19.45 The 2016 Green Issue, April 21, 2016, Volume 19, Issue 45, MauiTime

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Contents VOLUME 19 ✚ ISSUE 45

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION:

ON THE COVER:

What’s your favorite Jennifer Aniston movie? April 21, 2016 ✚ Volume 19 ✚ Issue 45 ✚ FREE

Page

Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com @tommyrusso on Twitter That horny dentist movie Editor: Anthony Pignataro (808) 283-1308 / anthony@mauitime.com @apignataro on Twitter The Break-Up Culinary, Lifestyle & Business Editor: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com @jenrusso on Twitter Advertising Executive: Sarah Gerlach (808) 283-3260 / sarah@mauitime.com Vin Diesel Art Director & Production Manager: Darris Hurst artdirector@mauitime.com / darrishurst.com Office Space Graphic Designer: Jenn Carter None of the above

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Welcome to our 2016 Green Issue Cover Design By: Darris Hurst

GREEN ISSUE 2016

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NEWS & VIEWS GREEN ISSUE BEST OF MAUI BALLOT THIS WEEK’S PICKS FILM CRITIQUE FILM TIMES DA KINE CALENDAR THE GRID CLASSIFIED HOROSCOPE MIND, BODY & SPIRIT

Pukalani Family Practice and Urgent Care

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Photographer: Sean Michael Hower mauiweddingmedias.com / howerphotography.com Camp Cucamonga Contributors: Jenn Brown, Caeriel Crestin, Max Errickson, Suzanne Kayian, Andrew Miller, Alex Mitchell, Ron Pitts, Marina Satoafaiga, Chuck Shepherd, Barry Wurst II Admin Executive: Shannon Kekahuna (808) 244-0777 / shan@mauitime.com Just Go With It Proofreader: Dina Wilson

MauiTime is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2015 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $110 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. MauiTime may be distributed only by MauiTime’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime. MauiTime 16 S. Market St., Ste. 2K, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 www.mauitime.com @mauitime on Twitter Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 18,000 copies of MauiTime

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News & Views

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QUIZ understood

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D. 2010 E. 2015

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1. On Apr. 17, Maui book publisher Arnie Kotler announced that he was selling his Maui-based Koa Books (all 12 of its titles will remain in print, he says). When did Kotler found Koa Books? A. 1995 B. 2000 C. 2005

er Joe Souki, D–Wailuku, will hold a campaign fundraiser at Wolfgang Steakhouse in Honolulu, according to the state Campaign Spending Commission. How much is the “suggested contribution” per person? A. $100 B. $250 C. $500 D. $1,000 E. $1,500

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News & Views

by Anthony Pignataro

PHOTO COURTESY SAVE OLOWALU FACEBOOK

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OLOWALU IS SAVED!

PHOTO BY SEAN M HOWER

Details are still sketchy, but the developers of the proposed Olowalu Town–which will add 1,500 homes and a variety of commercial structures to tiny Olowalu–withdrew their petition with the state Land Use Commission (LUC), according to an Apr. 7, 2016 letter from LUC Executive Officer Daniel Orodenker that’s posted on the LUC website. “We understand that Olowalu Town LLC and Olowalu Ekolu LLC (collectively “Petitioners”) do not intend to pursue the Petition for District Boundary Amendment (“Petition”) that was filed May 13, 2010, in the subject docket, and that Petitioners request that the Land Use Commission close the docket,” Orodenker wrote to Jennifer A. Lim of the Honolulu law firm Carlsmith Ball, LLP. “With this understanding, the Petition is hearby considered withdrawn.” Orodenker’s letter references an Apr. 6, 2016 letter from the Olowalu developers to the LUC, which is also posted on the LUC website. “This letter is to inform you that Olowalu Town LLC, and Olowalu Ekolu LLC do not intend to pursue the district boundary amendment that was proposed in the 2010 Petition, and that the Commission should close Docket No. A10-786,” Lim wrote in that letter. Officials with Olowalu Town LLC also haven’t yet responded to an emailed request for comment. On the whole, officials with the County of Maui say the developers made the right decision. “I think this is probably a good decision for the community and the landowner alike," said Will Spence, the County's Planning Director. "The project would have provided much-needed housing and we certainly applaud the developer's innovative planning ideas. The project, however, raised many questions that are specific to the site and those could have taken many years to resolve. Two of Planning's primary concerns were related to the reef system and traffic impacts from Maalaea to Puamana. Perhaps as we start into the West Maui Community Plan, another vision will form for the area.” In planning for the last decade, the proposed Olowalu Town plan hit a major roadblock in December, when the LUC rejected the developers’ Final Environmental Impact Statement. The LUC’s decision was based on a variety of reasons, including “extensive revisions made to the Traffic

group than in the adult group,” states the cinating trends emerge. Most notably: the report. “Spoken by 13 percent of the nonportion of the population that speaks a English speaking school-age children statelanguage other than English varies pretty wide, Hawaiian was as common as Japanese significantly by county. and Ilocano among the school-age children “The share of those speaking English in Hawaii… This is mainly because native ‘very well’ in the total non-English speakers Hawaiians have an age structure younger was 48 percent in Honolulu County,” states than most other races in Hawaii, which the report. “The share was higher in Hawaii means more school-age children in its popCounty and Kauai County by 20 percentage ulation than in other races. Conversely, Ilopoints and 15 percentage points, respectively cano and Tagalog were less popular among [Maui County’s share was 54 percent].” the school-age children.” What’s more, the report shows that about 21 percent of Maui County’s population speaks a language other than English at MAUI’S VOYAGING CANOE Impact Analysis Report (“TIAR”) since the home, while that percentage drops to 18.5 publication of the DEIS that the public did FINALLY GETS HOME percent in Hawaii County and rises to 27.5 not have an opportunity to review... the Maui’s voyaging canoe Mo‘okiha O percent in Honolulu County. absence of archaeological studies, including So what languages are we the inventory survey, a Preliminary Preservaspeaking? Nationally, Spanish tion and Mitigation plan, and other studies is by far the most popular for the entire Olowalu area as well as the non-English language–in most current preservation and mitigation fact, 62 percent of non-Engplans for the makai and mauka areas of the Petition Area in the FEIS... [and] the unsatis- lish speaking people in the U.S. speak Spanish. But here factory response of Petitioners to OP’s [the Office of Planning’s] comments on the DEIS in Hawaii, the distribution of languages is far more diverse. regarding the delineation of the 150-foot The most popular language shoreline setback line relative to Petitioners’ is a tie between Llocano and land use plan.” Tagalog (17.6 percent each), Japanese at 13.8 percent. NEW REPORT ON HAWAII’S with Just eight percent of non-EngNON-ENGLISH SPEAKERS lish speakers in Hawaii speak Using U.S. Census data collected Spanish–less than the nine from 2010 to 2014, the state Departpercent who speak “Chinese” ment of Business, Economic Develop- (the report clumps Mandarin, ment and Tourism (DBEDT) has released Cantonese and other languages a new 47-page report on Hawaii’s nonspoken in China all together) English speaking population. but more than the 5.4 percent “The Non-English Speaking Population who speak Korean. in Hawaii report looks at residents aged 5 There’s also a distinct differand older, who can speak a language other ence in the languages spoken than English,” states an Apr. 14 DBEDT by children and adults. “Comnews release. “The report shows 17.9 perpared with the adult populacent of the population are foreign born, tion, the share of non-English The Mo'okiha O Pi'ilani at its old home and speak more than 130 languages. About speakers at home was 7.5 one in four Hawaii residents speak a lanpercentage points lower in the guage other than English at home, which is 5 to 17 school-age children,” states the report. Pi‘ilani has finally found a permanent higher than the U.S. average of 21 percent. “English proficiency was also better in the mooring in Ma‘alaea. The data shows 12.4 percent of the state’s school-age population.” “Hui o Wa‘a Kaulua (The Assembly of population speak English less than ‘very There were also differences in the actual the Double-Hull Canoes) is pleased to anwell,’ which is much higher than the U.S. languages spoken by children and adults. nounce that Mo‘okiha o Pi‘ilani, on this average of 8.6 percent.” “Especially, the share of Hawaiian speakhistorical day, has secured a new home with Diving into the data, a number of fasers was noticeably bigger in the school-age a permanent mooring permit at Ma‘alaea Harbor,” states a news release sent out by Honu Media’s Katherine Smith on Apr. 8. “Having Mo‘okiha o Pi‘ilani in a permanent home at Ma‘alaea Harbor supports Hui o Wa‘a Kaulua to realize its vision to cultivate and support future generations of voyagers to perpetuate Hawaiian culture.” The canoe is the first one like it on Maui in about 600 years. Previously parked on blocks at MAN: “I’ll have the vegan burger.” Mala Wharf, the canoe’s crew has been lookWOMAN: “Now are you actually a vegan?” ing for a better home for about a year now. ■

Overheard

MAN: “Why?” WOMAN: “Because the vegan burger has egg in it.”

Kihei Triangle, Apr. 14

anthony@mauitime.com + @apignataro For more news articles, visit: mauitime.com/news

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News & Views

by Suzanne Kayian & Anthony Pignataro

PHOTO COURTESY USPS

MauiSphere

Haleakala Forever

POST OFFICE TO ISSUE HALEAKALA STAMP As a way of celebrating the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) will release 16 stamps illustrated with images from some of our National Parks. One of them, the USPS announced on Apr. 15,, will show Haleakala. The photo used in the stamp comes from Seattle photographer Kevin Ebi. Here’s Ebi’s story of how he got the shot:

The first-day-of-issue ceremony for the stamp, along with the 15 others in the series, will take place on June 2 at New York City’s Javits Center at 11am, the Apr. 15 news release stated. The ceremony will be part of the once-a-decade World Stamp Show-NY 2016. In addition, “dedication ceremonies will also take place at or near each of the National Parks depicted on the stamps,” states the news release. “Individuals are

PHOTO COURTESY HOSPICE MAUI FACEBOOK

“When you think of Hawaii, you probably imagine continuous summer, warm water and hot beaches. But a couple hours after landing on Maui, I was in the freezing cold, pelted by hail, surrounded by thunderclouds. For a few minutes at a time, the sun would briefly break through it, using rainbows as spotlights to illuminate Haleakala’s volcanic cinder cones. “As a nature photographer, I was in heaven–or at least 10,000 feet closer to it. “Whether it’s because of the explosive growth of photography, or our need to take a break from our always-on, connected lives, our national parks are busier than ever. But for me, they can still be wondrous places of solitude. Such was the case that afternoon I spent chasing Haleakala’s rainbows. “My day started as a scouting trip. Haleakala is known for stunning sunrises. Getting that sunrise would require me to arrive at my shooting location while it was still dark. I decided to take a look at the crater during the day in order to determine where I wanted to be the next morning. “But the closer I got to Haleakala’s summit, the less I could see. The fog got thicker and thicker. Then there was heavy rain. Then the rain turned to

hail. I sprinted from the car into the visitor center, hoping to catch a bit of the view through the window. All I could make out was the railing of the viewing platform. “It quickly became clear that the storm wouldn’t stop. The few visitors in the center sprinted to their cars. I decided to stay put. “Then something amazing happened. The hail turned into a light drizzle. Sunlight poked through a tiny hole in the ominous cloud. And a rainbow dipped into the crater. “I managed to get a few shots before the sun slid back behind the storm clouds and the pelting hail resumed. It was a beautiful scene. Much of Haleakala’s beauty comes from its rainbow-colored rocks. The rainbow in the sky complemented that nicely. “But I hoped for better placement of the rainbow. In those first images it was off to the side of the crater. I knew that as the sun moved across the sky, weather permitting, rainbows later in the day would land closer to a core group of cinder cones that I found especially attractive. And so I waited. “During the hour and a half I spent on the rim, the storm gave me just six opportunities to photograph rainbows. My favorite image–and the

one that is used on the stamp– was taken during the next-tolast ‘window.’ It was also the briefest opportunity. I was able to shoot only a single frame before the rainbow vanished. “Back in the car, with the heat and the de-fogger set on high, I was thankful for the experience even though I was soaked. In all of my work as a photographer, I treasure most the images that show nature at its dynamic finest. Braving an intense hailstorm is just part of the experience–a key part of the experience. “National parks take us into a different world, a world of jaw-dropping scenery and experiences that are dramatically different from our daily lives. This image of Haleakala is both to me. And it’s why I’m so honored that it will help commemorate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service.”

Nice award

asked to spread the news on social media by using the hashtags #NPSStamps, #FindYourPark or #NPS100.” The postal service seems to be announcing the National Park stamps alphabetically. Here are the other stamps nine stamps that have been announced so far: • Acadia National Park • Arches National Park • Assateague Island National Seashore • Bandelier National Monument • Carlsbad Caverns National Park • Everglades National Park • Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve • Grand Canyon National Park • Gulf Islands National Seashore -Anthony Pignataro

HOSPICE MAUI NAMED ONE OF BEST PLACES TO WORK Hospice Maui was named one of the Best Places to Work 2016 by Hawaii Business magazine. The publication named Hospice Maui the Best Place to Work in the medium-sized company category. Hospice Maui CEO Dr. Greg LaGoy received the award at a recent event in Oahu. “It takes time, effort, leadership, and (here’s the secret sauce) integrity, to be a recipient of the Best Places to Work award,” according to the recent Hawaii Business article “The Right Stuff ” by Gina Gelber. Over the past 35 years, thousands of people on Maui have experienced the main ingredient that sets Hospice Maui apart: the deeply compassionate care that is provided to patients and families by their dedicated staff. While it is rarely mentioned in relation to a work environment, their staff maintain that the love they bring to their work also helps make Hospice Maui one of the best places to work. Hospice Maui, trusted by physicians and families on Maui for 35 years, is committed to providing quality, compassionate care to help ease the physical, emotional and spiritual pain associated with a terminal illness. Hospice Maui provides services that support both the patients and their families and allows patients to live each day to the fullest, with meaning and purpose, in accordance with their deeply held values and beliefs. The Hospice Maui team is comprised of nurses, social workers, spiritual counselors, home health aides, volunteers and Hospice’s Medical Director who works directly with the patient’s primary care physicians, the patient and family itself. -Suzanne Kayian ■ editor@mauitime.com For more news articles, visit: mauitime.com/news

APRIL 21, 2016

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News Of The Weird THE POWER OF PRECEDENT Department of Veterans Affairs employee Elizabeth Rivera Rivera, 39, was fired after her arrest (followed by a February guilty plea) for armed robbery, but when she was sentenced only to probation, an arbitrator ordered the VA to rehire her–and give her back pay she “earned” while sitting in jail awaiting trial. (She had been the driver for a man arrested for a street robbery in San Juan, Puerto Rico.) Rivera’s union had demanded the reinstatement without salary penalty–for “fairness”–because the same Puerto Rico VA office had earlier hired a convicted sex offender, and the office’s hospital director, recently charged with DUI and drug possession, avoided VA discipline because of technicalities about the traffic stop.

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Ms. Ashton Barton, 33, charged with shoplifting a vibrating sex toy from a CVS pharmacy in Largo, Florida, in February, tried for police sympathy by explaining that she was in a troubled marriage. “My husband doesn’t want to touch me anymore,” and “I would rather do this than be unfaithful.” And neighbors of a loudly frisky couple in a Stockholm, Sweden, apartment building were so frustrated by the noise that they reached out to the country’s health minister, Gabriel Wikstrom–who took the side of the randy couple (according to a translation by Stockholm’s The Local): “Sounds nice for them, I think. Good for their wellbeing and thus public health as well.”

