HOME OF HOLOHOLO GIRL, COCONUT WIRELESS, EMPLOYEE OF THE WEEK, CRUISE CONTROL, EH BRAH!, LC WATCH AND AUDACIOUS MORALITY
■ MAY 26, 2005
■ VOLUME 8
■ ISSUE 48
■ MAUITIME.COM
■ FREE EVERY THURSDAY
■
MAUI’S ONLY INDEPENDENT & LOCALLY OWNED NEWSPAPER
11 STUDENT CARVERS At the Festival of Canoes
14 ISLAND FAVORITES At the Pukalani Country Club
27 GROUNDATION
Talking with Harrison Stafford
Now Playing Everywhere Can a movie at the MACC help us experience war?
2
MAY 26, 2005
Buffet Luau Fine dining Dining with a view Cheap food Ice cream Dessert Place to buy wine Happy hour Smoothie Saimin
The time for our annual Best of Maui issue is at hand! But in order to do at least a half-assed job, we need you—our loyal, intelligent, creative readers—to tell us what’s so hot about our island. So tell us. Be bold! Be wise! Fill out at least half the ballot so we can take it easy! Come on, be a pal. The results will appear in our July 28 issue, but we need your ballots by June 1. So get cracking!
Health food store Fish & chips Pupus Ribs Pancakes Sandwich Fish Taco Pad Thai Place to get a drink at 7 a.m.
FOOD & DRINK Restaurant
GOODS & SERVICES
Mai Tai
Place to cure that mysterious rash
Breakfast
Place massage for under $50
Lunch
Place to spend your last $20
Dinner
Auto mechanic
Burrito
Laundromat
Sushi
Tackle shop
Farmers’ market
Bike shop
Burger
Kite shop
Pizza
Place to get keiki toys
Steak
Place to get adult toys
Spaghetti & meatballs
Record store
Plate lunch
Hair stylist
Wings
Lingerie shop
Coffee house
Library
Japanese food
Bookstore
Chinese food
Place to buy a surfboard
Mexican food
Local board shaper
Local food
Place to rent a surfboard
Kim chee
Place to rent a kayak
Chef
Place to buy surfwear
Fish sandwich
Place to buy a bikini
Mac salad
Hardware store
Spam Musubi
Second hand store
Dive bar
Safety check
Male bartender Female bartender Place to do Jager shots Noodles
SuperCuz wen say eh, no forgit da back, brah!
Curry Vegan food
www.keithtuckercartoonist.com LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
3
Auto parts store
Dive spot
Place to buy a new car
Waterman
Place to buy a new truck
Surf ego
Place to buy a used car
Surf spot
Tattoo shop
Canoe Club
Place to buy porn
Camping spot
Waxing shop
State park
Piercing shop
Place to windsurf on the West Side
Manicure
Fishing spot
Pedicure
Spearfishing spot Place to hunt wild boar
ENVIRONMENT & POLITICS
Surf Contest
Political activist
Sport Fishing Tournament
Hawaiian activist
Local Surfer
County official
Local grom
Local environmental issue
Place to play pool
State official
Place to play video games
Thing about the mayor
Biker club
Thing about the governor
Mountain biking trail
Native species to save
Thing to see at Maui Raceway Park
Invasive species to hate Waterfall
A&E
Development
Karaoke
Development to hate
Art gallery
Use of county funds
Art exhibition
County blunder
Thing about the MACC
Place to watch the sunrise in Hana
Night club
Place to watch the sunrise on the North Shore
Ladies Night
Place to watch the sunset in South Maui
Club theme night
Place to watch the sunset on the Westside
Rock band
Akaku program
Jazz band Hawaiian band
SPORTS & LEISURE
Musician
Easy hike
Cover band
Difficult hike
Original music
Place to get married
Place to dance
Place to break up
Movie theater
Golf course that isn’t Kapalua
Record slinger
Beach for barbecuing
Place to meet your future ex
Beach to look at beautiful people
Live venue
Beach that’s quiet and secluded
Radio station
Beach for swimming
Thing about the Maui County Fair
Public pool
Community festival
Place to play tennis Place to play basketball Place to play bocce ball Place to play soccer Place to play baseball
Name: E-mail: Address:
Age: Phone:
Snorkeling spot
Vote online at www.mauitime.com or send completed ballots postmarked by June 1, 2005, to Maui Time Weekly Best of Maui 658 Front St. #126A-7278 – Lahaina, HI 96761 or fax to (808) 661-0446.
4
MAY 26, 2005
MAILING ADDRESS: 658 Front St., Ste. 126A-7278 Lahaina, HI 96761 PHYSICAL ADDRESS: 505 Front St., Ste. 216 Lahaina, HI 96761
CONTENTS
office (808) 661–3786 • fax (808) 661–0446
VOLUME 8 • ISSUE 48
www.mauitime.com
COVER STORY 12
Can a film at the MACC help us experience war? – by Anthony Pignataro
MAUI COUNTY 6 7
•New COlumn! •Eh Brah! •Cruise Control •LC Watch •’Too Cutting Edge’ Byron Sparks enjoys making believers from skeptics – by Krista Sherer
8 9 10
•Coconut Wireless •Overheard... •News of the Weird •Ted Rall Cartoon •Op Ed: Personal vs. Office Politics How your vote can get you fired – by Ted Rall
SURF & SPORTS 11
Editor: Anthony Pignataro anthony@mauitime.com (Starship’s “We Built This City”)
DA KINE CALENDAR
•Now PLaying Everywhere
Associate Editor: Samantha Campos sam@mauitime.com (Color Me Bad’s “I Wanna Sex You Up”)
21 •This Week’s Picks 24 •Film: ThisOur Man in Cannes coming year’s best films – by Cole Smithey 25 •Movies & Times 27 •A&E: ‘Positive Vibrations’ Talking with Groundation’s Harrison Stafford by Linda Gampert 28 •The Grid & Calendar Listings
Calendar Goddess: Kimberly L. Welch kim@mauitime.com (George Michael’s “I Want Your Sex”) Contributing Writers: Caeriel Crestin, Reese Quick, Ted Rall, Chuck Shepherd, Krista Sherer, Cole Smithey Illustration: Guy Junker, Glenn Watson Photography: Sean M. Hower, Kirsten Guenther, Jessica Pearl Interns: Linda Gampert, Kellie Holliday, Robin Horca, Gabrielle Poccia, Audrey Tomlinson Art Director: Rudi King rudi@mauitime.com (Kermit the Frog’s “Rainbow Connection”)
CLASSIFIED
Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers brad@mauitime.com (Soft Cell’s “Tainted Love”)
35 •Personals 36 •Classified Listings 37 •Sign Language 38 •HoloHolo Girl 39 •Mind, Body & Spirit
General Manager: Jennifer Russo jen@mauitime.com (Britney Spears’ “Toxic”) Office Assistant: Becky Spector Web Design: Bump Networks www.bumpnetworks.com Publisher: Tommy Russo tommy@mauitime.com (Rick Dees’ “Disco Duck”)
What Baldwin High is doing with canoes – by Jen Russo
14
MauiTime Weekly is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2005 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $70 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. Maui Time Weekly may be distributed only by MauiTime Weekly’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime Weekly is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime Weekly, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime Weekly are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime Weekly.
•Tides & Times •Student Carvers Y US
Gunner Palace - P. 12
ONO KINE GRINDS
TES OUR
Y
ARM
C TO:
PHO
•Enjoying Island Favorites At the Pukalani Country Club – by Randall Wong
15 17
Position (& song that’s a guilty pleasure)
•Dining Listings Hours, locations and price ranges of Maui’s eateries
•Employee of the Week
Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 11,000 copies of the MauiTime Weekly
form
COVER PHOTO: COURTESY US ARMY / COVER DESIGN: RUDI KING
DKL
DK Levin Company
Official information
For office use only
Phone number
Fax number
808 244 7770 808 244 7720 Important!
We’re weird. We actually LOVE doing taxes. Okay. Not many people can say this, but we at the DK Levin Company actually ENJOY doing tax returns. The forms. The worksheets. All that complex math and figures. It may not make sense, but it’s true. We’d like NOTHING better than to sit down with you and go over your W-2’s and 1099’s and other tax information. Then you can go home and we’ll get down to the fun stuff. email: Web:
*Same day booking only subject to availability. Kama’aina friends and family! Only one ID requred.
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
In no time at all, you’ll have beautifully prepared returns, with every possible deduction and credit. The IRS will be happy, you'll be happy, and you may even discover something for yourself. That you actually ENJOYED it too. Call us today at 244-7770 for an appointment. You’ll be glad you did.
doug@dklevincompany.com www.dklevincompany.com
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
5
Maui’s Largest Selection of Musical Instruments & Sound Systems for 26 years
NEWCOLUMN!
BY MICK E. FINN
BOUNTY MUSIC The Story Behind the Story! Fender Accoustic Guitars starting at $12999
Ukuleles starting at $ 2999
Portable Keyboards starting at $ 11995
Fender Electric Guitars starting at $ 12599
Drums Sets starting at $ 64950 NOT ALL PRODUCTS EXACTLY AS SHOWN
Play now with 90 days same as cash • No money down Financing Available 6 months same as cash for New Accounts O.A.C. Sale ends 5/31/05
111 Hana Hwy. • Kahului 871-1141 •www.ukes.com
Paper made from Hemp lasts longer than paper made from trees, up to 100 years without turning brown.
Playboy’s Girls of McDonald’s features six of the sexiest McDonald’s employees in the country who step out from behind the counter, lose the uniforms and say cheese! The DVD includes action footage of the sexy sirens doing all sorts of things they don’t do at work: wrestling alligators, getting tattoos, bowling naked with a girlfriend and much more! -Actual May 19, 2005 Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc. press release
Customer #124: Oh, Coke. Both of them.
Male McDonald’s Employee: So you never told me how that shoot with Playboy went.
Male employee: Did you say an alligator?
Female McDonald’s Employee: Oh, it was a blast! Everyone was so cool and helpful and they made it so easy. The photographer was really patient and kept telling me over and over how beautiful I was. It was really fun. Male Employee: That is so cool. But wasn’t it weird, you know, getting all naked in front of all those people?
Female Employee: Okay, that’s one Big Mac meal with Coke and one Quarter Pounder with Cheese meal with Coke. Anything else? Customer #124: That’s it. Female Employee: That’ll be $11.64. [Customer fumbles with money]
Female Employee: Yeah! It was gnarly! They wanted me to wrestle it over in that swamp behind Chuck E. Cheese’s. Male Employee: No way! [Customer hands over a bill] Female Employee: Way! Twenty? Your change is… $8.36. Thanks. Male Employee: So did you?
Female Employee: At first, sure. Plus it was kinda cold out, they had towels and stuff for when he had to change film. It only really got strange when they brought out the alligator and the-
16 Baldwin Ave. • 808-579-8880 www.hemphousemaui.com
[Day’s Customer #124 clears throat]
Female Employee: Fuck no. I’m not taking off my clothes and then jumping into some swamp with a live alligator. So they had me get naked and bowl a few frames over at Hula Lanes. I mean, that wasn’t so bad, except for those old guys who came in with their league-
Female Employee: I’m sorry. Can I take your order?
Customer: Excuse me, you only gave me $7.36. I think you said the change was $8.36.
Customer #124: Yeah, I’d like one Big Mac meal, one Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese meal and two apple pies.
Female Employee: What? Let me see… Oh, I’m sorry. Here you go.
Female Employee: What kind of drink?
Cleaners and Contractors Increase your income Get Certified in B tifi d i
Customer #124: What? Female Employee: What kind of drink would you like?
Male Employee: Cool. So are you going to start nude modeling all the time now? Female Employee: Oh, no. Models have fucked-up lives. They’ve got to stand in one place for like hours at a time and never change expressions. I could never do that. MTW
Water Damage Restoration
Class offered June 13-15th
Maui Fire & Flood Cleaning and Flood Rental, Sales, Advice 808-873-7077 400 Hana Hwy Ste B Kahului WWW.MAUIWORKS.COM
PROTECT YOUR STONE We carry professional sealers and cleaners For all applications
6
MAY 26, 2005
NEWS
EH BRAH! Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less, changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent to “Eh Brah!” c/o Maui Time Weekly, 658 Front Street, Ste. 126A–7278, Lahaina, HI 96761 or send an e-mail to
ehbrah@mauitime.com This is for the male driver who was making a left turn from Wainee onto Papalaua in Lahaina last week. We almost sat through an entire green light until I gave you a little courtesy honk. Then you gave me a courtesy wave back. I thought everything was okay, but then the girl in the passenger seat began frantically flipping me the bird. She did this for two blocks, until you finally turned left away from me. First of all, you were the driver, not her. Stand up for yourself, man! And what’s the dealing hanging with such a rude, vulgar chick in the first place? Oh, you could do so much better. Here’s a small suggestion: dump her ass and then find some decent girl who has a brain and some manners.
MAUICOUNTY
BY KRISTA SHERER
‘Too Cutting Edge’
Lance’s Debut
Byron Sparks enjoys making believers from skeptics Not long ago I went to see Byron Sparks, who has a beautiful tattoo on his calf of a Chinese man showing the kidney meridian. I was feeling stressed and irritable. I wasn’t sleeping or eating properly, Basically, I felt uncomfortable in my skin. After taking my pulses and thinking a few minutes, Sparks decided on a treatment. He told me that I was possessed, though it didn’t mean that I had demons in me. “People can be possessed by substances or behaviors,” he said. “You just need this negative energy trapped in your cells to be released.” Since coffee was my only drug of choice, I smirked at his diagnosis. I’m stubborn regarding any change in my life, and this was no different. But I let him proceed. As each needle went in I found I could actually feel the chi or energy literally moving through its pathway. It was as if Sparks had opened the channels of energy in my body. I immediately felt at ease and open to my healing. After the session I felt
Cruise Control Vessel: Infinity Operator: Celebrity Cruises Complement: 2,032 Scheduled Maui Visit: May 26, 2005 Last Center for Disease Control Inspection: May 1, 2005 Score: 94 out of 100 While good, the 91,000-ton Infinity’s recent score actually represents a two-point drop from its previous inspection. The crew lost six points on just two, somewhat scary items. The first was that two mercury thermometers in the galley “were broken in the hot hold units,” reported the inspectors, who couldn’t resist chiding the crew. “The last inspection noted mercury thermometers in these units and the report cautioned against the use of said thermometers because of the risk of contaminating foods should the thermometers break.” Okay, mercury in the food equals a loss of three points. What about the other three? That would be “numerous flies were noted in the Lido Galley and pantries.” Classic. -Anthony Pignataro
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
LC Watch
Sparks: he sticks patients with more than a bill more stable and grounded than I had been in a long time. He continues to be my doctor to this day. Acupuncture is one of the most ancient healing methods. Though its effects are sometimes unexplainable, it does seem to help with a variety of pathologies. Sparks practices Traditional Chinese Medicine. He began 10 years ago after being fired from his job as an art director. “I was too cutting edge,” he told me. When he came home there was a message on his answering machine advertising a free treatment at the Shiatsu school near his home. Deciding it was a sign, Sparks signed up. “I had clients who had cured themselves of things like cancer with something simple like changing their diet or taking herbs and it made me realize how simple and beautiful Traditional Chinese Medicine is,” he said. “Body, mind and spirit are connected, so any imbalance in the body will effect the mind or spirit and likewise. The real beauty in this medicine is that it can treat psychospiritually as well as physically.” Sparks divides his time between his private practice in Makawao and Northshore Chiropractic. He also performs acupuncture on a volunteer basis for the Maui AIDS Foundation every week. “My work at the Maui AIDS Foundation is mainly centered on increasing immunity with
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
acupuncture and herbs but I end up treating the side effects from many medications they are on,” he said. Sparks often combines bodywork with herbs and acupuncture in his sessions, which he said makes for a highly effective treatment. “When you just poke needles in people without any touch sometimes the client feels more guarded and may tense up which makes them resist the needle work,” he told me. “I love what I do,” he said. “I have the best clients and a really great connection with them. It’s nice to be in a profession where you get to form relationships with your customers. I have met such a variety of people with many different conditions. A lot of them have never had acupuncture and aren’t too sure if it can help them. But I love making believers out of skeptics.” MTW
It’s interesting that in his first Liquor Control Adjudication Board hearing, rookie member Lance Collins sat next to the Board’s attorney, First Deputy Corporation Counsel Tracy Fujita Villarosa. At times, he almost seemed to be more interested in her job than his own. In more ways than one, Collins proved himself a radical departure from your typical Board of Adjudication Board Member. He’s just 24 but holds a Juris Doctor law degree. He’s a failed County Council candidate. He understands philosophy. Right away, Collins distanced himself from the usual Adjudication procedure by asking the attorney for Maui-Molokai Sea Cruises—up on multiple charges of allowing minors to consume alcohol—what he considered to be a fair penalty. The refreshing question took everyone back. Then Board Chairman Shigeto “Mustard” Murayama gave the impression that “because Lance is new,” the Board wouldn’t make it a habit to ask that question again. But in the next case, against Idini’s for allegedly over-serving a drunk, Collins ridiculed attorney Steven Songstad’s request for a delay on the grounds that his client had been denied “due process” in regards to the names of witnesses the Prosecuting Attorney was preparing to call. Then Collins made a disturbing motion for the Board to go into “executive session” with Villarosa to discuss their options. Such a discussion should have been held in public—as it has been many times in the past. But when the session ended and Idini’s returned with a settlement offer to plead guilty, Collins began questioning why Songstad was insisting in his final statement that the prosecution’s case had holes in it. “Are we allowed to accept a guilty plea when he’s not actually pleading guilty?” Collins asked, pointing out that in trials defendants must admit guilt before pleading guilty. The rest of the Board seemed lost by his question, but then Prosecuting Attorney Angela Hedge explained that the whole defendant’s final statement was really just a formality. “In sentencing [at Adjudication Board hearings], you can say whatever you want,” she said. He’s learning. MTW
—Anthony Pignataro
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
7
MAUICOUNTY While our beloved Republican Governor Linda Lingle is shilling Hawaiian tourism to the incredibly bureaucratic and repressive Chinese government—Communist authoritarian or not, they’ve got the creditor side of our massive trade deficit—our Republican Mayor Alan Arakawa is working hard to bring Kyoto here. Of course, I’m speaking of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol— that detailed list of ways industrialized nations can cut greenhouse gas emissions to reduce global warming. Arakawa is the 139th mayor to sign the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. “With escalating oil prices worldwide, this gives us an opportunity to start exploring options that were too expensive before,” Arakawa told The Maui News. Now Arakawa’s action is a bit unusual for a Republican, considering that President George W. Bush has long opposed Kyoto. And nothing summed up our fearless leader’s thinking better than his quote to the Washington Post way back on April 24, 2001: “First, we would not accept a treaty that would not have been ratified, nor a treaty that I thought made sense for the country.”
THURSDAY, MAY 19 Here’s reason #352 on why being a lawmaker totally kicks ass: exemption from public records laws. The Associated Press reported today that Susan Jaworowski, the attorney for the state Senate Democrats, has advised her clients that they don’t have to release jack to the public, even if someone wants to see letters on official Hawai’i State Senate letterhead. The state Office of Information Practices disagrees, but admits that they have no power to compel the release of such documents… Twentysix-year-old former Maui Time Weekly contributing writer Gannon Gilmore man-
aged to get himself into the history books by being the first guy in line at the Maui Mall to see Revenge of the Sith, according to today’s Maui News. Hey, speaking of Maui’s paper of record, someone needs to step up and explain the following headline: “Chief angry repeat felon was loose.” There’s no way I’m going to get sleep tonight, wondering about things like how the angry repeat felons go about choosing their chief and whether there’s such a person as a chief happy repeat felon.
FRIDAY, MAY 20 Checked today’s email and found that with great fanfare and bravado Governor Linda Lingle has announced that she has released $821,000 in state funds so Lahainaluna High School can finally get a working fire alarm. “The new fire alarm system at Lahainaluna High School will help ensure the safety of students, teachers and staff in the event of a fire,” Lingle is quoted as saying, boldly glossing over the fact that the students, teachers and staff remain in a school completely lacking a workable fire alarm. And it’s not like people just realized that a high school was in such trouble. In fact, the fire alarm issue came up during the Mar. 17, 2005 Governor’s Maui Advisory Committee Meeting. “The project will start when school ends in June,” read the official minutes. “It was mention[ed] if this was a new school the Fire Department [would] not allow this school to open.” But now that’s all being taken of, leaving the state free to deal with Lahainaluna’s next most pressing problem: drinkable water.
SATURDAY, MAY 21 That stretch of bumper-to-bumper traffic running from the McGregor Point Lighthouse to Launiupoko this afternoon—did that work for everybody?
SUNDAY, MAY 22 Hawai’i is totally missing out on the big mili-
OVERHEARD... “YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN THE BUG WE SAW AT THE JACUZZI—I MEAN, THE WATER SLIDE. THIS THING HAD CLAWS.” -Woman talking to friends on the Ka’anapali beach walk, May 19
COCONUT WIRELESS THE WEEK IN REVIEW
empire in history and Hawai’i is stuck programming computer games?
MONDAY, MAY 23 Enough talk of Abercrombie and his meager haul of war pork. What about our own congressman, U.S. Representative Ed Case (D, 2nd District)? Looks like he’s taking some heat, too, for his proposal to convert 137,000 square miles of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands into a marine refuge. Now, that’s a huge refuge—it’s 12,000 square miles larger than Norway. And because it would be a “refuge,” there would be no fishing in the zone. And that would be bad, says the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council in today’s Advertiser. They’d much rather have the archipelago designated a “sanctuary,” which would allow some bottom fishing to continue. “We’re talking about 112,000 square miles of ocean and only a few boats,” Council Executive Director Kitty Simonds told the Advertiser. “These boats do not harm the habitat.”
TUESDAY, MAY 24
tary-industrial complex bucks just flying out of Congress, and we have Representative Neil Abercrombie (D, 1st District) to thank for it. According to today’s Honolulu Advertiser, Abercrombie convinced his colleagues on the U.S. House Armed Services Committee to give a measly $32.2 million in war pork to our state’s valiant defense contractors. The big winners included Honolulu-based Atlantis Cyberspace, Inc., which got $3 million to develop some Starship Troopers-type computer simulator for infantry. Oceanit Defense Systems over in Waimea scored $5 million to “continue developing technology” to detect missile launches. And Kaneohe-based Alaka’i Consulting and Engineering got $3 million for “research” into remotely detecting explosives. Now come on! Where’s the big aircraft carrier building contracts? The new stealth cruise missile program? What’s going on—the U.S. has become the most powerful
Whirlpool Jacuzzi Massage Chair Steam Room Traditional Sauna Infrared Sauna
Broke down and saw Revenge of the Sith at the Maui Mall last night. Who wouldn’t like a movie about a good republic that gets twisted into an evil empire? But then this morning I read the latest issue of the Federation of American Scientists’ Secrecy News. The newsletter contains a brief on a May 18 Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on “quasi governments”—so-called public-private hybrids that are all the rage these days across the U.S. They maximize things like “results” while eliminating quaint notions like “public accountability.” The report was less than reassuring. “There is nothing modest about the size, scope, and impact of the quasi government,” wrote the CRS. “Time will tell whether the emergence of the quasi government is to be viewed as a symptom of decline in our democratic government, or the harbinger of a new, creative management era where the purported artificial barriers between the governmental and private sectors are breached as a matter of principle.” Anthony Pignataro has spent over a decade analyzing geopolitics, macroeconomics and military strategy, yet still eats canned food. MTW
Futon & Frame starting at $
424
1 HOUR PRIVATE
Two People $15 ea / $20 One Person Just present this ad. It’s that easy! Expires 5/31/05
Paradise Art & Spa 1087 LIMAHANA PL. LAHAINA 661-9005 8
MAY 26, 2005
NEWS
Azeka II Shopping Center (Next to Kaiser) Kihei • 808-875-9004
The Trinity
Full size frame with DLX futon
Sit on it today, Sleep on it tonight
Open Tues.-Fri. 10-5, Sat. 10-2 285 Hukilike St. Kahului (Behind Midas, off Wakea)
871– 6406
www.futonlifestyles.com
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18
BY ANTHONY PIGNATARO
NEWSOFTHEWEIRD DIVINE FASTING Eating disorders have such a hold on many young women that some Internet sites glorify anorexia and bulimia as a quasi-divinity, using religious language to command obedience to a goddess of thinness known as “Ana,” according to a May story in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Said one Minnesota college freshman, “Ana is definitely a higher power, not higher than God, but higher than myself.” There are Ana prayers, Ana psalms and Ana commandments. One site has instructions for a ritual at an altar, culminating in a blood contract “with the anorexia deity.” An Arizona doctor reported that a 13-year-old anorexia patient suddenly spoke “an incantation, like a hex, as if to scare me off.”
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT Almost ready for release is Spanish designer Pep Torres’ “Your Turn” washing machine, developed to encourage sharing of housework. Household users, such as a husband and wife, initially register their fingerprints, and Your Turn will not then operate by the same person’s print twice in a row. Another product, still in development, is Briton James Larsson’s use of liedetector technology on restaurant utensils so that socially incompetent diners can better gauge how their dinner dates feel about them, by measuring stress as they eat. Reasoned Larsson, “Geeks have major challenges dating.”
Pleasant Island Holidays
BY CHUCK SHEPHERD
first removed the tip and stitched it onto the patient’s forearm so that he could graft more tissue onto it from elsewhere on the arm. After the tip lengthened, he reattached it to its proper place. According to an April dispatch from Moscow in London’s Daily Telegraph, Sokolshchik is optimistic that all functions will be restored, though he said the man will probably be permanently semi-erect.
“Your Best Travel Value”
Los Angeles/San Francisco ONE WAY
FITTING HONOR In April, two former Cornell University entomologists, in what they said was a show of respect, named three new species of beetles that feed on slime mold after President Bush, Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld. “We admire these leaders,” said Quentin Wheeler, for their “courage” “to do the very difficult and unpopular work of living up to principles of freedom and democracy ....” The Agathidium bushi are found in Ohio, Virginia and North Carolina, while the cheneyi and rumsfeldi are native to Mexico.
TAR-5308
New Boeing 757 Planes!
ROUNDTRIP
From $
00* 176 From $ 34800* Book online at www.pleasantonline.com
*Prices subject to availability and change. Some restricions apply. All taxes included.
