13.01 500th Issue June 25, 2009, Volume 18, Issue 1, MauiTime

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CONTENTS 15

VOLUME 13 • ISSUE 01

4 MAUI COUNTY Ocean acidification causes burning debate in Editor’s Inbox. A happy paddle boarder submits a rare positive Eh Brah! A beard growing contest gets hairy in News of the Weird. Click of the Week looks into the future— sort of. Rob Report returns from the Mainland with plenty to discuss. LC Watch says the members of the Maui County Department of Liquor Control spend too much time reading this paper. North Korean missiles and Hawaii GOP squabbling are examined in Coconut Wireless.

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION What thing could you do 500 times and not be completely sick of it?

12 FEATURE STORY

Editor: Jacob Shafer (808) 283-1308 / jacob@mauitime.com Fall asleep

Proofreader: Dina Wilson

You’re holding the 500th issue of Maui Time Weekly. To mark the occasion, we take a selfcongratulatory look back at some of our best, most timely stories, including a blackmail scheme in the governor’s office and a dolphin park that (thankfully) wasn’t built.

Contributors: Jessica Armstrong, Caeriel Crestin, Lloyd Dangle, Beau Ewan, Doug Levin, Jared Libby, Greg Mebel, Heather Nicholson, Rob Parsons, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II

15 ONO KINE GRINDS

Photographer: Sean Michael Hower Catch a wave

Jessica Armstrong says Betty’s Beach Cafe in Lahaina is unassuming in the best sense of the word.

Calendar Editor/Staff Writer: Kate Bradshaw (808) 264-8039 / calendar@mauitime.com Watch ‘Cool Hand Luke’

Art Director: Brittany Shaw (808) 281-8975 / brittany@mauitime.com Win at blackjack Graphic Designer: Kellee LaVars Shots of Don Julio Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers (808) 283-3260 / brad@mauitime.com Get tattooed General Manager: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com Put pen to paper Administrative Executive: Judy Toba (808) 244-0777 / judy@mauitime.com Shots of tequila Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown Go to Disneyland Web Design: Linear Publishing www.linearpublishing.com Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com Listen to cnet.com BOL (congrats on 1,000 episodes!)

17 MUSIC SCENE Kate chats with steel guitar legend Henry Kaleialoha Allen ahead of an event in his honor.

18 FILM Like inoffensive, predictable romantic comedies? Go see The Proposal.

19 Movie Listings

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20 DA KINE CALENDAR Kate skims off the cream of the entertainment crop, including a reggae deal and a benefit for injured animals.

22 Calendar Listings MauiTime Weekly is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2008 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.

23 Grid

Maui Time Weekly 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 • fax (808) 244-0446 www.mauitime.com

31 Mind, Body, Spirit

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JUNE 25, 2009

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With the recent publication of the cover story “Bad Chemistry” [June 18], Maui Time continues to demonstrate that they are poor guardians of the independent truth necessary to propagate the intelligent arguments that separate the polar ideologies that currently dominate our political landscape. Ms. Bradshaw’s synopsis of the documentary A Sea Change and its explanation of the mechanisms leading to ocean acidification and it’s potential consequences contained a very poor analogy and overlooked a crucial part of the ocean modeling necessary to make good predictions about the outcome of decreasing ocean pH. This flaw in the discussion will only serve as ammunition for the global warming deniers. The “tooth in coke” analogy readily illustrates a gap in knowledge that is extremely detrimental to the conservation cause. Coke has a pH of 2.8—acidity in the order of 100,000 times that of seawater. It’s like comparing vinegar to pool water and it doesn’t further the discussion. We need to create arguments based on sound, fundamentally accurate science in order to generate sympathy for this AGW-related issue. The acidification/ocean pH discussion deals primarily with an ocean-only model and neglects the effect of increasing water temperature. A recent study by IPCC 4th assessment expert reviewer, Dr. Ben McNeil, demonstrated that when both the climate feedback and C02 model issues are considered, by 2100, coral reef coverage could exceed that of the pre-industrial age, primarily due to the decreasing effect of C02 on the saturation state of CaCO3 based on the increasing sea surface temperature. In a nutshell, pH continues to decline but its affect on the availability of CaCO3 is mitigated by the change in sea surface temperature. Quite different from the bleak barren landscape prophesized by Ms. Bradshaw. Even when considering the phenomenon of coral bleaching, which some experts attribute to a rapid increase in SST, the red sea and other 90F SST environments teach us that the 250 million-year-old coral reef system is much more robust than we as guilt ridden homo sapiens can possibly fathom.