BREAKTHROUGHS N SCIENCE

by Chuck Shepard

News & Views

German researchers, publishing in March, revealed that female burying beetles uniquely discourage their mates from pestering them for sex after birth–thus explaining how the male of this species is observed actually helping with child care. The females apparently release a chemical “anti-aphrodisiac” to the father’s antennae. Said the lead researcher (a woman), “They are a very modern family.” Said another biology professor (also female), “Burying beetles are supercool.”

GREAT MOMENTS IN EVOLUTION Science magazine called the “butthole” “one of the finest innovations in the past 540 million years of animal evolution”–in that, until it developed, animals’ only channel of waste removal was through the same opening used for food intake. However, the recent discovery, announced at a March conference by a University of Miami biologist, that gelatinous sea creatures called comb jellies can excrete via other pores, was labeled by the magazine as “stunn[ing].”

THE WAR ON SCIENCE In 2000, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared that measles had been eliminated in the United States, but

by 2014 Americans had resurrected it (677 reported cases), and researchers from Emory University and Johns Hopkins set out to learn how–and recently found the dominant reason to be the purposeful decision by some Americans to refuse or delay widely available vaccinations (especially for their children). The researchers found similar, but less-strong conclusions about whooping cough.

UNDIGNIFIED DEATHS An 86-year-old woman died in February in New Cumberland, Pennsylvania, when she tripped and got her medical alert necklace caught on her walker, strangling herself. (2) A 25-year-old off-duty New York City police officer was killed on a highway near Elizabeth, New Jersey, in March. According to the police report, the officer had rear-ended another car and had gotten out to “discuss” the matter, then suddenly pulled his service revolver and threatened the driver using road rage-type language. As the officer backed up while pointing the gun, a passing driver accidentally, fatally struck him.

FINER POINTS OF THE LAW Joe Vandusen said he has had no contact whatsoever with his estranged wife for “16 or 17 years” and that both moved long ago to other relationships (Joe currently living with a woman, raising both his two children and her two, as well). Nonetheless, Vandusen’s “real” wife recently gave birth, from another father, and, without claiming Vandusen as the father, filed in February for child support from him. In the Vandusens’ home state of Iowa (like the law in many states), he must pay, irrespective of any DNA test (unless he gets an expensive court order to “de-establish paternity.”

IRONIES Ervin Brinker, 68, pleaded guilty to Medicaid fraud as CEO of the Summit Pointe health care provider in Michigan and was sentenced in January to 32 months in prison. He had embezzled $510,000 in “mental health” payments and apparently spent it all on a Florida fortune teller. And two of the three candidates for the Republican nomination for county property appraiser in Erwin, Tennessee, in November died before the election, leaving Rocky McInturff the only survivor. However, he is ineligible for the nomination because he lost badly on election day by one of the two dead candidates.

LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS Albuquerque police encountered Leonard Lopez, 26, inside a Chevy Cobalt car (that was not his) just after midnight on March 30 after neighbors reported a man screaming inside, flashing the car’s headlights. A panicked Lopez was upside down, with his feet on the dashboard and his head and shoulders wedged under the steering wheel, hands and arms tucked inside his sweatshirt. He was charged with burglary, and police guessed he was probably going through opiate withdrawal. ■


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Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less (which we reserve the right to edit), changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent, to “Eh Brah!” c/o MauiTime, 16 S. Market St, Ste. 2K, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

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h Fun Police who sat up front at the concert: You people give almost nothing back to the band, ever. You sit there while legendary artists pour their heart and soul out in front of you, while you golf clap and talk quietly amongst yourselves. Then you have the nerve to tell everyone to shut up and sit down–even after the musician told the crowd “Stand up, only old people sit down at a concert.” I’ve seen it time and time again. People like you embarrassed us and the whole island. I’ve watched this go on for 20 years now. You people should sit in the back and give your good seats to people who will appreciate a great show. You suck! ■

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Land Reform! The SHAKA Movement's radical plan to keep Maui green forever By Axel Beers

I

t was the intelligent enterprise of missionary families, one telling of history goes, that led to the accumulation of wealth and land among Americans and Europeans in Hawaii from the 1800s onward. The foreigners’ business acumen was so great that it culminated into a concentration of ownership that earned a group of companies (Castle & Cooke, Alexander & Baldwin, C. Brewer & Co., American Factors and Theo H. Davies & Co) the title, the Big Five. “They controlled land, water, and forest resources, and had a virtual lock on labor relations and public policy, creating a totalizing effect,” writes Carol MacLennan in Sovereign Sugar. The findings section of A Bill to Establish a Program to Acquire and Lease Agricultural Lands, proposed in the Maui Community Organic Farmland Initiative, claims another history with the use of a word not found in the Alexander and Baldwin myth: mahele. The controversial Mahele of 1848, which transformed the Hawaiian land system from one of communal tenure to private ownership, led to a concentration of land in 1890 where of the population of 90,000, just 5,000 owned land, Section 1 of the proposed bill states. Among this elite landowning minority, the findings maintain, Americans and Europeans were the majority and controlled over 1 million acres or approximately 56 percent of all privately held land. Agribusiness in Hawaii thrived, increasing the power of landholding sugar planters who, “with the assistance of the U.S. minister to Hawaii and the U.S. Military, overthrew the lawful Kingdom of Hawaii, which it replaced with a provisional government composed of landowning sugar planters and their allies,” the bill findings claim. In the plantationcentered economy (plantation agriculture, MacLennan notes in Sovereign Sugar, “has a long history as a colonizing force to subdue and exploit tropical ecologies and peoples”) that followed throughout the Territorial era, the amount of land planted in sugarcane doubled as concentrations of landownership increased. An influx of immigrant plantation laborers continued alongside the displacement of Native Hawaiian Land uses.

10 APRIL 21, 2016

Western histories of the 1848 Mahele have always defined the term mahele as “divide”... however, mahele has another connotation in Hawaiian that is very different from the idea of “divide” in English. Mahele also means “to share,” as one does food or wealth, while the term “divide” in English means “to separate, sever or alienate.” Did the Ali‘i intend to deny their people unrestricted access to all source of food? I think not… In capitalist theory, private ownership of the ‘Aina offered each individual great opportunities for private wealth, if one understood the rules of capitalist society. But capitalist rules were not easily understood by or logical to Hawaiians… -Lilikala Kame‘eleihiwa, Native Land and Foreign Desires

Critics of the petition, like Ann Emmsley–a University of Hawaii Maui College Professor of agriculture and natural resources–are concerned about increasing the use of eminent domain. The law would apply to properties over 1,000 acres that are zoned interim, agricultural, rural, conservation or open space and are currently used or have historically been used for agriculture. This includes land other than the closing A&B HC&S sugar fields. “There are a lot of large landowners” that fall over 1,000 acres, she said, listing Kamehameha Schools and “maybe other Hawaiian landowners, Oprah, Ulupalakua Ranch, Hana Ranch [and] Haleakala Ranch. “I have no problem with the county or the Hawaiian Islands Land Trust negotiating for ag parks,” Emmsley told me, but

PHOTO COURTESY YOUTUBE

In 1843, Samuel Thomas Alexander and Henry Perrine Baldwin, sons of pioneer missionaries, met in Lahaina, Maui. They grew up together, became close friends and went on to develop a sugar-growing partnership that spanned generations and left an indelible mark on Hawaii… What started off as partnership between two young men, with the purchase of 12 acres in Maui for $110, has grown into a corporation with $2.3 billion in assets, including over 88,000 acres of land... -AlexanderBaldwin.com

Is this Maui’s future?

The impact of centralized landholding continues today, with the focus of corporations now on the more profitable venture of land development rather than agriculture. A&B remains the largest private landowner on the island of Maui, the bill maintains, and engages in “‘land management’ practices that are not developed for the public good, nor for the long term health, stability and food-security of the community.” Thus, the bill would exercise the County’s power to use eminent domain to change “present patterns of such landownership in Maui County by allowing the County to buy or condemn agricultural land at the request of residents or potential farmers [to] satisfy the pressing public necessity for a secure, strong and stable agricultural sector and overall economy.” The colonial history of land concentration exposed in the findings section is an essential piece of the proposed bill. “Findings is the basis of the bill,” SHAKA co-founder and organizer for the Maui Community Organic Farmland Initiative Bruce Douglas told me. “The de-concentration of concentrated lands is an accepted use of eminent domain. It’s been upheld in federal courts and upheld in state courts as an appropriate use.”

to her the bill would cast a wide net that could catch many unintended fish. Douglas has enough faith in the bill language (SHAKA hired attorney and doctorate holder of political science Lance Collins to write the bill) and the community of Maui to dismiss this concern. “No one’s going to get somebody’s ranch and take it away for the wrong reason,” he said. “It’s not the spirit of the law of what people are going to stand behind. The law very explicitly excludes kuleana lands, land held by the crown, Hawaiian homelands and lands–of course–held by the federal government.” There are several steps in the proposed bill’s “Diversified Agricultural Land Acquisition and Leasing Program.” The bill creates a Community Farmlands Committee of nine members with various levels of experience in diverse fields such as organic or regenerative farming, large scale agriculture, Hawaiian Studies and culture, agricultural products and conservation science. The committee is appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the County Council, according to the 2015 Revised County Charter (a fact that elicited groans in an April Kihei town hall meeting held by the Community Farmland Initiative, showing an underlying discontentment with officials that explains in part why a District

Voting Charter Amendment Proposal has piggybacked onto the initiative). Under the proposed law, the County may acquire applicable agriculture lands two ways: First, after a petition of resident Maui farmers, holding no ownership of agricultural land, provide documentation demonstrating that they will be able to pay the county for the lease of the land and submit a viable farm plan. Or after a petition of signatures of registered voters in a number no less than 10 percent of the number of votes cast in the last regular second special election held in conjunction with the general election requests the condemnation of certain agricultural lands. Following this, the Community Farmlands Committee must hold a public hearing and evaluate the petitioner’s eligibility and whether the proposal meets the bill’s goals, and may grant the entirety or portion of the land identified in the petition accordingly. The committee, with the assistance of the Director of Finance, would then negotiate for acquisition over a period no longer than six months. “There’s actually very few landowners that have 1,000 acres in Maui County,” Douglas told me, indicating that the primary target of efforts under a potential community farmland law would be A&B land. Indeed, out of the 1,128 total farms in Maui County counted in the 2012 USDA Census of Agriculture, 29 farms have holdings of 1,000+ acres. The average farm size in Maui County is 203 acres while the median size is a mere five acres, an indication of unequal property size distribution and vast farmland concentrated among few. The census, however, only includes lands currently used for agriculture, not historical agricultural land. Douglas hopes that the land’s history will be fleshed out in the bill’s proceedings. “A concern people have is that apparently big areas of that land were leased to A&B on 99 year leases that have expired and they are still occupying that,” he said. “The families claim they have claim to that, but they’re not powerful enough to go up against A&B and stake their claim. They’ll tie them up in court and spend money they don’t have. What this will do is flush out those claims because you can’t use eminent domain on something that’s not owned; first you got to prove rightful ownership. The question of rightful ownership will come to the forefront… We’re all working together in order to flush that out; in order to get the power of the people against this corporation that has unfairly dominated our entire farmland.” This has earned Bruce Douglas and the Farmland Initiative the support of Hawaiian community leaders like Ke‘eaumoku Kapu. ”I will support the effort,” Kapu announced at a recent Lahaina town hall organized by the Farmland Initiative. “I will go out there and talk to my people to sign that petition–because that will give us a greater Continued on page 13


APRIL 21, 2016

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12 APRIL 21, 2016


PHOTO BY FORREST & KIM STARR / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Maui in 2004

Continued from page 10 opportunity to answer the true question out there. If the county does initiate some way of grabbing these lands for the benefit of the general community then hopefully some of those issues and concerns that have been pressed upon native Hawaiians for 127 years, 130 years, should come to the forefront. If it does come to the forefront I am hoping that all of you people who sign the petition really take grasp of the reality of who and the conditions that we live in–that our whole political system today from the state, from the senate, from the county is crooked. It’s time for the people to get back what is rightfully theirs.” The way to do that, initiative backers believe, is through eminent domain. “Eminent domain has been abused in the past because governments have taken land from small land holders and turned them over to developers,” Douglas said. “This [bill] is the opposite. This is the highest use of eminent domain. It’s actually the other way around, where we’re breaking up a corporation that’s unfairly concentrated the land and giving it back into the people’s hands where it belongs. So it’s not strengthening eminent domain, it’s using it for its highest and best purpose… This is the whole people coming together, saying, no, we want to use it as a people.”

small farmers band together in order to share and work together in harmony to help grow and get into market and share implements and costs and knowledge.” On Apr. 18, the first deadline for Community Farmland Initiative petitioners to submit 9,202 signatures to continue the process of turning a petition to law, this cooperative spirit was in display. “Who loves data entry? Who loves to count?” Satya Douglas, a key organizer for the initiative, called to the gathered supporters from under a blue canopy pitched to the side of the County building, as last minute petitioners notarized and submitted their papers for tally. Volunteers busily facilitated a continual march of incoming supporters as someone beat a tambourine and County workers passed by bewildered at the Earth Day scene which had beset High Street. Then, at 3:42pm, less than an hour before the deadline, Bruce Douglas and a small group of volunteers erupted, raising their joined hands and jumping for joy, exclaiming “We reached 10,000!” The air changed. That morning, a Farmland Initiative email called for volunteers to work to collect and submit 1,000 needed signatures, but now any anxiety was released. Hugs were exchanged all around. “The true heroes are all the petitioners,” Bruce Douglas said, “who went out without any fame or glory or notoriety or credits to gather all those signatures. We got 500 petitioners who’ve taken packets. Those are the real heroes.” The County Clerk’s office stayed open after 7pm that night, timestamping 1,069 pages of petitions and the accompanying paperwork for over 11,000 submitted signatures. Over the next 45 days, the office will review every signature’s validity in a process that, in Douglas’ experience, removes about half of the signatures. But Maui Community Organic Farmland Initiative petitioners say they’ll continue to collect signatures to replenish the likely count loss due to invalidity. If the petition has 9,202 or more valid signatures within 20 days after being notified of any insufficiency, the proposed bill will go to the County Council, which could enact it or place it on the ballot this November. ■ editor@mauitime.com For more coverage, visit: mauitime.com/news

