I found this on a Google search:
"The club also boasts a long and colorful history. The Territorial Hotel Company, which also owned the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and Moana Hotel in Waikiki, leased the former dairy land from Bishop Estate and hired internationally- known New York golf architect Seth Raynor to design the 18-hole course. Raynor was the protege of C.B. Macdonald, the St. Andrews-trained golfer/ designer who helped popularize the game in turn-of-the-century America. Raynor came to Oahu to draw up his design for the Waialae layout in November 1926, but died of pneumonia in Florida the following Febraury without seeing the completed course. His partner, Charles Banks, completed the project following Raynor's design.
Raynor selected famous holes from celebrated American and European courses as models for holes in Waialae. For example, the well-bunkered, par-three 8th hole which runs along the ocean is similar to the Redan hole at North Berwick, Scotland. The par-three 13th mirrors a hole at the Biarritz course in France. The St. Andrews 17th - the famed "road hole" that has been dubbed the toughest par four in the world - was the model for Waialae's par-five 10th, a dogleg with a severely bunkered green. And the green on the 161-yard 16th, the shortest holeon the course, is patterned after Mac-donald's renowned masterpiece, the National Golf Links of America in Southampton, New York."
Keep in mind the holes describe are as the "members" play the course. So, the Redan 8th is actually the 17th on TV.