Hoegh-Guldberg paper, “Rates of change in global temperature and [CO2]atm over the past century are 2 to 3 orders of magnitude higher than most of the changes seen in the past 420,000 years. Rates of change under both low and high Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) emission scenarios are even higher, as are recent measurements of the rate of change of [CO2]atm.” 3) Warming SSTs should not be seen as an ameliorating factor for coral reefs. Mass coral bleaching events have already resulted in massive mortalities on coral reefs (e.g., 1997-98 bleaching event). Even in the Red Sea, which experiences high fluctuations in SSTs, bleaching events have been reported. It is also critical to remember that these changes are not occurring in a vacuum. Climate impacts on reefs are exacerbating the other local and human threats (e.g., pollution, development, overfishing, declines in water quality), which have caused declines in many reef systems worldwide.

BURNING THE STRAW MAN Re last week’s letter about the solar telescope on Haleakala [“Culture wars,” June 18]: What a great straw man you’ve created, of the “typical” Native Hawaiian who litters and asks for a handout. Talk about a cliché! Most of the people who oppose this telescope are not ignorant or backward-looking. The people who were quoted in Maui Time made eloquent arguments based on significant cultural/spiritual concerns. You should learn to listen, as we all should. Gennifer Goodwinn, Haiku

THE AUDACITY OF ’SCOPE Talk about a misplaced priority! The starting price tag for the proposed new telescope on Haleakala is reported to be about $170 million in federal funds [“Trouble in the House of the Sun,” June 11]. How about using that money to restore Maui’s native forests, rescue our endangered birds and plants from extinction and restore natural cloud formation over Maui for the water we need to sustain life? I say turn the ’scopes we already have up there inward in search of intelligence on Earth. Tony Povilitis, Makawao

Darrel Smith, Kihei

SEND YOUR FEEDBACK Lizzie McLeod, a climate scientist with The Nature Conservancy’s AsiaPacific Division, responds: A few key points: 1) Thermally stressed corals have demonstrated decreased rates of calcification. 2) The rate at which change occurs is critical to whether organisms and ecosystems will be able to adapt or accommodate the new conditions. According to the

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

to the editor via e-mail (editor@mauitime.com), post (Editor’s Inbox, Maui Time Weekly, 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793) or fax (808-244-0446). All correspondence must include your full name, hometown and phone number.


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EH BRAH! Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less (which we reserve the right to edit), changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent to “Eh Brah!” c/o Maui Time Weekly, 33 N. Market St, Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

I know, I know—this is supposed to be a place to blow off steam. But this time, I want to say mahalo to the two young ladies who allowed me and my daughter to use their paddleboard today at Launiopoko. I have always wanted to try, but the cost of the board is just not a reality for us, nor is even the very reasonable rental rate. We had a great time and learned something new. Your aloha and island spirit is one that many more should have.


NEWSOFTHEWEIRD BEARD SCIENCE At the biennial World Beard and Moustache Championships in May in Anchorage, Alaska, four local heroes “defeated” the usually dominant German contingent in the 18-category pageant, including overall champ David Traver of Girdwood, Alaska, whose woven chin hair suggests a long potholder. Said Traver, of the Germans, “They were humble, and you have to respect that.” One defending champ, Jack Passion of Los Angeles, fell short with his navellength red hair, despite having authored The Facial Hair Handbook after his 2007 victory. Traver acknowledged that no money was at stake (only trophies and “bragging rights”), but added that there are “a lot of ladies” who fawn over men’s facial hair. “Seriously, they exist.”

BY CHUCK SHEPHERD CHUCK@MAUITIME.COM

pond. Lead researcher Marian Stamp Dawkins concluded that ducks basically just like water. (2) According to research announced in May by pediatrics professor Jennie Noll of the University of Cincinnati, the more often that teenage girls tart themselves up in online presentations, the greater the sexual interest they provoke.

DESPERATE TIMES (1) Among the assets for sell-off listed in the May bankruptcy filing of Innovative Spinal Technologies of Mansfield, Mass., were nine human cadavers—eight of which had already been used for research. (2) In May, Ichiro Saito, a professor of dentistry at Tsurumi University, publicly warned that as many as 30 million Japanese workers overstressed by the economy are suffering from such severe dry mouth that the country might be experiencing epic halitosis.

DANGEROUS BREEDERS

FAMILY FEUD

(1) Thomas Frazier, 42, was jailed in Flint, Mich., in April after his unpaid child-support tab reached $530,000 (14 children with 13 women). He told the judge that he was only trying “to find someone who would love me for me.” (2) The total tab of Desmond Hatchell, 29, of Knoxville, Tenn., was not reported at his May court appearance, but the judge questioned him sharply about payments from his minimum-wage job. Hatchell has 21 kids by 11 women, but told WLVT-TV, “I didn’t intend to have this many.”

When Christina Vanderclip dropped by the house of her former boyfriend, Travis Schneller, in Greeley, Colo., in June, they soon began to argue. According to police, Travis hit her and pulled her hair, then Travis’s mother jumped on Christina’s back and pulled her hair, then Travis’s younger brother Michael and father, Robert, jumped on Christina, too, hitting and choking her. Christina managed to escape, and police, after a 10-hour standoff, entered the home and arrested the entire Schneller family.