Las Vegas
419
$
LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS Vickey Siles, 35, was arrested in New Haven, Ind., last year and charged with altering a check from the Globe Life and Accident Co. The check was for $1, but Siles had badly obliterated the amount and written in “$4,000,000.00.” Furthermore, she believed that she could cash a check for that amount at a neighborhood check-cashing shop. Instead, the clerk alerted authorities. The job was so pitifully done that in March 2005, a judge gave her only a suspended sentence and probation.
CUTTING EDGE MEDICINE
NOT SO TENSE NEGOTIATIONS
Professor Mikhail Sokolshchik of Russia’s National Medical Surgical Center performed a two-stage penile lengthening early this year on a 28-year-old virgin, adding 5 inches to what was an almost dysfunctionally small organ. Sokolshchik
In Gang Mills, N.Y. in March, neighbors reported a disturbance at the home of Billy Abbey, 31. Police surrounded the house and, for the next 11 hours, tried to coax him out. But Abbey slept through the whole thing, oblivious to the siege. MTW
One bag per booking. *Price is per person based on double occupancy. Taxes and fees up to $35 per person not included. Subject to availability and change.
Call (808) 922-1515 or 1-800-654-4FUN Today! 1601 KAPIOLANI BOULEVARD STE. #960 - OPEN EVERYDAY FROM 8AM TO 5:30PM
Mayecials! Sp
Nature’s Path Optimum Breakfast Cereal 14oz
Rice Dream Original & Vanilla Beverage 32oz
Giovanni Tea Tree Shampoo & Conditioner 8.5oz
Sale $2.89
Sale $1.59 Reg. $1.99
Sale $5.19
Reg. $5.19
Reg. $7.19
CHECK OUT THESE OTHER GREAT DEALS! Sale $.99 Reg. $1.69 Sale $1.50 Reg. $2.49 Sale $2.89 Reg. $4.79 Sale $1.99 Reg. $3.89 Sale $2.19 Reg. $3.69 Sale $2.69 Reg. $4.49 Sale $1.50 Reg. $2.59 Sale $1.99 Reg. $3.99
Pinto Beans, Bulk per lb Barbara’s Yogurt & Onion Chips, 5oz Bragg Liquid Amino, 16oz Consorzio BBQ Sauce, 12oz Drew’s Kalamata Olive & Caper Dressing, 12oz Eden Saffron Ribbons, 8oz Fantastic Foods Falafel, 10oz Lakewood Lemonade, 32oz
2411 S. KIHEI ROAD • 875-4356 LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
9
Original Aorttos from Your Ph
LOOK WHO’S BACK IN TOWN!
39
$
EACH when you purchase 2 or more
NOW OPEN IN OUR ‘BRAND NEW’ LOCATION AT QUEEN KAAHUMANU CENTER NEXT TO MACY’S MENS DEPT.
LINGERIE • NIGHTWEAR BIKINIS • JEANS • CROCHET WORKOUT WEAR
12”x18” • Your own photo is enhanced in Photoshop and printed on canvas (Giclée) • Rolled canvas packs and ships easily! • All work is done while you wait!
(at the corner
661-4042 KUMKANI-White SAUVIGNON BLANC 2004 Stellenbosch South Africa Bright Zingy fruit with a crisp finish. Great hot weather wine!
$13.99
EVENTIDE CELLAR Red SHIRAZ 2002 Wellington South Africa Huge Ripe red fruits balanced by coffee and toffee notes. Give South Africa a try!
$15.99 1203 Keawe St., Lahaina Across from Lahaina Cannery Mall
808-661-9274 Open 7 Days 8am-6pm Lube closed on Sundays
10
MAY 26, 2005
NEWS
BY TED RALL
Personal vs. Office Politics How your vote can get you fired You arrive at work early, work hard and leave late. You’re quiet, respectful and well liked. You keep your nose clean: when someone brings up politics, you’re smart enough to shut up or walk away. You wouldn’t want to say anything that might annoy one of your coworkers. Once you get home, though, you get to be yourself: a committed political activist. You work the phone bank at Republocratic headquarters, update your blog with scathing takedowns of opposing politicians and chat up your neighbors to urge
employment.” Only five states, he says, ban political firings. Even contractors that earn income from the government are exempt, as are private offices, shops, restaurants and factory floors—where 85 percent of Americans work. Last year’s presidential election campaign first exposed the problem. Lynne Gobbell’s boss fired her from her job after she refused his demand that she remove the KerryEdwards bumpersticker from her car. “I would like to find another job, but I would take that job back because I need to work,” she told the Decatur paper. “It upset me and made me mad
UNLESS YOU’RE SO WEALTHY THAT YOU CAN AFFORD NOT TO WORK, WHAT GOOD IS THE RIGHT TO FREE SPEECH IF YOUR EMPLOYER CAN FIRE YOU FOR USING ITEVEN AFTER WORKING HOURS?
704 Front St. Lahaina of Dickenson)
• Full Service Car Wash • Express Detailing • Express Oil Changes
OPED
MR. WINE Lahaina • Maui • Hawai'i 808 Waine'e Street, Suite 101
808-661-5551
them to vote for your favorite candidates. But when you clock back in, you leave it at the door. You’re cool. One morning, your boss calls you into her office. “It has come our attention that you’re a Republocrat,” she says. “We don’t want your type working here. Gather your things and get out. You’re fired.” Can she do that? Are your political opinions your employer’s business? It depends on the state. My friend’s employer recently gave “Jackie” (not her real name) a choice: give up her political blog or be fired. She lives in Florida, where labor laws prohibit discrimination based on sex or affliction with sickle-cell anemia—but not political expression. Lida Rodriguez-Taseff, head of the Miami chapter of the ACLU says: “The [Florida] law is pretty clear that a private employer can fire someone based on their political speech even when that political speech does not affect the terms and conditions of employment.” If Jackie lived in California or New York, she could sue her boss merely for even threatening her with dismissal. Unless you’re spending your free time working for the violent overthrow of the government, those states protect a worker’s right to political speech outside the workplace. (Companies may ban some workers, such as store clerks, from wearing political buttons or campaigning during work hours.) But only five states have laws protecting workers’ offsite political speech. Residents of the other 45 states get no help from federal law. “Do not think you’re protected by the First Amendment,” says Lewis Maltby of the National Workrights Institute. “It doesn’t apply to private
that he could put a letter in my check expressing his (political) opinion, but I can’t put something on my car expressing mine.” Coworkers confirm that the company attached a pro-Bush letter to paychecks. He has that right under Tennessee law. On the other side of the left-right divide, Playgirl magazine fired editor Michele Zipp after she wrote an article “admitting” that she was a Republican. “I wouldn’t have hired you if I knew you were a Republican,” Zipp quoted a Playgirl executive. As a New Yorker, she can sue for damages. Liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican, every American is entitled to his or her political opinions. But unless you’re so wealthy that you can afford not to work, what good is the right to free speech if your employer can fire you for using it—even after working hours? Our hodgepodge of conflicting state labor laws highlights the absurdity of the situation. Why can the leftover “W ‘04” sticker on your car get you canned in Florida but not in California? How can the United States bring democracy to the Middle East while allowing American citizens to be fired for how they vote? Extending national protection to outsidethe-workplace political expression is something that even Democrats and Republicans in this highly partisan Congress ought to be able to agree upon. Neither party wants its supporters to lose their jobs. The obvious remedy is to add the protection of political speech to the list of activities and identifiers already covered under current federal labor laws: whistle blowing, race, color, national origin, religion, age, gender, etc. Only then will we truly be a nation that values and protects free speech. By the way, Jackie has ended her blog. In the town where she lives, jobs are hard to find.
MTW
SURF&SPORTS
BY JEN RUSSO
Student Carvers
PAI A Fi s h M ar k et Restaurant
Tides & times
What Baldwin High is doing at the Festival of Canoes
Tide-times set for Honolulu - subtract as follows: Kahului: 1hr 41min Hana: 1hr 23 min Makena: 0hr 32min Kihei/Ma`alaea: 0hr 22 min Lahaina: 0hr 40 min
26 Sun R 5:50A Thur Sun S 7:07P
L 1:44A +0.0 H 5:41A+0.3
L 10:47A - 0.3 H 6:47P +2.4
27
Sun R 5:50A Fri Sun S 7:08P
L 2:47A +0.0 H 6:58A +0.3
L 11:39A - 0.1 H 7:43P +2.2
28
Sun R 5:49A Sat Sun S 7:08P
L 3:45A -0.1 H 8:36A +0.4
L 12:45P +0.1 H 8:40P +2.1
29 Sun R 5:49A Sun Sun S 7:09P
L 4:33A - 0.1 L 2:13P +0.3 H 10:17A +0.6 H 9:37P +1.9
30 Sun R 5:49A Mon Sun S 7:09P
L 5:13A -0.2 L 4:01P +0.5 H 11:35A +0.9 H 10:31P +1.6
31 Sun R 5:49A Tue Sun S 7:09P
L 5:46A -0.2 L 5:45P +0.6 H 12:32P +1.2 H 11:22P +1.4
01 Sun R 5:49A Wed Sun S 7:10P
L 6:16A -0.2 H 1:18P +1.6
L 7:14P +0.6
100 HANA HIGHWAY, PAIA
579-8030
WE’VE EXPANDED OUR LOOK TO BETTER SERVE YOU! ◆VINTAGE FURNITURE ◆UNUSUAL LAMPS ◆WOOL & SILK RUGS ◆HOME FURNISHINGS ◆WOMEN’S APPAREL & BAGS ◆MEN’S HAWAIIAN SHIRTS ◆LOCALLY DESIGNED JEWELRY ◆ART
NECESSORIES
BOUTIQUE
21 BALDWIN AVE. / PAIA / 579-9805
PHOTO: JACQUELINE WINDH
James Ballao, left, with a student from the 2003 Festival of Canoes James Ballao likes to say that learning means more than just paper and pencils at the desk. Needless to say, his Baldwin High School students really appreciate that approach to teaching social studies. “I like to use geneaology with the kids to tie history to their lives,” he says. “‘What was your great, great, great, great, great grandfather doing?’ I ask them. What was it like during his time? Then I turn it around and say, ‘what kind of world are your great grandchildren going to live in?’” Part of his social studies curriculum for the last four years has focused on the canoe. More specifically, on the International Festival of Canoes held in Lahaina every May. Five years ago Ballao was just a bystander. He says he was awed by the event, especially the fact that Lahainaluna kids were carving and participating. Then he ended up talking story with local Lahaina activist Ke’eaumoku Kapu about getting the Wailuku side kids involved. He introduced Ballao to event organizer Theo Morrison and then they went from there. Ballao says he’s always had an affinity for the canoe. “I had a book on canoes I took out of the library as a kid and I just loved it,” he says. “I think ended up forgetting to ever return that book. I never had any experience carving a canoe but I had a great calling towards it.” It was that passion for hands-on learning that four years ago led him to Mike Tavioni, a master carver from the Cook Islands. Today, Ballao heads the Baldwin
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
High carving team, sponsored this year by the Maui Marriott. The team has been working on a Hawaiian opelu canoe. Built for fishing, its hull is deeper and wider than that of a racing canoe. Charlie Noland, an experienced carver who also sits on the festival committee, is guiding the crew. Finding kids to participate was easy, but Ballao found that getting time off school was more difficult. Getting the kids to the carving team required taking them out of school for the two weeks needed to complete and launch the canoes. But Ballao says that many of his colleagues support the event. “Some teachers even bring their students down to see the progress here,” he says. “I really have to thank my principal, Stephen Yamada, for allowing us the opportunity to be here, too.” Joining Ballao this year for the first time is his long time friend Alex Ishikawa, a teacher at Maui Youth and Family Services. Ishikawa’s involvement meant that the team could include students from that program as well. Basically, their idea is to spread the word about canoe carving in an attempt to get as many students as possible to participate. Ballao’s personal goal for the festival is having all the schools send an apprentice team. “Creating a bridge from the past to the future is what it’s all about,” says Ballao. “If the kids can learn the past and add it to the present to build their future then I have done my job. Wouldn’t it be awesome to see the master carvers from all the different island nations training teams from all the schools on Maui?” MTW
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
www.honoluasurf.com
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
(888) HONOLUA
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
11
Now Playing Everywhere Can a movie at the MACC help us experience war? by Anthony Pignataro
12
MAY 26, 2005
COVER STORY
PHOTO COURTESY OF U.S. ARMY, SGT. JEREMY A. CLAWSON
For the first time in nearly two generations, war has become a daily focus for Americans. Every day it’s in the papers and on the nightly news. And with good reason: since Mar. 19, 2003, 1,600 U.S. troops have died in Iraq—at a rate of slightly more than two per day. More than 12,000 soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines have been wounded. No one knows how many Iraqis have died, but the best estimates top 22,000. Sent to topple dictator Saddam Hussein’s murderous regime and neutralize his supposed weapons of mass destruction, the U.S Army and Marine Corps have instead become guardians of a disintegrating state wracked by ethnic divisions, murderous sectarian violence and a jihadist insurgency. There is no end in sight or timetable for U.S. withdrawal. Gunner Palace is a new documentary that represents the latest attempt to show civilian audiences what it’s like to fight this war. It’s played on the Mainland to rave reviews. It’s a gritty, tragic, humorous and compelling portrayal of young soldiers caught in a bloody maelstrom few stateside understand or care about. The hour and a half documentary screens here for the first time at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center on June 1 as part of the Maui Film Festival’s Wednesday film series. “I walked into Gunner Palace in September 2003 with a simple desire to tell the soldiers’ story—to capture what we didn’t see on the news,” said director Michael Tucker. “To do so, I left my personal opinions and my preconceptions about the war at the gate and tried to get as close to the subject as possible. I looked at the subject not as news, but as living history; an experience, not an event.” Palace focuses on soldiers of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment’s 2nd Battalion—trained to fire big howitzers and cannons—who’ve been cannibalized into infantrymen. At the time of filming they were based in one of Uday Hussein’s ostentatious though bomb-damaged palaces in the heart of Baghdad—a strangely luxurious backdrop for an already surreal war. Tucker joined the unit four months after President George W. Bush stood on the deck of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln and said, “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.” As we all now know, 1,500 U.S. servicemen and women have died in Iraq since then and another 10,000 or so have been wounded in what the soldiers of Gunner Palace deride as “minor combat operations.” The documentary is considered intensely
realistic, so much so that Tucker fought the Motion Picture Association of America’s (MPAA) January 2005 ruling that the film’s numerous instances of soldiers saying “fuck”— probably the most common word uttered on the battlefield—it would be Rated R. Tucker wanted a PG-13 rating so young people could see it before reaching enlistment age. On Feb. 24, Tucker got his wish. The MPAA Appeals Board voted 9-3 to re-rate Palace PG-13. Even teens, the movie industry’s most powerful lobbying arm seemed to admit, would benefit from seeing actual combat footage.
One of the first to attempt an extended filming of the American combat infantrymen’s life was John Laurence of CBS News. In 1970—five years into the Vietnam War—he, two cameramen and a soundman began traveling with a unit of the 2nd Battalion of the 7th Cavalry Regiment. It was a storied outfit that achieved fame by being massacred at Little Big Horn in 1876 and was then nearly wiped out again 89 years at the Ia
Drang valley in Vietnam’s Central Highlands. Laurence’s resulting documentary, The World of Charlie Company, won every major broadcast award in 1971. “If we spent enough time with one small unit, a squad perhaps, the soldiers might trust us enough to talk honestly about the war,” Laurence wrote in his 2002 memoirs The Cat from Hué. “Some of the soldiers in the squad might be wounded or killed. And that, we believed, would give viewers a measure of individual human loss in the war.” At first, Laurence got more resistance from his bosses at CBS than the army, which initially loved the idea, though they insisted on picking the unit Laurence and his crew would document. Still, they went to great lengths to help—at one point, senior officers even offered to delay rotating out the company commander if Laurence thought the move would harm the continuity of his film. At first, things went well. The soldiers— many of which were draftees who chose serving in Vietnam instead of fleeing to Canada or going to jail—loved having the CBS crew
around. After the novelty of having a camera crew trail them wore off, the soldiers freely talked of how they hated the war, had no idea why they were still fighting and resolved to avoid killing. But when Laurence filed an Evening News report about how the unit had balked at a new commander’s order to walk down a road—their previous commander had drilled into them that such actions invariably led to ambushes—the Army freaked out. Commanders began asking for editorial changes in Laurence’s reports, which he refused. Then they ruled that no news organization could visit troops in the field without a public information officer. When Laurence ditched his assigned handler, the Army banned him from returning to Charlie Company barely three weeks after they arrived. There’s no question Laurence and his crew produced an extraordinary portrait of war, but Laurence’s memoirs show he left a lot out. At one point early in the project, Laurence wrote in The Cat from Hué that he found himself in the middle of a surreal drug-fueled party, complete with rock music and the playful fir-
ing of live ammunition into the brush. None of it appeared in his documentary. For 24 years following the CBS project, the Pentagon banned reporters from getting anywhere near combat units. Then a few months before the Iraq invasion, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld suddenly lifted the restriction and allowed the press to “embed” themselves with soldiers and marines. The Public Broadcasting news magazine Frontline took advantage of those new rules. Their hour-long documentary A Company of Soldiers aired Feb. 22 (you can watch it at www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline). This new documentary chronicled the life of the 8th Cavalry Regiment’s headquarters support company throughout November, 2004. Whereas Laurence filmed draftees openly wearing peace symbols and cursing the Army, the Frontline crew found professional, regular army volunteers who strongly supported their presence and mission in Iraq. Normally a rear-area unit manning desks, the realities of the Iraqi counter-insurgency war converted them to a combat unit hunting insurgents in armored Humvees and manning checkpoints. Though operating in an urban environment, one soldier says on camera that the troops can “never fully relax.” Like the Vietnam troops filmed by CBS, these soldiers play chess when back at their base, worry about their loved ones back home and try to get on as best as they can as their friends are killed and wounded. “[W]e were left to our own devices and allowed to film everything, with no restrictions,” wrote co-producer Edward Jarvis on the Frontline website. “We selected the unit we wanted to be with and we chose those whom we wanted to film.” Jarvis added that the crew’s “embedding agreement” required them to show the completed film to the Pentagon before broadcast, but for “security clearance only. “Their only request was blur the name of an intelligence officer named in a document which appears briefly in the film,” wrote Jarvis. “Everything else is a faithful documentation of this company of soldiers during the month we spent with them last November.” Faithful, that is, except where language is concerned. Worried about trouble from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Frontline actually offered an edited version of its documentary to the 170 PBS affiliates around the country. Fearing a backlash from the notorious anti-“smut” FCC, most went with the clean version.
realities of war. “You can never do it,” he said. “The only way is to fire live ammo over the heads of the people in the movie theater.” Eugene B. Sledge knew that well. A freshman in college when he joined the U.S. Marines in late 1942, Sledge fought in two of the bloodiest battles of the Pacific War. His 1981 memoirs With the Old Breed—based on a secret diary he kept during the war in defiance of Marine Corps regulations—illustrate the absolute impossibility of conveying the full wartime experience to an audience sitting in an air-conditioned home or theater. As Sledge made clear, horror was everywhere in the Pacific during the war. Neither side thought the other was completely human,
“Because the Japanese was kicking his feet and thrashing about, the knife point glanced off the tooth and sank deeply into the victim’s mouth,” wrote Sledge. “The Marine cursed him and with a slash cut his cheeks open ear to ear. He put his foot on the sufferer’s lower jaw and tried again. Blood poured out of the soldier’s mouth… Another Marine ran up, put a bullet in the enemy soldier’s brain, and ended his agony. The scavenger grumbled and continued extracting his prizes undisturbed.” The problems presented to a documentary producer by such a scene are staggering. But that assumes troops would simply let a civilian film crew document their atrocities. And that begs a whole new round of questions: Do troops in the field act differently in
“I existed from moment to moment, sometimes thinking death would have been preferable. We were in the depths of the abyss, the ultimate horror of war.” and each acted accordingly. Japanese soldiers considered prisoners dishonored. They starved, beat and killed them with a ferocity that made the Nazi treatment of American prisoners seem gentle. On the American side, soldiers and marines collected the skulls of Japanese soldiers killed in action—even mounted them on the hoods of Jeeps. The barbaric practice became so widespread that Washington had to issue an official ban. Consider the following incident from the battle for Pelelieu, in which Sledge watched a fellow member of Tom Brokaw’s “Greatest Generation” use his kabar knife to extract a gold tooth from a living prisoner:
the presence of a film camera? Is it possible for them to forget there’s a camera watching them? Are the images we’re watching authentic or played up for visual effect? For the sake of argument, let’s say a camera was able to record Sledge’s buddy plunging his knife into a prisoner’s jaw without his realizing it. But even if an audience is willing to sit through it, they still won’t have a completely “realistic” view of war. That’s because the true nature of war transcends visual imagery. War degrades, desensitizes and demeans. War is long periods of boredom in which nothing whatsoever happens. War is an indeterminate yet unmistakable smell of black powder, rot, sweat, garbage and decay. During the bloody battle for Okinawa in 1945, Sledge and his unit found themselves pinned down for days in a muddy wasteland. All around them were maggots feasting equally on the corpses of dead Americans and Japanese. “The stench of death was overpowering,” Sledge wrote 36 years later. “The only way I could bear the mon-
strous horror of it all was to look upward away from the earthly reality surrounding us, watch the leaden gray clouds go skudding over, and repeat over and over to myself that the situation was unreal—just a nightmare—that I would soon awake and find myself somewhere else… I existed from moment to moment, sometimes thinking death would have been preferable. We were in the depths of the abyss, the ultimate horror of war.”
Both Frontline’s A Company of Soldiers and Gunner Palace have earned rave reviews across the political spectrum. Unlike John Laurence’s Charlie Company, the current documentaries on Iraq are completely bereft of politics. They make no judgment on the merits of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. If done well, war documentaries like these appeal to all sides. Pacifists see in them evidence of good, young men sent far away to risk death for hazy goals while jingoists see the same men performing an ancient duty honorably and professionally. The flaw in that arrangement is that the soldiers on screen become arbitrary pawns bereft of any ideology at all. Anyone who’s seen Das Boot already knows this—that movie is so compelling most people forget they’re sympathizing with a Nazi U-Boat crew. But war is political. Politics—specifically President George W. Bush’s promise to destroy the “stockpiles” of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons he insisted Saddam Hussein was hiding—sent a couple hundred thousand men and women to Iraq. And politics will keep those soldiers there for many years to come— weapons of mass destruction or not. Gunner Palace runs 89 minutes and is Rated PG-13. It will show Wednesday, June 1 at 5 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m. at the MACC’s Castle Theater in Kahului. Tickets $10. For more information, call 572-3456. MTW
Documentaries like Gunner Palace provide superb snapshots of soldiers in the field, but they have limitations. Sam Fuller, who directed the outstanding war movie The Big Red One and fought in Europe during World War II, thought movies and film documentaries could never capture the true
PHOTO COURTESY OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
13
ONO KINEGRINDS
BY RANDALL WONG
Enjoying Island Favorites At the Pukalani Country Club It was a Wednesday afternoon when my friend and I sat on our boards in the calm waters off the Olowalu coast. With all the hype of a forecasted south swell, we expected a little more than trite conversation with other hopeful surfers. After several hours of disappointing sets, I proposed the idea of heading back upcountry and getting some food at the Pukalani Country Club. He accepted. The prospect of having some good food somewhat redeemed the delinquent waves.