PHOTO COURTESY MAUITIME

Since announcing their transfer out of the sugar industry, Alexander & Baldwin has announced a “new diversified model” that would divide the plantation “up into smaller farms with varied agricultural uses, potentially including energy crops, food crops, support for the local cattle industry, and the development of an agriculture park.” Douglas and other critics of A&B doubt the corporation’s ability to bring about land use changes that they believe are in the best interest of the people (A&B did not respond to a request for comment for this story). The nonprofit activist organization Maui Tomorrow has exhibits titled Alexander and Baldwin’s Proposed Central Maui Developments which use East Maui Stream Water and Comparison Map of Current (2010) HC&S Ag Lands and Lands Committed to Future Lands as IAL (important agricultural lands). These exhibits show that A&B is planning residential and baseyard expansions along with a North Kihei “mixed use” development of 1,700

proposed lots on 260 acres. No farms or ag parks are named. The proposed bill determines that leasing land “exclusively for farming that feeds Maui and the Hawaiian Islands on as many small, diverse farms as possible using organic and regenerative agricultural practices” is in the best interest of the people and sets this as its ultimate goal. Priority would be given to applicants whose proposals demonstrate a long-term public benefit, facilitate cooperation with other farmers, avoid negative impacts to other farmers, encourage long term sustainability, utilize regenerative agriculture, contribute to food security in Hawaii, create living wage employment for the citizens of Maui and reduce off-site harm and increase off-site benefits to the environment. Emmsley sees a problem with non-farmers creating restrictive rules dictating how farms should operate. Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa holds a similar stance and “does not support condemning land, nor does he support excluding a majority of Maui’s small farmers from leasing said land,” said county Communications Director Rod Antone. “If you read the initiative, you’ll see that they would only allow organic farmers to work the land and no one else.” A farmer who grows both organic and non-organic plants, Emmsley supports organic and diversified agriculture, but feels that “organic is not the only way” to farm sustainably. Indeed, in a 2014 Forbes article, Henry I. Miller, molecular biologist and founding director of the FDA’s office of biotechnology, characterizes the development and application of non-organic techniques as the maximization of “human ingenuity and the quest for progress–that is, for processes and products that are more efficient, less costly, and at the same time, less harmful to the environment.” But Douglas and the SHAKA movement disagree. “In the long term [organic farming is] the only thing that works,” Douglas said. “The old system of killing the soil, killing the microbes, with synthetic fertilizers and chemicals is a dead end street. There isn’t a choice anymore to continue down the chemical agriculture pathway.” SHAKA activists cite environmental imperatives for their purist stance, such as reducing air pollution and pesticide drift, restoring and detoxifying groundwater, sequestering carbon in soil, decreasing our 90 percent dependence

on food and energy imports and reducing water use. Further evidence cited in Town Halls for the Initiative is a UH Manoa study that showed tumors in the Honu (green sea turtle) are linked to excessive nitrogen in the ocean from agricultural fertilizers. Then there are findings of a recent Maui Tomorrow report conducted by Permaculture Design International LLC titled Malama ‘Aina: A Conversation About Maui’s Farming Future (available online at Futureofmaui.org). Although Albert Perez, the director of Maui Tomorrow, said that the organization does not presently support or oppose the proposed bill due to their open exploration of how land can be used towards a “win-win-win situation for all concerned” interests, he spoke at a recent Kihei Community Farmland Initiative town hall to explain the report. The Malama ‘Aina report focuses on the “abundant, resilient” methods of regenerative agriculture (a refined kind of organic agriculture founded on the principle of systematically increasing soil health). Maui Tomorrow’s report echoes the SHAKA’s claims that not only is regenerative agriculture a feasible solution, it’s a way forward that can be more profitable, create more skilled jobs, use significantly less water, cause less erosion and pollution, contribute to a more diverse economy and develop a more food secure and sustainable island when compared to HC&S and similar industrial, conventional monocrop methods. “Will it take a lot of intelligence and a lot of will of the people to do that?” Douglas asked rhetorically, regarding the potential large scale transition to regenerative agriculture farms. “Yes, it will. But in two to five years you can have life back in that soil again and be able to grow it. In 10 years it can be in full vibrancy again.” Another parallel between the Malama ‘Aina report’s findings and Bruce’s vision for Maui farming is the hope for more cooperative models of farming that provides opportunities for shared knowledge, training and education. In principle, this hope values food security, mutual good and ecology before profit, believing that with the former in place economics and long term sustainability will follow. The competitive model, on the other hand, significantly places the odds of success in favor of large corporations with investment power. “The cooperative model is the only model that’s sustainable,” Douglas told me. “[The cooperative model] is a way that

The current view of Maui

APRIL 21, 2016 13


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Iao Valley Just Got Brighter The Hawaii Nature Center's facility there is going solar By Anthony Pignataro

T

PHOTO BY ANTHONY ZERGA / PRO CAMERA HAWAII

hough you often see rain and gray clouds hugging the mountain peaks that tower over Iao Valley, Hawaii Nature Center’s program facility there will soon get solar power (while solar cells do work on overcast days, they’re not as efficient as on sunny days, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association). Hawaii Pacific Solar is installing the photovoltaic system at a discounted rate, and the center is paying for the installation through a $40,000 grant from the Jonathan Merage Foundation grant, stated an Apr. 13 news release from the Hawaii Nature Center. “This grant has a two-fold purpose: to spread awareness of the benefits of solar power and to build the capacity of the Hawaii Nature Center,” said Chad Robertson, program coordinator, the Jonathan Merage Foundation, in the news release. The Jonathan Merage Foundation helps advance education, science and the study of severe weather. Since 1981, the Hawaii Nature Center has provided a variety of environmental education programs to more than 15,000 elementary and middle school children from both public and private institutions every year. Their goal, according to the organization’s website (Hawaiinaturecenter.org), is “to encourage environmental stewardship through hands-on investigative field study and experiences.” The Nature Center’s Iao Valley operation also

Where’s the sun?

offers a variety of other programs for the greater community as a whole. “The Hawaii Nature Center in `Iao Valley on Maui offers a large variety of custom programs for all kinds of groups including school groups, church groups, employee retreats, and various clubs,” states the organization’s website. “In the past we have hosted groups as diverse as Kamehameha Schools staff, Punahou school students, Habitat for Humanity volunteers, canoe clubs, boy scouts, and mainland volunteer groups.” The Iao Valley center’s new solar system consists of 255-watt panels and micro-inverters and will generate 9.69 kW. According the Hawaii Nature Center, this translates into the equivalent saving of 1,074 gallons of gas, offsetting 21,114 pounds of CO2 and diverting 7,116 pounds of municipal waste from the landfill. “We are very grateful to the Jonathan Merage Foundation for this grant,” said Hawaii Pacific Solar CEO Bob Johnston in the news release. “The PV panels will provide almost 100 percent of the power used by the facilities at Iao Valley, helping the Hawaii Nature Center reduce costs so it can deploy those cash assets elsewhere.” ■ editor@mauitime.com For more coverage, visit: mauitime.com/news

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Seed Bombs Away! How Montessori School of Maui students will help restore the leeward Haleakala Watershed

PHOTO COURTESY MOMI

By Jen Russo

Seed Bombers

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he leeward slopes of Haleakala are about to get bombed. This Friday, Apr. 22–that would be Earth Day–the entire student body of Montessori School of Maui will participate in a campus-wide project to create 1,500 native seed bombs for the Leeward Haleakala Watershed Restoration Partnership (LHWRP). “Every student’s hands–from our

toddlers (18 months old) to 8th graders– will help shape the seed ball–basically a “meatball” of native seeds mixed into dry clay and a potting soil mix,” says Alison Grimes, the Development Director at Montessori School of Maui. The goal is to make upwards of 1,500 seed balls over the course of the day. They’ll be dried on campus over the weekend, then stored at LHWRP until their fall plantings. The

seed ball method has proven effective in their mass planting efforts because the substrate helps hold moisture.” The bombs will be used by LHWRP for their work in re-establishing forest in the Nu`u area.The leeward slopes of Haleakala have faced challenges with feral animals as well as invasive plant species and erosion, reducing its once vibrant forest to less than 10 percent of what it was two centuries ago. “A lot of the area has eroded,” says Keahi Bustamante, the LHWRP director. “If you’ve driven out there you can see. At one time it was a vast, dense, wet forest–just like you may see driving to Hana on a clear day when you’re driving through Keanae and you look up and can see Ko`olau Gap. When you see the Koa and Ohia forest up there on the high slopes, that’s exactly what it was. But today on the leeward side, that’s nearly gone. Decades of non-native animals have decimated the forest. We’ve had to build fences to keep the animals out of the area that we’re trying to reforest. It’s really hard to guarantee we have all animals out of a fenced area because they can hide anywhere. But we can at least bring the numbers way down. Only then can the native species start to come back. There are thousands of goats on the leeward slopes,

and they’re doing a lot of the damage. They chew everything. It’s really steep terrain.” Bustamante and Montessori school garden director Scott Lacasse will be guiding the students on this inaugural program for LHWRP. “All the students will be involved, divided up by age groups,” says Lacasse. “The LHWRP will be giving a presentation to begin the day, with Andrea Buckman starting off. Keahi Bustamante will be giving lessons on how to make the seed balls. Then all the materials will be going to the primary classes, the kids in the Sustainability Committee here on campus will be organizing and assisting. Then the lower elementary and upper elementary will be making balls and storing them on racks to dry. We will be keeping ours in the fridge over the summer and planting them as a lesson in the fall.” The LHWRP has been collecting seeds like crazy for this Earth Day project. “We’re starting at Montessori, but doing this with the hopes that we can get other schools involved,” says Bustamante. “We have done experiments with the seed bombs in the past, but this is the first time we’re making and getting Continued on page 23

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Best Of Maui Awards Ballot It’s that time again

A FEW NOTES ABOUT BALLOT STUFFING:

We know you hold the key to the BEST OF MAUI. It’s your year round perseverance and diligent research on where to eat, where to play, the best shops on the island, and which political scandal takes the cake for 2016. The time you’ve been waiting for is finally here. Cast your vote for your favorite shops, restaurants and community highlights in the MauiTime Best of Maui and be heard! As usual, categories are organized into five sections: arts & entertainment; food & drink; goods & services; politics & environment; and sports & leisure. We’ve added some new categories this things up, but you’ll still is year to spice p find all the old standbys. Please VOTE CATEGORIES if you TE E IN A AT LEAST 40 CATEGO want your ballot to be counted. Voting ng g ends May 20th. 20th

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★ ONLY ONE (1) BALLOT PER PERSON ★ ALL BALLOTS MUST BE SIGNED ★ NO PHOTOCOPIED BALLOTS WILL BE ACCEPTED

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PHOTO COURTESY MOMI

Ohia grows one millimeter in diameter a year. They’re estimating that some of these large Ohia trees are thousands of years old.” Other challenges include changes in the original ecosystem. Some of the native pollinating birds and insects are already gone. “For us to get back to the level of plant and animal diversity that we see in nicer parts of the leeward slopes like the Kahikinui area, it will take thousands of years,” Bustamante says. “But hopefully we’re still trying by then. Some of the more rare plants like the Haha are really specific to how

they are pollinated. Really, the only birds that can pollinate these plants are the I’iwi with its long bill. A lot of the other birds with the long bills have gone extinct. It’s going to be a different forest in the future because of the pollinators–not just the birds, but the insects, too. The fences that go up protect these plants and the pollinators that depend on them. We, as the users of the water and the forest, we are dependent on them, too.” ■ jen@mauitime.com + @jenrusso For more coverage, visit: mauitime.com/news

School Garden Goodness

math,” says Lacasse. “The kids can see what propagates from the seeds. We can to some math lessons like percentages of how many seed dropped to how many germinated. They will be used for educational purposes here.” Of course, the reforestation efforts will take some time. “Koa is a lot faster growing than ohia,” says Bustamante. “Within 10 years, a Koa could be 20-plus feet in height, and already making seeds of its own. Ohia is a lot slower. I don’t know if you’ve seen some of the articles on Ohia that have come out recently, but we’ve just started to be able to date those Hawaiian trees.

PHOTO BY BETTY RUSSO

Continued from page 17 thousands out there. We’ve ramped up our seed collection efforts to facilitate this. It takes tons of native seeds that we’ve collected from the area like Mamane, Koa, Aweoweo.” I spoke with Bustamonte as he collected Mamane seeds from the Kula Forest Reserve. These seeds will will be planted at the 6,000-foot elevation in Nu`u–some dropped from helicopter, some by hand. Some of the seed balls will remain in Makawao for the students to experiment with. “We are going to keep a few seed balls here on campus, and do a little

Native Ohia Blossom

THE GREAT AMERICAN CLEANUP IS GOING ON NOW – APRIL 30!

Photo by Robi Campbell

GREAT AMERICAN CLEANUP volunteers are motivated by the notion that litter-free places allow for an ecosystem’s natural beauty to shine. Native species of plants and animals can thrive in healthy habitats, and people can experience first-hand the richness of Hawai‘i’s pristine environment.

Photo by Jason Hastain

Anyone & everyone can have a positive impact on our environment by taking action wherever they see a need. Call 877-2524 or visit MalamaMauiNui.org to get involved! APRIL 21, 2016 23


There are over 100 things you could be doing today on Maui. Go to mauitime.com for complete weekly calendar listings, and find something to do today.

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Picks

by Marina Satoafaiga

This Week's Picks THURSDAY, APR. 21 ‘THE TINY TREE’ – The Honolulu Theatre for Youth’s The Tiny Tree by Annie Cusick Wood will tour a few Maui public libraries on Thursday, Apr. 21 and Friday, Apr. 22. On Thursday, the production will take place at the Makawao Public Library (10am) and at the Wailuku Public Library (3pm). On Friday, the show will take place at the Kihei Public Library (10:30am). The interactive 30-minute show explores the similarities between tiny trees and tiny children. Geared for children ages three and older. All children must be accompanied and special accommodations can be made with each library. Makawao Public Library 808-573-8785, Wailuku Public Library 808-243-5766, Kihei Public Library 808- 875-6833, Friendsofthelibraryofhawaii.org. Photo courtesy Honolulu Theatre for Youth

HULA HONEYS – Enjoy your lunch outdoors and unic der the shade with The Hula Honeys during Picnic ofor Poki. Roselani Place and Ola Na Mele Prodductions present the Na Hoku Hanohano Awarduwinning duo of Ginger Johnson and Robyn Kneuhat buhl. They’ve captivated audiences with a sound that ed blends Waikiki’s golden era with jazz. Fresh baked e. cookies will sweeten the afternoon deal. Free. 11am-12:30pm. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Church h (103 S. High St., Wailuku), Roselaniplace.com.. Photo courtesy The Hula Honeys Facebook page

FRIDAY, APR. 22 KIHEI PUBLIC LIBRARY 20TH ANNIVERSARY – The Kihei Public Library celebrates its 20th anniversary this Friday, Apr. 22 and Saturday, Apr. 23 with a book sale. Maui Friends of the Library (MFOL) will host the extravaganza, and each child present will be able to select a free book from the children’s table. All proceeds will go towards materials and additional sponsored programs at the library. 10am-3pm. Kihei Public Library (35 Waimahaihai St., Kihei), Mfol.org. Photo courtesy MFOL

KOMEDY CLUB – The writer John Padon presents the Komedy Klub at the King Kamehameha Golf Club. The evening’s guests will be Kings of Queens’ Greg Vaccariello and “TV GUY” Joe Trammel. All three have enjoyed recent stints in the Las Vegas comedy scene. Grab dinner before the show or opt for show only. $75 (with dinner)/ $40 show only. 6pm doors/6:30pm dinner/8pm show. 21+. King Kamehameha Golf Club (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Wailuku); 808-866-5025. Photo of Greg Vaccariello courtesy King Kamehameha Golf Club

SATURDAY, APR. 23

FRIDAY, APR. 22 SEABURY HALL DANCE SHOWCASE – Seabury Hall’s 27th annual Dance Showcase spans three days. It runs this Friday, Apr. 22 (7pm), Saturday, Apr. 23 (7pm) and Sunday, Apr. 24 (3pm). Featuring each genre offered by the dance program, performances will include jazz, ballet and hip-hop. The show continues with an upbeat contemporary piece by guest artists Meghan and Tito Reyes of Fusion Dance Project. $5-12+. 7pm. Seabury Hall (480 Olinda Rd., Makawao), Seaburyhall.org. Photo: Jack Grace

REGGAE ON DA ROCK – The Cannabiz Review presents the first Reggae on da Rock, Maui’s 420 Festival in Kihei. Enjoy live performances from the Lambsbread, the Grudge, Spittin Image, Ie Baysicent, Goldawn Won and more. Guest speakers include Joshua Fukino of Kauai Kine, Celia Jane of Fresh Farms and The GoddessM of HVCA. Enjoy non-gmo, vegan and organic food options. Location will be revealed at ticket purchase. $10-100 12:30-9pm. Reggaeondarock.com. Photo courtesy the Lambsbread

SATURDAY, APR. 23 OKINAWAN COOKING CLASS – Try your hand at traditional Okinawan cooking with Eric Wada of Ukwanshin Kabudan. A certified Sensei in Okinawan dance, culture, language and identity, Wada will cook alongside students to make Muuchi (Okinawa mochi) and Champuru (vegetable stir fry). The event is hosted by the Maui Ryukyu Culture Group, all are welcome for questions, cooking and community. RSVP required. $20. 10am-1pm. Rinzai Zen Mission (120 Alawai Rd., Paia), Rinzai-maui.org. Photo: Banzai Hiraoki/Wikimedia Commons

HAIKU HO‘OLAULE‘A – The 23rd annual Haiku Ho‘olaule‘a and Flower Festival returns to Haiku School. The event serves as a benefit for the school, the Haiku Boys & Girls Club and the Haiku Community Association. Enjoy entertainment, food, an artisan marketplace, keiki zone and more. There’s also the bake sale, silent auction and bloom design contests. Don’t forget to hashtag your social media photos with #PeaceLoveHaiku. Free admission. 9am-3pm. Haiku School (105 Pauwela Rd., Haiku), Haikuhoolaulea.org. Photo: Peter Liu

SATURDAY, APR. 23 LET’S GET COUNTRY – The Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center and KAOI FM present Let’s Get Country at the mall’s center court. Enjoy an afternoon of giveaways, line dancing and talk story sessions with Maui ranchers. Slack key guitarists Jeff Peterson and George Kahumoku, Jr. will perform live. Free. 3-5pm. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului), QueenKaahumanuCenter.com. Photo courtesy George Kahumoku, Jr.

