![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiw9sSi7ryIiw9yi8jp4UgdXNNplCYkCFTsbwmCazzu7TRMIB0rDY60RtbaVw_bh745m9LAgS43eFfIFa5GuGR7BBujbXmPvlhS6mQ3KlKk0Rq3vqxVowyNoJBIK3p_S8kNIpaIAtDI-R0/s320/493803634209_0_ALB.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiitlvqs_dxYdgjPTwVgW1l77x3r2STmfwthswI2QEKxVlRtzrtqb2DJDlEEwXGJGxdtqn14pIBhd0f41ZYzqkjJrgEHRO5eV9efFtgiOgqO76M18OO2rpjwFQd8awbSQZ7WaGPOss9heY/s320/293803634209_0_ALB.jpg)
Found a couple of pictures of the boat I used to race on when I was going to UH. It has been sold to a new owner since I was on board, but it is still moored at the Hawaii Yacht Club.
"Our modern term 'charm' comes from the Latin for song, ...carmen, which was taken in turn from the Greek charma meaning 'source of joy'... But it was also from this word that the Greeks derived the word charme. In modern English charme best translates as 'combat'. All of which makes one wonder...if Shakespeare was aware of this when he had Macbeth, shortly before he is killed by Macduff, coin the term 'charmed life.'" - Nic Kelman, Girls: A Paean
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