Pukalani Country Club 360 Pukalani Rd., Pukalani, 572-1325. $$ We headed in, dried off and shook away the sand as best we could. Forty-five minutes later, we pulled into the parking lot. Our shorts were still wet and sand clung to our bodies as we walked in. The host greeted us casually, as if they were expecting us. The Country Club is a familiar place for nearly all Upcountry residents. Just five minutes from any point in Pukalani, the club and restaurant is a second home and a staple of the community. You’re almost always sure to run into someone you know. We sat at a table near the entrance of the long house-shaped room. Large windows occupied the west-facing wall, allowing a nice view of the West Maui Mountains and the Kahului flatland. Directly below the windows lay the 18th green. If you go during the day, you can watch golfers attempt to end their round on a good stroke here. It often provides some humor or at least a little light conversation. I soaked in the ambiance. Nothing too fancy, a picture here and there and Hawaiian music playing on the stereo. Every time I come here, I feel relaxed and comfortable, with little to distract
me from my food and company. Just like home—without the dirty dishes. The menu here is simple, full of island favorites. If you need your fix of kalua pig ($8.50), lomi salmon ($5.75), poi ($3.35) or saimin ($6.50), this is the place for you. It’s also one of the few establishments I know of that serves these dishes on a regular basis with superior service and quality. When our server came by, my friend ordered the Pan Fried Breaded Mahi Mahi ($11.75). I went with the Lau Lau Plate ($11). The plate dishes come with a choice of rice or poi (I always go with the poi), soup, haupia and a sliver of Kula onion with chili pepper water and sea salt. These plates are reasonably priced from $8 to $12. If you’re in the mood for something lighter or healthier, you can always opt for the salad bar. The Country Club is one of the few places I know of that offers this amenity. Waiting, my friend and I began chatting about what we would do the next day. Before we could get into it, our food arrived. After that, our lips moved, but no words were spoken. At first, the portions appeared small. The lau lau was a little smaller than a tennis ball, but it came with a nice bowl of poi. I was done within a matter of minutes. I guess I tend to have an appetite after returning from the beach. My hunger satiated but not overindulged, I sat back and waited while my companion finished. His mahi looked good as well, but I declined a sample when he offered. I peered out the wall of windows. The sun was dipping below the West Maui Mountains, casting shadows over the island. I was feeling the fatigue of a long day and a fulfilling meal. We talked a little more about what was going on during the weekend. Nothing much was the consensus. Then we parted ways, making plans to test the waters again. Maybe at Ma’alaea next time, or perhaps Big Beach. The swell was supposed to last for several more days. MTW
Ruth Ann DePonte’s been at the Country Club for 24 years
Happy Hour Daily
KAMA’AINA & SEAFOOD
From 2-5 PM
SPECIALS ALL WEEK LONG
$2.50 Well Drinks $3.50 Margaritas $1.50 Bud Lights
NIGHTLY SPECIALS
MON-1-1/4 LB LIVE MAINE LOBSTER $21.95 TUES-KAMA’AINA 50% OFF DINNER ENTREES WED-1LB. ALASKAN KING CRAB LEGS $21.95 THUR-14OZ PRIME RIB $18.95 FRI-KAMA’AINA 50% OFF DINNER ENTREES Kama’aina valid w/ HI ID & 17% Gratuity prior to Discount
HAPPY HOUR DAILY 3-6 $3.00 TROPICALS / WELLS $3.25 BUD-BUD LIGHT-COORS LIGHT $1.00 FRESH OYSTER SHOOTERS DOLLAR DOUBLE ALL DAY
14
MAY 26, 2005
DINING
Watch Your Favorite Sports On Our New Bar T.V.s
Fridays
2. Mai Tais 16. Prime Rib Nite $
50
Wednesdays
$
95
Variety Is Our Specialty 2511 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei • 879-1954
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
$$→$20-$40
CENTRAL MAUI Ale House - Wide selection of food with sports and games all around. 355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului, 877-9001. $ Alive And Well - Healthy food, juices, smoothies, wraps, salads or plate lunches. Organic pastries, vegetables. Open daily, 8 a.m.6 p.m. 340 Hana Hwy., Kahului, 244-5950. $ Aloha Grill - A large assortment of burgers with veggie styles and all the extras. 270 Dairy Road Marketplace, Kahului, 893-0263. $ Ba-Le - French-Vietnamese sandwiches, noodle dishes, pho, saimin and more. Plus, a large variety of tapioca. 270 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 877-2400. $ Bangkok Cuisine - Casual setting featuring exceptional Thai food with plenty of crisp vegetables and fresh seafood. Lunch, dinner or take-out. 395 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 893-0026. $ Biwon Restaurant - Fresh and flavorful, authentic Korean food. Open 10 a.m.-10 p.m., lunch and dinner. 752 Lower Main, Wailuku, 244-7788. $ Brooklyn Café - Delicious healthy alternative. Eat in or take out plate lunches and snacks. Finest organic whole foods used. Open Mon-Fri, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Corner of Market and Main, Wailuku, 877-4950. $
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
Dunes Restaurant - Adventuresome revisions of local and American breakfast, lunch and dinner favorites. Maui Lani Golf Course, Kahului, 877-7461. $$ Fiesta Time - Superior Mexican taqueria. Order a la carte or combo special with the freshest ingredients. 1132 Lower Main, Wailuku, 249-8463. $ Gardencafe (Brigit & Bernard's) - Oasis of cozy European and fresh island fish cuisine in the midst of the industrial zone. Lunch, dinner, catering. 335 Ho'ohana St., Kahului, 877-6000. $$ Ichiban Restaurant and Sushi Bar - Breakfast, lunch and dinner featuring modestly priced Japanese and local cuisine. Kahului Shopping Center, 871-6977. $$ Island Saimin Noodle Cafe - Island grinds, chow fun house specialty. Open breakfast and lunch, 6 a.m.3 p.m. 34 Lono Ave., Kahului, 877-4400. $ International House of Pancakes - (IHOP) Open for breakfast, specialty pancakes and sandwiches, along with lunch and dinner entrees. Maui Mall, Kahului, 871-4000. $
Piñata’s - Fresh and wholesome Mexican food from Kitchen Sink burritos to quesadillas. Casual dining and various piñatas available. 395 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 8778707. $ Pulehu BBQ - Local plate lunches with a Southern smokehouse twist. 1500 Lower Main St., Wailuku, 244-4049 or 244-6159. $
Saeng’s Thai Cuisine - Vegetarian, meat and seafood Thai entrees in a casual garden setting. 2119 Vineyard, Wailuku, 244-1567. $$
Koho Grill & Bar - Comfort food in a casual setting. Breakfast, lunch and dinner Open daily at 7 a.m. 275 Kaahumanu Ave., Queen Ka’ahumanu Center, 877-5588.
Krispy Kreme - This place is known all over the world for its warm, tasty glazed doughnuts. 433 Kele St., Kahului, 893-0883. $
Da Kitchen - Huge portions of local Hawaiian food. Plate lunches, steak plates and amazing chicken katsu. Very casual; sit and eat or get your food to go. 425 Koloa St., Kahului, 871-7782. $
Mama Ding’s Pasteles - This family-owned restaurant consists of a variety of breads, coconut papaya bread, apple cinnnamon, Puerto Rican sweet bread. Serving breakfast. Open 7 a.m.-2 p.m. 255 Alamaha, Kahului, 877-5796. $
Dish - The concept is simple. Every month, the owner and manager decide on a different “menu” of 14 entrees, of which you may select 12 to assemble in their kitchen. Sessions available Wed-Sat. 150 Hana Hwy., Kahului, 8771414. $$
Mike’s Restaurant - Authentic Chinese cooking and ono local grinds. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Also offers catering. 1900 E. Main St., Wailuku, 2447888. $
Kahili - Lunch with a view, served from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 2500 Honoapiilani Hwy., Waikapu, 242-6000. $$
Cupie’s Drive-In - Local lunch take-out. Open Monday through Saturday. 134 W. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului, 877-3055. $
Dragon Dragon Chinese Restaurant Excellent service and fair prices with dishes like Kung Pao Chicken, Crispy Gau Gee Mein and Honey Walnut Prawns. Maui Mall, Kahului, 8931628. $
Mercado - Latino/Mexican market, with produce from Mexico, So. America, Tonga and New Zealand. Homemade tamales. Open Mon-Fri, 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 325 Hukilike St., Kahului, 871-5067. $
Ruby’s - Walk down memory lane at this fabulous ‘50s cafe. Old-time American dining morning to night. Queen Ka`ahumanu Center, Kahului, 248-7829. $
Kozo Sushi - Fast food take-out. Open 9 a.m to 7 p.m. Mon through Sat. Sushi platters available. 52 N. Market Pl., Kahului, 243-5696. $
Denny’s - Open 24 hours, serving breakfast, lunch or dinner. Omelettes, burgers, salads. 430 Kele St., Kahului, 873-5550. $
Ave, Kahului, 877-0706. $ Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with chargrilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and island spices. Queen Ka’ahumanu Mall, Kahului, 871-7726. $
Little Ceasar Pizza Station - Specialty pizzas along with salads and sandwiches. Located inside of K-mart. 424 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 871-1566. $
Café Marc Aurel - Offers an elegantly casual menu, including gourmet cheeses, dolmas, tzatziki and an extensive wine-by-the-glass list. 28 N. Market Street, Wailuku, 244-0852. $$
Da Sushi Bar - Full menu and a variety of sushi. Open 11 a.m.- 2:30 p.m. and 5-9 p.m. FriSat, 5 p.m.-12 a.m. 333 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 8774849. $$
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip.
Manaña Garage - Latin-American cuisine with unique and colorful decor. Try the Chicken Tortilla Epozote, vegetarian enchilada and paella. Cool, quaint bar. 33 Lono St., Kahului, 873-0220. $$ Marco’s Grill Deli - A lavish and beautiful setting complements the hearty Italian food and excellent wines. 444 Hana Hwy., Kahului, 877-4446. $$ Maui Coffee Roasters - Ono grinds and freshly roasted coffee in a fun and casual atmosphere makes this the place to take five. 444 Hana Hwy., Kahului, 877-CUPS. $ Maui Beach Hotel - Buffet-style restaurant featuring different foods each night of the week. Features range from Shabu Shabu (tons of meat) to sushi and Japanese. 170 Ka’ahumanu Ave., Kahului, 877-0051. $$ Maui Mix Plate - Traditional foods of the varied ethnic groups who call Hawai’i home. 70 Ka’ahumanu
Saigon Cafe - Wailuku’s hidden secret! Delicious and affordable Vietnamese cuisine with excellent service. 1792 Main, Wailuku, 243-9560. $$ Sam Sushi - A new location and with over 20 years of experience in the food industry. Catering and party trays available. Open Mon-Fri, 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sat, 5-9 p.m. 1951 E. Vineyard St., Wailuku, 249-2420. $$ Sheik’s Restaurant - Local favorites including Loco Moco and Shoyu Chicken. 97 Wakea Ave., Kahului, 877-0121. $ Simply Sweets Bakery - Delicious sweet and savory pastries, rolls, cakes, Mauisadas and deli sandwiches. Open Mon-Thu, 7 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Fri, 7 a.m.6:30 p.m; Sat, 7 a.m.-4 p.m. 150 Hana Hwy., Kahului, 893-0700. $ Siu’s Chinese Kitchen - Fast food Chinese with daily specials. All entrees are served with rice or noodles. 70 E. Ka’aumanu Ave., Maui Mall, 871-0828. $ Squeaky’s Family Restaurant - “A Taste of Philadelphia” with real Philly cheesesteak, pan-fried trout, vegetarian meatloaf. Open for breakfast. 197 North Market St., Wailuku, 244-4100. $ Stillwell’s Bakery & Cafe - Specialty cakes and desserts, breads and pastries, with sandwiches, salads and soups for lunch. Open 6 a.m.-4 p.m. Mon-Sat. 1740 Ka’ahumanu Ave., Wailuku, 243-2243. $ Sushi Go - Presents a concept unlike anything we’ve seen on Maui: conveyor-belt sushi! Queen Ka'ahumanu Center, Kahului, 877-8744. $
Sub Paradise - Maui’s famous subs since 1990. An extensive list of breakfast bagels, sub sandwiches and salads. Open Mon-Fri, 7 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sat, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun, 7 a.m.-4 p.m. 395 E. Dairy Rd, Kahului, 877-8779. Takamiya Market - Plate lunches, homemade corned beef, sashimi, tossed salads. Catering and banquet facility. 359 N. Market St., Wailuku, 244-3404. $ Tasty Crust - Local-style cuisine for breakfast (try their famous hotcakes!), lunch and dinner. Serving Maui since 1944. 1770 Mill, Wailuku, 244-0845. $ Tiffany’s - Featuring 103 items of local and Asian entrees, Bento boxes, noodles and fish. Featuring DJ and Karaoke. Open 10:30-2 a.m. 1424 Lower Main St. Wailuku, 249-0052. $ Tin Ying Chinese Restaurant - A Hong Kong-style seafood restaurant. They have over 100 menu choices at reasonable prices. Buffet style lunch take-out, as well as sit-down dining. 1088 Lower Main St., Wailuku, 242-4371. $ Tokyo Tei - Lunch and dinner featuring teriyaki beef and fish, tempura, katsu, saimin and more. 1063 E. Lower Main St., Wailuku, 242-9630. $ Valley Isle Seafood - Known for their luau stew, along with several choices of seafood. 475 Hukilike St., Kahului, 873-4847. $ Wei Wei BBQ & Noodle House - Very affordable Chinese cuisine, counter-service, delicious noodle dishes. 210 Imikala St., Wailuku, 242-7928. $ Wow-Wee Maui Cafe - Unique candy bars, ice cream shakes, bagels, coffees, sandwiches and soups. Also a Hawaiian menu, kava kava, sushi and oxygen bars. 333 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 871-1414. $
SOUTH MAUI Alexander’s Fish & Chips - Affordable take-out seafood, chicken, ribs—all deep fried tempura style or grilled. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., 874-0788. $ Antonio’s - Italian cuisine in a cozy atmosphere, extensive wine list and friendly service. Trust us, try the Tiramisu. 1215 S. Kihei Rd., 875-8800. $$ Aroma D’Italia Ristorante - Southern Italian cuisine and full wine list at reasonable prices. Open MonSat, 5-9 p.m. 1881 S. Kihei Rd., 879-0133. $$ Ashley’s South Shore Cafe - Affordable breakfast, lunch and dinner with burgers, local plates, fresh island fish, comfort foods and deli sandwiches. 362 Hukulii Pl. (behind Tesoro gas station), Kihei, 874-8600. $ BadaBing! - Home of the Rat Pack Bar. Pizzas, pastas and Italian specialties created with love and a little attitude. $10 wines and kids eat free on Monday and Saturday. Fuhgeddaboudit! 1945 S. Kihei Rd., 8750188. $$ Bamboo Chi - Euro, Asian and Mediterranean atmosphere—perfect for relaxing with friends. Pupus, tapas and antipasto. Live music Fri-Sat in the Wabi-
Special Lunch or Dinner Entrée*
CELEBRATING 15 YEARS!
(Offer good with coupon‘til 5/31/05)
Hour Happy AY D EVERYto 7pm 4 m o Fr
KAMA‘AINA TUESDAYS 50% OFF ALL ENTRÉES
Buy 1 Entrée Get 50% OFF the 2nd Entrée of equal or lesser value
Burgers
Sandwiches
PLEASE SHOW VALID HAWAII ID OFFERED MAY 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Specializing in Jersey Style American/Italian Food
667-5117
875–0188 Kihei Kalama Village • 1945 G South Kihei Rd.
127 Lahainaluna Road, Lahaina www.lahainagrill.com
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
15
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
$$→$20-$40
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
Sabi Lounge. Dinner attire suggested. Open from 5 p.m. 100 Wailea Ike Dr., Wailea, 8794777. $$
Cyberbean Internet Cafe - Gourmet coffee, espressos, cappucinos, lattes, sandwiches, smoothies and salads. 1881 S. Kihei, 879-4799. $
Beach ’n Bagels Cafe - Fresh bagels with traditional toppings of flavored cream cheeses, smoked salmon, sandwiches, salads, smoothies and specialty coffee drinks. 2395 S. Kihei Rd., Dolphin Plaza, 875-7668. $
Da Kitchen - Huge portions of local Hawaiian food. Plate lunches, steak plates and amazing chicken katsu. Very casual; sit and eat or get your food to go. 2439 S. Kihei Rd., 875-7782. $
Big Wave Cafe - Small cafe serving Pacific Rim cuisine, including lobster and sweet corn fritter with furikake tartar sauce, and coconut shrimp with fruit salsa and ginger lilikoi sauce. Open daily. 1215 S. Kihei Rd., 891-8688. $ Bistro Molokini - Blend of California and Island cuisine, lunch and dinner. Poolside. Grand Wailea, 875-1234. $$ Bocalino Bistro & Bar - Affordably priced Mediterranean cuisine. Open for dinner. Late night menu served until 1 a.m. 1279 S. Kihei Rd., 874-9299. $$ Blue Marlin Harbor Front Grill & Bar - Get amazing seafood, steaks, sandwiches, pizza and sushi. Eat outdoors overlooking the Ma’alaea Fishing Fleet. Ma’alaea Harbor Village, 2448844. $$ Buzz’s Warf - Steaks, seafood and more, including Sweet Paradise Prawns. Reservations recommended. Ma’alaea Harbor Village, 2445426. $$ Cafe Kiowai - Authentic Japanese fare according to centuries-old tradition. Casual dining in a relaxed garden setting. 5400 Makena Alanui, Maui Prince Hotel, 874-1111. $$ Caffe Ciao - Italian cuisine baked in a Kiawe wood oven. Open for lunch and dinner. Dine outdoors poolside. The Fairmont Kea Lani, Wailea, 875-4100. $$ Capische? - Contemporary Italian with a twist and an extensive wine list. Commanding ocean views from every table. Wailea Diamond Resort, 879-2224. $$$
Denny’s - Open 24 hours for breakfast, lunch or dinner with omelets, burgers, salads. Open 24 hours. 2763 S. Kihei Rd., 879-8600. $ Dina’s Sandwitch - Deli sandwiches, salads and hot dogs, homemade potato salad, pasta salad, healthy garden fresh salads and saimin. Open 11 a.m.10 p.m. 145 N. Kihei Rd, 879-3262. $ Enrique’s Restaurant - Authentic Mexican food. Fajitas, seafood, enchiladas, tamales, burritos and vegetarian items. Open Mon-Sat, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sun, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 2395 S. Kihei Rd., 875-2910. $ Fernando’s - Authentic Mexican food. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. 41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei, 879-9952. $ Ferraro’s - Gourmet Italian cuisine oceanfront with live violin and guitar, outdoor kiawe-wood-burning oven, all-day lunches and cucina rustica dinners. Four Seasons Resort Wailea, 874-8000. $$$ Fiesta Time - Superior Mexican taqueria. Order a la carte or combo special with the freshest ingredients. 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ma’alaea, 244-5862. $ Five Palms Restaurant - Local produce and fish featuring Pacific Rim seafood. Breakfast, lunch, pupus and dinner. Open 8 a.m.-9 p.m. 2960 S. Kihei Rd., 8792607. $$ Harry’s Sushi Bar - Japanese cuisine with fresh and delicious sushi. Open 5 p.m.-12 a.m. 100 Ike Drive, Wailea, 879-7677. $$ Hawaiian Moons Natural Foods - A fantastic salad bar and healthy natural foods. Open daily 8 a.m.9 p.m. 2411 S. Kihei Rd., 875-4356. $ Horhitos Mexican Cantina - Burritos, salads, appetizers and “food for gringos,” too. Located next to Hapa’s Nightclub. Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip.
41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei, 891-MEXI. $
Ma`alaea Harbor Village, 243-2206. $$
Hula Moon - Enjoy breakfast, lunch, dinner or a champagne Sunday brunch with an open air tropical setting and spectacular ocean views. Featuring fresh Hawaiian fish. 3700 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 874-7831. $$$
Ma’alaea Waterfront Restaurant - Seafood and continental cuisine. Open for dinner daily from 5 p.m. Milowai Condominium, 50 Hauoli St., 244-9028. $$
Humuhumunukunukuapua’a - Hawaiian and Polynesian cuisine oceanside. Grand Wailea Resort, 875-1234 ext. 4900. $$$ Jawz Tacos - Island-style tacos and burritos, including choice of vegetarian, mahi mahi, ono, shrimp, chicken or steak. Impressive salsa bar and the taco salads are da bomb! 1280 S. Kihei Rd., 874-TACO. $ Joy’s Place - “Smart eating” featuring organic foods which are low fat, low salt and wheat free. Open Mon thru Sat, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 1993 S. Kihei Rd., 879-9258. $ Kai Ku Ono - A tapas-style menu, where everything is a la carte, special late night menu and sushi. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner with bar and lounge area. 2511 S. Kihei Rd., 875-1007. $$ Keoki’s Fish ‘N Chips - Ono Fish & Chips. Open for breakfast at 7 a.m. Kukui Mall, next to Starbucks, 8911400. $ Kihei Caffe - Affordable breakfast and lunch with lanai seating, hearty portions, tasty sandwiches, huli chicken and fresh fish. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., 879-2230. $
Marco’s South Side Grill - A lavish and beautiful setting complements the hearty Italian food and excellent wines. 1445 S. Kihei Rd., 874-4041. $$ Maui Espresso & Shave Ice - Finest Hawaiian shave ice, a full service coffee kiosk, fruit smoothies and shakes. 2439 S. Kihei Rd., 874-0414. $ Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with chargrilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and spices from the islands. 2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kamaole Beach Center, 879-5005. $ Mulligan’s On the Blue - Maui’s authentic Irish pub, plenty o’ Irish food, whiskey and beer. Breakfast served till 3 p.m 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131. $ Nick’s Fishmarket - Fine dining in open air and elegance with amazing seafood dishes and fresh fish. Fairmont Kea Lani, Wailea, 879-7224. $$$ OutBack Steak House - Quality steaks, shrimp-onthe-barbie, and the Bloomin’ Onion in a casual and lively atmosphere. Open 4-10 p.m. 281 Pi’ikea Ave, Kihei, 879-8400. $$
Life’s A Beach - Food and drinks in a fun atmosphere. Nachos, burritos, prime rib and grilled mahi mahi and lunch specials. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., 891-8010. $
Pita Paradise - Good food served fast. Serving up a mean Mediterranean-style “gyro,” salads and wraps, with outdoor lanai. Kihei Kalama Village Center, 8757679. $
Lobster Cove - Seafood, steak and lobster at its best in a relaxed and casual atmosphere. Open 5 p.m. to midnight daily. 100 Ike Dr., Wailea, 879-7677. $$$
Royal Thai Cuisine - Thai food with a large selection of vegetarian dishes. Open for lunch (Mon-Fri) and dinner (nightly). 1280 S. Kihei Rd., 874-0813. $
Longhi’s Wailea - Seafood, meat and pasta entrees with many not listed on the menu. 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., 891-8883. $$$
Roy’s Bar & Grill - Mouth-watering Hawaiian fusion entrees in a spacious and upbeat atmosphere. Open nightly from 5:30 to 10 p.m. Fine dining, reservations recommended. Pi’ilani Shopping Center, 303 Pi’ikea Ave., Kihei, 891-1120. $$$
LuLu’s - Ribs, burgers, chicken wings, Black ‘n Blue Ahi and more in a fun, upbeat tiki-fied atmosphere with a huge bar and open-air deck. 1941 S. Kihei Rd., 879-9944. $ Ma`alaea Grill - Reasonably priced fine dining overlooking the harbor from the Maui Ocean Center.
Same great food and same friendly staff but now FERNANDO’S has a new name…
Daily Specials!
Sansei Restaurant - Japanese-based Pacific Rim dining, sushi bar and late night menu. Award-winning cuisine, early bird and late night special. 1881 S. Kihei Rd., 879-0004. $$ K
VOTED BEST BURGER ON MAUI BY MAUITIME WEEKLY READERS
MON Carnitas-$7.99 TUES Mole-$7.99 WED Fish Burrito-$7.99 THUR Fajitas-$9.99
WE DELIVER 5-8:30 pm TAKE OUT AVAILABLE
FRI
Tamales-$6.99
SAT
Menudo-$7.99
SUN
Menudo-$7.99
879-9952 • KIHEI • 41 E. Lipoa • Next to Gold’s Gym
SEE WHAT ELSE IS COOKIN! 444 Hana Hwy. Kahului Corner of Dairy Rd. & Hana Hwy.