MAUI BICYCLING LEAGUE FAMILY RIDE – As part of National Bike Month, the Maui Bicycling League is hosting a free Family Ride on the Northshore Greenway. MBL leaders will demonstrate basic hand signals and rider safety tips as well as give an “ABC Quick Check” for riders to learn about air, brakes, chain and quick release safety. The route will take riders from the Kaunoa Senior Center to Kanaha Beach Park and back. All riders must wear bicycle helmets; earbuds are prohibited. Please RSVP! Free. 9am. Kaunoa Senior Center (401 Alakapa Pl., Kahului), Mauibicyclingleague.org. Photo courtesy Maui Bicycling League

SUNDAY, APR. 24

MONDAY, APR. 25

HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS – The Harlem Globetrotters are back on Maui and ready to thrill you with their basketball antics and theatrics. They’re returning to War Memorial Gymnasium and fans of all ages are welcome to enjoy an afternoon of tricks and tips. The familyfriendly event will have everyone engaged. 3pm show. War Memorial Gym (700 Halia Nakoa St., Wailuku); 856-229-7793, Harlemglobetrotters.com. Photo courtesy Harlem Globetrotters’ Facebook page

TUESDAY, APR. 26

WORLD PENGUIN DAY – The Hyatt Regency Maui invites you to celebrate with its seven African BlackFooted Penguins. Festivities will include a special penguin feeding, penguin cookie decorating and photo opportunities with the resort’s penguin mascot. Be sure to hashtag your photos with #PenguinInParadise. Free. 9:30am. Hyatt Regency Maui (200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka’anapali); 808-661-1234, Maui.hyatt.com. Photo courtesy the Hyatt Regency Maui

WEDNESDAY, APR. 27 SOMOS OHANA NICARAGUA BENEFIT NIGHT – Make your buck go further at Flatbread Company’s Benefit Night because a portion of proceeds from every pizza sold will benefit Somos Ohana Nicaragua (SON). It’s a nonprofit that partners with Nicaraguan government to build schools, arrange health services, college scholarships and transportation costs. Shop the silent auction of unique crafts and other items. 5-10pm. The Flatbread Company (89 Hana Hwy., Paia), Somosohahanicaragua.org. Photo courtesy SON

UPCOUNTY COUNTY COUNCIL CANDIDATES DEBATE –Join the Maui ui Young Democrats for the Upcountry Maui County Council Candidates’’ Debate at the Pukalani Community Center. Candidates include Stacey Moniz, Eric Molina, Yuki Lei Sugimura and Napua Greig Nakasone as they answer questions on the issues facing Maui. The evening will also celebrate Gladys Baisa, the current Upcountry Maui County Council seat holder, who is not running this year. 5:30-8:30pm. Pukalani Communityy sy Center (Makawao), Facebook.com/MauiYoungDems. Photo courtesy Maui Young Democrats

APRIL 21, 2016 25


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Film

by Barry Wurst II

Let The Light Shine In ‘Midnight Special’ is a very pleasant surprise ★★★★★ Rated PG / 110 Min.

M

idnight Special is not bound by mainstream formula, genre expectations or even conventional storytelling. The new film from writer/director Jeff Nichols overflows with sequences that begin strikingly and develop is surprising ways. The establishing scenes gradually set up the premise, in which a father (Michael Shannon) has kidnapped his son, Alton Meyer (Jaeden Lieberher). Along with a getaway driver (Joel Edgerton), the three are on the run and in pursuit by the FBI. On their trail is an inexperienced scientific expert (Adam Driver) and the leader of a church (Sam Shepard), who both seek to detain Alton, but for different reasons. Alton is calm, awfully kind and frequently wears swimming goggles, in order to contain his strange ability: if he removes his eyepiece during the day, a massive beam of light shines from out of his pupils. This detail, introduced early, is far from the only strange thing about Alton. Late in the film, the audience is still

discovering layers to the characters and the story, which reminds me of the great works by Stephen King that aren’t horror tales. Nichols’ previous films include Take Shelter, which similarly explored faith versus reason, and Mud, a showcase for one of the best performances Matthew McConaughey has ever given. His latest is an ensemble piece, though young Lieberher (so good as Bill Murray’s only friend in St Vincent) anchors it by making Alton a compelling and disarmingly sweet figure. Shannon once again offers Nichols his considerable intensity. It’s always a pleasure to see Shepard (though his role is too small) and Kirsten Dunst is excellent as Alton’s loving and fearful mother. Driver, hot off playing Kylo Ren in some sci-fi thing, is a welcome presence, adding droll humor to his scenes. The DNA of the screenplay can be traced back to John Carpenter’s Starman and pieces of The X-Files, Powder and The Day The Earth Stood Still. Yet, while those works had expansive narratives, Midnight Special chooses to be vague at times and has more plot than it needs. For example, the segment dealing with The Ranch, the church led by Shepard’s char-

If it's ok, I'd prefer not to talk to the hand

acter, is rich enough for an entire movie. Unlike Nichols’ overlong Mud, Midnight Special is under two hours, moves briskly, has no unnecessary or wasted scenes and draws us in by consistently taking his story into surprising territory. Although Nichols isn’t a showy filmmaker (a quality he shares with Carpenter), his latest is meant for the big screen. Whereas too many recent movies are best viewed at home, this is a welcome example of a film that needs to be seen in a theater with an audience. There are some weird, unspoken ties to Twilight Zone-The Movie, which also utilized the Credence Clearwater Revival title song (presumably present here for its line “...shine your light on me...”). They also share the presence of a powerful little boy, though saying more would

unwisely spoil things. This is the kind of movie where the less you know going in, the better your experience will be. Nichols understands that special effects are best used as a storytelling tool and not a means of distraction or a key component to hang an entire movie on. Here, the CGI is dazzling and plentiful, but always in service of the film and not the other way around. Weeks later, I can barely recall an outstanding visual effect from Batman v Superman. On the other hand, I’ll never forget the ending of this movie. This, along with 10 Cloverfield Lane, is one of the great surprises of 2016, a thriller with novel twists and a great storyteller in charge. Midnight Special wants to wow its audience and succeeds, again and again. ■

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Film

by Alex Mitchell

Showtimes KA‘AHUMANU 6 Queen Ka‘ahumanu Shopping Center, Kahului. 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: every day until 4pm) The Jungle Book-PG- 2D THU 11:15 1:30 3:45 8:15, 2D FRI-SAT 11:45 12:15 12:45 2:10 2:40 3:10 4:05 5:05 5:35 4:35 7:00 7:30 8:00 9:00 9:25 9:55 10:20, 2D SUNTHU 11:45 12:15 12:45 2:10 2:40 3:10 4:05 5:05 5:35 4:35 7:00 7:30 8:00 9:00, 3D FRITHU 11:15 1:40 6:30. Criminal-R- FRI-THU 11:00 1:40 4:20 7:00, FRI-SAT 11:00 1:40 4:20 7:00 9:30, SUN-THU 11:00 1:40 4:20 7:00. Eye In The Sky- R- THU 12:00 2:25 4:45 7:10, FRI 12:00 2:25 4:45 7:10 9:30, SAT 2:25 4:45 7:10 9:30, SUN-WED 12:00 2:25 4:45 7:10, THU 12:00 2:25 4:45. Spirited Away- PG-SAT 11:00. Demolition-R- THU 9:30. God’s Not Dead 2 -R- THU 2:30.

MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, Kahului, 808-249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm) On The Waterfront (1954)-NR- SUN 2:00 7:00,

WED 2:00 7:00. Huntsman: Winter’s War- PG13- FRI (11:30

12:00 1:40 2:10 4:30 5:00) 7:20 7:50 10:00 10:30, SAT (11:30 12:00 1:40 2:10) 4:30 5:00 7:20 7:50 10:00 10:40, SUN (11:30 12:00 1:40 2:10) 4:30 5:00 7:20 7:50 10:00 10:40, MON (11:30 12:00 1:40 2:10 4:30 5:00) 7:20 7:50 10:00 10:30, TUE-THU (11:30 12:00 1:40 2:10 4:30 5:00) 7:20 7:50 10:00 10:30. Barbershop: The Next Cut- PG13- THU 11:30 2:10 4:50 7:30 10:30, FRI (11:30 2:20 5:00) 7:40 10:20, SAT (11:30 2:20) 5:00 7:40 10:20,

NEW THIS WEEK THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR - PG13 - Action/Drama - The Huntsman (Chris Hemsworth) tries to protect Queen Freya (Emily Blunt) from her rival sister Ravenna (Charlize Theron). Don’t expect to see Snow White, though… 114 min. MILES AHEAD - R - Drama/Music - An unconventional look at the life and music of Miles Davis. Stars Don Cheadle, who also directed and cowrote the film. 100 min. ON THE WATERFRONT - NR - Crime/Drama - TCM presents a special screening of the 1954 classic starring Marlon Brando as a boxerturned-longshoreman who must fight corrupt union bosses. 108 min. SPIRITED AWAY - PG - Animation/Family Hayao Miyazaki’s wonderful 2001 movie about a 10-year-old girl who wanders into a world of gods, witches and monsters. 125 min.

NOW PLAYING BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT - PG13 - Comedy - The neighborhood around Calvin’s Barbershop isn’t what it used to be, so the crew gets together to turn things around. 112 min. BATMAN V. SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE - PG13 - Action/Adventure - Dramatization of the landmark Supreme Court case that concerned the limits of tort laws in the matter of defective capes. Kidding! It’s about

SUN (11:30 2:20) 5:00 7:40 10:20, MON (11:30 2:20 5:00) 7:40 10:20, TUE-THU (11:30 2:20 5:00) 7:40 10:20. Hardcore Henry-R- THU 12:10 2:40, FRI-SUN 6:50 9:20, MON 6:50 9:20, TUE-WED 6:50 9:20, THU 6:50. Miles Ahead- R- FRI (11:30 2:00 4:30) 7:00 9:40, SAT (11:30 2:00) 4:30 7:00 9:40, SUN (11:30 2:00) 4:30 7:00 9:40, MON (11:30 2:00 4:30) 7:00 9:40, TUE-THU (11:30 2:00 4:30) 7:00 9:40. The Boss-R- THU 11:50 12:20 2:20 2:50 4:50 5:20 7:20 7:50 9:50 10:30, FRI (11:20 2:30 4:50) 8:00 10:40, SAT (11:20 2:30) 4:50 8:00 10:40, SUN (11:20 2:30) 4:50 8:00 10:40, MON (11:20 2:30 4:50) 8:00 10:40, TUE-THU (11:20 2:30 4:50) 8:00 10:40. Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice- PG132D THU 11:30 12:00 2:50 3:20 6:10 7:10 9:30 10:00, FRI (11:20 1:40 4:50) 7:10 10:20, SAT (11:20 1:40) 4:50 7:10 10:20, SUN (11:20 1:40) 4:50 7:10 10:20, MON (11:20 1:40 4:50) 7:10 10:20, TUE-THU (11:20 1:40 4:50) 7:10 10:20. My Big Fat Greek Wedding- PG13- THU 11:30 1:50 4:20 6:50 9:20, FRI (11:20 2:20 5:10) 7:20 10:10, SAT (11:20 2:20) 5:10 7:20 10:10, SUN (11:40 2:20) 5:10 7:20 10:10, MON (11:20 2:20 5:10) 7:20 10:10, TUE-THU (11:20 2:20 5:10) 7:20 10:10. Hello, My Name Is Doris- R- THU 12:20 2:30 4:40, FRI (12:00 2:10 4:40), SAT (12:00 2:10) 4:40, SUN (12:00 2:10) 4:40, MON-THU (12:00 2:10 4:40). Midnight Special- PG13- THU11:40 2:20 5:00 7:40 10:20, FRI (11:20 1:50 4:20) 6:50 9:30, SAT (11:20 1:50) 4:20 6:50 9:30, SUN (11:20) 7:50 10:30, MON (11:20 1:50 4:20) 6:50 9:30, TUE (11:20 1:50 4:20) 6:50 9:30, WED (11:20) 6:50 9:30, THU (11:20 1:50 4:20) 9:30.

Batman and Superman kind of fighting with Lex Luthor (I think Wonder Woman shows up too for some reason). 151 min. THE BOSS - R - Comedy - Melissa McCarthy plays a rich industrialist who goes to prison for insider trading, then tries to rebrand herself as a good citizen. 99 min. CRIMINAL - R - Action/Science Fiction The government implants a dead CIA operative’s memories and skills into a death-row inmate to stop a dangerous plot, because what could possibly go wrong with that? Stars Kevin Costner, Ryan Reynolds and Gal Gadot. 113 min. THE DIVERGENT SERIES: ALLEGIANT– PART 1 - PG13 - Sci-Fi/Adventure - Tris and Four must escape and learn the shocking truth of what’s beyond the wall that encircles Chicago (spoiler: it’s another movie). 121 min. EYE IN THE SKY - R - Drama/War - A colonel has an international incident on her hands when a girl wanders into her counter-terrorist operation in Kenya. Stars Helen Mirren and the late Alan Rickman. 102 min. HARDCORE HENRY - R - Action/Adventure First-person POV flick about a guy who’s reborn with no memory and must stop a warlord from bioengineering super-soldiers. 96 min. HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS - R - Comedy/ Drama - Sally Field stars in this film about a 60ish woman who pursues a younger man. 95 min. THE JUNGLE BOOK - PG - Adventure/Family With help from Bagheera the panther and Baloo

The Divergent Series: Allegiant- PG13- THU

11:30 2:20 5:00 7:40 10:20, FRI (11:40 2:30 4:40) 7:30 9:50, SAT (11:40 2:30) 4:40 7:30 9:50, SUN (2:30) 4:40 7:30 9:50, MON (11:40 2:30 4:40) 7:30 9:50, TUE-WED (11:40 2:30 4:40) 7:30 9:50, THU (11:40 2:30 4:40) 9:50. Miracles from Heaven- PG- THU 11:30 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30, FRI (11:40 2:00 4:20) 6:50 9:20, SAT (11:40 2:00) 4:20 6:50 9:20, SUN (2:00) 4:20 9:20, MON (11:40 2:00 4:20) 6:50 9:20, TUE (11:40 2:00 4:20) 6:50 9:20, WED (11:40 2:00) 10:30, THU (11:40 2:00 4:20) 6:50. Zootopia -PG- 2D THU 11:40 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40, FRI (12:00 2:50 5:20) 7:50 10:30, SAT (12:00 2:50) 5:20 7:50 10:30, SUN (12:00 2:50) 5:20 6:50 10:30, MON (12:00 2:50 5:20) 7:50 10:30, TUE-THU (12:00 2:50 5:20) 7:50 10:30. 10 Cloverfield Lane -PG13- THU 7:00 9:40.

WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front St., Lahaina, 808-249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day) Huntsman: Winter’s War- PG13- FRI (1:00) 4:00 7:00 10:00, SAT (1:00) 4:00 7:00 10:00, SUN (1:00) 4:00 7:00 10:00, MON (1:00 4:00) 7:05, TUE (1:00 4:00 7:00 10:00), WED-THU (1:00 4:00) 7:05. The Jungle Book-PG- 2D THU 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:30, FRI (1:15) 9:50, SAT (1:15) 9:50, SUN (1:15) 9:50, MON (1:15), TUE (1:15 9:50), WED-THU (1:15). 3D FRI-THU 4:15 7:15. The Boss-R- THU 1:15 3:45 6:30 9:00, FRI (1:30) 4:30 7:30 10:15, SAT (1:30) 4:30 7:30 10:15, SUN (1:30) 4:30 7:30 10:15, MON (1:30 4:30) 7:30, TUE (1:30 4:30 7:30 10:15), WED (1:30 4:30) 7:30, THU (1:30 4:30). Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice- PG132D THU 1:00 4:20 7:45.

the bear, Mowgli faces the dreaded tiger Shere Khan in this Rudyard Kipling classic. 105 min. MIDNIGHT SPECIAL - PG13 - Adventure/Science Fiction - A father and his son (who has special powers, of course) are pursued by the government and some cult. See this week’s movie review. 112 min. MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN - PG - Drama A young girl with a terrible digestive disorder is suddenly cured after a bad accident. Stars Jennifer Garner. 109 min. MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING 2 - PG13 Comedy - Nia Vardalos and her family returns for even larger Greek wedding. 94 min. ZOOTOPIA - PG - Animation/Adventure - A fox that’s a fugitive con artist must team up with a bunny that’s a rookie cop to stop a conspiracy. Voices by Ginnifer Goodwin and Jason Bateman. 108 min.

LAST CHANCE 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE - PG13 - Drama/SciFi - After getting into a wreck, a woman is held captive by two guys who say the world is under attack from chemical weapons. 105 min. DEMOLITION - R - Comedy/Drama - A guy coping with the sudden death of his wife forms an unlikely bond with a vending machine company customer service rep. 100 min.

AT AZEKA SHOPPING CTR.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT JAMIE GALLO MAUI 8 TRACK PLAYERS THE DRIVERS BRING A FOOD DONATION! FOR MAUI FOOD BANK (NON-PERISHABLE) KEIKI ZONE THE MAUI SPIDER JUMP CHRISTALINE’S BALLOON TWISTIN’ HUMAN BALLS ON WATER BY MOREY INC. GOOD EATS ARTS & CRAFTS & MORE! INTERESTED IN BEING A VENDOR OR IN VOLUNTEERING? FOR INFO GO TO: KIHEIFRIDAYS.COM LOOKING FOR THE NEXT TOWN PARTY? MAUIFRIDAYS.COM

GOD’S NOT DEAD 2 - PG - Drama/Science Fiction - Oh no! Evil school administrators are trying to destroy Jesus! Does one god-fearing teacher have the power to stop them? 121 min.

APRIL 21, 2016 29


Calendar

by Alex Mitchell & Shannon Kekahuna

Da Kine Calendar BIG SHOWS MICK FLEETWOOD BLUES BAND FEATURING RICK VITO - Thu. Apr 21. Ticket holders with a dinner reservation get an opportunity to attend the Mick Fleetwood ‘Meet and Greet.’ $50-125. 8:30pm. Fleetwood’s On Front Street, (744 Front St., Lahaina); 808-669-6425; Fleetwoodsonfrontst.com NATALIE ROBLES BAND - Thu. Apr 21. Enjoy the soulful eclectic sound of Natalie Robles and her band live at Mulligan’s. 7:30pm. Mulligan’s on the Blue, (100 Kaukahi St., Wailea); 808-874-1131; Mulligansontheblue.com THE PHARCYDE - Thu. Apr 21. Hard Rock Cafe hosts The Pharcyde for their Global Mana Tour 2016 with special guest Pure Powers. 21+ Tickets available online. $20. 9:30pm. Hard Rock Cafe, (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-7400; Bit.ly/1RZ2NkB KIHEI 4TH FRIDAY TOWN PARTY - Fri. Apr 22. Come to the South side and enjoy free entertainment, food booths and trucks, art, crafts and plenty of great local shopping. 6pm. Azeka Marketplace, (South Kihei Road); Mauifridays.com INNAVISION’S ’LIFTED’ TOUR 2016 - Fri. Apr 22. Check out the Lifted album release event hosted by Spence Jam. There will also be special guests like Sounds of Jah, Kai K and Koa Hewahewa. $15. 21+. 9pm. Charley’s Restaurant and Saloon, (142 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-8085; Charleysmaui.com ‘A NIGHT AT THE MOVIES’ - Sat. Apr 23. Under the baton of Artistic Director Gary Leavitt, “A Night at the Movies” celebrates the beautiful melodies and spirited medleys that set the scene for your favorite moments on film. Tickets are $30 for Adults $15/students and keiki 18 and under (with student ID) plus applicable fees. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Wailuku); 808-242-2787; Mauiarts.org

WILLIE K & THE WAREHOUSE BLUES BAND Thu. This Hawaiian phenomenon captivates audiences around the world with his astounding performances and remarkable array of musical styles. $60 dinner and show, $25 show only. Call for reservations. 6:30pm. King Kamehameha Golf Club, (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Waikapu); 808-249-0033; Kamehamehagolf.com ‘INHERIT THE WIND’ - Fri. Apr 22. One of the truly great American dramas of this century, and one of the most meaningful plays in American theatre. $2040. 7:30pm. Historic Iao Theater, (68 N. Market St., Wailuku); 808-242-6969; Mauionstage.com AN EVENING WITH MARK TWAIN - Fri. Apr 22. Come enjoy a performance of “An evening with Mark Twain” by Rick Scheideman. With humor and wisdom Mark Twain shares aspects of his fascinating life including his time on Maui. $20. 6:30pm. The Pioneer Inn, (658 Wharf St, Lahaina); 808-276-4201; Pioneerinn-maui.com ISLAND RHYTHMS SUNSET COCKTAIL CRUISE - Fri & Sat. Get on board for lots of fun, food and dancing on Pacific Whale Foundation’s Island Rhythms Sunset Cocktail Cruise with local reggae star Marty Dread. This cruise includes delicious appetizers, perfectly mixed Mai Tais and other cocktails. Fridays: 4:30pm, (Ma‘alaea Harbor); Saturdays: 4:30pm, (Lahaina Harbor); 808-249-8811; Pacificwhale.org KEIKI HULA PERFORMANCE - Fri. Come by to witness a true array of talents by our island’s keiki in their native hawaiian hula performance. 5pm. The Outlets of Maui, (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-8277; Theoutletsofmaui.com FREE RANGE COMEDY - Sat. Pure improv comedy by Maui’s own award-winning troupe! Raw, unfiltered, fast and funny audience inspired scenes and games (but don’t bring the kids). $10. 7:30pm. Temple of Peace Maui, (575 Haiku Rd.); 808-575-5220.

THE GLAMTRONS - Sat. Apr 23. Get down with the Gamtrons as they perform a special tribute to David Bowie. $15 at the door, $10 in advance. 7pm. Mulligan’s on the Blue, (100 Kaukahi St., Wailea); 808-874-1131; Mulligansontheblue.com

ON THE SPOT THEATRE - Sun. Don’t miss this exciting night of improv! Their actors will take suggestions for improv scenes straight from the audience. Share in the excitement, drama and emotion. $5. 6:30pm. Proartspacific.com

THE HAIKU HILLBILLYS - Sun. Apr 24. Enjoy live music during the day with The Haiku Hillbillys. Sue Westcott will be playing the violin and mandolin, Rand Cook will be on vocals and playing the banjo, guitar and harmonica. And, of course Randall Rospond will be on the guitar and harmonica with his amazing vocals. 2:30pm. Banyan Tree Park Lahaina, (648 Wharf St., Lahaina).

POWER UP COMEDY WITH CHINO LAFORGE - Tue. Stand up comedy with Chino LaForge live on stage at Three’s Bar. 5:30pm. Threes Bar and Grill, (1945 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-879-3133; Threesbarandgrill.com

DJ IRIE DOLE - Wed. Enjoy late night reggae with DJ Irie Dole. 10pm. Paradise Grill, (2291 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-662-3700; Paradisegrillkb.com

STAGE ‘ULALENA - Mon, Tue, Thu, and Fri. Delight in the richness of Hawaiian history and culture through music and dance. $29.99 Keiki / $59.99 adults. Children 5 and under are free. Kama‘aina and military rates, and dinner partner offers are available. 5pm. Maui Theatre, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com BURN’N LOVE - Mon, Tue, Thu, and Fri. Maui Theatre’s Burn’n Love brings back the golden era of Elvis in Hawaii. Performer Darren Lee makes it easy for you to relive the days of Blue Hawaii. Tickets start at $59.99; Children 12 and under are free. Kama‘aina and military rates, and dinner partner offers are available. A portion of every ticket sold benefits the Maui Food Bank. 7:30pm. Maui Theatre, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com ‘THE NERD’ - Thu. Apr 21. Directed by Sally Sefton and featuring Dylan Bode, Laura Cole, Kyle Lane, Chris Rose, Anthony Rummel, Marsi Smith and Caleb Chargualaf. $22 Kama‘aina nights on Thursdays. $25. 7:30pm. ProArts Playhouse, (1280 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-463-6550; Proartspacific.com

30 APRIL 21, 2016

NA LIO KEIKI DAY - Wed. Apr 27. Bring your family to a fun evening with Na Lio Iki, their miniature horses Julio and Freedom. This is a theatrical production with horses that tell the story of the Hawaiian Cowboy. Everyone will have an opportunity to take pictures and brush the minis. There will be games, crafting, coloring and refreshments. Free. 5:30pm. Na Lio Gift Shop, (335 Keawe St, Lahaina); 808-270-2255; Naliomaui.com FOUREVER FAB SHOW - Wed. Apr 27. Fourever Fab, a Beatles tribute band, is composed of seasoned look and sound alike musicians who have been performing the timeless hits of the Beatles around the world for many years. 7pm. Maui Theatre Lahaina, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com GEORGE KAHUMOKU JR.’S SLACK KEY SHOW - Wed. Apr 27. Enjoy Hawaii’s renaissance man, Grammy Award-winner George Kahumoku Jr., performing in concert with Hawaii’s music legends. Preshow dinner package at Sea House Restaurant, advance purchase required. $37.99. 7:30pm. Napili Kai Beach Resort Aloha Pavilion, (5900 L. Honoapi‘ilani Rd., Napili); 808-669-6271; Napilikai.com

two options: A La Carte (offering a variety of special goses and one pupu), or It All Gose Together (a guided tasting experience of gose and pairings menu). Reservations are required. 2pm. Maui Brewing Company Brewpub, (4405 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Kahana); 808-669-3474; Mauibrewingco.com

auction. The jamboree benefits the children of Carden Academy of Maui. This year, funds will go to building an outdoor classroom, establishing a school-wide communication system and tuition assistance. 5pm. Oskie Rice Polo Field, (521 Olinda Rd., Makawao).

BURGERS AND BURGUNDY - Thu. Apr 21. Explore the flavors of Burgundy with 8 tasting wines and specialty sliders. Featuring wines from North Berkeley Imports. Please call for reservations. $60. 4pm. Cane and Canoe Bar, (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808-662-6681; Montagehotels.com/kapalua

CHEECH & CHONG - Sat. Apr 30. Successful beyond their wildest dreams, the iconic comedy duo Cheech and Chong defined an era with their hilariously irreverent, satirical, counter-culture, no-holds-barred comedy routines. The evening will also feature special guest Brian Evans. 5pm. Lahaina Civic Center, (1840 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); 808-661-4685.

HALE KU‘AI OPEN MARKET - Thu. Features fresh assorted fruits and vegetables. Free. 11am. Hale Ku‘ai, (1977 Main St., Wailuku); 808-984-2156.

