman of Scanteam, Norwegian NGO international development consultants[311]
  • '67 Suzanne M. Sato (Harvard/Radcliffe)—VP of AT&T Foundation and VP for Arts and Culture at Rockefeller Foundation[312][313]
  • '86 Melinda Tuan[314] (Harvard)—senior fellow at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors

Other founders and CEOs

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Other business leaders

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Cultural notables

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Authors, editors, and journalists

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David Boynton, prolific naturalist photographer

Other cultural notables

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Lorrin A. Thurston, early baseball player and anti-monarchy politician
Republic of China President Sun Yat Sen
USAF Colonel Charles L. Veach, shuttle astronaut
Miss Universe Brook Mahealani Lee

Notable former faculty and staff

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References

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Additional references

[edit]

The main reference for this page is the Punahou School Alumni Directory 1841-1991 Harris Publishing, New York, 1991.

[edit]

Media related to Punahou School alumni at Wikimedia Commons