877–CUPS
WWW.HAWAIIANCOFFEE.COM
Homemade Italian Cuisine
opopopopopopopopop
Mahalo to all our customers! We’ll be closed ‘til May 31st
Made from Scratch Ravioli Lasagna Meatballs Osso Buco Tiramisu Open Tuesdays thru Sundays 5pm - 9pm
1215 S. Kihei Rd. (Long’s Ctr.) • 875-8800
16
MAY 26, 2005
DINING
FRESH FISH STEAKS • SALADS BABY-BACK RIBS CHICKEN
On Front St. in Lahaina upstairs in
The Wharf Cinema Center
667-0908
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
$$→$20-$40
Sarento’s on the Beach - Contemporary dining near the water’s edge. Italian cuisine, very romantic. Private VIP table available. 2980 S. Kihei Rd., 875-7555. $$$ Seawatch - Hawai’i regional cuisine utilizing the freshest island fish and produce. Open for breakfast and lunch 8 a.m to 3 p.m, dinner 5:30 p.m. 100 Wailea Golf Club Drive, Wailea, 8758080. $$
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
flare. Open 5-10 p.m. Music nightly. 760 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 874-8385. $$ K
Jameson’s Grill & Bar - Featuring fine steaks, fresh local fish and seafood, and of course, baked artichoke. 200 Kapalua Dr., Kapalua, 669-5653. $$$
UPCOUNTRY
Kimura Saimin Shop - Casual atmosphere, simple, affordable menu with fresh ingredients done right! 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery, 575-5228. $
Anthony’s Coffee Company - A full espresso bar, hot and cold sandwiches, ice cream. Make sure to stop in for a great box lunch to go! 90 Hana Hwy., Paia, 579-8340. $
Kitada’s - Saimin for breakfast is a standard. Teriyaki beef, hamburger steak, tofu and teriyaki all available. 3617 Baldwin Ave., Makawao, 572-7241. $
Shabu Shabu Toji - Healthy and delicious Japanese style fondue. Beef, pork or seafood, and veggies. Open for lunch Wed-Fri; dinner 5:30-9:30 p.m. nightly. 1280 S. Kihei Rd., 8758366. $
Aha ’Aina - Oceanfront dining featuring a delicious chili pork burrito and a large variety of omelets. Island fish, chicken katsu. Open for breakfast and lunch only: Tue-Sat, 7 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sun, 7 a.m.-1 p.m. 7 Aewa Place, Pukalani, 572-2395. $$
Kula Lodge & Restaurant - Upcountry’s familystyle restaurant with sweeping views of the island. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Haleakala Highway, 878-1535. $
Spago - Gourmet cuisine as presented by world-famous chef-owner Wolfgang Puck. Oceanfront dining at its finest! Four Seasons Resort Wailea, 874-8000. $$$
Café 808 - Local diner-style serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Open daily from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. 4566 Lower Kula Rd., Kula, 878-6874. $
La Provence - French-style bistro and patisserie with lanai, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Open Wed thru Sun, 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 3158 Lower Kula Rd., 878-1313. $$
Spices - Steak, seafood and more! Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The Maui Coast Hotel, 2259 S. Kihei Rd., 891-8860. $$$ Stella Blues Cafe - Healthy, quality food in a casual, homestyle setting. Breakfast, lunch and dinner with daily specials. 1279 S. Kihei Rd., 874-3779. $$ South Shore Tiki Lounge - Killer burgers, sausage sandwiches, mai-tais and pizza. Awesome outdoor seating on the Aloha Jungle Lanai. Open 11 a.m.-2 a.m., serving food 'till midnight! Kihei Kalama Village, 874-6444. $ Sports Page Bar & Grill - Over 100 menu items, including half-pound burgers and deli sandwiches, with 24 TVs and a full bar. Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. 2411 S. Kihei Rd., 879-0602. $ Sunset Mixed Grill - Local, Japanese and Chinese cuisine, along with some Korean dishes. Entrees come with two side dishes. Open 10 a.m.-9 p.m. BYOB. 2395 S. Kihei Rd. 891-1991. $ Tastings Wine Bar & Grill - Savory and sweet nibbles, such as house-smoked duck breast on wilted spinach with toasted hazelnuts, grilled whole Moi with jasmine rice and ginger braised bok choy, along with an excellent wine list. Open Tue-Sun, from 5 p.m. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 879-8711. $$
Cafe Del Sol - Sandwiches and fresh fish, daily specials. Open for breakfast and lunch: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 3620 Baldwin Ave., Makawao, 572-4877. $ Café Des Amis - Charming cafe with delicious sweet and savory crepes and Mediterranean fare. 42 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-6323. $ Café Mambo - International bistro featuring Mediterranean and Mexican cuisine with Moorish influences. BYOB. 30 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-8021. $ Cakewalk Paia Bakery - High quality baked goods, sandwiches and specialty cakes. 100 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-8770. $ Casanova - First class service, first class food. Fine Italian dining at night and Makawao’s favorite deli by day. 1188 Makawao Ave., 572-0220. $$ Charley’s Restaurant & Saloon - Hankering for some grub? Charley’s serves it hearty and healthy from breakfast to dinner and beyond. 142 Hana Hwy., Paia, 579-9453. $ K Colleen’s - 1940s-style urban bistro serving breakfast, lunch and dinner from 6 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily. Haiku Cannery, 575-9211. $$ Fresh Mint - Vietnamese vegetarian cuisine including Summer Rolls, Spicy Lemongrass Soup and Soy Fish in Clay Pot. Open daily 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Catering and take-out available. 115 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 5799144. $
Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe - Relaxed island luxury in ambience and cuisine, with ocean views and live music. The Shops at Wailea, 875-9983. $$
Hali`imaile General Store - Gourmet dining in a charming atmosphere with food from Chef Beverly Gannon’s award-winning menu. 900 Hali`imaile Rd, 572-2666. $
Tony Roma’s - Famous for ribs, barbequed chicken and onion ring loaf, along with daily specials. 1819 S. Kihei Road, 875-1104. $$
Hana Hou Cafe - Hawaiian homestyle cooking with aloha-filled ambience and local musicians. 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery, 575-2661. $
Vietnamese Cuisine - Hawaiian Opakapaka filet, soft shell crab, New York steak. Open 10:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Azeka Place I, Kihei, 8752088. $$
Island Tacos - A taco stand with fresh, made-toorder fish, beef and chicken tacos. Daily from 11 a.m.4 p.m. 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery. $
Yorman’s By The Sea - Southern Pacific cuisine with a blend of Louisiana Cajun and tropical
Jacque’s Northshore Bistro - Tropical yet festive atmosphere, with a sushi bar, indoor and lanai dining. 120 Hana Hwy., Paia, 579-8844. $$
Livewire Cafe - Gourmet desserts, coffee drinks, smoothies. Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sun thru Thu; 6 a.m. to midnight Fri and Sat. 137 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-6009. $ Lynne’s Cafe - Affordable homestyle local food including breakfast, plate lunch, chow fun and more! Catering available. 810 Kokomo Rd., Haiku, 575-9363. $ Makawao Steak House - Classic and comfortable menu with daily fish preparations and salad bar. 3612 Baldwin Ave., Makawao, 572-8711. $$ Mama’s Fish House - Fresh island fish with fresh local ingredients at “Maui’s favorite restaurant.” 799 Poho Pl., Kuau, 579-8488. $$$ Maui’s Best Tamales & Local Food - Authentic, fresh and tasty Mexican cuisine along with local favorites. 81 Makawao Ave., Pukalani Square, 5732998. $ Milagros Food Co. - South American cuisine with an island influence. Best people watching spot in Paia! Extensive tequila menu and delicious daily specials. 3 Baldwin St., Paia, 579-8755. $ Moana Bakery & Cafe - Pacific Rim dining for vegetarians and meat eaters. Bakery provides wonderful goodies for the sweet tooth. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9999. $ Pa`ia Fish Market - By serving fresh local Hawaiian fish daily, they are the hot spot for seafood lovers without the upscale pocket. 2A Baldwin Ave., Paia, 5798030. $ Pauwela Cafe & Bakery - Healthy, low-fat deli cuisine and daily fresh baked goods. Open 7 a.m.-2:30 p.m. 375 W. Kuiaha Rd., Haiku, 575-9242. $ Polli’s Mexican Restaurant - Paniolo country’s premier Mexican cantina, with nachos, burritos, ensaladas and more! 1202 Makawao Ave., 572-7808. $ SandBar & Grill - Casual contemporary island cuisine, featuring salads, kiawe grill burgers, sandwiches and lobster tacos. Full bar, happy hour everyday 4-6 p.m. Open daily from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. 89 Hana Hwy., Paia, 579-8742. $
David Wolfe Author of
Naked Chocolate founder of
www.rawfood.com will talk and serve Chocolate Milk and Truffles June 2, 7- 10 pm, $20 at the door at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center Open for breakfast am & Lunch ‘til pm Mon Sat
please come out and help us give David a big Maui No Ka Oi Aloha for more Info or to join emailing list call Katharine Clark 808-573-7514 or email HealthWorksHi@aol.com
34 LONO AVE. KAHULUI
877- 4400 LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYEE OF THE
WEEK AS TOLD TO GABRIELLE POCCIA
Michele Sacay Pizza cook/server at Bada Bing Every time I walk into Bada Bing I feel like I am home. It’s kind of like a second home to me. I just get a really warm and friendly vibe from the place. I feel so welcomed that I sometimes eat there on my days off. I started working as a cook three years ago then moved to hostess and now have been a server for about three months. Many of the employees work both in the kitchen and on the floor. I liked hostessing but serving is definitely better because I make more money. Working at the restaurant is a full-time job and it keeps me pretty busy. I usually work five days a week but every so often I will work six days when necessary. I try to help out whenever they need me. My time is split pretty evenly between cooking pizza and serving tables. The mix of the two is great because some days I can be in my own world, make pizza and avoid any stress that comes from dealing with fussy people. Then on other days I work out on the floor and have a great time with the customers and my co-workers. I moved to Maui eight years ago from the Big Island because I got a bit bored and felt like I needed a change. I live in Kihei and I really love it here. Maui is wonderful. I have worked at several other restaurants on the island but for me Bada Bing is the best. It’s where I belong. We don’t have a frequent turnover of employees and so we all know each other pretty well. My coworkers are like family. The managers are so great and very understanding, and owners are really down to earth. Who could ask for more? MTW
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
17
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
Vasi Gourmet - The best cakes and pastries around, along with delicious salads, quiches and gyros with a variety of teas. Open 7 a.m.-8 p.m. 810 Kokomo Rd., Haiku Marketplace, 575-9588. $ Veg Out - Vegan and vegetarian food, from Mexican, Italian and Far East influences. 810 Kokomo Rd., Haiku, 575-5320. $
WEST MAUI A&J Kitchen, Deli & Bakery - Choose from American, Hawaiian, Korean and Chinese cuisines. Bakery with cakes and cookies. Lahaina Center, 667-0623. $ Alexander’s Fish & Chips - Seafood, chicken, ribs, deep-fried tempura style or grilled. Great food, great prices. 840 Wainee St., Lahaina Square, 667-9009. $ Aloha Mixed Plate - Experience the traditional foods of the varied ethnic groups who call Hawai’i home. 1285 Front St., Lahaina, 6613322. $ Athens Greek Restaurant - Affordable and authentic gyros, shish kebab, falafel and more. Ya’Sou! Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-4300. $ The Bakery - Freshly baked breads and pastries. Soup and sandwiches available. 991 Limahana Pl., Lahaina, 667-9062. $ Ba-Le - French Vietnamese sandwiches, noodle dishes, pho, saimin and more. Wide variety of tapioca. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-5566. $ Bamboo Bar & Grill - Vietnamese, Thai and Japanese sushi. Delivery available, great daily specials. Open late with full bar, pool tables. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 667-4051. $ K Banyan Tree - “Eclectic Pacific cuisine with a Hawaiian twist.” Lodge atmosphere, ocean views. Ritz Carlton Kapalua, 669-6200. $$$ Basil Tomato’s Italian Grill - Specializing in Northern Italian cuisine. Come in for the ambience, stay for the delightful dining experience. 2780 Keka’a Dr., Ka’anapali, 662-3210. $$ BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria - Deep-dish specialty pizzas and homemade Pizookies with live music nightly. Overlooking Lahaina Town with ocean view. 730 Front St., 661-0700. $ Blue Lagoon - Casual dining with local grinds and bar, surrounded by waterfalls and palm trees. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 661–8141. $ Breakwall Cafe - Serving breakfast, coffee, sandwiches, salads, smoothies. Open everyday 7 a.m.-2 p.m. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-7220. $ Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. - Fine Southern foods, with “Forrest Gump” movie memorabilia and logo wear in a lively, casual atmosphere. 889 Front St., Lahaina, 661-3111. $$ Cafe O’Lei - Oceanfront dining featuring light
$$→$20-$40
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
and healthy yet hearty gourmet lunch and dinner. Delicious salads and focaccia sandwiches. 839 Front St., Lahaina, 661-9491. $$ Cafe Sauvage - Gourmet, hearty, satisfying fare in an unpretentious setting. Extensive beer and wine menu, after-dinner cordials, and desserts! 844 Front St., Lahaina, 661-7600. $$ K Canoes - Casual yet elegant dining serving Polynesian style steaks, and seafood. Lunch 11 a.m.2:30 p.m., dinner 5-9 p.m. 1450 Front St., Lahaina, 661-0937. $$ Captain Dave Fish & Chips - Classic baskets of fish and chips. Open daily. 126 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina, 667-6700. $ Castaway Cafe - Beachside, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Soups, salads, pasta. Maui Kaanapali Villas & Resort, 661-9091. $ Cilantro - Fresh Mexican Grill island fish, tacos and burritos. Mexican food beyond the border. 170 Papalaua St., Lahaina, 667-5444. $ Chez Paul Restaurant - Fine dining French cuisine, open for dinner only. Romantic setting. Call for reservations. 820 Olowalu Rd., Olowalu, 661-3843. $$$ K China Boat - The best Mandarin Szechwan cuisine on Maui, open for lunch and dinner. 4474 L. Honoapiilani Road, Kahana Gateway Shopping Center, 669-5089. $ CJ’s Deli & Diner - Reasonably priced comfort foods like Reuben sandwiches, pot roast, freshly baked pies and more. Open daily. 2580 Keka’a Dr., Fairway Shops, Ka’anapali, 667-0968. $ Coconut Grove - Steak, seafood and other island favorites. Next to Lahaina Cannery Mall. Open 5:30-9 p.m. 1312 Front Street, Lahaina, 661-5648. Comercial Mexicana Store - Authentic Mexican food, tamales, enchiladas, tacos, soups, rice and beans Open everyday 10 a.m.-9 p.m. 840 Wainee St., Lahaina, 661-6193. $ Compadres Bar & Grill - Western cooking with a Mexican accent. Oceanview dining and margarita bar. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-7189. $
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip.
Feast At Lele - A royal tour of the cuisine of Polynesia sharing the spotlight with music and dance from four Pacific Islands. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 6675353. $$$ Fish & Game Brewing Co. & Rotisserie - Maui’s own restaurant brewery, with rotisserie grill, featuring steak, seafood and ambience. Also, late-night menu served until 1:30 a.m.! 4405 Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Kahana, 669-3474. $$ Gaby’s Pizzeria - Casual Italian dining with pizza and pasta from $6-$25. Open 11 a.m. to 12 a.m. daily. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8112. $ Gazebo Restaurant - Full breakfast and lunch menu, casual atmosphere and beautiful oceanside setting. 5315 Lower Honoapi’ilani Rd, Napili, 669-5621. $ Gerard’s - Fine French dining in downtown Lahaina. Rich, flavorful yet light foods await your taste buds. 174 Lahainaluna, Lahaina, 661-8939. $$$ Giovani’s Tomato Pie Ristorante - Fine Italian dining located. Open for dinner. 2291 Ka’anapali Pkwy., 661-3160. $$ Hard Rock Cafe - Good American food at decent prices amongst rock ‘n roll memorabilia. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 667-7400. $ Hawaiian Village Coffee - Old-Hawaiian styled coffeehouse with pastries, smoothies, salads and sandwiches, quiche. Open 5:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. 4405 Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Kahana Gateway Shopping Center, 665-1114. $ Hecocks - Italian restaurant and cocktail lounge oceanside. Breakfast, lunch and dinner. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8810. $$ K House of Saimin - Ono homemade saimin, chicken sticks, and haupia pie are just some of the local favorites here. Old Lahaina Center, 667-7572. $ Hula Grill - Barefoot bar and beachside dining, 1940s-style. Menu is a seafood lover’s delight. Whaler’s Village, Ka’anapali, 667-6636. $$ i`o - Pacific Rim cuisine among awesome sunset views, and indoor or outdoor dining. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8422. $$$
Cool Cat Cafe - 1950s-style dinner. Delicious burgers and sandwiches, huge salads and fountain desserts. Food served 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Wharf Cinema, Lahaina, 667-0908. $ K
Island Taco - The best soft shell tacos ever! Beef, fish, pork or chicken, served with black beans, fresh cabbage, cheese, onions and jalapenos. Open very late night, next to Paradice Bluz. 744 Luakini St., Lahaina. $
Curry-In-A-Hurry - Curry dishes that are delightful and delicious in alternative vegetarian eating. Open Tue-Sat, 11:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 840 Wainee St., Lahaina Square, 661-4370. $
Java Jazz/Soup Nutz - Coffee bar and cafe with great food, eclectic atmosphere, lounge ambience. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 3350 Lower Honoapi’ilani Rd., Honokowai, 667-0787. $
David Paul’s Lahaina Grill - Fine Pacific Rim cuisine in the intimate dining room on the ground floor of the Lahaina Inn. 127 Lahainaluna, Lahaina, 667-5117. $$$ K
Jonny’s Burger Joint - Great burgers, as well as Mexican food, salads and fried items, served until midnight, with bar and pool table. 2395 Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Ka’anapali, 661-4500. $
Dollie’s Pub & Cafe - Pizza, sandwiches, salads and full bar. Open daily 11 a.m. to midnight. 4310 L. Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Kahana Manor Shops, 669-0266. $
Kahuna Kabob - Healthy food, low prices! Soups, brown rice, veggies and kabobs. And they deliver. Lahaina Marketplace, 661-9999. $ K
Kimo’s - Fresh fish, prime rib and their famous Hula Pie, oceanside dining. Live entertainment daily. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4811. $$ Kobe - Japanese Steak House and Oku’s Sushi Bar, featuring teppanyaki cooking and fabulous sushi. Dinner nightly from 5:30-10 p.m., Sushi 5:30-11:30 p.m. 136 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 667-5555. $$ Lahaina Coolers - Off the beaten path surf bistro. Good food, good quality, late night menu. 180 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 661-7082. $ Lahaina Fish Co. - Chef’s signature Pacific Rim specialties prepared with fresh island fish. Dine on the oceanside lanai. 831 Front St., Lahaina, 661–3472. $$ Leilani’s On The Beach - Relaxed beachfront dining, specializing in fresh seafood and Pacific Rim cuisine. 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., 661-4495. $$ Livewire Cafe - Gourmet desserts, coffee drinks, smoothies. Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon-Sun. 612 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4213. $ Longhi’s - Elegant fine dining, freshest ingredients, pasta, seafood and steaks. 888 Front St., Lahaina, 6672288. $$$ MaLa - Oceanfront dining and organic whole grains cuisine. From clams and lobster soup to chicken tikka, beet and goat cheese salads. Full bar. 1307 Front St., Lahaina, 667-9394. $$ Mama’s Ribs & Rotisserie - Serving ribs and roasted chicken, BBQ baked beans, coleslaw and macaroni salad. Napili Plaza, 665-6262. $ Mango Cafe - Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. American cusine, along with some local favorites. Full bar Nightly specials. 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. 2290 Ka’anapali Pkwy., 667-1929. $$ K Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with chargrilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and spices from the islands. Lahaina Square, 661-8883; Napili Square, 665-0222. $ Mercado - Latino/Mexican market, with produce from Mexico, So. America, Tonga and New Zealand. Homemade tamales. Open Mon-Fri, 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 3636 L. Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Honokowai, 665-5900. $ Moose McGillycuddy’s - Great value, large portions, all-you-can-eat specials, merry atmosphere and a large bar. 844 Front St., Lahaina, 667-7758. $ Mr. Sub Sandwiches - Specialty sandwiches made to order, with salads and homemade soups. 129 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina, 667-5683. $ Nachos Grande - Fresh Mexican food, fast. Vegetarian, too. Honokowai Marketplace, 662-0890. $ Nalu Sunset Bar & Sushi - Sushi rolls, sashimi, various Japanese appetizers, sandwiches and more. Maui Marriott, Ka’anapali, 667-1200 ext. 51. $$ Okazuya Deli - Quality Japanese plate lunch. The best lemon caper mahi mahi and Okinawan potato tempura ever! Open 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 4:30 to 9 p.m. 3600 Lower Honoapiilani Hwy., Honokowai,
Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Open Daily: 7:30am - 1am Dinner Served 5pm - 10pm Full Bar - Late Night 10pm - close
Homestyle New American Comfort Food Vegetarian Selections
Locally Raised Grass Fed Beef
Fresh Local Fish
Homemade Desserts
WHERE PEOPLE & FOOD OF GOOD TASTE COME TOGETHER! In Our New Location - Azeka II - 874-3779 MAY 26, 2005
DINING
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
$$→$20-$40
665-0512. $ Ono’s Surf Bar & Grill - Casual poolside dining. Now featuring reasonably priced tapas, Hawaiian style menu for dinner. 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m. The Westin Maui, Ka’anapali, 667-2525. $
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
Pizza Paradiso - Award-winning pasta dishes, tossto-order salads, big fat Greek gyros, homemade tiramisu and panna cotta. Honokowai Marketplace, 667-2929. $ Plantation House Restaurant - HawaiianMediterranean cuisine. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. 2000 Plantation Club Dr., Kapalua, 669-6299. $
Outback Steak House - Quality steaks, shrimp-on-the-barbie, and the Bloomin’ Onion in a casual and lively atmosphere. Open 4-10 p.m. nightly. 4405 Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Kahana, 6651822. $$
Quizno’s Subs - Toasted subs, 100% dairy-made ingredients. Open Mon-Sat, 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun, 12-8 p.m. 170 Papalaua Street, Lahaina Mall, 667-5111. $
Pacific’O - Elegant oceanfront award-winning contemporary Pacific cuisine. Live jazz on weekends. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 667-4341. $$$
Reilley’s - Known for their choice award-winning beef. Gourmet steaks and seafood. Open at 5:30 p.m. 4405 Honoapi`ilani Hwy., Kahana, 667-7477. $$$
Penne Pasta - Mark Ellman’s inexpensive Italian bistro with homestyle pasta, pizza and salads. 180 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 661-6633. $
Roy’s Bar & Grill - This fine dining restaurant has mouth-watering Hawaiian fusion entrees in a spacious upbeat atmosphere. Open nightly from 5:30-10 p.m. 4405 Honoapi’ilani Hwy., Kahana, 669-6999. $$$
Pho Saigon 808 - Vietnamese cuisine, Saigon steaks, vegetarian delight. Open 7 days a week. 658 Front St., Wharf Cinema Center, 661-6628. $ Pioneer Inn - Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, with live entertainment nightly. 659 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636. $ Pad Thai - Delicious Påd Thai, among many other items. Open daily. 658 Front St., Lahaina. $
Rusty Harpoon Restaurant & Tavern - Quench thirst, satiate hunger and watch sports. Large parties welcome. Whalers Village, Ka’anapali, 661-3123. $$ Ruth’s Chris Steak House - USDA prime steak and fine wines. Dinner served nightly, 5-10 p.m. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8815. $$$
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip.
Kodama has combined the highest quality sushi bar infused with Hawai’i’s cultural flavors. 115 Bay Dr., Kapalua, 669-6286. $$ K Sea House Restaurant - Looking out over incredible Napili Bay, dining is an amazing experience here under the direction of Chef Michael Gallagher. 5900 Lwr. Honoapi`ilani Hwy., Napili, 669-1500. $$ Smoke House - Delicious barbeque, ribs, chicken, sandwiches and hamburgers, along with a full bar. Open 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. 927 Wainee St., Lahaina, 667-7005. $
temporary fine wines. Hyatt Regency, Ka’anapali, 6674727. $$$ Terrace Restaurant - Open from 6:30-11 a.m. serving breakfast only. Elegant dining, buffet-style rotating menu ranging from “Breakfast on the Farm” to “Hawaiian Plantation-Style Breakfast.” Ritz Carlton, Kapalua, 669-6200. $$$ Thai Chef - Thai food like you’ve never had it, with curry, Pad Thai, summer rolls and more. Old Lahaina Center, 667-2814. $
Spats Trattoria - Step into old Northern Italy. Tables are private and the antipasto serves two. Hyatt Regency, Ka’anapali, 667-4727. $$$
Tropica - Oceanfront dining on Ka’anapali Beach, features sizzling steaks, fresh fish, prepared in variety of styles. Specialty entrees, appetizers and deserts. Open 5:30-9:30 p.m. Westin Ka’anapali, 667-2525. $$
Sports Club Kahana Grill - Upscale, healthy restaurant inside Sports Club Kahana. Breakfast, lunch and take-out. 4327 Lwr. Honoapi`ilani Rd., Kahana, 669-3539. $$
Vino - Comfort and contemporary cuisine featuring fresh pasta and an extensive wine list. Open for dinner nightly from 5:30 p.m. Village Course Clubhouse, Kapalua, 661-8466. $$$
Sunrise Cafe - Casual and cozy outdoor lanai, serving American food from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. 693 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8558. $
Vinny’s Pizza - Authentic New York style pizza, calzones and heros. Open daily, delivery 11 a.m.-10 p.m. 840 Wainee St., Lahaina Square, 661-6773. $
Swan Court - One of the top 10 romantic restaurants in the world, with an extensive list of con-
Sansei Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar - D.K.
HOLOHOLO
“WHO HAS
SAID A GREAT MEAL TO BE EXPENSIVE ”
Chef M a rk E llma n’s
GIRL THE REST OF THE WORLD IS ALWAYS ONE DRINK BEHIND
Beer & Wine Pastas, Salads, Pizzas, Sandwiches and Nightly Seafood Specials We now have Brown Rice Pasta! Wheat & Gluten Free! 50¢ extra / Cooked to order so it takes a few minutes longer
661-6633 • 180 Dickenson Street • Lahaina LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
19
AVAN TI! SEMPRE AVAN TI! A N E W A R T M OV E M E N T C R E AT E D B Y:
DEBORAH LEE GALESI
LADY IN WAITING
(OIL ON LINEN & WOOD, 15.75 X 11.8125)
INFINITE DANCE OF BLISS
DEBORAH LEE GALESI, having lived various lives between the Universe and Mother Earth, is born once a gain, in Paterson, New Jersey, U.S.A. As a small child, she discovered a great love for oil painting, and was encouraged by her teacher to follow this strong passion. Eleanor Egg was her first private art instructor. After some years, Deborah graduated from the University of Colorado with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in art and psychology. Then continuing her private lessons with Maestro Raymond Whyte and Maestro Gene Scarpentoni, from the “Art Student’s League,” New York City, she was able to show her work in New York, Colorado, New Jersey and France. Her work is collected privately in the United States, France, Japan, Italy and Mexico. Deborah taught for some years in the U.S.A. and after Meastro Gene Scarpentoni’s death, she travelled all over Europe in search of a new Maestro. She found herself in Florence, Italy, and as she continued her artistic path, Deborah began studying at Villa Schifanoia, but not to her satisfaction. Therefore, she happily found herself as an apprentice with ben Long, a student of Annigoni specializing in portraits. Today, Deborah shows us various styles in her work: Conceptual, Impressionism, Symbolism, Naif, Fantatique, New Realism, and/or Surrealism depending on her spiritual moments. Thus, her paintings are based on the vibrations received from places or lifetimes, or from places or lifetimes, or from space without time. In reality, since childhood, Deborah has always been attracted to Florence by the magical energy of the Renaissance, which allowed her to know her inner self more fully. Deborah’s paintings transmit many messages for humanity, so that humanity may remember the true fundamental values of love, life and nature. Her art captures the invisible world and metamorphosis, essential and important. These are the keys to believing in our dreams. Deborah’s aspirations and dreams have always been to live in a New Renaissance (Rebirth) with balance. She decided to call the “Avanti! Sempre Avanti!” She launched an International L’Atelier in which we can get a creative vortex of energy flowing for working together and far apart in harmony, love, brotherhood and sisterhood. The artist, Deborah Lee Galesi, now resides in the state of Hawaii on the Island of Maui. After getting married and spending several years remodeling her home, the fine artist is ready to share her work with her native country, the United States of America. Deborah Lee Galesi has recently returned to the Islands from a very successful show in New York. The following article was published in the Gallery & Studio Magazine (written by critic, Maurice Taplinger).
20
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
of the centerpieces of Deborah Lee Galesi’s recent solo exhibition at the 584 location of Montserrat Gallery (which will include her work in its year-round OsalonneBroadway on moving to its new space in Chelsea), was a large oil on canvas called “Look Inside,” which took its inspiration from the biblical Psalm 23: ”You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.” The painting presented a kind of freeform contemporary version of The Last Supper, populated by an eclectic cast of characters, some in fill color, others in grisaille, representing several nationalities. They were gathered around a circular table split down the middle, as if by an earthquake, its pyramidal opening revealing a rainbow-vibrant realm of cosmic phenomena, mountain ranges,m waterfalls, winding rivers and verdant foliage. Within this vast visionary landscape, which could represent an earthly Paradise, a woman in native dress bathed an infant in shallow water, while white swans glided along, porpoises left through the air in formation, and a luminous angel waded nearby. For all its multilayered imagistic complexity, as the title “Look Inside” suggests, the message of the painting seemed profoundly simple: Look past the conference tables where bargains are struck between government leaders and politicians negotiating the fate of humanity to one’s own inner being, where the real truth of existence lies within easy reach. One of the things that makes Galesi’s work do fascinating is her willingness to take risks that would daunt a less intrepid painter, as seen in another large canvas called “Infinite Quantum Leap: Infinite Possibilities,” which has become an emblematic work of her career, having been repeatedly reproduced in the Village Voice and other publications. In this composition a prehistoric hunter and another figure who appears to be a medieval knight brandishing a long sword ride the back of a fire-breathing dinosaur, while a huge wave of water whooshes up behind the huge creature like a jet-trail, a white dolphin discernible within its white foam. And far be it for Galesi to stop there: the figure of a shaman sitting in the lotus position holding a ceremonial staff and a sort of sparkler god with luminous, wiggling rays emanating from his entire body can be seen levitating in the deep, nocturnal darkness surrounding the main figures! In this large oil, too, the artist appears to be paying tribute to indigenous inspirations and imparting wisdom channels from the ancients. Yet the real triumph, in strictly aesthetic terms, is how successfully Galesi balances all of these disparate images within a composition that goes far beyond the efforts of other international Neo-Expressionists in her all-out willingness to share the truth of her experience with the viewer. For Galesi, a native of Patterson, New Jersey, this means calling upon the technical skills that she honed at the Art Students League in New York City and during a long periods of study in Florence, Italy, where she soaked up the methods of the Renaissance masters who were her earliest inspiration, in order to make every image that she paints a palpable representation of her inner quality. This a complex undertaking indeed, since Galesi’s inner reality is fed by a variety of esoteric sources, which include her fascination with everything from Native American Culture to the art of the Etruscans and the ancient Egyptians, as well as the New Age theories of
(OIL 48.125 C 48.125)
Deepak Chopra, among any number of other passing interests which invariably find their way to her pictures. An image especially emblematic of Galesi’s spiritual path is the oil on canvas she calls “Infinite Dance of Bliss,” in which a figure that appears to be a symbolic self-portrait floats above a volcanic landscape in a stratosphere where smaller beings of pure light seem to surf on streams of purplish illumination emanating from the stars. Here, on a canvas whose perfectly symmetrical square format enhances the composition’s sense of infinite space, is a vision of transcendence to rival those of no less delightfully daft a British visionary than the great William Blake! And while this could seem an enterprise fraught with peril for a contemporary painter, Galesi possesses both the technical skill and the spiritual conviction to make the painting succeed. Even more startling in conceptual terms, yet just as successful in its own manner is the large oil called “Swept Away by the Dolphin Vortex,” in which a dolphin with the body of a woman rises like a Botticelli Venus out of the sea, set against a watery swirl that gives Galesi the opportunity to flaunt her virtuoso painterly skills in one of her boldest, most dazzlingly Expressionistic compositions to date. Deborah Lee Galesi has already amassed an impressive exhibition history around the country and in various places abroad: France, Japan, Australia and particularly Italy, where she is especially esteemed. She has also exhibited in New York City in the past. However, the sheer range and scope of her most recent solo show at Montserrat Gallery (which included many more paintings than those described here, among them smaller works such as the pensive nude “Solitude,” presenting a more intimate side of her talent) seemed to make is a landmark in her career.