ART SCENE

CELEBRATE EARTH DAY AT MAUI BREWING CO. - Fri. Apr 22. Hawaii Wildlife Fund is a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of Hawaii’s native wildlife through research, education and advocacy to protect Hawaii’s fragile marine ecosystem and inhabitants. Join Maui Brewing Co. in donating half of their house beer sales in support of Hawaii Wildlife Fund. 6pm. Maui Brewing Company Kihei, (605 Lipoa Pkwy., Kihei); 808-213-3002; Mauibrewingco.com AIPONO WINE DINNER PROGRAM - Fri. Apr 22. Spago Maui is hosting with Chambers and Chambers Wine Merchants to benefit the Maui Culinary Academy. The Spanish-themed multi-course dinner is by Chef Cameron Lewark. For each dinner, $25 will go to the Maui Culinary Academy. Call for reservations. $125. 6pm. Spago Maui, (3900 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-879-2999 SUNDAY HAWAIIAN MUSIC JAM SESSION Sun. How do you take Sunday Brunch and make it better? By listening to Hawaii’s most talented musicians, of course. $50/adult, $25/children. 10am. King Kamehameha Golf Club, (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Waikapu); 808-249-0033; Kamehamehagolf.com

TICKETS ON SALE JUSTIN MOORE AND RODNEY ATKINS - Thu. Apr 28. Country stars Justin Moore and Rodney Atkins perform for one night in their first Maui show. $39-129. 5pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-2787; Mauiarts.org OLUKAI HO‘OLAULE‘A FESTIVAL - Fri. Apr 29 - Sun. May 1. Each May, OluKai holds its annual premier paddling festival on Maui’s North Shore to celebrate Hawaiian culture and the traditions that surround this community. The event brings together both elite athletes competing in the world’s best SUP and OC1 races (highlighted by the legendary Maliko Downwind Run) and is also a gathering of friends and family-friendly activities in a celebration of the ocean and cultures that surround it. Register online. 8am. Kanaha Beach Park, (Alama Place, Kahului); 808-877-2524, Olukai.com/hoolaulea.html DAVID BENOIT - Fri. Apr 29. David Benoit, the Grammy-nominated pianist, composer and conductor, will join Maui musicians Phil and Angela Benoit. The evening will feature the silky voice of Angela as they perform songs from David’s new album 2 In Love. Phil will add smooth guitar, accompanied by a rhythm section of Maui all-stars. Tickets are $35-45 (plus applicable fees). 7pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Wailuku); 808-242-2787; Mauiarts.org

MAUI FOODIE

CHAKA KHAN - Sat. Apr 30. After a sold-out show in 2015, Chaka Khan returns to Maui. Affectionately known around the world, she has the rare ability to sing in R&B, pop, rock, gospel, country, world music and classical. $35-125. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-7469; Mauiarts.org

HOWZIT GOSE! - Thu. Apr 21 - Fri. Apr 22. Maui Brewing Co. presents the first of a four night series featuring Black Lava Gose. Guests can choose from

CARDEN JAMBOREE 2016 - Sat. Apr 30. Enjoy a delicious BBQ dinner prepared by Three’s Bar and Grill, live music with the Country Knights and shop their silent

EXHIBIT: ART MAUI 2016 - Thu. Art Maui continues to showcase the growing community of visual artists on Maui in their 38th annual juried community exhibit. 10am. Schaefer International Gallery, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-2787; Mauiarts.org 2016 ART OF TRASH EXHIBIT - Ending April 30th, The Art of Trash promotes creative reuse, stimulates environmental awareness, and redefines how we view “garbage.” Art of Trash is free and open to the public; donations are welcome. Free. Maui Mall, (70 E. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-877-2524; MalamaMauiNui.org VIEWPOINTS GALLERY SPRING SHOW - Thu. Apr 20 - Fri. May 20. Featuring Chelsea Bryce, Joseph Fletcher, Charlton Kinkade and Casey McLain. 5pm. Viewpoints Gallery, (3620 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-572-5979; Viewpointsgallerymaui.com ARTISTS IN RESIDENCE - Thu. Apr 20. Browse sculptures, paintings, photography, woodturnings and ceramics from select local artists. Located in the lobby near the Botero Lounge. 9am. Grand Wailea, (3850 Wailea Alanui); 808-875-1234; Grandwailea.com RESORT ART COLLECTION TOUR - Fri. Learn about Grand Wailea’s extensive museum quality art collection, the largest resort collection in Hawaii. Tour meets and starts at NaPua Gallery. 10am. Grand Wailea, (3850 Wailea Alanui); 808-875-1234; Grandwailea.com CHRIS LARSON - Fri. Apr 22. Chris will be displaying her work and creating new pieces. 1:30am. Maui Hands Lahaina, (612 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-9898; Mauihands.com IAN HAIGHT - Fri. Apr 22. Ian will be working on his beach and ocean wave inspired paintings. 4:30pm. Maui Hands Lahaina, (612 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-9898; Mauihands.com FRIDAY NIGHT ART NIGHT - Fri. Lahaina Printsellers Ltd. invites you to visit our gallery, for live music and mai tais while we showcase our artist of the week. Free. 6pm. Lahaina Printsellers, (764 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-5815; Printsellers.com BOOTZIE GALLERY GRAND OPENING- Sat, Apr 23. Please join us for our grand opening! Enjoy live music, refreshments and hors d’oeuvres, and come meet the artists. Enter to win luxe prize giveaways- and come celebrate with us. Featured Artists: Kim Mosley, Walfrido, Lynette Pradiga, Travis Joers, Anyes B., Erin Dieguez, James Freeborn Welch, Bootzie and others. 4-7pm. (3660 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-495-4161 JAMES LYNCH - Mon. Apr 25. Check out this oil and pastel artist. 11am. Maui Hands Paia, (84 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-9245; Mauihands.com CHRISTINE WAARA - Mon. Apr 25. Meet Christine Waara and watch her watercolor painting. 11am. Maui Hands Makawao, (1169 Makawao Ave.); 808-572-2008; Mauihands.com ELLEN LEWINSKY - Tue. Apr 26. This week you can talk story with her, bring your friends and family to see how the magic is created. 10am. Lahaina Arts Society Banyan Tree Gallery and Old Jail Gallery, (648 Wharf St., Lahaina); 808-661-0111; Lahaina-arts.org


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

4/21

4/22

4/23

4/24

4/25-4/27

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

AMBROSIA 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-1011

SIN w/ DJ Blast, 10pm

BLACK ROCK LOUNGE Sheraton Maui Resort, 2605 Kaanapali Pkwy, 661-0031

CAFE DEL VINO 300 Maalaea Rd., Maalaea - 868-0732

Gina Martinelli & Gene Argel, 5:30-9:30pm

Frisky Friday w/ DJ Skinny Guy, 10pm

Saturday Night Diva w/ DJ Decka, 10pm

PURE: Top 40, House & EDM w/DJ Big Mike

House Party Saturdays w/ DJ Big Mike & DJ Kamikaze

Francois, 5:30-9:30pm

Francois, 5:30-9:30pm

Sundaze Sessions w/ DJ Kurt, 10pm

MON-Joe Cano 5:30pm, TUE- Gina Martinelli & Gilbert Imata 5:30pm, WED- Tempa & Naor, 5:30pm

CASANOVA

WED- Wild Wahine Wednesday w/ DJ Kurt, 10pm $10 cover

1188 Makawao Ave. - 572-0220

CHARLEY’S 142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8085

COOL CAT CAFE Wharf Cinema Center, 658 Front St #160, Lahaina - 667-0988

DIAMONDS ICE BAR 1279 S. Kihei Rd. - 874-9299

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

DOWN THE HATCH 658 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4900

FLEETWOOD’S ON FRONT ST. 744 Front St. (Rooftop), Lahaina - 669-6425

HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-8010

Justin Morris, 6:30pm no cover

Innavision-Lifted Tour 2016 10pm, $10/$15

DJ Mancat, 9:30pm $10

Bloody Mary Bar! 7am-all day

MON- Live Band Open Mic & Jam 7pm, TUE-Brain Massa 6:30pm, WED-Randall Rospond 6:30pm

Will Hartzog 7:30-10pm; no cover

Johnny Ringo 7:30-10pm; no cover

Dave Carrol 7:30-10pm; no cover

Justin Phillips 7:-9pm; no cover

MON - Da Ukulele Boyz, 7:30pm , TUE - Jazz at the Cat 7:30-10pm WED-Benny Uyetake 7-9

SIN

House Music

DJ $Mike, 10pm

Gina Martinelli Band, 6pm

TUE & WED- Pool League

Pub Quiz 7pm, DJ Jamo 10pm

DJ Jamo, 10pm

DJ Illz, 10pm

Steve Craig 6-9pm SIN 9pm

MON & TUE-Bartenders Mix, WED- Louis & Lewis, 10pm

Industry Night w/DJ Surge

Fresh Squeezed Fridays w/ Adam Rio & Bree Richardson, 8pm

Flip Coin Night! 10pm

Paul Johnson, 7pm

Houseshakers, 7pm

Kona Storm, 7pm

Ryan Robinson, 7pm

MON- Noa Zeb 7pm, TUE-Private Event, WED- Cole Sulenta 7pm

TBA

Rick G 4pm, Dat Guys 9pm

Island Reggae, 9pm

Karaoke Industry Night 8pm

MON-Karaoke Rick G 4-8pm, TUE-Rick G 4-8pm, Karaoke 9pm, WED- Rick G 4-8pm, Open Mic 9pm

LUANA KAMA - Tue. Apr 26. Luana Kama finds it fascinating to see the pigments and water flow on paper. Her favorite subjects are people and flowers. 4:30pm. Maui Hands Lahaina, (612 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-9898; Mauihands.com

WRITING CLASSES - Thu. Apr 21 - Thu. May 12. Jasmyne Boswell, author, teacher and coach is offering writing classes (memoir, fiction and nonfiction). Six-week sessions, $225+ G.E.T. tax (early reg. $195). 8am. Jasmyne Boswell, 808268-5807; Jasmyneconsulting.com

Runway Season 8 finalist and transgender activist Ari South. South will be selling wrap-inspired dresses at the Zonta Maui Kihei Party pop-up at the Kihei Town Party. The Zonta Club of Maui is part of Zonta International, a global organization whose mission is to empower women through service and advocacy. 6-9pm. Zontamaui.org

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

DONUTS 2 GO WITH THE FRIENDS OF JOE BLACKBURN - Thu. Apr 21. Nathan Nunuha and the Friends of Joe Blackburn will give away free donuts until they run out. Free. 8am. Corner of Vineyard and Market Streets, (104 N. Market St., Wailuku).

FRIDAY MORNING YIN YOGA WITH SOOKIE KUNST - Fri. Apr 22. Bring a yoga or exercise mat and two firm beach towels for props. Suggested donation is $12 per class. Free for Pacific Cancer Foundation clients. 8am. Waipulani Park, (South Kihei Road).

LET’S KOKUA TOGETHER - Thu. Apr 21. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center invites all nonprofit organizations an opportunity to educate, fundraise and outreach at the Center as part of its new “Let’s Kokua Together” program every Friday. All approved organizations must provide a Certificate of Insurance, have all required permits and adhere to the QKC guidelines. 6pm. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center, (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-877-3369; Queenkaahumanucenter.com

COCONUT WEAVING - Fri. Join Bolly Helekahi for the 2015 Hana No‘eau cultural demonstration series. Bring your family and friends and learn the ancient art of Hawaiian coconut weaving. Free. 1pm. Kipahulu District of Haleakala National Park, (Kula); 808-572-4400; Nps.gov/hale

THURSDAY, APRIL 21 NATIONAL PARK WEEK - Thu, Apr 21 - Sun. Apr 24. Celebrate the Centennial of Haleakala National park and the National Park Service. Entrance fees will be waived all week. Special Junior Ranger programs will be offered on Saturday, April 23, including talks, walks, cultural demonstrations, and a “Talk Story” with former Civilian Conservation Corp member “Uncle Rex” Ornellas, who also turns 100 this year. From 1-3pm in the Kipahulu District, park staff and partners will teach and share weaving, poi pounding, and other cultural practices. 8am. Haleakala National Park, (Haleakala Hwy., Kula); 808-572-4400; Nps.gov/hale/index.htm 2016 GREAT AMERICAN CLEANUP - Until Sat. Apr 30. The Great American Cleanup is the country’s largest community improvement program. This year’s goal is to inspire and empower individuals and community groups to remove litter and debris from shorelines, waterways, roads and other public spaces. 9am. Maliko Gulch, (Hana Highway, Haiku); Malamamauinui.org VOLUNTEERS NEEDED AT PACIFIC PRIMATE SANCTUARY - Thu. Currently seeking volunteers for Animal Caretakers, Support Staff, Office Assistant/Creative Project Development, and Groundskeeper/Handyperson. 8am. Pacific Primate Sanctuary Inc., (Haiku); 808-572-8089; Pacificprimate.org HALEAKALA NATIONAL PARK SUNSET SUMMIT OPERATIONS MEETING - Thu. Apr 21. With ever-increasing numbers of sunrise visitors, park managers are being challenged to provide a safe and enjoyable experience while also protecting the sensitive summit environment. The purpose is to gather input involving visitors who come to the park in personal or rental vehicles, not on commercial tours. 4:30pm. Kahului Community Center, (275 Uhu St., Kahului); 808-270-7389

MON-Movies Games Music 10pm, TUE- Tequila Tuesdays/ Dance Music,10pm, WED-Wine Down & Bartender Mix,10pm

HALAU HULA KAULUOKALA KUMU ULUWEHI GUERRERO HULA CLASSES - Thu. Apr 21. Halau Hula Kauluokala under the direction of Kumu Uluwehi Guerrero is opening classes for adults who cannot make a full halau commitment but still want to have hula in their lives. No fundraising, performance or protocol commitments. Must have knowledge of the hula basics. These are not beginner classes. $30. 5pm. Maui Art and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-7469; Mauiarts.org YOGA FOR EVERY BODY - Thu & Sat. Gentle yoga, all levels of experience welcome. On the grass under the Monkeypod tree, between the two tennis courts. During practice, we view the ocean and sometimes whales and rainbows appear. Taught by certified yoga teachers Sandy Callender, 808-214-2766 or Gylian Solay, 808344-8068. Senior discounts are available. $8. 7:30pm. Waipulani Park, (South Kihei Road).

FRIDAY, APRIL 22 WOMEN UNDER WRAPS - Fri, Apr 22. This year’s area meeting for Zontra Club of Maui features Project

SATURDAY, APRIL 23 BIG ITEM RUMMAGE SALE - Sat. Apr 23. The annual rummage sale is back! There will be household goods, furniture, clothes, bake goods, St. Ann’s famous onolicious bread (limited quantity), Portuguese bean soup, fried chicken plates and more. Proceeds collected will go towards updating the parish hall and kitchen. 7am. St. Ann’s Church, (40 Kuhinia St., Wailuku); 808-269-4946; Saint-ann-maui.org FUN DAZE BAZAAR - Sat. Apr 23. Featuring live entertainment with Frank DeLima, a live and silent auction and rummage sale. Delicious foods from various vendors and a variety of exciting activities for the children, from face painting, balloon art, fish pond, stand the bottle, basketball toss, soda toss and the fat cat game. 8am. St. Anthony School, (1618 L. Main St., Wailuku); 808-244-4976; Sasmaui.org KIHEI PUBLIC LIBRARY’S 20TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION - Sat. Apr 23. The celebration will include a book sale, welcome and blessing, refreshments, photo slideshow, Harpist Lily Swan and “Ho‘okani me hula e oluolu”–pleasant music with hula featuring Hulali and Ka‘imi Hanano‘eau. In honor of National Poetry Month and the library’s anniversary, original artwork and poetry created by library patrons will be on display.