A New Art Movement Created by:
DEBORAH LEE GALESI PERMANENT EXHIBITION
AT MONTSERRAT GALLERY 547 WEST 27TH STREET, CHELSEA, NY 10001
FUTURE SHOWS INCLUDE
31ST INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS SCIENCE, CULTURE & ARTS IN THE 21ST CENTURY, JUNE 5–11 SHERATON MOANA HOTEL, WAIKIKI / HONOLULU, HI AMSTERDAM WHITNEY INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, INC.
OCT. 7–NOV. 29 (OPENING RECEPTION: OCT. 14 & NOV. 10) 511 WEST 25TH STREET, CHELSEA, NY 10001
W W W . D L - G A L E S I . C O M
Back at the Drive-In Saturday, 5:30 p.m. at MCC [FILM] I realized this morning, as I sat on my porch listening to the birds chirp, smelling the flowers and wearing a big daffy grin, that the whimsy of the hot summer is upon us. It is high time to take advantage—time to get out the grills and the floaties, take a dip… oh, and you know what else you can do? Go to the drive-in! Now it doesn’t get much more whimsical than that. This Saturday, MauiFEST Hawai’i and Maui Community College will be hosting not one but three films, along with live music by Uncle Boy Kanae and friends. Plus, there’ll be a special appearance by Sam Sushi and Pulehu BBQ. Yummm… I love it when they show up places! So you can listen to some tunes, go to the food booths and then veg in your car and watch The Incredibles—that animated flick about a crime fighter turned insurance adjuster. They’re also showing Bhutan, a preview of Tom Vendetti’s film on the country of, well, Bhutan (soon to air on CBS) and The Devil at 4 O’clock, a Frank Sinatra/Spencer Tracy adventure movie shot on Maui in 1961. It’s about a convict and a priest-turned-alcoholic who are trying to finish the chapel at a leper hospital before the volcano erupts. They just don’t make stories like that anymore! And who doesn’t like seeing Frank in his prime? Good stuff! Plus, it’s only five bucks—don’t bother with the math—that’s $20 bucks for you, three friends and a car. Sweet. Gates open at 5:30pm at Maui Community College. [REESE QUICK]
SEND YOUR LISTINGS & PHOTOS FOR DA KINE CALENDAR TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM OR FAX (808) 661-0446 LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
21
ThIS WEEK’S PICKS by Samantha Campos
The Other Canoe Exhibit
Summer Sunsplash
Now through June 5 at the Schaefer International Gallery
Friday, 6 p.m. at A&B Amphitheater
[ART/CULTURE] Standing at the edge of the water off the islands of Hawai’i, there is a sense of awe and respect for the vast sea that surrounds us. It’s even more humbling to know that a long time ago some very brave people looked from the opposite side of the ocean and decided to paddle out to see what could be found. Canoeing is part of all the Pacific cultures: the Northwest Coast, Hawai’i, Polynesia, Micronesia, New Zealand and Japan. The skill of carving and shaping canoes is ancient. Today people young and old are participating to keep the tradition alive. The MACC has made available a creative picture of this important part of Hawaiian culture, and has joined with the Lahainatown Action Committee in celebrating the tradition of the canoe. Canoes, tools used in the making, and drums from the 2004 Canoe Festival will be displayed, as well as photos from last year’s events. The intimate black-and-white works of Maui photographer Masako Cordray (see LEFT) are featured. The exhibit is open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and is also open during Castle Theater shows and intermissions. The admission is free and there’s really no reason not to stop by and take a glance. [GABRIELLE POCCIA]
[MUSIC] ‘Tis the season for outrageous reggae show lineups, this time with Afro-Latin hiphop supergroup O-Maya, a 10-piece band from Berkeley, Calif, which features a neo-traditionalist, a “Prophet of Rage,” an accordian player, and an Oscar-nominated feature film scorer in their line-up. Also featuring legendary dancehall and R&B crossover reggae artists Chaka Demus & Pliers, as well as fiery reggae rap queen Tanya Stephens, writer of such hits as “It’s a Pity,” grrrl-empowering ”Yuh Nuh Ready (Fe This Yet)” and “Big Ninja Bike”—a song dissing men who don’t match up on sexual promises. Word. Tickets: $25 in advance, available at the MACC Box Office, Beach Road Records (Kihei), Groove 2 Music (Lahaina), and Ainokea, Queen Ka’ahumanu Center (Kahului). Food from Applegate Catering, Maui Tacos, Maui Kazowie Kettle Korn, with dessert and coffee by Vasi’s. Tickets: $30 day of show.
THURSDAY
SUNDAY
➤➤➤➤➤FRIDAY ➤➤➤➤➤SATURDAY ➤➤➤➤➤SUN
May-June MAUI’S TRUE LIVE MUSIC VENUE MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
26
27
JOE CANO 29
30
31
1
2
UNCLE WILLIE K
LADIES NIGHT $2 DRINKS
NO COVER
$3 CORONA $3 MARGARITA
LIVE BLUES BOBBY INGRAM
HAU PHAT IS DAT THURSDAY
5
6
7
8
9
LIVE BLUES VOODOO SUNS
HAU PHAT IS DAT THURSDAY
UNCLE WILLIE K
SHAKE YOUR DJ STYLES HEINI NO COVER KAPAKAHI
CHECK PARADICEBLUZ.COM FOR CALENDAR UPDATES
28
GROUNDATION
TANYA STEPHENS FEATURING CHAKA DEMUS APPLE GABRIEL CONCERT OFFICIAL OF ISRAEL VIBRAAFTERPARTY TION 3 4
THE HEAT IS ON DJ HEAT
F R I D AY, M AY 2 7
SATURDAY
VIVA LAS VEGAS IN PARADICE
TANYA STEPHENS CHAKA DEMUS Official Concert Afterparty
HIP-HOP/DANCE “TOUCH OF GOLD” 10 11
THE HEAT IS ON DJ HEAT
VIVA LAS VEGAS IN PARADICE
HIP-HOP/DANCE
“STUDIO 54”
S AT U R D AY, M AY 28 - R E G G A E N I G H T W I T H
Groundation featuring
Apple Gabriel from Israel Vibration
744 FRONT STREET • A FEW STEPS BELOW FRONT STREET • 667-JAZZ (5299) • paradicebluz.com 22
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
Canoe Fest Wrap-Up Friday-Sunday in Lahaina, mostly [CULTURE] It’s time to bid aloha to this year’s celebration and International Festival of Canoes. But this means we get a parade! Yippee! The Parade of Canoes is on Friday, 6 p.m. from 900 Front Street to 505 Front St. in Lahaina. Free. On Saturday, 6 p.m., is the honorary Launch of Canoes and Ho’olaule’a at Kamehameha Iki Park in Lahaina. This will also include a big ole free party in the park with food and live entertainment, including a concert headlined by the Makaha Sons! Sunday features the canoe send-off at 9 a.m. along Ka’anapali Beach. Free. Also, the award-winning Cook Island Dancers, Taku Aroa ki Awaiki (see BELOW) will perform Sunday, 6:30-8 p.m. at The Westin Ka’anapali. Tickets: $21.50, call 667-2525. For more info, call the event hotline at 667-9194 or visit www.MauiCanoeFest.com.
An Untold Triumph Monday, 9 p.m. on PBS Hawai’i Channel 11 [DOCUMENTARY] Formed by the U.S. Army using immigrants and their sons in the days following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the 1st and 2nd Filipino Infantry Regiments fought to liberate their homeland during World War II. Navy submarines even landed one of the Regiments’ units into the Philippines to act as spies and commandos. This documentary, narrated by Lou Diamond Phillips, shows for the first time the sacrifices these men made to rid their old country of Japanese imperial aggression. The film premiered at the 2002 Hawai’i International Film Festival where it won the Hawai’i Film and Videomaker Award. [ANTHONY PIGNATARO]
DAY
➤➤➤➤➤MONDAY ➤➤➤➤➤TUESDAY ➤➤➤➤➤WEDNESDAY
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
23
FILMCRITIQUE
BY COLE SMITHEY
Our Man in Cannes The lowdown on this coming year’s best films
MauiTime Weekly seeks Freelance writers to cover stimulating & in-depth community interest stories.
Send resume, samples or ideas to: 658 Front Street. #126A-7278 Lahaina, HI 96761
CANNES—Whether with dreams of familial contentment or with concealed intentions of greed and bloodlust, there was an overwhelmingly recurring theme of unpredictable characters inserted into family situations in the films at Cannes this year. Although it played outside of competition Match Point was the festival favorite. In Woody Allen’s first foray into a London-set story Jonathan Rhys Meyers plays an opportunistic former tennis pro who marries into an upper crust British family with the idea of stealing Scarlett Johansson away from his new brother-inlaw. When murder enters into the equation the movie hits a diminished minor chord that resonates well against Allen’s Crimes And Misdemeanors. L’Enfant (Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne), the winner of this year’s Palme d’Or, presents the audience with a challenging teenaged protagonist in the guise of Bruno (Jeremie Renier) a French street criminal who’s recently fathered a son by his immature but loving girlfriend Sonia (Deborah Francios). The film delivers a sucker punch when the seemingly attentive Bruno spontaneously decides to sell the couple’s baby on the black market. Jim Jarmusch’s crowd-pleasing Broken Flowers portrays Bill Murray as Don an aging bachelor who goes on a journey to visit his ex-girlfriends in search of a son he may have sired 20 years ago. Don’s bizarre experiences during his unannounced visits make
for some very funny minimalist cinema. Writer/director David Jacobson (Dahmer) takes Ed Norton on an imposter’s path in Down In The Valley in which Norton plays Harlan, a self-professed cowboy from the Midwest transplanted in the San Fernando Valley. Harlan uses his fish-out-of-water softspoken charm to seduce the teenaged daughter (Evan Rachel Wood) of a single father (David Morse). But Harlan is not what he appears and his sudden shift to violence negates everything he’s disclosed in this wellacted but false-ringing film. The extraordinary Sam Shepard and Jessica Lange appear together in Wim Wenders’ Don’t Come Knocking about a washed up Hollywood cowboy actor who discovers he may have a son from a long ago fling with a woman in Butte, Montana. Shepard’s character nearly bites off more than he can chew as he’s forced to discard the emotional crutches of his past to make peace with the present. From Michael Haneke’s cinema of confrontation comes Cache (“Hidden”), which won the Cannes award for Best Director. Georges (Daniel Auteuil) is the host for a literary review TV program when he isn’t tending to his wife Anne (Juliette Binoche) and young son. The family is threatened when anonymously sent surveillance tapes and childish drawings point to a person from Georges’ childhood who may be out to destroy the family. The implications subtly expand to include possible governmental intrusion as Georges inadvertently induces a shocking act of ultimate violence while the source of the surveil-
I love my job
24
MAY 26, 2005
FILM
lance tapes remains an enigma. In Tommy Lee Jones directorial debut, The Three Burials Of Melquiades Estrada (for which he won Cannes’ Best Actor Award), Jones plays Pete Perkins, a Texas rancher who befriends a Mexican immigrant named Melquiades Estrada who entrusts Pete to bury him in his hometown in Mexico when he dies. Pete’s brotherly duty comes all too soon when a border guard (Barry Pepper) shoots and kills Estrada. In Arnaud and Jean-Marie Larrieu’s Peindre Ou Faire L’Amour (“To Paint or Make Love”), William and Madeleine are a happily married couple who test the waters of sexual freedom after their daughter goes away to college. After moving into an old house in the countryside the couple is gently seduced by their blind neighbor and his attractive wife into a game of sexual swapping that turns their world upside down. Although this year’s festival lacked the plethora of political documentaries of last year’s festival, there was one documentary that addresses the subconscious reasons for so many films about people with hidden agendas working their ways into familial environments. The Power Of Nightmares was initially a three-part television series for the BBC. In it, director Adam Curtis establishes the way that the U.S. government has changed from offering its citizens a great society, to offering nothing but protection from vague evil forces. Curtis makes his final and clearest point when he proves that Al-Qaida is a complete and utter fiction created by the U.S. Justice Department. Curtis asserts that there is no such global network of terrorists working together to undermine societies. Perhaps soon we will see the words “Al-Qaida” only ever prefaced with the word “fictional.” If the Buzzcocks were a band forming today they might write a song called “There is No Terror in this World Anymore” with the refrain, “not like in the states.” MTW
SHOWTIMES
MOVIECAPSULES
MAUI FILM FESTIVAL
MAUI FILM FESTIVAL’S CANDLELIGHT CINEMA Wednesday May 25
Castle Theater, 572-3456 Gunner Palace - R - Wed 5, 7:30
MAUI MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, 249–2222 (Showtimes) = Matinee Beauty Shop - PG13 - Th only (2), 7:10 Crash - R - Th (12:35, 3, 5:20), 7:45, 10, Fr, Tu-W (11:15, 4:15), 9:20, Sa-M (11:15), 4:15, 9:20 Hitchhiker’s Guide - PG - Th only (1:50, 4:20), 6:50, 9:30 House of Wax - R - Th only (11:40, 2:10, 4:40), 7:20, 9:50 Ice Princess - G - Th only 7:25, 9:45 Longest Yard - PG13 - Fr, Tu-W (11, 11:30, 11:50, 1:30, 2, 2:20, 4, 4:30, 4:50), 6:30, 7:10, 7:40, 9:10, 9:45, 10:15, Sa-M (11, 11:30, 11:50, 1:30, 2, 2:20), 4, 4:30, 4:50, 6:30, 7:10, 7:40, 9:10, 9:45, 10:15 Madagascar - PG - Fr, Tu-W (11:20, 11:40, 12:10, 1:50, 2:10, 2:40, 4:20, 4:40, 5:10), 6:50, 7:20, 7:50, 9, 9:30, 9:50, Sa-W (11:20, 11:40, 12:10, 1:50, 2:10, 2:40), 4:20, 4:40, 5:10, 6:50, 7:20, 7:50, 9, 9:30, 9:50 Mindhunters - R - Th only (11:50, 2:20, 4:50), 7:30, 9:55 Monster In-Law - PG13 - Th (12, 12:30, 2:25, 2:50, 4:45, 5:10), 7:15, 7:40, 9:40, 10, Fr, Tu-W (11:45, 1:45, 2:15, 4:45), 6:40, 7:15, 9:40, Sa-M, (11:45, 1:45, 2:15), 4:45, 6:40, 7:15, 9:40 Robots - PG - Th only (12:40, 3:05, 5:15) Star Wars Episode III - PG13 - Th (11:15, 12:15, 1, 1:45, 2:30, 3:30, 4:15, 5, 5:45), 7, 7:45, 8:15, 9:15, 10:15, Fr, Tu-W (11:10, 12, 12:30 ,1:40, 2:30, 3, 4:10, 5, 5:30), 7, 7:30, 8, 9:20, 10, Sa-M (11:10, 12, 12:30, 1:40, 2:30, 3), 4:10, 5, 5:30, 7, 7:30, 8, 9:20, 10 XXX: State of the Union - PG13 - Th only (11:35, 4:30), 9:35
GUNNER PALACE 5 & 7:30 P.M., CASTLE THEATER Even the staid Wall Street Journal raved that this illuminating and evenhanded documentary "reveals the complex realities of the situation in Iraq not seen on the nightly news, as told firsthand by our troops." "Rousing and Provocative." Also called "A nerve-jangling work of visual poetry and ironic juxtaposition, and a powerful human story" by salon.com and “Sensational” by the LA Weekly. Rated R. 89 min. See Cover Story, p. 12.
New This Week THE LONGEST YARD - (PG13) - Comedy - This remake of the 1974 Burt Reynolds classic stars Adam Sandler and, um, Reynolds again as current and former football star, respectively, who wind up in stir together. They end up putting a team together to play the guards and hilarity ensues. At least, it did back in ’74. Also stars Chris Rock. MADAGASCAR - (PG) - Comedy, Kids/Family and Animation - Ah! Finally a movie with stars we can respect: a lion, a zebra, a giraffe and a pregnant hippo (voiced by Ben Stiller, Chris Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett-Smith, respectively). See, the animals were all “residents” of the zoo but when one of them disappears, the other three go looking for him and all four end up getting captured, put in boxes and shipped back to Africa. Only, something happens with the ship and the four wash up on the shores of Madagascar, having to fend for themselves after being “cared for” by humans all their lives. Yeah, I know, it sounds fishy to me, too, but that’s just half of it! Also stars (the voice of) Cedric the Entertainer.
Now Showing THE BEAUTY SHOP – (PG-13) – Comedy – Here we are back in the chair again. Gina (Queen Latifa) has finally had it with her egotistical boss (Kevin Bacon). She ups and leaves, not only to open up a shop of her own but also taking a few of the key clients and shampoo girl (Andie MacDowell, Mena Suvaris and Alicia Silvertsone). Fixing up this rundown salon, Gina inherits a very colorful and sexy sassy new group of people, or just what is needed in a beauty shop—a bunch of chatty Kathy’s. CRASH - (R) - Drama - It’s a typical scene in L.A.: A Brentwood housewife and her DA husband. A Persian storeowner. Two police detectives, who are also lovers. A black television director and his wife. A Mexican locksmith. Two car-jackers. A rookie cop. A middle-aged Korean couple. And, in the next 36 hours, they will all collide. HITCHHIKER’S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY (PG) - Action/Adventure, Comedy, Science-Fiction - Earthman Arthur Dent is having such a bad day—not only is his house about to be bulldozed, but he discovers that he has an alien for a best friend. Actually, that would be rad! Meanwhile, Planet Earth is about to be demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass (so very Jetsons!). The universe begins when the world ends, nothing is what it seems—even a simple towel is the most useful thing in the universe. Who knew? THE HOUSE OF WAX - (R) - Suspense - Why, this remake? And why, Paris Hilton?? A group of friends on their way to a college football game falls prey to a pair of murderous brothers in an abandoned small town (of course). They discover that the brothers have their own main attraction: creating an entire town filled with the wax-coated corpses of unlucky visitors. Now the group must find a way out before they, too, become permanent exhibits in the House of Wax. Hey, at least Paris is already halfway there! ICE PRINCESS – (G) – Romantic Comedy Don’t think this is another Ice Castles, people. It’s just another one of them formulaic, cute teen chick underdog battles against “the popular girls” to rise up the ranks and win... something. A trophy? The presidency? Oh yeah, selfesteem. Whoopee. We all know self-esteem gets you nowhere. Just look at Robert Blake! Stars Michelle Trachtenberg, Joan Cusack and Kim Cattrall.
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
KA’AHUMANU 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center, 875-4910 Kicking and Screaming - PG - Daily (12:30, 2:45), 5, 7:15, 9:30 Kingdom of Heaven - R - Th (12:35), 4:05, 5, 7:05, 10:05, Fr-W (12:35), 4:05, 7:05, 10:05 Kung Fu Hustle - R - Th-M (12:30, 2:45), 5, 7:20, 9:45, Tu (12:30, 2:45), 5, 10 Interpreter - PG13 - Th (1:10), 7, Fr-Sa, M, W (1:10), 4:15, 7, 9:50, Su (1:10), 4:15, 10, Tu (1:10), 4:15, 7, 9:50 Sahara - PG13 - Daily (1:15), 4:40, 7:20, 10 Unleashed - R- Daily (12:35, 2:55), 5:10, 7:30, 9:55
Who me?! No, YOU belong in the zoo!! THE INTERPRETER - (PG13) - Drama, Thriller African-born U.N. interpreter Silvia Broome, (Nicole Kidman) inadvertently overhears a death threat against an African head of state scheduled to address the United Nation's General Assembly. Of course, she realizes that she has become a target and that no ones believes her, especially Tobin Keller (Sean Penn), the federal agent charged with protecting her.
ROBOTS – (PG) – Animation, Sci-Fi, Comedy – This computer-generated cartoon details a world populated by robots. Yes, I know it sounds fantastic and even a bit childish, but really, this place actually exists! And I’ve been there! No, I swear—what? No, I haven’t taken my meds, yet. Anyway, it features the voices of Mel Brooks, Ewan McGregor, Halle Berry, Greg Kinnear and, of course, Robin Williams.
KUKUI MALL
KICKING & SCREAMING - (PG) - Comedy - Will Ferrell in a comedy? No, surely not! Strange as that may seem, Ferrell stars as Phil Weston, a normal guy who has never gotten his father Buck’s (Robert Duvall) approval for…well, anything he has done in his entire life (poor Phil!). A showdown between father and son occurs when Phil coaches his 10-year-old son’s soccer team and must defeat the team his (gasp) insanely competitive father coaches in order to win the league championship. While the PG rating implies clean laughs (no bringing of the green hat or Hank the Tank), watching Ferrell try to contain a bunch of 10-year-olds (because he’s 10 too, you know) is going to be funny.
SAHARA - (PG13) - Action/Adventure - Explorer Dirk Pitt (Matthew McConaughey) takes on a treasure hunt in several regions of North Africa in search of a ship called The Ship of Death—why, Dirk, why?! Anyway, along with his smarty pants sidekick (Steve Zahn), they use their clever heroics to help out the beautiful Doctor Eva (Penelope Cruz), who believes this ship is the reason why there are a lot of mysterious deaths. She’s smart, that one.
FRONT STREET THEATERS
KINGDOM OF HEAVEN - Action/Adventure, Drama and Romance - (R) - Now here is a common stranger in a strange land, finds himself thrusted into a decades long war. Ultimately, he must protect the people of Jerusalem from overwhelming forces while striving to keep a fragile peace. Oh yeah, and he falls in love with an exotic and forbidden queen, and rises to knighthoodom. What a guy. KUNG FU HUSTLE - (R) - Action/Adventure, Foreign, Comedy - Shanghai in the 1930s is a very dangerous time when gangs ruled the streets. The most notorious of these, the Axes, strike fear into the hearts of honest citizens and inspire admiration in one young wannabe, who wreaks havoc when he recklessly poses as an Axe member and causes a riot between the real gang members and the denizens of a housing project. MINDHUNTERS - R- Action/Adventure, Thriller and Crime/Gangster - The FBI has a training program on a remote island for their psychological profiling division, called Mindhunters, which is used to track down serial killers. The training goes bad when a group of seven young agents discover that one of them is a serial killer. Starring yummy Val Kilmer and fine-ass L.L. Cool J and... well, Christian Slater. MONSTER IN-LAW - (PG13) - Romantic comedy Okay, hasn’t this story been told already? Charlie Cantilini (Jennifer Lopez) has finally met the man of her dreams (geez, J-Lo, another one??), Dr. Kevin Fields (Michael Vartan). There's just one problem—his overbearing and controlling mother (Jane Fonda). Also stars the hilariously sassified Wanda Sykes.
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
STAR WARS: EPISODE III – REVENGE OF THE SITH - (PG-13) - Action/Adventure, Science Fiction/Fantasy - The furry and lovable Chewbacca makes his anticipated return to the big screen in the last installment (really!) of the Star Wars trilogy. Get ready to witness the transformation of young Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) into the evil and deep-voiced man in black, Darth Vader (because, let’s face it, without the voice he would not be cool). The rest of the gang is ready for some action as well, including the bearded Obi-Wan Kenobi (sexy Scottish Ewan McGregor, mmmmm), the Senator Padme Amidala and her insane hair (Natalie Portman) and best of all, Yoda! People go crazy for that little green guy, agreed?…Too bad we all know how this trilogy ends.
1819 South Kihei Road, 875-4910 Hitchhiker’s Guide - PG - Th only (1:15), 4:30, 7:45 Kicking and Screaming - PG - Th only (1:45), 5, 8 Kingdom of Heaven - R- Th (1), 4:15, 7:30 Longest Yard - PG13 - Fr-W (1:15), 4:30, 7:20, 9:35 Madagascar - PG - Fr-W (1:30), 4:45, 7:30, 9:25 Monster In-Law - PG13 - Daily (1:45), 4:45, 5, 7:40, 9:50 StarWars Episode 3 - PG13 - Fr-W (1), 4:15, 7:05, 9:55 900 Front Street, 249–2222 Hitchhiker’s Guide - PG - Th only (4:45), 7:15, 9:45 Kicking and Screaming - PG - Th-Fr, Tu-W (4:15), 7:45, 9:50, Sa-M (1:30), 4:15, 7:45, 9:50 Kingdom of Heaven - R - Th-Fr, Tu-W (4), 7, 9:55, Sa-M (1), 4, 7, 9:55 Madagascar - PG - Fr,Tu-W (4:30), 7:15, 9:45, SaM (1:15), 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 Monster In-Law - PG13 - Th-Fr, M-W (4:45), 7:30, 10, Sa-Su (1:45), 4:45, 7:30, 10
WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front Street, 249–2222 Hitchhiker’s Guide - PG - Fr, M-W (1:15), 7:15, SaSu (1:15), 7:15 House of Wax - R - Th only (4:30), 9:50 Interpreter - PG13 - Th only (10:30, 1:30), 7:15 Longest Yard - PG - Fr, M-W (1, 4), 7, 9:30, Sa-Su (10:30, 1, 4), 7, 9:30 Star Wars III - PG13 - Th-Fr, Tu-W (12, 3:20), 6:45, 10, Sa-M (12), 3:20, 6:45, 10 Unleashed - R - Th (1:15, 4), 7, 9:30, Fr, Tu-W (4:15), 9:45, Sa-M (10:45), 4:15, 7, 9:45
UNLEASHED - (R) - Action/Adventure - Danny (Jet Li) has lived his whole life without any sort of normal socializing and with only one lesson learned: how to fight. He is “owned” and treated like a dog—including having to wear a collar (ew, kinky!)—by his boss, Bart (Bob Hoskins). After a car accident lands Bart in a coma (um, can we say karma??), Danny’s on the run and meets a blind piano tuner (Morgan Freeman) who uses music to teach Danny some things about the world and about being human
8*
$
XXX: STATE OF THE UNION - (PG13) Action/Adventure - NSA Agent August Gibbons (Samuel L Jackson) is fresh off the success of his last renegade recruitment, and once again finds himself in need of an outsider. Gibbons and his new agent Darius Stone (Ice Cube), now code-named "XXX," (uh, does that mean he’s a badass?) together must track down a military splinter group that is conspiring to overthrow the U.S. government.
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
WED., JUNE 1 *with MFF passport (5 films-$40)-single tickets Phone: 572-3456 www.mauifilmfestival.com
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
25
EVERYTHURSDAY
KAHULUIFREE ISLAND-WIDE LAHAINA
KIHEIPAIA
WAILUKU
ISLAND-WIDE EVERY WEEK!
FREE KAANAPALI HONOKOWAI MAKAWAO
WAILEA
ISLAND-WIDE FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION CALL 661-3786 26
JANUARY 13, 2005
DAY&NIGHT
ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT
LINDA GAMPERT
‘Positive Vibrations’ Talking with Groundation’s Harrison Stafford Albert “Apple Gabriel” Craig hails from Jamaica and has overcome struggles that few musicians have experienced. Like contracting polio at the age of three and then having to endure a scorching hot blanket wrap for “treatment.” His years spent with Israel Vibration have made him one of the most respected names in reggae music, and he continues to inspire people, including the members of Groundation.
Groundation with Apple Gabriel Saturday, 10 p.m. at Paradice Bluz. Call 667-JAZZ for more info. The band formed in 1998 at Sonoma State College in California by musicians Marcus Urani, Ryan Newman and Harrison Stafford. Their album Hebron Gate was nominated for Germany’s World Music Award and has received worldwide praise. Their current tour follows the release of their fourth album, We Free Again, which has received critical acclaim. It blends elements of jazz and dub with reggae. Groundation singer Stafford recently set aside some time while on Oahu to talk to us. He described legendary singer Apple
Gabriel as “a blessing musically” and that touring with him has been a good balance for the group. Working with Gabriel on their latest album has allowed Groundation to “push boundaries” and continue to make unique music that moves people in ways only music can. What does he find unique about Maui and its people? “Maui seems to have a really a good balance,” he said. “If you want to climb to the top of a mountain and just be in that spiritual space, it’s your backyard.” Then I asked Stafford how Hawaiian shows differ from performing in front of a California crowd. “The strongest vibration of reggae music is in Europe and Hawai’i,” he said. He added that people in Hawai’i are on a “more conscious level of music.” Stafford sees people on Maui as being “lifeloving people” who are “connected to the ocean,” who stay away from the negative things in life and “choose consciously to support positive vibrations.” Groundation is not worried about huge success, like gaining fame through MTV, he said. “We give our lives to music,” he added. In any case, he feels MTV’s programming is focused
on “negative” depictions of women and minorities. “That’s why you don’t see reggae music on TV,” he said. Negative? Sure, there’s violence, drugs, the bling factor, Paris Hilton… But mostly it’s all harmless, right? Not quite. Stafford said reggae music embraces and celebrates the positive aspects of life. It’s about positive energy and love—not in the stupid-sappy way of chick flicks or Hallmark cards, but coming together as people, embracing differences. But reggae isn’t just promoting positive energy, but about connecting people, grounding them, opening the lines of communication—which is where they got the name “Groundation” in the first place. Because once that happens, people get inspired to do something great with their lives. “All we have is life,” he told me. “We are here for the moment.” Saturday’s show features two sets of booty-shaking music: one set of pure Groundation jams, the other featuring Apple’s music with Groundation jamming in the background. The show is 21 and over and tickets are $25. MTW
AY SIGN UP TOTD OF HE DJ’S 4 BATTLE
dsa#1 yDJ... s r 6 u h T 2 5/ Looking for Maui’
DJ’s
the f o e l t t Ba ER $3 COV
10pm
7 5/2
FrisdBeast yReggae...
Kauai’
read B s b m a L VER $10 CO
10pm
8 5/2
Saoptur- Sdoula- Duyb..
ects
Hip H
n 808 Con
ER $5 COV 10pm
9 Sundayary’s8am.. 2 / 5 akfast & Bloody M rod
/Ja eShw t i N c i w o pen M m FREE 2pm
Bre
O
10 JONES REVOR T S U L P p
30
5/
y Monadrta ... ini Menu
Live Jazz
M
extet
re S o h S h t r No
how FREE S 9:30pm
5/3
TulleTusesddaays wyith...
1
ject o r P e r o hn Mo Red Bu
Jo 6
HOW FREE S 9pm -
ay d s e n d e W pular Demand..
/1
Po Back By
8pm t n e m a n PoolivTe oMuusric with Head High L
10pm
ER $3 COV
NEW MENU! NOW SERVING BREAKFAST SAT & SUN MON-FRI 11AM-2AM SAT-SUN 8AM-2AM
Just “here for the moment”
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
27
thursday
05/26
BADA BING
friday 05/27
saturday05/28 sunday05/29
monday05/30 – wednesday06/01
Pono Players, Comedy Improv $15, 8pm
1945 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 875-0188
BLUE LAGOON
WED - No entertainment
658 Front St., Lahaina - 661-8141
BOCALINO
Kilohana No cover, 10pm
Neto Peraza, Latin $5,10pm
Curtis Williams & Guest $5, 10pm
Curtis Williams, soul & blues, No cover, 10pm
MON - Mark Epstein & Friends, Blues & Jazz, No cover, 10pm; TUE - Jay Molina & Gilbert Emata, $5, 10pm; WED - Hone Uncle Trio, No cover, 10pm
CASANOVA
The Jillian Speer Band w/ Bobby Parrs, $10, 9:30pm
The Easy $5, 9:45pm
DJs Negro Botero & Garoto, $7, 9:45pm
Sunday’s Acoustic Style
WED - Wild Wahine Wednesday w/DJ Blast, $5, 9:45pm
Leoria $5, 9:30pm
‘80s Flashback w/DJs Durty & Orel, $3, 9pm
Teomon 9:30pm
MON - Kanoa & Friends, No cover, 9:30pm; TUE-WED - No entertainment
1279 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 874-9299
1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220
CHARLEY’S
142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-9453
Salsa $5, 10pm
COMPADRES BAR AND GRILL Lahaina Canery Mall - 661-7189
WANTED:
Interns Maui Time has immediate openings for internships. If you are a high school or college student, or recent grad this may be the opportunity for you! Potential positions in editorial, graphic design, accounting, or sales could give you the experience or college credits that you need. Previous experience is not necessary. Budding interns should want to work in a dynamic newspaper office with a great crew. Please send a resume to 658 Front St. # 7278, Lahaina, HI 96761 or call 808-661-3786 x3# and speak to Jennifer.
DA KINECALENDAR BIG SHOWS Summer Sunsplash Maui - Friday. Featuring dancehall legend Chaka Demus & Pliers, grooving out their alltime hit “Murder She Wrote.” Also included in the lineup is Jamaican superstar Tanya Stephens, with her smash hit "It's a Pity." Special guest supergroup O-Maya. Tickets: $25 adv, $30 day of show. 5 p.m. gates open. 6 p.m., A&B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Apple Gabriel with Groundation - Saturday. Apple Gabriel is the original and founding member of Israel Vibration. Two full sets, all of Groundation’s music and Apple’s music with Groundation backing and collaborating. Highlighting songs throughout Apple’s long career, including classics like “Rudeboy Shufflin’ (On the Rock),” “Friday Evening Unconquered” and “Racial Injustice (IV),” as well as the latest songs off Apple’s solo album, Another Moses. Tickets: $25. 10 p.m., Paradice Bluz, 667-5299.
TICKETS ON SALE Sister Cities Festival - June 11. A special family day with food and craft booths, entertainment and multi-cultural demonstrations, celebrating the diversity of cultures in Maui County and throughout the world. Countries with participating cities: Chile, Japan, China, Korea, Guam, Philippines, Peru. Free. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., A&B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Sister Cities Concert - June 11. An evening to "Celebrate Peace in the World" featuring Uluwehi Guerrero and Halau Hula Kauluokala; the cast of 'Ulalena, and representative performers from Maui’s sister cities. Tickets: $20, $15, $10. 7:30 p.m., Castle Theater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Return of the Champions - June 20. The biggest gathering of today’s outstanding young Filipino pop stars, idols of every young “pinoy!” Featuring Sarah Geronimo, Rachelle Ann Go, Christian Bautisita, Mark Bautista and Raymond Manalo, joined by Sheryn Regis and Frenchie Dy. Tickets: $100, $75, $55, $45, $35. 7 p.m., Castle Theater, MACC, 242-7469. Zenshin Daiko's Annual Taiko Festival - June 25. The New Shirakaba Orchestra starts off the evening's thrilling taiko drumming by performing some old-time Japanese favorites. Zenshin Daiko will perform new original pieces written by group members. The evening will culminate with Kinnara Taiko from Los Angeles. Tickets $15. 7 p.m., Castle Theater, MACC, 242-7469. Ki Ho‘Alu: Slack Key Guitar Festival. - June 26. An all-day, all-star line-up of Hawai`i’s finest slack key musicians. The music of Hawaiian slack key guitar has evolved into a popular musical tradition that truly captures the magic of Hawai´i. Event festivities include local vendors with fresh flower lei, fine Hawaiian arts & crafts and delicious local-style food. Free. 2-7 p.m., A&B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Maui Festival Orchestra Concert - June 30. Featuring a broad range of multicultural music including classical, Okinawa, Chinese and Hawaiian. Artists include Na Hoku Hanohano award-winning Uluwehi Guerrero; internationally-known cellist Lifen Anthony and her 12-year old daughter Rianna. Maui’s popular taiko group Zenshin Daiko; the Maui Cello Ensemble and the Jinpu Kai USA Kin Lyosho Ryukyu Geino Ken
28
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
Kyusho Okinawa Dancers. Tickets: $18, $14, $10. 7:30 p.m., Castle Theater, MACC, 242-7469. Celtic Aloha - July 9. Oceans Apart, Islands Together Daniel Ho & George Kahumoku Jr., Jamie O'Brien & Jennifer Johnson. Celtic and Hawaiian songs, tunes, stories and dances are contrasted and blended for an evening of shared island traditions from the Pacific to the Atlantic. Hula and Step Dance, slack key and Celtic style guitars, along with ‘ukulele. Tickets: $20. 7:30 p.m., McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, 242-7469. Hawaii Jaycees Summer Jam - July 17. There are numerous community projects throughout the year. In appreciation for the support they receive from the community, this year’s concert features Round & Round and the Opihi Pickers. Free. 4 p.m., Castle Theater, MACC, 242-7469. Na Mea Kani Hula: An Evening of Hula Kahiko - July 25. An Evening of Hula Kahiko, emphasizing the use of traditional hula implements. Tickets: $10 general public, free to conference participants. 6:30 p.m., A & B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Pagan Pride - July 30. A Hawaiian chant concert, chants draw upon traditional stories and cultural practices, ranging from permission chants to healing chants, chants for nature and the elements, for legendary gods and ruling chiefs. Tickets: $38, $25, $10, 6:30 p.m., A&B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-7469.
EVENTs International Festival of Canoes - Now through May 29, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at Banyan Tree Park on Front Street, Lahaina. Master carvers from nations across the Pacific come together with Hawai`i carvers to create real canoes from wood logs. Demonstrations of old-style surfboard shaping and thatched house building, cultural arts lessons and a Polynesian crafts fair. Free. For info, call 667-9194.
FRIDAY, MAY 27 Parade of Canoes and Festival - 6 p.m. at The International Festival of Canoes, Front St., Lahaina. The parade will showcase a majestic display of cultural pride, skills, music and tradition. Participants will be riding in their completed canoes decorated as floats, along with the Hawaiian Hale builders. For info, call 667-9194. Ho‘opi‘i ‘Ohana - 6-9 p.m. at the Tiki Courtyard of Ka‘anapali Beach Hotel. The Ho‘opi‘i ‘Ohana will perform complimentary Aloha Friday. This special performance is a rare opportunity to enjoy one of Maui’s favorite families of Hawaiian music. There will be plenty of fun and good food from the hotel’s Tiki Bar & Grill. Free. For info, call 667-0165.
SATURDAY, MAY 28 Makena Park Cleanup - 8:30-11 a.m. at Makena State Beach Park. The ongoing effort is part of the "We Love Makena Beach Campaign.” This summer cleanup will focus on the wooded areas. All supplies and cold drinks will be provided by Community Work Day. Cold watermelon will be provided, as well as a commentary on the history of the area. Free. For info, call 579-9802.
HAPA’S NIGHTCLUB
41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei - 879-9001
thursday 05/26
friday05/27
Aqua Boogie w/DJs Daniel J, Tim Dog & Justin, 9pm
Ho’onua 9pm
Club 98.3 FM 9pm
monday05/30 – wednesday06/01
MON - Willie K, Live 104.7FM; TUE - Lucky Charm w/Fat Joe, 9pm; WED - Sin Night, 9pm
TBA 9pm
DJ Boomshot 10:30pm
HARD ROCK CAFÉ
900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400
El Dogg 9pm
DJ Boomshot $5, 10pm
Live Local Artists No cover, 10pm
Rene Alonza w/Mike 6pm
Kenny Roberts 6pm
El Nino 6pm
Habernero Brothers No cover, 10pm
Thirsty Thursday w/Q103 $6, 9:30pm
The Habanero Brothers $5, 9:30pm
Funky Monkey, $5, 9:30pm
Karaoke w/James No cover, 10pm
Middle John 9pm
41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei - 879-2849
JACQUE’S
120 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8844
KAHALE’S BEACH CLUB 36 Keala Pl., Kihei - 875-7711
Gina Martinelli 6-9pm MON - Dr.Nat, jazz/salsa, No cover, 7:30-10pm
t
Lif e
MON - Steve Mendoza, 6pm; TUE-WED - Da Hawaiians, 6pm MON - Martini Monday; TUE - Island Grooves w/Vaugn, No cover, 9:30pm; Wed - DJ Boomshot, No cover, 10pm
Fr u
it
No Panties No Piercing Just Kick-Ass
Tattoos
.
Sw
Co
ee
355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001
MON - Reggae At The Rock w/Marty Dread, $5,10pm
Tommy Cherry Band 9pm
HENRY’S BAR & GRILL
KAHULUI ALE HOUSE
saturday05/28 sunday05/29
Gift Baskets • Fruit Baskets • Flowers Delivered on Maui and now Shipping WORLDWIDE.
Since 1998 10am-10pm Daily
(808)27-SWEET(277–9338) SweetlifefruitCo@aol.com
193 Lahainaluna, Lahaina • 667-2156
s r
r
TM
VISIT US AT www.mauifruitbasket.com
Finding your perfect match is easier than washing dishes. Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar Late Night Specials 10pm to 1am – 21 & over with I.D.
© 2004 TPI GROUP
50% OFF SUSHI & APPETIZERS FREE KARAOKE - DRAFT BEER SPECIALS
KIHEI, THURSDAY - SATURDAY KAPALUA, THURSDAY & FRIDAY
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL 5:30pm to 6:00pm DAILY
And much more fun!
Kapalua 669-6286
To listen and respond to ads using your credit card
1-800-710-7835 LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
The Shops at Kapalua
Kihei 879-0004 Near Foodland
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
HRC MAUI 900 Front St., Lahaina Info: 808.667.7400
MONDAYS
$2 Bud Select $3 Bud Light
MARTY
DREAD’S REGGAE
AT THE
ROCK $5 COVER
h a r d r o c k . c o m
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
29
Mahalo to Maui Time Weekly for supporting this ad!
Witness the Birth of a Canoe from Log to Launch...
... in a 2-week Cultural Adventure
Come Experience The Shops & Restaurants
• Bamboo Bar & Grill • Breakwall Cafe • The Feast at LeLe • Friends of Moku’ula • Gaby’s Pizzeria • Gallerie Hawaii • Goofy Foot Surf School • Hecocks Restaurant • I’O Restaurant • Lahaina Print Sellers • Lei Spa Maui
May 13 - 29, 2005 Lahaina Event Hotline 667-9194 www.MauiCanoeFest.com Sponsored by:
• Maggie Coulombe • Maui To Go Arts & Crafts • Nancy Emerson School of Surfing • The Needlework Shop • Pacific’O Restaurant • Seaside Gems Maui • Whalers General Store
Mahalo to: Hui O Wa’a Kaulua, Young Brothers LTD, Lahaina Shores, The Water Store, Ekahi Tours and Klahani Travel - Festival Travel Agency. Special Mahalo to: Royal Hawaiian Movers
20+ Shops & Boutiques • 4 Oceanfront Restaurants • Polynesian Canoe Exhibits
Official Headquarters at Old Lahaina Courthouse
www.lahainashops.com • www.lahainarestaurants.com.
30
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
thursday05/26
friday05/27
KIMO’S
845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811
KOBE JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE 136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555
saturday05/28 sunday05/29
TBA
The Carroll Brothers 9pm
Karaoke 9:30pm
Karaoke 9:30pm
monday05/30– wednesday06/01
LIFE’S A BEACH
Cool Rush 9pm
John Moore Project, $5, 9pm
Underground $5, 9pm
Karaoke 9pm
MON - Open Jam, 9pm; WED - Clinit, 9pm
LOBBY LOUNGE
Jazz w/Sal Godinez & Marcus Johnson, 8:30-11:30pm
Jazz w/Sal Godinez & Marcus Johnson, 8:30-11:30pm
Nils & Anastasia 8:30-11:30pm
Ricardo Dioso 8:30-11:30pm
MON - Nils & Anastasia, 8:30-11:30pm; WED - Jazz w/Sal Godinez & Marcus Johnson, No cover, 8:30-11:30pm
Live Music 9pm
Live Music 9pm
WED - Karaoke, 9pm
1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891–8010
Four Seasons Resort, Wailea - 874-8000
Cano Band $5, 9:45pm
LONGHI’S
888 Front St., Lahaina - 667-2288
Live Music 9pm
Live Music 9pm
LULU’S
1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944
DA KINECALENDAR Drive-In Movies - 5:30 p.m. at Maui Community College. Travel back in time Hawaiian style with The Devil at 4 O’clock, shot on Maui in 1961 with Frank Sinatra, Spencer Tracy and thousands of Maui citizens. Also, Oscar-winning film The Incredibles and Bhutan. Live music with Uncle Boy Kanae and friends, along with onolicious food booths. Tickets: $20 per car (of up to four people). For info, call 573-5530.
TUESDAY, MAY 31 Rennie Harris Puremovement Program - 9 p.m. on local cable channel 52. All the teen Hip-Hop fans will want to tune in to AKAKU for a fascinating program with local artists talking story with the performing artists of Rennie Harris’ Puremovement. For info, call 242-2787, ext 232.
ART Friday Night Art Night - Fri, 6:30-9:30 p.m. at Lahaina Galleries, 828 Front St. Meet en plein air artist Sue Perry, and master sculptor Dale Zarrella. Using only a palette knife to apply paint to canvas, Sue Perry creates unique oil paintings full of life and movement. Dale conveys the spirit of his sculpture with a serene manner and enormous respect for the traditions and beliefs of Hawai’i. Wine and pupus will be served. For info, call 661-8005.
LECTURES
make an intelligent Real Estate investment. Bonus Topic: California Real Estate Updates. So to sum it all up—globalization of real estate and its effect on the Philippine Economy. For info, call 264-5202.
POETRY Maui Booksellers Monthly Poetry Slam - Sun, 7 p.m. at the store on the corner of Market St. and Vineyard, Wailuku. Poets and spoken word artists are invited to present and perform original works of three minutes or less in any style and on any theme in competition for a $100 cash prize going the top poet of the evening. Judges will be selected randomly from audience members. For info, call 244-9091.
SPORTS Service Trips in Haleakala Crater - Sat. A trip into the crater to do non-native species removal and light cabin maintenance, and at Haleakala National Park Pools of Ohe’o in Kipahulu. For info and time, call 878-8015. Open Gym Nights - Tue, 6:30-9 p.m. at Lahaina Civic Center. Sports available during those nights will be basketball, volleyball, table tennis (aka, ping pong) and board games. Free. For info, call 661-4685.
DINNER MUSIC WEST MAUI
Ira Ono and the Business of Art - Thu, 12:30-2 p.m., Maui County Business Resource Center, Maui Mall. Ono’s award-winning work is in the Hawai’i State Museum, as well as public and private collections. You will learn to price product, find packaging ideas, presentation techniques, wholesale or retail opportunities. For info, call 873-8247. Real Estate Market in the Philippines - Sat, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Maui Beach Hotel. Guest speaker Susan Barlin will discuss how to understand the Real Estate Market in the Philippines. Along with how
BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria – John Kane, Wed, Thu and Fri; Harry Troupe, Sat; Kaleo Phillips, Sun; Clay Mortenson Mon, Tue. All sets from 7:30-10 p.m. 730 Front St., Lahaina, 661-0700.
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
Fish & Game Brewing Co. & Rotisserie - Nino Toscano, Thur, Fri; Kawika Lum Ho, Sat; Damien, Tue; E rnest Puaa, Sun-Wed; Brian Haia, Mon. All sets from 6-9 p.m. 4405 Honoapiilani Highway, 669-3474. Hula Grill - Kawika Lum , Albert & Billy, Mon; Jarret Roback and Albert & Billy, Tue; Ernest Pua’a and Brian & Roy, Wed; Ernest Pua’a and Bradah Brian & Don Thur; Bradah Brian & Roy, Fri; Ernest Pua’a Kawika Lum and, Sat; Kawika Lum Ryan Tanaka & Friends. Sun. 2435 Kaanapali Parkway, Building P, Kaanapali, 667-6636. Java Jazz/Soup Nutz – Acoustic music with Mike FriSat only 7 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapiilani Rd., 667-0787. Kahana Terrace Restaurant – Harry Troupe, Tue and Thu; Randy Reno, Sat. All sets from 6-9 p.m.
Sands of Kahana Resort, 669-5399. Kimo’s – Sam Ahia, Wed thru Sun, 7-8:30 p.m. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4811. Leilani’s on the Beach – Crazy Fingers, Thu, 4-6 p.m.; JD & Friends, Fri - Sat, 2:30 -5:30 p.m.; Kilohana, Sun, 3:30-6 p.m; Wed Jarret Robak 4 - 6 p.m. 2435 Ka’anapali Parkway, Building J, Ka’anapali, 661-4495. Moose McGillycuddy’s - Greg & Steve, Thu; Llayne & Greg, Fri; Mark & Mike, Sat-Sun; Anastasia, Wed. All sets 6-9 p.m. 844 Front St., Lahaina, 6677758. Pioneer Inn – Ah-Tim Eleniki (Local-style guitar), Thu; 6-9 p.m.; Greg Di Piazza, Wed 6-9 p.m.,Tue Captain Billy Bones 6-8 p.m. 658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636. Reilley’s Steaks & Seafood -, Gene Argel, Mon and Tue; Irish Billy Bones Wed-Fri, 6-8 p.m. 4405 Honoapi`ilani Hwy, Ste #304, Kahana, 667-7477.
★
★
Every Friday Night is Party Night ★ ★ ★ ★Come As You Are ★ or Dress Like A Star! ★★ ts ues EE G er FR iD nn itted Adm
★
Cafe O’Lei - Steve Sargenti, Tue-Fri 5:30-9 p.m. 839 Front St., Lahaina, 661-9491. Cheeseburger In Paradise – Brooks Maguire, Thu, Sat, Sun and Wed; Harry Troupe, Fri; Gail Swanson, Mon and Tue. All sets from 4:30-7:30 p.m. and 8-11 p.m. 811 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4855.
S P R E
E
N
TS
★Longhi’s is Maui’s Best Open Air ★ Night Club with Fantastic Ocean Views!
Cool Cat Cafe - Erik Pietsch Mon & Thu; Howard
EH BRAH! TALK IS CHEAP
Ahia Fri-Sun, Hau Phat, Wed. All Sets 7:30-10 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 667-0908.
FRIDAY, MAY 27 FREE Valet Parking • Dinner served until 10:00 p.m. 9:45 music begins $5 Cover • Dinner Guests Free Admission
SEND YOUR EH BRAH TO ehbrah@mauitime.com
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
Dancing on Longhi’s fabulous koa wood dance floor longhis@maui.net 888 Front St. Lahaina 667-2288 www.longhis.com DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
31
FRIDAY, MAY 27TH
Front Street’s
One Of A Kind
Shopping Nook!