Free. 10am. Kihei Public Library, (35 Waimahaihai St., Kihei); 808-875-6833; Librarieshawaii.org SPRING CRAFT FAIR & SILENT AUCTION - Sat. Apr 23. Help King Kamehameha III Elementary School PTA. This event will have local vendors and crafters selling their goods and services. Great food like Teddy’s Burgers and Wai Lemi. In addition they will have a fun zone for keiki with the help from a keiki folklorico dance group called Konetl Maya. 10am. King Kamehameha III Elementary School, (611 Front St., Lahaina); 808-870-3278; Kk3pta@gmail.com SPECIAL PSYCHIC AND HEALTH FAIR - Sat. Apr 23. The anniversary of Awakening in Paradise continues with open house, live music and munchies. 11am. Kihei Long’s Center, (1215 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-891-1114. EXSTATIC HEART A HEART DANCE EXPERIENCE - Sat. Apr 23. A magical journey of transformation. The dance-floor is a talk, drug and alcohol free space to connect through movement and expression. Please bring your own water. $15. 11am. Lumeria Maui, (1813 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-579-8877; Lumeriamaui.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 24 KA‘EHU BAY BEACH CLEAN UP - Sun. Apr 24. In collaboration with the community and NOAA’s tsunami monitoring program, Hawaii Wildlife Foundation (HWF) adopted Waiehu’s Ka‘ehu Beach on the northwest coastline of Maui in 2012 and cleans this beach every month. Marine debris continues to wash ashore. 9am. Kukona Place, (Kukona Place, Wailuku); Wildhawaii.org/projects.html FREE ZUMBA - Sun. Apr 24. At Keoni’s Hot Lava DanceFit Studio. Free. 9am. Maui Mall, (70 E. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-871-1307; Mauimall.com MAUI MADE FESTIVAL - Sun. Apr 24. Featuring Hawaiian style entertainment followed by jazz. Stay the day and be entertained. 9am. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center, (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808877-3369; Queenkaahumanucenter.com

APRIL 21, 2016 31


32 APRIL 21, 2016


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

4/21

4/22

4/23

4/24

4/25-4/27

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

HARD ROCK CAFE 900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

JAVA JAZZ 3350 L. Honoapiilani Rd. - 667-0787

KAHALE’S 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-7711

KIMO’S 845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

Evan Shulman, 7:30pm no cover

WED-Howard Ahia & Friends, 8-11pm no cover

Guest Performers

Robbie Ray Jazz

MON, TUE & WED- Soundlab

Damaged Goods

Brant Quick Beer Pong

MON-Maui Blues, TUE- John Grover, WED-John Ness

Willie K, 9-11pm $5 cover

Ma’a, 6:30pm

Benny & Rock, 6-8pm

MON-Benny & Rock, 6-8pm, TUE & WED- Sam Ahia 6:30pm

Karaoke w/ “Auntie” Toddy Lilikoi, 9:30pm; no cover

Karaoke w/ “Auntie” Toddy Lilikoi, 9:30pm; no cover Outdoor Sunset Dance Party 5-8pm, $5

MON-Industry Night

The Pharcyde, 9:30pm

Club Hard Rock w/ DJ Del Sol, 10pm $5

Rick Glencross

Guest Performers

Herb Andrews Ma’a, 6:30pm

KOBE STEAKHOUSE 136 Dickenson St. (Lounge Area), Lahaina - 667-5555

KONO’S ON THE GREEN

Ladies Night w/DJ & dancing, 8:30pm

470 Lipoa Pkwy, Kihei - 633-4220

LAHAINA SPORTS BAR

MON-Trivia w/ Niki Guy, 7pm, TUE-Live Music w/ Alex Calma Band, 10pm

843 Waine’e St., Lahaina - 667-6655

LONGHI’S LAHAINA

TBA

TBA

Two Cats Acoustic Jazz, 6-9pm, no cover

Codae Music, 7-10pm

Meryl & Brian, 7-10pm

Mimosa and Bloody Mary Bar, 8:30am

Garrett Probst 10pm

DJ Lobstah 10pm

Welo & Kekai 10:30am-1:30pm

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

888 Front St., Lahaina - 667-2288

LULU’S LAHAINA Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

Far West, 6-9pm

MAUIANO’S 900 Front St, Lahaina, 667-0791

MERRIMAN’S 1 Bay Club Pl., Kapalua - 669-6400

MONDAY, APRIL 25 STORY OF HAWAII - Mon. Watch Bryant Neal as he combines history, geography and cartography of the Hawaiian Islands to create an educational and entertaining experience. 10am. Montage Kapalua Bay, (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808-662-6600; Montagehotels.com HULA SHOW BY TE TIARE PATITIFA - Mon. Enjoy a true Hawaiian hula show with Te Tiara Patitifa. 10:30am. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center, (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-877-3369; Queenkaahumanucenter.com

TUESDAY, APRIL 26 OLUKAI: STAND-UP PADDLE BOARD EXPERIENCE - Tue. Apr 26. New OluKai Ho‘olaule‘a pre-event will be held at Montage Kapalua Bay. Stand-up Paddling (SUP) Experience with pro SUP athlete Connor Baxter and renowned waterman Archie Kalepa. A yoga stretch will be hosted by Spa Montage Kapalua Bay. Meet at Cliff House at 10am. $75 per person (ages 16 and older). Price includes April 30 OluKai Ho‘olaule‘a VIP spectator wristband. Space is limited, advance reservations are required. 10am. Montage Kapalua Bay, (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808-662-6628; Montagehotels.com KALAMA INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL BAND - Tue. Apr 26. Join us for our annual school band concert series featuring the Kalama Intermediate School Band. These concerts allow the next generation of musicians to experience the same world-class stage setting that the superstars enjoy. The public is invited to attend and support Maui’s young performing artists. Free. 6:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-7469; Mauiarts.org TALK STORY AND HULA LESSONS WITH KAHU DANE MAXWELL AND ‘OHANA - Tue. Visitors will have an extraordinary opportunity to hear from the Aquarium’s Hawaiian Cultural Advisor Kahu Dane Maxwell and ‘Ohana as they conduct a talk story session and hula lesson at the end of the Open Ocean Exhibit. Schedule is subject to change. 11:45am. Maui Ocean Center, (192 Ma‘alaea Rd.); 808-270-7061; Mauioceancenter.com STORYTELLER DR. MARGARET READ MACDONALD - Tue. Apr 26. Dr. Margaret, a Washington state children’s book author and folklorist, will share lively folktales from around the world. Free. 6:30pm. Kihei Public Library, (35 Waimahaihai St., Kihei); 808-875-6833; Librarieshawaii.org FREE UKULELE LESSONS - Tue. Free ukulele lessons, because it’s never too late to learn how to play the ukulele.

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

Free. 5:45pm. Lahaina Cannery Mall, (1221 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); 808-661-5304; Lahainacannerymall.com SING OUT MASTER CLASS WITH LOUISE LAMBERT - Tue. Apr 26. Sing Out and get ready for The Voice! Sing your best in your own style and prepare for professional singing gigs and auditions. Jazz vocalist, Maui’s Swing Queen Louise Lambert helps you learn confidence, mic technique, range expansion, flexibility, stage presence, music theory, harmony and ad libbing in a fun and safe space. $15. 6:45pm. Maui Meadows, (Kihei); 808-205-3971; Louiselambert.com

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27 AARP HAWAII PRESENTS: THE BIG SHORT - Wed. Apr 27. Based on the true story by journalist Michael Lewis, The Big Short is the story of a handful of investors who bet against the U.S. mortgage market from 2006-2007. This is a free event, open to the public, though registration is required and seating is firstcome, first-served. Register online or by phone up until 2pm. Arrive early. Patrons must pre-register and bring their confirmation email to attend. 6pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Wailuku); 844418-2281; Aarp.cvent.com/BIGSHORT_Kahului SOUTH SIDE BIKE RIDE - Wed. You’ll need more than a beach cruiser for this bike ride. Riders pedal an average 15mph from Kihei to Iao Valley and back. Road bikes recommended. Free. 6:55am. South Maui Bicycles, (1993 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-874-0068; Southmauibicycles.com UKULELE MIX PLATE - Wed. With more than 20 years in the business, Mele Ukulele has developed great relationships with Maui’s best ukulele teachers. 6pm. The Shops at Wailea, (3750 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-891-6770; Theshopsatwailea.com VOLUNTEERING ON VACATION: O‘O FARM - Wed. Work on an exquisite organic farm in the misting forest of Waipoli in Kula. Wear sturdy shoes and bring a light jacket that you do not mind getting a little dirty, plus water and sunscreen. Gloves and gardening tools provided. Please call 24 hours in advance to sign up. Free. 8:45am. O‘o Farms, (651 Waipoli Rd., Kula); 808-249-8811; Oofarm.com

LIVE MUSIC WEST MAUI CAPTAIN JACK’S - Thu, Jonny Ringo 2-5pm; Fri, Will Hartzog 2-4:30pm; Mon, Will Hartzog 2-4:30pm; Tue, Jonny Ringo 2-5pm; Wed, Tori Dixon Band 2-5pm; (672

Front St., Lahiana); 808-667-0988; Captainjacksmaui.com CHEESEBURGER IN PARADISE - Thu, Brooks Maguire 4:30-10:30pm; Fri, Harry Troupe 4:3010:30pm; Sat, Scott Freeman 4:30-10:30pm; Sun, Brooks Maguire 4:30-10:30pm; Mon, Mark Burnett 4:30-10:30pm; Tue, Scott Freeman 4:30-10:30pm; Wed, Harry Troupe 4:30-10:30pm; (811 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4855; Cheeseburgerland.com COOL CAT CAFE - Thu, Will Hartzog 7:30-10pm; Fri, Johnny Ringo 7:30-10pm; Sat, Dave Carroll 7:3010pm; Sun, Justin Phillips 7-9pm; Tue, Jazz at the Cat 7:30-10pm; Wed, Benny Uyetake 7:30-10pm; (658 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0908; Coolcatcafe.com DOWN THE HATCH - Fri, Uncle Lou 5-7pm; (658 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4900; Dthmaui.com DUKE’S BEACH HOUSE - Thu, Ben DeLeon 3-5pm; Thu, Peter D and Garrett Probst (Ukulele Boys) 6-8:30pm; Fri, Garrett Probst 3-5pm; Fri, Damon Parrillo and Tim Osbourne 6-8:30pm; Sat, Danyel Alana 3-5pm; Sat, Damon Parrillo and Ron Hetten 6-8:30pm; Sun, Keali’i Lum 3-5pm; Sun, DAMIEN AWAI 6-8:30pm; Mon, Keali’i Lum 3-5pm; Mon, Danyel Alana 6-8:30pm; Tue, Ben DeLeon 3-5pm; Tue, Roy Kato and Guest 6-8:30pm; Wed, Garrett Probst 3-5pm; Wed, Puhi Ko 6-8:30pm; (130 Kai Malina Pkwy., Ka‘anapali); 808-662-2900; Dukesmaui.com FLEETWOOD’S ON FRONT ST. - Thu, Paul Johnson 7-9:30pm; Sat, Kona Storm 7-9:30pm; Sun, Ryan Robinson 7-9:30pm; Mon, Noa Zeb 7-9:30pm; Wed, Cole Sulenta 7-9:30pm; (744 Front St., Lahaina); 808-669-6425; Fleetwoodsonfrontst.com HARD ROCK CAFE - Sun, Evan Shulman 7:3010:30pm; (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-7400; Hardrock.com/cafes/maui HULA GRILL - Thu, Kealii Lum and Naiwi Teruya 2-5pm; Thu, Derick Sebastian and Damon Parillo 6-9pm; Fri, Derick Sebastian 11am-1pm; Fri, Maa and Aloha Friday Hula Show 2-5pm; Sat, Kawika Lum Ho 2-5pm; Sun, Ma’a 2-5pm; Mon, Ma’a 2-5pm; Mon, Kulewa 6-9pm; Tue, Kawika Lum Ho 2-5pm; Tue, Wili Pohaku 6-9pm; Wed, Danyel Alana 2-5pm; (2435 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-667-6636; Hulagrillkaanapali.com JAPENGO - Thu, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Fri, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Sat, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Sun, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Mon, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Tue, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Wed, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; (200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-4909; Japengomaui.com

MON-Nestor Ugale 6pm, WED- Open Mic/Karaoke 9pm-close

MON - David Wolfberg / TUE - The Benoits WED - Ranga Pae (all 5:308:30pm)

JAVA JAZZ AND SOUP NUTZ - Thu, Rick Glencross 7-10pm; Fri, Guest Band and Dancing 7-10pm; Sat, Guest Band and Dancing 7-10pm; Sun, Robbie Ray 7-10pm; Mon, The Soundlab 7-10pm; Tue, Paul Bunuan and Nino Toscano 7-10pm; Wed, Paul Bunuan and Nino Toscano 7-10pm; (3350 Lower Honoapiilani Rd., Honokowai); 808-667-0787; Javajazz.net KIMO’S - Thu, Ma’a 6:30-8:30pm; Sat, Ma’a 6:308:30pm; Sun, JD and Harry 2:30-4:30pm; Sun, Benny and Rock 6-8pm; Mon, Benny and Rock 6-8pm; Tue, Sam Ahia 6:30-8:30pm; Wed, Sam Ahia 6:30-8:30pm; (845 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4811; Kimosmaui.com LAHAINA PIZZA COMPANY - Thu, John Kane 7:309:30pm; Fri, John Kane 7:30-9:30pm; Sat, Joseph Chee 7:30-9:30pm; Wed, Scotty Rotten 7:30-9:30pm; (730 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-0700; Lahainapizzacompany.com LEILANI’S ON THE BEACH - Thu, Josh Kahula and Dave of ‘Nuff Sedd’ 3-5pm; Fri, JD and Friends 3-5pm; Sun, ‘Kilohana’ Merv Oana and Duane Feig 3-5pm; Wed, Jarret Roback, Josh Kahula and Roy Kato 3-5pm; (2435 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-661-4495; Leilanis.com LONGHI’S - Thu, Wilmont Kahaialii and Shawn McLaughlin 5-7pm; Fri, Brian Massa and Meryl 5-7pm; Sat, Steve Grimes and Gang 5-7pm; Tue, Tori Dixon and Shawn McLaughlin 5-7pm; (888 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-2288; Longhis.com LULU’S LAHAINA SURF CLUB AND GRILL Thu, Far West 6-9pm; Fri, Codae Music 7-10pm; Mon, Nestor Ugale 6-9pm; (1221 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); 808-661-0808; Luluslahaina.com MAUIANO’S ITALIAN GRILLE - Fri, Nestor Ugale 6-8pm; (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0791; Mauianos.com MERRIMAN’S - Thu, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Fri, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Sat, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Sun, David Wolf 5:30-8:30pm; Mon, David Wolf 5:308:30pm; Wed, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; (1 Bay Club Pl., Kapalua); 808-669-6400; Merrimanshawaii.com/kapalua OCEAN POOL BAR AND GRILL - Fri, Live Music 4-7pm; Mon, Live Music 4-7pm; (6 Kai Ala Drive, Lahaina); 808-667-3200; westinkaanapali.com/dining/oceanpool OHANA SEAFOOD BAR AND GRILL - Thu, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Fri, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Sat, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Sun, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Mon, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Tue, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Wed, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; (104 Ka‘anapali Shores Pl.); 808-667-1337.

APRIL 21, 2016 33


MAUI CLASSICAL MUSIC FESTIVAL KATHERINE COLLIER & YIZHAK SCHOTTEN, MUSIC DIRECTORS

3 5 T H

A N N I V E R S A R Y

S E A S O N

$IVSDI DPODFSUT TVHHFTUFE EPOBUJPO BEVMUT TUVEFOUT

Friday, May 6, 2016

“VERVE AND VIRTUOSITY� Makawao Union Church s 7:00 pm Monday, May 9, 2016

“PASSION AND NOBILITY� Keawala‘i Congregational Church, Makena s 7:00 pm Wednesday, May 11, 2016

HANA COMMUNITY CONCERT Wananalua Congregational Church, Hana s 7:00 pm The 35th Anniversary Concert

Friday, May 13, 2016

“FESTIVAL FINALE� Maui Arts & Cultural Center, Castle Theater s 6:00 pm Pre-concert pupu and no-host bar at 6:00 pm Performance at 7:00 pm with both audience and musicians on stage Post-concert dessert and champagne reception 4FBUJOH MJNJUFE UP t "ENJTTJPO QMVT BQQMJDBCMF GFFT

Maui Arts & Cultural Center Box Office 808-242-SHOW (7469) www.mauiarts.org For information and reservations,

call 808-878-2312 www.MauiClassicalMusicFestival.org

34 APRIL 21, 2016

THURS | 4/21

JUSTIN MORRIS 6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER

FRI | 4/22

EVENTS

Maui Choral Arts presents

A NIGHT AT THE MOVIES

INNAVISION

SAT April 23 - 7:30 pm SUN April 24 - 3:00 pm McCoy

10PM • $15 COVER

Celebrating 90 years of smiles!

– LIFTED TOUR 2016 – $10 PRESALE AT CHARLEY’S & THE FOAM CO.

SAT | 4/23

DJ MANCAT 9:30PM • $10 COVER

SUN | 4/24

BREAKFAST SERVED 7AM

DON’T MISS OUR BLOODY MARY BAR!