COME VISIT US Jewelry • Tattoos • Activities Snorkel Gear • Fashion Art • Time Shares
• Chadwick Hawaii Jewelers • Watch-n-See • Lahaina Ticket Co. • Manta Ray Snorkel Dive Tropical Toes • Air Brush Tattoo Timeshare Re-Sale • Temporary Tattoos Maui Dukes Shave Ice & Ice Cream
815-819 Front St. • Lahaina, HI 96761
32
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
thursday 05/26
friday05/27
MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S
DJ Mackie Mac No cover, 9pm
DJ Mackie Mac No cover, 9pm
DJ Swerve No cover, 9pm
DJ Rock Hard Tark No cover, 9pm
MON - Mark & Mike; TUE - DJs Mackie Mac & Big Zeek, $5, 9pm; WED - DJ Mackie Mac, No cover, 9pm
MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE
Wailea Nights 8pm
Wailea Nights 8pm
Murray Thorne No cover, 9pm
Celtic Tigers No cover, 7pm
MON - Gypsy Pacific, No cover, 7pm; TUE - Acoustico, No cover, 7pm; WED - No entertainment
No information available
No information available
No information available
No information available
No information available
Live Jazz, No cover 9pm-12am
Live Jazz, No cover, 9pm-12am Willie K
MON - Ladies’ Night w/DJ Boomshot, Ladies free, 9pm; TUE - DJ, No cover; WED - Bobby Ingram, $5, 9:30pm
844 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7758
100 Kaukahi St., Wailea - 874-1131
NEPTUNES
1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 874-2555
PACIFIC’O
505 Front St., Lahaina - 667-4341
Tanya Stephens & Chaka Groundation w/Apple Gabriel of Demus Official After Party, 9pm Israel Vibration, 9pm
Joe Cano 9pm
PARADICE BLUZ
744 Front St., Lahaina - 667-5299
saturday05/28 sunday05/29
monday05/30– wednesday06/01
DA KINECALENDAR Sea House Restaurant – Hawaiian music with Albert Kaina and Kincades Basques, Thu; Kincade Basques, Fri, Sat, Mon,Tues; Kapule Paoa, Sun; Albert Kaina, Wed. All sets 7-9 p.m. Napili Kai Beach Resort, 5900 Honoapiilani Road, Napili, 669-1500. Sir Wilfred’s at Whalers Village - Sun. Live Jazz 5-9 p.m. Main stage. The Best Jazz Musicians on the island, along with special guest stars. 2435 Ka’anapali Parkway, 661-0202.
SOUTH MAUI Bada Bing - Fri, Hilarious improv comedy with The Pono Players. Seating 5:30-7 p.m. & 8 p.m. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., 875-0188. Blue Marlin Harbor-Front Grill & Bar - Fri, Mon Boy Kana’e and Ka’ Uhaneleo; Sat, Braddah Frances and friends, 6:30 p.m.; Sun, Terri Garrison, 4-6:30 p.m.
Peter. Wed & Fri Trevor Jones 4-6 p.m. Outdoor seating on the Aloha Jungle Lanai. 1913 Kihei Road, Kalama Village, 874-6444.
0852.
Maalaea Grill – Benoit Jazz Works, Thu, Fri and Sun, 6:30-9 p.m.; Jimmy C Jazz, Sat, 7-9 p.m. Maalaea Village Shops, 243-2206.
Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Café – Wed-Fri; guitar and vocals w/Brado, Sat; Brian Wittman Sun-Mon; Patrick Mayor, Tue All sets from 6-10 p.m. The Shops at Wailea, 875-9983.
Sushi Go - Presents a concept unlike anything we’ve seen on Maui: Conveyor-belt sushi. Live music every Wed. 4-8 p.m. Queen Ka'ahumanu Center, Kahului, 877-8744.
Marco’s Southside Grill – Various artists (piano), Mon -Sun. All sets from 7-10 p.m. 1445 S. Kihei Rd., 874-4041.
Yorman’s By The Sea – All That Jazz Band, WedSun, 7-10 p.m. 760 S. Kihei Rd., 874-8385.
Mulligan’s on the Blue – Fri ,Tue, Wailea Nights, , dinner and show. 8- 10p.m.; Celtic Tigers, Sun, 7-10 p.m., Mon Gypsy Pacific 8-10 p.m. 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131.
Ma’alaea Harbor, 244-8844. Capische? – Mark Johnston; Thu-Sat; Brian Cuomo Su, Wed; Sal & Estaire Godinez, Mon.; all sets 7-10 p.m. Diamond Resort, 555 Kaukahi, 879-2224.
Seawatch Restaurant - Nightly Music 6 -9 p.m. 100 Wailea Golf Club Dr., 875-8080. South Shore Tiki Lounge - Sunset happy hour $3 special's. Live entertainment Sun, Tue, Thu Tony &
IN
THE
Mañana Garage – Nightly, Neto & Friends, Latin music, 6:30-9 p.m. 33 Lono Ave., Kahului, 873-0220.
UPCOUNTRY MAUI
CENTRAL MAUI
Jacque’s - Mon, live jazz; 5 p.m. 120 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-8844.
Brigit & Bernard's Gardencafe - Live entertainment. 335 Ho’ohana St., Kahului.
Livewire Cafe - Various artists Tue 7-10 p.m. 137 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-6009.
Café Marc Aurel - Thursdays, Gene Argel and Shiro Mori, 7-10 p.m. 2nd Friday of every month, Shimmy Nights with Bellyroll Dance Company, 7-9 p.m. 28 N. Market Street, Wailuku (near the Iao Theatre), 244-
Moana Cafe - Hula Honeys, vintage and contemporary Hawaiian music with elegance and aloha. Wed, Fri Live Jazz. Sun Anik 6-9 p.m. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia,
H EART
OF
O LDE M AKAWAO T OWN
Wild Wahine Wednesday with dj blast
C ASANOVA ’ S F AMOUS L ADIES N IGHT ! T E T E C T A HE
VENING
HAT
ARNED
ASANOVA
HE
“B EST L ATE N IGHT I N M AUI ”
WARD
MUSIC STARTS @ 9:45PM • $5 COVER
IGHT N TH THURSDAY MAY 26
PEER BAND THE JILLIAN S Y PARRS with BOBB LK / ROCK SOUL FO
@ 9:30PM MUSIC STARTS R $10 COVE
HT FRIDAY N7IG TH MAY 2
THE EASY ATIVES ISLAND ALTERN 45PM
@ 9: MUSIC STARTS R $5 COVE
NTHIGHT SATURDAY28 Y A M
O BOTERO DJ NEGRA TO DJ G RO BA NIGHT CUMBIA Y SAM 9:45PM IC STARTS @ MUS
$7 COVER
SUNDAY Y 29TH MA AFTERNOONUSTIC SUNDAYS
Y ACO UPCOUNTR
RIMES STEV&EfrG iends
PERFORMANCE PREMIERE SOLO TS @ 2PM MUSIC STAR ON $7 DONATI DIO TO MANA’O RA
Make it a Memorable Evening • Dine and Dance at Casanova For dinner reservations call 572–0220 • Log on at casanovamaui.com LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
33
thursday05/26
friday05/27
Battle of the DJs $3, 10pm
Lambs Bread, Kauai reggae $5, 10pm
Karaoke, 10pm-1am Karaoke, 10pm-1am
Karaoke, 10pm-1am Karaoke, 10pm-1am
SANDBAR & GRILL
89 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8742
SANSEI 115 Bay Dr., Kapalua - 669-6286 SANSEI Kihei Town Center - 879-0004
saturday05/28 sunday05/29 808 Connect, $5, 9pm
monday05/30 – wednesday06/01
Open Mic Night w/Jarod 10pm
MON - North Shore Sextet, 9:30pm; TUE - John Moore Project, No cover, 9pm; WED - Head High, $3, 10pm
Acoustic w/Kanoa & Cody No cover, 9:30pm
MON - DJ ED V, No cover, 10pm; TUE - The Lollipop Landlords, No cover, 10pm
Hale & The Hot Lava Band No cover, 9pm
MON - No Entertainment, No cover; TUE - Erin Smith, No cover; WED - John Moore Project w/Elan Rae, 9pm
DJ Blast $10, 9:30pm
SPATS TRATTORIA
Hyatt Regency, Ka’anapali - 667-4727
SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE
DJ Sunny No cover, 9:30pm
SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR
Crunch Pups No cover, 9pm
1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 874-6444
Open Jukebox 9pm
Kenny Roberts & Friends 9pm
STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR
Voodoo Suns $3, 9pm
Habanero Brothers $3, 9pm
TSUNAMI NIGHTCLUB
DJ Dancing, $10, 9:30pm
DJ Dancing, $10, 9:30pm-2am
2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602
1127 Makawao Ave. - 572-1380
3850 Wailea Alanui Dr. - 875-1234
DA KINECALENDAR 579-9999.
Nalu’s: Kilohana, Wed, 8-10:30 p.m.
Lagoon Bar Entertainment w/hula dancers, 6-8 nightly: Bobby & Ralph, Thu, Mon and Tue; Ralph & Allan, Fri; Fausto & Kawaika, Sat and Sun; Nathan & Ralph, Wed; torchlighting and cliff diving ceremony at sunset, 7-8 nightly.
Embassy Vacation Resort – Ka’anapali Beach 104 Ka’anapali Shores, Lahaina, 661-2000
Napili Kai Beach Resort 5900 Honoapiilani Hwy, Napili, 669-1500
The Westin Maui Hotel 2365 Kaanapali Parkway, 667-2525
Maui Prince Hotel 5400 Makena Alanui, 874-1111
Ohana Bar & Grill: Live music, Thu & Wed; Patrick Major, Fri; Wayne & Friends, Sun; Ernest Pua’a w/ Hawaiian music, Mon & Tue. All sets from 5:30-9:30 p.m. Torch lighting ceremony nightly.
Hawaiian Music: Kincaid & Albert, Thu; Kincaid Basques Fri-Sat, Mon-Tue; Kapule Paoa, Sun; Albert Kaina, Wed; All Hawaiian music shows from 7-9 p.m.
Tropica: Mitch Kepa, Mon & Sat-Su; Benny Uyetake, Tue-Fri. 6-9 p.m. Tableside magic by Fortunato Tue & Thu, and Wed & Sat 7-9p.m.
Molokini Lounge: Ron Kuala’au, Hawaiian and contemporary guitar and vocals, Sun, 6-10:30 p.m. and Tue, Thu and Sat, 6-8:30 p.m. Mele ‘Ohana duo, Mon, Wed. and Fri, 6-8 p.m., Mon-Sat, 8:30-10:30 p.m. and Mon, Wed and Fri, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
5:15 p.m -8:30 pm.
RESORT SHOWS WEST MAUI
Spats: Weeping Banyan Lounge with nightly Live Hawaiian Contemporary Music 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Ka’anapali Beach Hotel 2525 Kaanapali Parkway, 661-0011 Kupanaha: Maui Magic for All Ages Illusions and dinner show Tue-Sat, 4:30 p.m., Kanahele Room; Lanui, live music and dancing, 6-9 nightly. Free hula show, 6:30-7:30 nightly; Sunday Champagne Brunch with Hawaiian music by Polinahe, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Whalers Village Center Stage. Sat; Polynesian Hula Show 6:30 p.m. – 7 p.m. Sunset Jazz Show Sun 5 p.m.- 8 p.m. Mon; Dances of Polynesian 6:30 p.m. – 7 p.m. and Drums of Tahiti 7:30 - 8 p.m; Wed Polynesian Hula Show 6:30 p.m. – 7 p.m.; and Tahitian Dance 7:30 – 8 p.m. All Shows free. Kapalua Bay Hotel 1 Bay Drive, Kapalua, 669-5656 The Bay Club: Jazz trio, Fri and Sat, 6-9 p.m.; solo pianist, Sun-Thu, 6-9 p.m.; Gardenia Court: contemporary Hawaiian music, Sun, 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Lehua Lounge: Free hula show Wednesday and Fridays.
Maui Marriott 100 Nohea Kai Drive, Kaanapali, 667-1200
Ritz-Carlton Kapalua One Ritz-Carlton Drive, Kapalua, 669-6200 Lobby Lounge: Live music, 6-10 nightly. Banyan Tree Restaurant: World fusion duo Ranga Pae,Tue-Sat, 6:15-9:45 p.m. Kapalua Indoor Amphitheater: Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Concerts series features traditional Hawaiian music. Every Tues 6 p.m.- 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $40 visitor and $30 kama`aina rate. The Legend of Kaulula'au: Young Hawaiians loving their culture and willing to perpetuate an aspect of their Hawaiian culture, the art of storytelling. Every Thur at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $30 and $27 Kamaaina. 1888-808-1055. Royal Lahaina Resort 2780 Kekaa Drive, Kaanapali, 661-3611 "Eddie and Eddie" w/Eddie Lilikoi and Eddie Sebala, 5-9:30 nightly in the Royal Ocean Terrace. Royal Lahaina Luau featuring authentic Hawaiian and Polynesian song and dance at 5 nightly. Sheraton Maui Hotel 2605 Kaanapali Parkway, 661-0031
SOUTH MAUI Four Seasons Resort Wailea 3900 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 874-8000 Lobby Lounge, Hawaiian music w/Steve Repollo and Alan Villeran, Thu, 5:30-7:30 p.m. followed by jazz w/Sal Godinez and Marcus Johnson, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; contemporary music w/Clay Mortensen and George Tavoularis, Fri, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; island style trio, Sat and Mon, 5:30-7:30 p.m. w/hula dancer 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Pam Peterson and Rudy Baria, Sun, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; Nils & Anastasia (of VooDoo Suns) live & unplugged Mon and Sat, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; Clay Mortensen and Gilbert Emata, Wed, 8:30-11:30 p.m. Sunset torchlighting nightly. Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa 3850 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 875-1234 Botero Bar entertainment, 5:30-9:30 Live Music Wed; Strolling Hawaiian duo in the Humuhumunukunukuapua’a nightly. The Fairmont Kea Lani Maui 4100 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 875-4100 Cafe Ciao Restaurant. Jazz entertainment from 69 nightly.
DAISY DUKE CONTEST!!! - GIVEAWAYS!!! - PRIZES!!!
REDNECKS & ROMANCE $2 Boones Farm STRAWBERRY HILL on the rocks Trailer Trash Productions presents:
DJ MACKIE MAC S NIEL’ A D JACK ly $3.00 On S TTLE O B R MILLEnly $2.00 O
Wednesdays - 9pm-Close - It’s gonna be a Hoot Ya’ll... 34
MAY 26, 2005
DA KINE CALENDAR
Wailea Marriott 3700 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 879-1922 Hawaiian Entertainment w/hula 6-9 nightly in Kumu Bar & Grill. Hawaiian entertainment 9-11 nightly in the Mele Mele Lounge featuring Pam Gamboa Peterson Mon and Sat, Mitch Kepa & Raymond "Mundo" Medeiros. Paradise & Ka Poe O Hawaii perform at the Luau, Mon, Tue, Thu and Fri. Renaissance Wailea Beach Resort
3550 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 879-4900 Sunset Terrace; Live Hawaiian contemporary music by Lono Mon-Tue; Wed-Thurs Bobby Krueger; Fri Mahalo Greg; Sat Rama Camarillo; Sun Mondo Kane; all sets 6- 9 p.m.
EAST MAUI Hotel Hana-Maui Hana, 248-8211 Hawaiian Music in Paniolo Lounge, Thu thru Sun, 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Hula show, every Thu and Sun, 7:30-8:15 p.m. in the Main Dining Room.
Da Kine Calendar listings are complimentary and are printed at the discretion of the Calendar Editor, on a space available basis. Please send your submission requests in the form of event date and time, brief description & public contact phone number to calendar@mauitime.com or fax (808) 661-0446
TwâÄà fxÜä|vxá TOTALLY RELAX AND LET GO Come and experience my wonderful touch. Very sensuous, enjoyable & healing. 250-4557 MEET HOT SINGLES Connect locally. 18+ 808-521-6696. Ad#4288 GET LUCKY TONIGHT! Meet Island Singles! 18+ 808-5216696. Ad# 4003 DIVINE TANTRA Spa Session 269-2263
Tantric Loving Bodywork
Satisfying the Senses...
Sensual Island Goddess to nurture your body, mind & spirit
Simply the Best!
Unconditional love from the heart in or out call
264-6325
Most Preferred on Maui Fresh Faces!
Pleasures inParadise
∫ Love•Compassion•Ecstacy ∫ Exquisite Experiences ∫ Tantric Touch ∫ Intimacy Assured
in/out call
Touched by An Angel Sweet, Sensual, Loving In/out call 874-3831
Sweet & Sexy
276-5240 Sensual Loving Goddess wants to show you the way to a full body experience
MEN • WOMEN COUPLES
In-Out Calls 1-888-TantraV maavarea@msn.com The Ultimate Relaxation Therapy
268-8555
TO BECOME A MEMBER, CALL
TO LISTEN & RESPOND TO ADS, CALL
1.900.226.0169
1.800.710.8735
TO LISTEN & RESPOND TO ADS USING A CREDIT CARD, CALL
1.800.721.0152
CALL COSTS $1.99/MIN. MUST BE 18+
Petite Beauty
Magik Mermaids ∫ 879-3500 ∫
To pay for our services using a check, call
269-0814
Taste of Tantra
CHARGE IT!
Sacred Sensual Bodywork to open your heart & delight your body. In/Out Call
573-6830 PLACING AN AD IS EASY! CALL 661-3786
Maui Time Weekly accepts credit cards for classified and display ads
When you see the @ at the end of an ad, that means the advertiser has a profile (and maybe even a picture!) at our online personals site. Note the username listed after the @, and check it out at
www.mauitimepersonals.com WOMEN Seeking Men WEST MAUI LADY Beautiful, vivacious lady seeking professional, secure N/S SWM, age 45-65, for fun: parties, dancing, dinners, sunsets, beach, movies, music and more. 616262
Paradise Spice XXX Superstore Rated #1 Clean, Friendly, Best Selection, Price & Service
1-800-252-0920
What’s this @ symbol all about?
for Enchanting Titillating Touch
Elegant Ambience ∫Garden Temple
WORK IN ADULT FILMS No Experience, All Types & Sizes, WORK In Films, Magazines & On Live Internet Sites. Searching for beginners, make money daily, meet exciting new people while having fun. Call Worldwide 11:00am to 6:00pm, EST 1-800-508-5384
visit us online at www.mauitimepersonals.com
The Art of
INANNA
WORTH A CALL BiWF, 27, employed, 5'3", 130lbs, smoker, seeks outgoing, SF to share friendship, talks and good times. 522754
SEXY MAUI BABE Tall ex-model, blonde mom of three, fitness freak but not a control freak, seeks casual relationship with a nice, similar male. 657288
MEN Seeking Women LIFE IS A BEACH SWM, Libra, smoker, drinker, seeks SAF, 21-40, who is energetic and loves to party on the beach. Smokers, non-smokers ok. 654646
ARE YOU OUT THERE? Fit SM, 25, loves would like to find that one SA/WF, 18-35, who stands out from the rest. 661566
HAWAIIAN COWBOY Hawaiian cowboy looking for goodtime I am looking for a women who can make me happy. I have no children. Seeking SF, 18-36. 685542 @ allcon3
HEALTHY AND HAPPY BiWM, 48, enjoys gardening, nature. Seeking younger man, for companionship and fun times. 604288
HOW DO YOU PLACE AN AD??
4 HOUR DVD’S AS LOW AS
$8.95
Call the FREE membership number.
Sign up now to get connected to thousands in your area to chat safely, discreetly and anonymously.
We put the Class in Adult Shopping & the Spice in Adult Fun
www.ParadiseSpice.com
(808) 249-2449
Record a personalized voice greeting. Answer some basic profile questions about who you are and who you're looking for.
Three easy ways to get started!
Open Daily 10:00AM to Mid (7:00PM Sun) 1010 B Lower Main St. Wailuku, HI
• Text - Send “mauitxt” to 23578 • Online - www.txt2flrt.com • Phone -
enter “mauitxt” in the ID code box on the registration page Call 1-866-312-FLRT (3578) and enter promo code "5094"
© 2004 g8wave
Magdalene’s Garden Specializing in the art of Sacred Sexuality, Bachelor Parties, Erotic Dance Performances, Sensual Massage & Sexual Healing. 250-6468
Tell us what you’d like your print ad to say, or, if you choose, we’ll write one for you. Choose a notification method for us to contact you about new messages and matches:
• E-mail • Text Message • Phone Call
LEAVE THE REST TO US!!
The first text message in each conversation is FREE! After that, keep chatting for just 50 cents per message!
For customer service call 1-617-450-8773 or email MauiTime@placepersonal.com ABBREVIATIONS: A-Asian; B-Black; C-Christian; D-Divorced; F-Female; G-Gay; H-Hispanic; J-Jewish; M-Male; N/S-Non-Smoker; P-Professional; S-Single; W-White GUIDELINES: Personals are for adults 18 or over seeking monogamous relationships. To ensure your safety, carefully screen all responses and have first meetings occur in a public place. This publication reserves the right to edit, revise, or reject any advertisement at any time at its sole discretion and assumes no responsibility for the content of or replies to any ad. Not a service of all ads have corresponding voice messages. To review our complete guidelines, call (617) 425-2636
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
35
AUTOMOTIVE
ISLAND COINS & STAMPS
WE BUY & SELL
coins, tokens, medals, stamps, paper money, Hawaiiana, sport collectibles
667- 6155
3rd floor Wharf Cinema Ctr.
COMPUTER EQUIPMENT Area 51 Computer Service www.area51maui.com On-Site Repairs & Upgrades Home Office/Networking 298-9274
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
$CASH NOW$ AS SEEN ON TV. Advances for insurance, lawsuit settlements, annuity payments, lottery/casino winnings. Call Prosperity Partners Cash in future payments! 1-800-8153503. www.ppicash.com (AAN CAN)
EARN $3500 WEEKLY! Answering Surveys Online! $25-$75 Per Survey! Guaranteed Paychecks. ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE! Process E-mails Online $25.00 Per Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own E-mail. Mystery Shoppers Earn local candy route. Includes 30 $57.00/Hour Shopping! Machines and Candy. All for $9,995. www.RealCashPrograms.com (AAN 1-800-807-6525. (AAN CAN) CAN)
$$CASH$$ Immediate Cash for Structured $50,000 FREE Settlements, Annuities, Law Suits, CASH GRANTS 2005! Inheritances, Mortgage Notes, & Never repay! For personal bills, Cash Flows. J.G. Wentworth - #1 1school, new business. Fee for infor- (800)-794-7310. (AAN CAN) mation. $49 BILLION left unclaimed from 2004. Live operators! 1-800-7856360 Ext. #74. (AAN CAN)
Bubba Gump Shrimp Company WANNA HAVE FUN? WANT MORE HOURS? See us today for your interview!!
NOW HIRING ALL POSITIONS Apply in person • Aplique ahora 889 Front St., Lahaina
Looking For A Little Experience?
EMPLOYMENT
WARREN & ANNABELLE’S Get Paid To Shop! Maui’s most fun and amazing show Mystery Shoppers Needed to Pose is looking to add: EXPERIENCED BUY A NEW SURFBOARD.. as Customers! Training Provided. PREP-COOK GET $100!!! FT/PT. CALL NOW!! 1-800-690-1273 to join our energetic team! Apply in Get a $100. store credit with the pur- (AAN CAN) person. Monday- Friday 9am- 4pm chase of any new surfboard from 900 Front St., Lahaina UP TO $4,000 WEEKLY!! stock. Offer valid through May 31, 2005 only. Hawaiian Island Surf & 11 Year Nationwide Company Now WARREN & ANNABELLE’S Sport, corner of Dairy Rd. & Hana Hiring! Easy Work, Sending Out Our Maui’s most fun and amazing show is Simple One Page Brochure! Free Hwy, Kahului. 871-4981 looking to add: Postage, Supplies! FREE INFORMAP/T (Aft./Eve. Shift) FRONT DESK TION, CALL NOW!! 1-800-242-0363 RECEPTIONIST Ext. 4200 (AAN CAN) to join our energetic team! Res. incl.: Meet, greet, check in guests, $ hanHELP WANTED dling, gen’l admin. & phone reserv. Earn Extra income Assembling CD IT’S THE SMARTEST THING Must have great personality & neat Cases from home. No experience YOU’LL DO ALL YEAR! appearance. Hourly + Commissions. necessary! Start Immediately! 1-800Train at home for a brand new career! 688-0295 EXT. 870. www.easywork- Apply in person. Monday- Friday 9am4pm 900 Front St., Lahaina Visit Virginia College Online today at greatpay.com Invalid in MD, WI, ND, www.aboutvc.com (AAN CAN) SD. (AAN CAN) MODELS WANTED NEWS FLASH! POLAR ICE CAPS For Calendar & Print Work. Cash Paid. $50,000 FREE 573-6753 MELTING AT ALARMING RATE! CASH GRANTS 2005! Learn to SCUBA before it’s too late! Never repay! For personal bills, *MOVIE EXTRAS* Dive Today with SHAKA DIVERS, school, new business. Fee for inforProfessional, Safe, Fun Lessons and mation. $49 BILLION left unclaimed Earn $150-$300/Day All Looks/Types Dive Tours. Torpedo Dives, Hydro- from 2004. Live operators! 1-800- Needed. No Experience Necessary. TV, Music Videos, Commercials, Film, Optix Masks! (808) 250-1234 www. 856-9591 Ext. #88. (AAN CAN) Print. Call Tollfree 7 days! 1-800-260shakadivers.com it’s SHAKA-RIFIC 3949 x3025. (AAN CAN)
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
283-7725 BUY & SELL
$BUY & SELL$ JEWELRY • DIAMONDS WATCHES • COINS COLORED STONES MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS SURF BOARDS
WEST MAUI GOLD 667-7689 1000 LIMAHANA PL. LAHAINA CHARGE IT!
CLASSIFIEDS
Maui Time Weekly accepts credit cards for classified and display ads
36
CLASSES & INSTRUCTION
Ad Deadline Monday 4pm To Advertise Call 661-3786 Fax Number 808.661-0446 Email classifieds@mauitime.com Website www.mauitime.com Mailing 658 Front Street #126A-7278 • Lahaina, HI Drop off 505 Front St. Ste. 216, Lahaina
MAY 26, 2005
CLASSIFIED
Is Seeking Interns. Entry level positions. High school students okay. We will train. • Must Be Bright & Adaptable • School Credit Possible
• Work With A Fun Team • Gain Valuable Experience
Send resume to: Jen Russo 658 Front St. #126A-7278, Lahaina HI 96761 or call 661-3786 x3# 2005 POSTAL POSITIONS!! $17.50-$59.00+/Hour. Full Benefits. Paid training & Vacations. No experience Necessary! Green Card OK! For More Information Call 1-866-329-0801 ext. 1050. (AAN CAN)
$1050 WEEKLY INCOME mailing sales brochures from home. Genuine opportunity working with wholesale company. Supplies provided. No selling or advertising. Call 646722-8424 (24 hours). w w w. A s S e e n O n T V M a i l e r s . c o m (AAN CAN)
2005 POSTAL POSITIONS! $17.50-$59.00+/hr. Full benefits. Paid MEDIA MAKE-UP ARTISTS training & Vacations. No experience necessary! Green Card OK! For more earn up to $500/day for information call 1-866-271-3579 ext. television,CD/videos, film, fashion. 150. (AAN CAN) One week course in Los Angeles while building portfolio.Brochure 310MYSTERY SHOPPERS NEEDED. 3 6 4 0 6 6 5 EXP NOT REQUIRED. Training is pro- w w w. M e d i a M a k e u p A r t i s t s . c o m vided. Paid up to $20.00 per hour. (AAN CAN) Call 1-800-601-5721. (AAN CAN)
CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES 5 lines included – approx. 140 characters
Frequencies of 1-8weeks Frequencies of 9-26weeks Frequencies of 27-52weeks
$15/week* $11/week* $8/week*
Additional lines are $3 per each - bold and/or caps are $3 per line *Does not apply to Backside or Adult Services. Please call for pricing details.
EXPOSE YOURSELF! With one simple phone call, you can reach up to 17 million young, active and educated readers in more than 100 newspapers just like this one. Go to www.aancan.com or call this newspaper for more information. (AAN CAN)
Maui Recycling Service If not now, when?
When you subscribe for 3 months of bi-weekly service – (A $25 value!) New customers only – offer expires 5/31/05
MUSIC & ARTS
CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) Cancers are fanatically loyal to their families—tragically, the feeling’s not always mutual. What some Cancers see as protective love, others can view as stifling control. For you, love transcends all. For some people, stuff like politics, practicalities, and the need for privacy can get in the way. Nothing’s likely to change this week about who’s close to you, and who’s not—except for your attitude. It’s an ideal time to come to terms with the shape your family’s in, good or bad, and assess whether or not improving it is actually in your power. If not, best to let it go, no?
244-0443 • www.mauirecycles.com
WANTED Jah Inspired Keyboardist for AllOriginal Reggae Project. Positivity a must. 283-9250
LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)
SERVICES
Movin’ on up… You could have that deluxe apartment in the sky soon, or its metaphorical equivalent, provided you roll up your sleeves and put in some effort this week. You now have the chance to network with big fish from reservoirs larger than your relatively tiny pond. It’s time to get out there and sell yourself—but be careful. Some people grab the spotlight, and feel like they have to put on a show to justify it. Resist that urge. You’re already larger than life; adding drama will just make you gaudy and unlikable. Be absolutely real. That’s all you need: your normal everyday self and a bright light. Try it. You’ll shine.
HEALTH
FINISH CARPENTER/
NOTICES ALOHA VALUED READERS We would like to let our readers know that we try to screen most of our ads. We read back the ad copy to ensure that it is the correct information that advertisers want. If you see the acronym (AAN CAN) that ad is a national ad and was not submitted directly to us. If you have a question directly concerning AAN CAN, please check out aancan.org
PRESCRIPTION DIET PILLS No prior prescription needed. HANDYMAN Doors, Windows, Moulding & Floors, Prescription Pain Pills - No doctors Walls, Cabinets. No job too small. Call fees. Prescription Sleep Aids - US based and FDA approved. Kerry 268-8428 Prescription Muscle Relaxer. NextDay Delivery 1-800-715-0445. www.valuerx.biz (AAN CAN) MAUI RECYCLING SERVICE Picks up all your glass, plastic, aluminum, tin, mixed paper, & cardboard. Home Pickup; a convenience for $16/mo! Bi-monthly pick up. Commercial accounts avail. Call Now! 244-0443
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Maui Lawn Works
S.&W. MAUI CONDOS $193,000 fee simple W. & S. MAUI HOMES from $450,000
from
Surf the Maui MLS Listings at www.barrybrownmaui.com Barry Lee Brown (R) P.O. Box 11782 Lahaina
“we do all the work . . . so you can enjoy your yard”
VACATION RENTALS Friends or Family Visiting Maui? Affordable Studio Condo w/ Kitchen. Newly Remodeled, Clean, AC, View of Pool. Ideal Kihei Location, 2 minute walk to Maui’s Best Swimming Beach. Call for rates 875-7893 CLEAN, AFFORDABLE Accommodations in our vacation rental from $49 per day. Call Toll Free Wailuku Guesthouse 877-986-8270 or www.wailukuhouse.com
SERVICES RANDEM SYSTEMS INVESTMENT TRAINING SERVICES Learn to live debt free and have some money from your current income. Learn to invest properly. Do not believe that if you have no money there is nothing that you can do. (808) 344-0256 Email: rsist@randem.com
LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) Every city I’ve lived in has had its share of “wild” animal denizens, living alongside humanity. New York’s full of rats; San Francisco, raccoons. Los Angeles plays host to coyote. Berlin has foxes. Each of these species has carved out its modern existence by successfully adapting to new circumstances and environments. I mention these animals—often referred to as “pests”—because their strengths is yours, as well. You have the adaptability to survive and thrive in swiftly changing situations—only sometimes you don’t let yourself do it. Go with the flow, Libra. It’s nature’s way. And being on the endangered species list isn’t as glamorous as it sounds.
SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) A battle of wills looms. Don’t go rushing off to don an emotional suit of armor and pick weapons, though. Instead, go naked into the fray and see what happens. One of your intimate relationships is at a turning point. You’ll either fall (or explode) apart, perhaps never to come together again, or you’ll achieve a new level of closeness and trust. Getting to that enviable place will probably involve some serious emotional cleansing, though, a sort of scouring of built-up interpersonal grunge. It’s hard work, and being encumbered with weapons and chainmail would only make it impossible. Don’t guarantee estrangement; leave your shields and catapults behind. Yeah, that means your “enemy” can get near enough to tear out your hair, but also close enough to kiss and make up.
CALL 661-3786 EXT: 5#
SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) How honest are you about your relationships? Don’t take this the wrong way; I know you’re a good-hearted, forthright, trustworthy person. But most Sags, especially when they’re young, take a lot more than they give. This can lead to habits that get you into trouble in more serious long-term relationships. At some point—like this week—your partner will demand some balancing of the scales. If they’re asking for more from you, don’t get defensive or start backing out. Chances are, you owe it to them. Maybe not; only you can ultimately judge what you’re able and willing to give. My advice? If there’s any doubt at all, give your lovely loved one its benefit.
573-1920
AD DEADLINE MONDAY 4PM
HIV COUNSELING AND TESTING If you feel that you have been potentially exposed to HIV and would like Free, Confidential and Anonymous testing call the Maui AIDS Foundation at 242-4900. It is important to know your HIV status so that you do not unknowingly pass the virus to others, also early detection is vital to your health and treatment. The Maui AIDS Foundation now offers Drop-In HIV Counseling and Testing (No appointment necessary) Drop in hours are Mon.-Fri. 8:30am to 4:30pm, Wed. 8:30am to 7pm 1935 Main Street, Wailuku For more information on HIV/AIDS, STD’s including Viral Hepatitis and HIV Counseling and Testing call the Maui AIDS Foundation at 242-4900. In Hana call 248-7801, Lanai 5656722, and Molokai 553-9086.
CLASSIFIEDS
ALL AREAS - ROOMMATE.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: www.Roommates.com (AAN CAN)
Get the @#$* outside. Your apartment is clean enough, damn it. There’s a big exciting world out there beyond your well-organized existence. It may even be in need of some of your energy, but that’s not important. What matters is what you need, whether you realize it or not: thrills, new experiences, inspiring people. All you have to do is go out and find them. It may take some work, so don’t give up and go back to alphabetizing your DVDs when nothing jumps out at you on your five-minute walk around the block. Go to where the energy is. You know where I mean. You’ll find what you’re looking for there, and then some.
PLACING AN AD IS EASY!
A portion of every commission is donated to the Surfrider Foundation of Maui
SHARED HOUSING, ROOMMATES
VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)
Jason Meyer
(808) 661-1800
NEWS
Fix the slow drip on your kitchen tap, or seal that drafty bedroom window, or repair those hard feelings with your landlord. You can do any number of little things this week that will make your house feel safer, more secure and more comfortable; in other words, more like a haven, a home. You need that security more than you think— which you’ll realize, with relief, once you have it. Also, it’s far more achievable than you ever imagined. Yeah, it’s never going to be perfect, but it could be a lot better than it is, with a minimum of effort. Get to it.
FREE Recycling Bins – And No Sign-up Fee!
MUSICIANS WANTED
BY CAERIEL CRESTIN
GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)
CURBSIDE RECYCLING!
$ MODELS WANTED $ For calendar magazine and artistic print work. Ages 18 to 35. 573-3712
LETTERS
SIGNLANGUAGE
Work is piling up. This is a crappy time to look far into your future, because whatever brightness lies there will be obscured by the mountains of little stuff stacked up in front of you. It’s overwhelming, but try not to let it get to you. Make lists, organize yourself and resolve to never give up, lest you’re buried in the mess. Diligence and discipline are two of your strengths, thank goodness, because you’ll need them now. Don’t worry about next year, next month or even next week. You’ve got enough work on your plate right this second. Finish that. Then we’ll talk about dessert.
TO ADVERTISE Call 661-3786
AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) You’re a blank slate, an empty page. You’re a virgin, about to let yourself be deflowered. No, that’s too passive. You’re a virgin, about to go out and screw the hell out of someone. That’s more accurate. Obviously, I’m using sex as a metaphor; I know you’re not really a virgin. (Please.) Still, it’s important that you choose well on this new frontier. What (or who) you do now could be very important in the future, and affect everything that comes after. Make sure you get off to a good start, or you’ll never get to the finish line at the end of this particular path.
FAX NUMBER 808.661-0446
PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) The reason for your recent voracious hunger is easy—you’ve been preparing for a metamorphosis that begins this week. Just like a cute little caterpillar, you devour everything you can get your mouth around, until the overwhelming urge to hide in a cozy chrysalis hits you. Your periodic cocooning is normal and necessary, despite the world’s loud demands. I urge you to resist them. This is all part of every Pisces’ natural cycle. The longer and deeper you can immerse yourself in your practice of resurrection, the bigger, brighter and more beautiful your wings will be when you eventually emerge.
EMAIL classifieds@mauitime.com
WEBSITE
ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) You’re a pillow at the moment: all soft, receptive and squishy. Unfortunately, when some people encounter something so malleable, all they want to do is punch it, throw it around, sit on it, or use it to muffle their farts. Your challenge, despite this harsh treatment, is to avoid growing a crusty hard shell or filling your insides with bricks; take all this abuse with good grace. Become bigger than it by absorbing it but still retaining your fluffy, amiable shape and welcoming attitude. Eventually, you’ll find someone who appreciates this side of you. It’d be a shame if those who came before ruined it for that very deserving person.
www.mauitime.com
MAILING 658 Front Street #126A-7278 Lahaina, HI 96761
A public health message provided by The Maui AIDS Foundation.
COVER STORY
CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)
TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) Bad relationship patterns, like insomnia, can easily spiral out of control. Let me explain: You have trouble sleeping one night. The next night, you worry about having insomnia again, and so of course you do. The third night, it’s worse, because you’ve already had two sleepless nights. And so on. The same thing can happen in a relationship. You hit a bump in the road that’s like one you’ve experienced before, with someone else. That affair ended badly, so you start worrying about this one. Your fearfulness feeds into distrust instead of feelings of connection and fun, and before you know it, the road is riddled with potholes that weren’t there before. Stop worrying right now, because it’ll only make things worse. You hit a bump? Slam on the gas, not the brakes.
DROP OFF 505 Front St. Ste. 216, Lahaina
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
CAERIEL@YAHOO.COM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
37
HOLOHOLOGIRL
BY SAMANTHA CAMPOS
The Early Days, Part 2: Sex, Drugs and the Hard Rock Café Last time: A pre-Holoholo science geek and relationship suckah faced Year One on Maui before tiring of the pastoral comforts of island living… So in December 1998, I bought my one-way ticket from Maui to San Francisco. And I knew as soon as I did, I would have misgivings about leaving. Sure, at the time I was tired of the relentlessly perfect weather of Maui, as well as the cost of a gallon of milk, being unable to drive over 40 mph, the lack of adequate clothes shopping, the lack of adequate nightlife, the lack of black folks and my Mexican peeps, the lack of guys who did anything besides talking about surf, the lackadaisical attitude of co-workers and nary an In-N-Out Burger in sight! Yes, I had island fever. But here I was making money living in a tropical paradise that millions of people in other parts of the world save up all year just to visit for a week. Plus, I was right smack in the middle of humpback whale season. And I was surprised by how many friends were genuinely sad to see me go. I was on the fence again. Right before I left, I ended up telling everyone I would be gone just for month, and then I would be back to Maui. It snowed the day I arrived in San Francisco. For like, the first time since the winter of ’76. That first day marked an unprecedented cold front in the Bay Area starting with four consecutive nights of below freezing temps and an outbreak of tornadoes. Be careful what you ask for, right? And well, I also got to drive those high speeds I’d been craving—right into the rear end of a car driven by one very angry African-American lady on a toll bridge. And my Mexican peeps? They were laughing in the next lane over. Anyhoo, none of that mattered ‘cuz I was going to be staying with friends in a glamorous city flat! Actually, it was a 500-sq. ft. studio shared by two charming but slovenly 200-pound-plus dudes and all their dirty underwear, smelly farts, ubiquitous cartons of takeout—and wee me!—in the heart of the Western Addition, a district with a reputation for great soul food and, conveniently, even better crack cocaine. As I remarkably left in good standing—I guess I had enough “flair”—I simply transferred jobs from the Hard Rock Café in Lahaina to the one in SF. My first day there, I was wide-eyed with wonder. Not at the scenic vistas of Golden Gate Bridge or Coit Tower. Nor at the hustle and bustle of the Hard Rock’s outer Tenderloin—and rejected stepchild status of Pacific Heights—vicinity. I was in awe of the gorgeous and friendly kids working at the corporation rock ‘n roll restaurant chain. Of course, it didn’t take me long to figure out that everyone was doing blow in the employee dressing rooms, and each other in the walk-in freezer. Now that’s what I call flair. My Hard Rock “trainer” was yet another cutie—a tall smiley-faced boy with dimples and a mischievous glint in his big blue eyes. He looked like trouble—and he was—but I immediately assumed he was gay, like all the other attractive men in the city and at the Rock. As part of my work initiation, the naughty Trainer and I took a “smoke break,” which I would also come to know later as the signal to hightail it down the block for a shot of whiskey and a line at the Beer Ness. It was there that all the employees would gather before, during and after work for a little relax and rewind, so to speak (see above). Needless to say, the “one month” I was supposed to stay in San Francisco turned into nine, I got a second job at an outdoors, on the water, China Basin joint called The Ramp and sorta/kinda moved in with the Trainer—the Peter Pan to my Wendy... or maybe he was the Tinkerbell to my Captain Hook... hmm... it was San Francisco, after all—in the Sunset District. In no time at all, I became enmeshed in hot Trainer love and a scandalous whirlwind of rockstar partying all night on whiskey and/or wine, drugs of mostly the amphetamine kind with some dangerous narcotics thrown in, oiled and naked orgies either involving a lot of sake drinking or bonfires at the beach, motorcycles, paddle and whip parties, partner swapping, lots more drinking and absolutely no sleep at all. It’s certainly not behavior I’m advocating. I’m just glad I survived it ‘cause honestly, it was a lot of fun. But well, the Trainer and I were tired of all the partying and debauchery. Or were we? Anyway, we decided to move to Maui together. Next time: How I came to tending goats and playing the fiddle in Astoria! Samantha Campos is currently writing her second memoir, I Wasn’t Abducted By Aliens But I Do Have Relatives in Ossipee. MTW
38
MAY 26, 2005
CLASSIFIED
Mind Body Spirit A G U I D E F O R H E A LT H Y L I V I N G Tammy Yoka-Psychic Reader
Sex life on hold? Sex therapist with 20+ years exp. will help you overcome ED, premature ejaculation, lack of desire, shyness, fear of intimacy, communication problems. Discuss your sex & relationship concerns confidentially. Free initial phone Overweight? Need More Energy? consult. Call Dr. Bouchard today at 891Get Healthy with All-Natural, Doctor 0952. Recommended Supplements. Now under new management www.paradisenutritionandweightloss.com
ALOHA SEXUAL HEALTH & HAPPINESS
Counseling For all Sex & Intimacy Concerns
& Adviser Through the tone of your voice and your date of birth, she can tell your past, present & future. Specializing in reuniting lovers. 480-860-0013
allenge Ch
NIA KEEPS EXPANDING! The Studio Maui, Maui Lotus Yoga, and NOW Island Spirit Yoga in Lahaina. Please visit www.niamaui.com for further details and come sweat your joy!
3
Hard Rock Center SACRED BODYWORK Quality, hands-on healing touch for discriminating clients. Nurturing, enjoyable, spiritual...a different experience. Call 572-2623. 9am-9pm
(next to Shoe Fetish)
COLON THERAPY With Shelley St John RN., CHT. Other holistic therapies available. 573-0696
(not valid with any other offers, new students only, exp.5/30/05)
250-1220
& Energywork to quiet the mind, relax the body & open the heart. Feel the difference! call Grace at 283-1222 MAT#3018
INDIGO OCEAN Spiritual Energy Healing & Channeled Guidance. 573-4290 www.clearlightnature.com
CHARGE IT! Maui Time Weekly accepts credit cards for classified and display ads
YOGA CLASS With Leyla Atwill. Free your spirit. Be in shape. North end of Kam 3 Park, Kihei, near white gazebo. Saturday 9:00am. 891-8979
PIPES
• Glass Designs • Vaporizers • Grinders • Hand Made on Maui
Alice In Hulaland 19 Baldwin Ave Paia 579-9922
www.lifebydesignonmaui.com
Are You Looking For Guidance, Clarity & Specifics? • Yoga • Belly Dancing • NIA • • Exclusive Clothing Line & Boutique • • Over 25 Classes • 7 Days a Week • Group & Private Lessons
Sharon Brooks Gifted Clairvoyant Intuitive Open Channel • Dynamic Life Coach Workshop Leader • T.V. Appearances Call for info 808-891-9247
808.667.2111
SOULMATE SPECIALISTSYLVIA BROWN Strong & powerful methods reuniting lovers forever. Solves impossible cases. No false promises. Guaranteed immediate results. Complimentary consultation. 210-647-0720
CLASSES & INSTRUCTION
Connecting Spirit with Motion
Find Maui’s Holistic Events! Visit www.mauivision.net today and explore our extensive mind, body & spirit listings. New June/July Maui Vision Magazine Coming Soon! Call 669-9091 for info. Exquisite Massage
Michael Ra Bouchard, M.A., Ph.D. Doctor of Human Sexuality If not now, when? 891.0952 www.sexhappiness.com
Full Circle Toe Rings Since 1987 14k Sterling • Unique Jewelry Oceanic Woods • Weapons • Spiritual Fetishes
TTOP ROPICAL ARTWARE / U.L.C. FLOOR WHARF CINEMA CENTER ACROSS FROM BANYAN TREE
NEW BELLYDANCE
KAMA`AINA 3 Classes INTRO for $30 SPECIAL Take the classes on consecutive ay Yoga 3D days, get $20 OFF your next package
Take the
FREE BODYWORK SESSION Free 90 Minute Bodywork Session by athletic, masculine male, my place or yours, feel great guaranteed! Call Matt at 808-298-6194
Confidential • Free Phone Consultation
Blown Aboriginal PIPES MAUI Home
840 Wainee St., (Behind Ace Hardware) Lahaina Square Shopping Center www.islandspirityoga.com
I PROVIDE GUARANTEED SOLUTIONS For Effective Lifestyle Management. For results Call 619-364-6620
Ama 1 1/2 z i n g Mass Hour age $65
re unctu Acup cials. a F ! Work They
MASSAGE RELAX THE MIND, BODY & THE SENSES The Power of Therapeutic Touch. Massage Therapy by Dante. In/Out Calls. $50/$60 for an hour. Swedish, Shiatsu, Lomi and Reflexology. Lahaina area. MAT#8577 250-9442 THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE Affordable Outcall Service with Carla Justice 665-5953. MAT#7258
Mon-Fri 9am-7pm • Sat 9am-4pm • Sun by Appt.
Healing Touch
RETAIL
Therapeutic Massage in Makawao $70-sliding scale avail.
WEST SIDE MASSAGE By Sophia MAT #8279 Downtown Lahaina. Bring your body back into balance. Relaxing Therapeutic. MAT #4273 661-8639 CHRONIC ISLAND VIBE CLOTHING
573-6826
@ HEALING HANDS
$45 MASSAGE!!! ISLANDSPICEHAWAII.COM $35 Acupuncture, $45 Facials. 7 days a week. Blue Bamboo Chinese Medical Center, 2099 Wells St. Wailuku 2446778
In Kihei
MASSAGE THERAPY With Daniel Fowler, Available in Wailuku. $70 or sliding scale. Specializing in Therapeutic Lomilomi, Deep Tissue and Injury rehabilitation. MAT # 2765 Call 280-0733
Move your body! Express your spirit! Free your mind!
FOR YOUR HEALTH & WELL BEING
BARBARA WILLIAMS
875-2081 MAT #7179
PLACING AN AD IS EASY! CALL 661-3786
Nia – fitness for every Body Erin Graue – Certified Nia Teacher
CHARGE IT! Maui Time Weekly accepts credit cards for classified and display ads
www.niamaui.com – 242-4343
OPEN YOUR MIND CHALLENGE YOUR BODY A GUIDE FOR HEALTHY LIVING for advertising info • call 661-3786 ex.5#
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
MAY 26, 2005
39
edis
Maui’s Premier Tanning Boutique UV & Sunless Tanning 10 levels of tanning for every skin type
HIGH VISIBILITY! LOW COSTS! BACK SIDE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
Private Booths in a Casually Elegant Boutique
CALL (808) 661-3786 for complete details!
Featuring: Designer Skin & Magic Tan
662-GOLD
VIAGRA VIAGRA - $2.40/dose - CIALIS available Lowest price refills Guaranteed! Call PBG we can help! Non Profit Organization Toll free: 1-866-5798545 (AAN CAN)
VACATION RENTAL-DISCOUNT SUMMER RATES!!! Luxury condo in Kihei. Newly remodeled studio unit, kitchen, AC, 2 minute walk to Maui’s best swimming beach. From just $69. per night. 2693333
910 HONOAPIILANI HWY. SUITE 7 • LAHAINA www.mauimagictan.com
BUY A NEW SURFBOARD, GET $100!!! Get a $100 store credit with the purchase of any new surfboard from stock. Offer valid through May 31, 2005 only. Hawaiian Island Surf & Sport, corner of Dairy Rd. & Hana Hwy. 871-4981
MAUI TATTOO COMPANY Traditional, Custom, Polynesian, Cover-Ups, Portraits. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., under Lu Lu’s. 8740034
JOSH JERMAN REALTOR (S) 2005 Maui Scholarship Fund
Cancer, Glaucoma, HIV/AIDS Cachexia/Wasting Syndrome, Chronic Nausea Epilepsy/Seizures, Multiple Sclerosis, and Crohn’s Disease also Chronic Pain Disorders such as Chronic Neck and Back Pain If you have any of these conditions, you may qualify for Legal Medical Marijuana. We are medical doctors and we can help you obtain your permit. You will need to provide us with copies of your medical records documenting your medical history.
874-5141
Weekdays 9-5
mjmaui.com
LOOKING COLLECTABLE OLD COINS?
FISHING ACTION!
JOSH JERMAN R (S) MAUI’S PREMIER REAL ESTATE TEAM
STOP WISHIN’ & GO FISHIN’ 42’ BERTRAM SPORTFISHERS
RATED #1
Maui: (808) 667-2774 KONA: (808) 327-1265
TOLL FREE 1-800-590-0133
MASSAGE & FACIALS
35Acupuncture
$
ACUPUNCTURE PRICES VALID THRU MAY 2005
7 DAYS A WEEK
BLUE BAMBOO Chinese Medical Center & Spa
244-6778 2099 Wells St., Wailuku
TIME TO FILL OUT YOUR BALLOT
We’ve got Maui’s Best Selection and Lowest Prices. Also Collectable Old Stamps, Sports Memorabilia and Flags from Around the World. Island Coins & Stamps, Wharf Cinema Center, 3rd Floor, Lahaina, 667-6155
Sweet Life Fruit Company
SKIN DEEP TATTOO
Gift Baskets, Fruit Baskets & Flowers
Tattooing Hawaii for 29 Years!!! 626 Front Street . Lahaina Town . 661-8531
Delivered on Maui or shipped worldwide. Sweet Life Fruit Co. 808-27SWEET (277-9338) or (6629338) www.mauifruitbasket.com
West Maui/Molokai Special. Only Air Maui offers this incredible flight! Call now for your 2 for 1 Kama’aina special or special visitor rate! Expires Dec. 31, 2004. For reservations call 877-7005
BornOnMaui.com
45
$
The time for our annual Best of Maui issue is at hand! We need you—our loyal, intelligent, creative readers—to tell us what’s so hot about our island. The results will appear in our July 28 issue, but we need your ballots by June 1. So get cracking! Fill out the Ballot on page 3 and 4 and mail it in or visit our website at www.mauitime.com and fill it out online.
2 for 1 Special!
for Maui County Graduating Seniors. Application & Guidelines at
877-4145 visit: BornOnMaui.com
Is approved in Hawaii for:
Air Maui Helicopter Tours
(2) $1000.00 College Scholarships
An Independent Member Broker
Medical Marijuana
MAT#5293
kcab
Don’t Sweat It At The Beach! Tan Instantly at Maui Magic Tan!
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Full service nationwide adoption agency specializing in matching families with birthmothers. TOLL FREE 24/7 866-921-0565. ONE TRUE GIFT ADOPTIONS www.onetruegift.com (AAN CAN)
Feel & Look Young Anti-Aging Medicine
• Permanent Hair Reduction (Underarms, Legs, Bikini) • Cosmetic Dermatology • HGH • Botox • Collagen - Restylane • Foto Facial IPL Laser • Chemical Peels • Natural Hormones (Female) Testosterone (Male) • Wrinkle Removal Acne Scars, Age, Sundamage Spots, Lip Enhancement, Microdermabrasion DNA Skin Stem Cells Offices in
Wailea•Kihei Makawao•Lahaina
808.276.4130 Trained at the Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN
BURTON FEINERMAN, M.D.