MON | 4/25

CHARLEY’S LIVE BAND OPEN MIC & JAM 7PM-10PM • NO COVER

TUES | 4/26

BRIAN MASSA

6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER

WED | 4/27

THE HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS

SUN April 24 3:00pm War Memorial Gymnasium

FREE school band concerts

Kalama Intermediate School TUE April 26 6:30 pm Castle

AARP Movies for Grownups

THE BIG SHORT

WED April 27 6:00 pm McCoy FREE -- MUST pre-register in advance @ 844-418-2281 GALLERY

6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER

RANDALL ROSPOND

ART MAUI 2016

142 HANA HWY a PAIA a 808.579.8085

10 - 5 Open every day FREE

Through Sat, April 23


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

4/21

4/22

4/23

4/24

4/25-4/27

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea - 874-1131

PARADISE GRILL

2291 Kaanapali Pkwy, Lahaina - 662-3700

PLAYMAKERS SPORTS BAR 928 Lower Main St., Wailuku - 244-4084

SANSEI - KAPALUA 115 Bay Dr., Lahaina - 669-6286

SANSEI - KIHEI 1881 S. Kihei Rd., Ste. KT116 - 879-0004

Natalie Robles Band, 7:30-10pm

Soul Kitchen Big Band, 7-9pm

The Glamtrons David Bowie Tribute, 7pm $10/$15

Celtic Tigers, 7-9:30pm

MON- Mulligans Magic 6:30pm, TUE- Ron Kuala’au 6:30pm, WED- Joel Katz 5:15pm, Willie K Dinner Show, 6:30pm

Thirsty Thursdays w/ DJ Kai K, 10pm

Salsa Lessons & Dancing w/Rafael, 9:45pm DJ Illz 10pm (downstairs)

UFC 197 2pm, Move The Floor w/DJ Kai, 10pm

Juke Box, 10pm

MON-Juke Box, 10pm, TUE- Mellow Sounds w/ DJ Lane 10pm, WED-Reggae w/ DJ Irie Dole, 10pm

Free Pool All Day NBA & NHL

Jukebox Jangles & Free Pool. NBA & NHL

Jukebox Jangles & Free Pool. UFC 3pm, NBA & NHL

Pool Tournament ($10 buyin) & Jukebox Jangles, NBA & NHL

MON-Free Bingo 7pm & NBA & NHL, TUE-Taco Tuesday, Free Pool & NBA & NHL WED- Miss Kalai & DJ Stylz 9pm

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Randall Rospond 4-6pm, DJ Gemini 10pm

Tom Conway 4-6pm, DJ LX 10pm

Viva La Rumba 4-6pm, Sunday Night Lounge 10pm

MON - Kanoa 4pm & DJ Big Mike SIN 10pm, TUE - Jon Bowser 4-6pm, WED- Ladies Night Out DJ LX & JayP

Bryant Quick

Homestead, 9pm

Just Us, 9pm

Free Pool

MON-Martini Monday-Pool Tournament, TUE- Free Pool, WED- Whiskey Wed & Karaoke 8pm

FREE Karaoke w/ Dudley 9pm-12am; no cover

Maui Blues Co., $4 cover

FREE Karaoke w/ Dudley 9pm-12am; $4 cover

Salsa Night w/ Barbara & Ernesto, 8pm-no cover

Louise Lambert Trio, 7:30-10:30pm

Capt Dan, 6:30-8:30pm

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by Caeriel Crestin

Horoscope

Sign Language TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)

You’re a big monkey. That’s not so bad, though. Orangutans, for example, live in complete collusion with their environment. They eat fruit, spilling seeds and nutrient-rich shit all over the forest, helping ensure its continued growth and renewal. Humans, at least as a race, are more or less a virus, without much hope of living in harmony with the land. At best, we aim for minimal impact. The bad news you already know: This planet-consumption will proceed apace. The good news: Forget minimal impact; you Bulls have the best chance of having more of a positive than a negative effect on everything you touch this week. GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)

Pry. Be nosy. Snoop, sneak and persistently ask difficult questions. You can worm any secret out of anyone this week. Why wouldn’t you? Knowledge is power, and I trust you with it. (Mostly.) Enough to impart this kind of advice, anyway. You’re the best kind of spy this week, because you’re working only for yourself (and, of course, in some part of your subconscious, the betterment of the whole human race). There’s tons of juicy, important dirt out there, and someone’s bound to dig it up eventually. Why shouldn’t it be you, and sooner rather than later? CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)

Your sex life is a rich complicated blend of flavors and textures, a virtual edible tapestry, right? Not so much. It may have seemed that way at the time, but the delicious new complexities you’ll have the opportunity to sample this week will make your former diet seem as bland and inoffensive as tofu. Luckily, bean curd soaks up whatever you put it with, so start marinating, baby. Drink in some of the spicy new ideas the cosmos has plunged you into. By the time this chapter is over, I don’t expect you to have simply tried a few new dishes; I anticipate, instead, that you’ll write a whole new cookbook. LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)

You’re already larger than life. This week, due to the gaggle of celestial influences on your sign, you have the potential to be at least three times louder, four times as influential and get five times as much attention as you’re used to. Now that everyone’s listening to you, be positive you know exactly what you’re saying. Since more people are subject to your will than at any time since last summer, make sure your instigation is properly thought out. Lastly, make sure you’re getting all this attention for all the right reasons, and none of the wrong ones.

models into bed. All you have to do is talk. Just share what’s on your mind. For some reason, most of those around you will find what you say compelling, regardless of whether or not they like it. Of course, this isn’t just an opportunity to climb up onto whatever soapbox happens to be nearby. It’s also a chance to work through some tough shit that’s been sidelined for a while now, mostly because the other person it involves hasn’t been willing to hear what needs to be said. Say it now; trust me, they can’t help but listen. SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)

The Sagittarian symbol is a centaur–a creature half horse, half man. It’s Chiron, a wise teacher, skilled in the medical arts, especially herbal medicine and surgery, who taught Asclepius and Hercules. He gave his immortality to Prometheus when he received an incurable wound, and was made into the constellation of Sagittarius by Zeus. Why mention this? Your power to heal is overlooked too often, especially by you. You may need it soon. It’ll need a tune-up and some revving to get it going again, just like an old car that’s sat on blocks for a while. The best way to get it in gear? Healer, heal thyself.

QUIZ understood

ANSWERS

...to questions from page 4

1: C–2005 2: B–4.1 percent 3: D–$1,000

PRESENTS

FRESH START

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)

Choose a theme song. You’re going to need something that’s consistently uplifting for you, and that you can keep cued up on your device to play on a moment’s notice. It’s going to be a bloody tough week. Not because anything outrageously horrible will happen, necessarily, but simply because the rules of the game you’re forced to play are downright depressing. It’s hard to remain upbeat, patient, trusting and openhearted when the hoops you’re required to jump through are so lame, difficult and spiritually degrading. Keep that song playing and try to smile anyway. AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)

Pull on those elbow-length yellow rubber gloves, grab a bucket and some rags. It’s time for some belated spring-cleaning. Your head and heart are messes, too. The mildew in the shower of your emotions has got to be scoured away. The mold lurking in the back of the refrigerator where you store your freshest ideas is plotting a take-over. The dust bunnies under the bed of your inner peace have been propagating and mutating. Take a sponge or broom and some heavy-duty cleaners to all your winter’s grunge, or you’ll be scrubbing old stains all through the summer, instead of busy acquiring new ones.

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PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)

Western society tends to view the heart as the seat of the emotions, but many other cultures say the root of intense feelings is actually the liver. They may have a point: It outweighs the heart and is made of softer stuff–heart tissue is pretty tough. You’ve been pretty tough lately, too. Do you really need to be so rugged? Might I suggest taking a break from feeling everything with your sturdy, efficient heart and switch to experiencing your emotions from a sloppier, softer organ? Repeat after me: I love you with all my liver. LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22)

Ah, springtime, when a young person’s fancy turns to lust. This time of year is chock full of sweet temptations that might divert your attention from the primary object of your desire. Spring fever adds extra momentum to your pseudo-seductions, inertia you may not be aware of. Imagine your flirtation as a long train, pushing over a steep hill. You have to start braking well before the whole thing is over the top, or you’ll race out of control to the bottom, and end up between the sheets. This might not be a bad thing, I’m just warning you so you can go into it with your eyes open and your horn tooting. SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)

Damn, you’re on fire! We’re hanging on your every word. You could start a new religion right now, make the business deal of the decade, or simply get hot

Don’t let ennui make you an addict. This is the kind of week that could wear you down slowly, grinding away at any good moods you might have started with. What’s worse is there’s nothing you can point at to explain or justify the sour, or least bored, mood you’re likely to end up in. That sucks because some of the people around you have this ridiculous expectation that you should be happy. Most Pisces respond to this tedious quandary with drugs, alcohol, or other self-destructive stuff, just to cut through the murk. Don’t do that right now. The haze will lift soon enough on its own in a few days–unless you reinforce it with a cloudy mind; then it’ll last for weeks instead. ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)

Imagine yourself zooming down a slick, snowcovered slope, a thin lozenge of a board strapped to your feet. You’re freezing and banged-up from the crashes and wipeouts associated with learning to snowboard. Now, to turn this thing, you have to lean downhill. That’s the only way you’re going to be able to get an edge into the powder and, well, steer. Despite my out of season message, my analogy is otherwise accurate: You are racing along the path you chose, and although your instinct may be to take a step back and try to slow down–the only way to stay in control is to take your whole self and lean, hard, in the direction you’d like to go. To contact Caeriel send mail to sign.language.astrology@gmail.com

APRIL 21, 2016 37


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38 APRIL 21, 2016


Classified

Mind, Body & Spirit FIND MAUI’S HOLISTIC EVENTS! Visit www.mauivision.net today and explore our extensive mind, body & spirit listings. New April/May edition out now! Call 669-9091 for info.

Authentic

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ReJuveaDerm

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Call or Text 808.276.0213 THAI MASSAGE SWEDISH

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$50 Facial - 60 min

Authentic Thai Body Work Call Neng 808.269.3932

FEATURING $100 Detox Mud Wrap & $100 Couples Facials In South Kihei To book call 808.385.3166 www.ReJuveaDerm.com

808.298.4097 IN LAHAINA mat#13743

Kahului 9am - 7pm p

Day Spa & Wellness Center Traditional Thai Massage, Lomi Lomi, Deep Tissue, Swedish, Hot Stone, Hot Towel & Aromatherapy

Magic Mermaid Phenomenal Bodywork

Everyone knows mimes don’t talk, they text! Call mauitime to book an ad today.

808-283-3260

879-3500 Convenient Kihei Location

AWARD WINNING SPA! Most Relaxing Couples Massage & Best Thai Massage AFFORDABLE PRICE & KAMA’AINA SPECIAL Open Mon - Sat 9 - 6 pm Sun 10 - 6 pm 180 Dickenson Square Ste. 209-210 • Lahaina • Free Parking 808.214.6167 • Mat 13004 • www.lahainamassage.net

GET YOUR EVENT ON MAUITIME SUBMIT AND EDIT YOUR EVENTS BY GOING TO WWW.MAUITIME.COM/ADD

Mahalo M ahalo to to our our million, million, trillion Facebook Facebook friends friends trillion and counting... counting... and

WE LIKE YOU TOO! facebook.com/mauitime

MUST BE BRIGHT & ADAPTABLE COMPUTER SKILLS DESIRABLE EARN SCHOOL CREDIT

LENNON'S PADMA'S UNIQUE GIFTS NATURAL HEALING HEAVEN Light Energy Healing & Workshops Hand & Foot ReÁexology • Consoling High Quality Babysitting • Chinese Language Lessons 810 Haiku Market Place • naturalhealingheaven.com

808.495.6971

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Email Inquiries to interns@mauitime.com 16 S. Market Street, Suite 2k Wailuku, HI 96793

APRIL 21, 2016 39


All Therapists are Fully Licensed and Insured

• MASSAGE • ACUPUNCTURE • FACIALS • WAXING • GIFTS

KUA‘AINA MAUKA

TM

MauiCustomT-Shirts.com

Family Reunions

We carry a wide range of locally made products

Green Ti

Cottages starting at $350K Upcountry.Hawaiilife.com Josh Jerman R(B) 808.868.1584

40 N. Market St. • Wailuku, HI

Upcountry@HawaiiLife.com

808.242.8788

Hawai‘i Life Real Estate Brokers

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • MAE #2281

www.greentimaui.com

ASK ABOUT PHOTO SHIRTS

Disclaimer: Photos, drawings, and other visual depictions are for illustrative purposes only and should not be relied upon in deciding to purchase in the development. the Developer makes no guarantee, representation or warranty whatsoever that the developments depicted will ultimately appear as shown.

SPECIAL! Full Color 8'x3' BANNER Only

$99

• Signs • Stickers • Car Magnets • Coffee Mugs • Hats

Unlimited Colors • No Minimums

Quick Turnaround

1261 Lower Main St. CALL NOW! (808) 268-5860

(Wailuku)

BMW/MINI • VOLVO/SAAB • MB • LR • VW/AUDI TOYOTA • LEXUS • HONDA • ACURA • NISSAN SUBARU • MAZDA • FORD • GM • CHRYSLER

THE BACKPAGE

10% DISCOUNTon Parts & Labor

gets high visibility for low costs. Back page classifieds work!

We Repair Maui’s Best European, Asian & VW AUDI Domestic Service Center!

FREE MINI-DETAIL WITH LARGE SERVICE • Scheduled Maintenance to Major Overhauls • Towing • Extended Warranty Service • Custom & Performance Products & Installation • Collision Repair • Restorations • Detailing • Tires • Wheels • Mufflers • Batteries • A/C • Exhaust Systems •Computer & Electronic Diagnostics Diesel • Biodiesel • Hybrids • Electric • Vehicle Storage Service • Parts • Accessories

Call 808.283.3260 for complete details.

(#RD 3881)

878-2698 9

AMERICAN • ASIAN • CARS • SUVS • TRUCKS 3135 Lower Kula Road • Behind Kula Hardware

S10 PIPES

MEDICAL USE of MARIJUANA

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875-7881

FREE

and we make a $300 donation to a Maui charity

(808) 667-2774

Cancer, HIV/AIDS, Severe Pain, Severe Nausea, Glaucoma, Seizures, Severe Muscle Spasms, Severe Cramping

THIS SPACE COULD BE YOURS!

New Qualifying Condition as of 7/1/15 Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

FOR AS LITTLE AS

STATE OF HAWAII CERTIFICATION The Office of

MATTHEW BRITTAIN, LCSW Coordinating M.D. Services for Medical Marijuana Certification QUALIFYING MEDICAL CONDITIONS INCLUDE: (but are not limited to)

MAUI MANA

Stop Wishin’ & Go Fishin’ 42 ft. Custom Sportfishers Catch a 500+lb Marlin & your trip is

ISLAND WIDE SERVICE

SMOKE SHOP SPECIAL

SPORTFISHING

$115/WEEK

$140 for New Patients | $115 for Renewals ($38.50 separate fee payable to State of Hawaii also required)

CALL SARAH AT 283-3260 OR TOMMY AT 283-0512 TO RESERVE YOUR SPOT

Please call Matthew at our Main Office in Hilo at

(808) 934-7566 We are not a dispensary. Offering monthly clinics on Maui. We are not State of Hawaii employees or contractors.

.com Just think: right now you're only getting some of the stories. Go online and see what you're missing.

MAUI'S ONLY LOCALLY OWNED INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER


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