BY THE

Thee HAWAIIAN Islandd of

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percent more than in 2007

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298 Number of confirmed swine flu cases in Hawaii as of June 18; three are from Maui

0 Number of Hawaii residents who have died from the disease Sources: National Agricultural Statistics Hawaii Field Office, Pacific Business News, Associated Press

INCOMPETENT CRIMINALS YOU DON’T SAY Two scientists from Britain’s University of Oxford, on a three-year study costing the equivalent of nearly $500,000, found that ducks may be even more comfortable standing under a sprinkler than paddling around in a

‘CLICK’ OF

Jose Villarreal, charged in Georgetown, Texas, with assaulting his girlfriend, decided to take his chances at trial and rejected the prosecutor’s offer of five years in prison. In May, the jury deliberated one minute before finding him guilty, and he got 16 years. MTW

THE WEEK

Think the future looks bleak? Well reality’s got nothing on the dystopian wasteland of killer robots, natural disasters and total, balls-out anarchy envisioned by Hollywood. For an overview of what the world would be like if filmmakers ran the universe, peep this timeline, created by cartoonist Dan Meth, that lays out the years in which a bunch of futuristic films were supposed to take place. Escape From New York (1997) and 2001: A Space Odyssey (uh, 2001) are already in our rearview, while in the next decade we can expect Kevin Costner to unite the fragments of humanity (The Postman, 2013) and a cyborg police officer to crack down on crime (Robocop, 2015). Sadly, a Harley-riding porn star president (Idiocracy, 2505) will have to wait. - JS Find it at… danmeth.com

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

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ROBREPORT

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

Budget bust

Faithful readers, part I

California and Hawaii define issues, cope with changes y friend, who works for the city of Oakland, California, stood in the area that was once his front lawn. The late afternoon sun warmed the cocoa husk mulch covering his totalmakeover landscaping project, producing an aroma like brownies baking in the oven. What, I asked, does the city do about something like this, gesturing to where a street tree’s root had heaved up the sidewalk three or four inches.

M

home in pajamas and look for jobs on the Internet.” With his proposal to lay off 5,000 state workers, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger seems destined to keep his “Terminator” reputation. Among those are 2,000 park rangers, biologists, lifeguards, interpreters, architects and maintenance workers, all jeopardized by a recommendation to cut $70 million from the state parks budget. That would necessitate closure of 220 of 279 parks, including Emerald Bay at Lake Tahoe and Humboldt

Local food and energy production have been heralded by Maui’s elected leaders, but so far little has come of the talk—aside from Mayor Tavares tootling about in an electric car. “At this point,” he replied, “we let them trip over it and then sue us.” His answer (later recanted, when he acknowledged that a sidewalk repair program exists, but “takes quite a while”) was indicative of the feeling of economic desperation in California, which hit 11.5 percent unemployment last week, the nation’s highest, according to a Monterey Herald headline story. Oakland’s Public Works department alone saw an 18 percent cut in jobs. Hawaii, meanwhile, is turning to work furloughs rather than layoffs. The Golden State’s $24.3 billion budget shortfall makes Hawaii’s $700 million deficit look like chump change, though in addressing potential cuts, both states are showing about as much finesse as one choosing to open a china shop in Pampalona. As a recent New York Times editorial put it, “The governor [Linda Lingle] announced the most drastic furlough program in the country. She’s closing state offices three days a month, for two years. Aloha Friday, where people go to work in aloha shirts and muumuus, is going to be Furlough Friday, where they stay

Redwoods State Park, home to the world’s tallest tree. California parks attract an estimated 80 million visitors annually, and a State Parks Foundation official believes that the state receives $2.35 in return revenue for every dollar spent on parks. A Ventura County Star article stated that California legislators were reviewing a $15 vehicle park entry fee tax proposal that reportedly would help avoid layoffs or offset the parks budget shortfall.

awaii’s Recreational Renaissance bill, similarly proposed to prop up state park funding, failed to garner approval at this year’s legislative session. Lingle’s plan, however, would have relied upon $240 million in bonds to help fix Hawaii’s aging parks and harbors, paid for in part by user fees to non-residents at eight popular parks, and increased harbor slip fees. State officials still believe there is merit in charging tourists to enter state parks, citing the increased visitor numbers at Diamond Head, even after bumping up charges to those entering the state monument. But objections were voiced statewide that fees levied at specific parks (Makena and ‘Iao were selected for Maui) should be used to improve those facilities, not spirited away to fix other parks. With more than $111 million carved from the Department of Land and Natural Resources budget in fiscal 2009, it’s uncertain how State Parks and other divisions will cope. New rules for commercial activities within Maui County parks geared to “strike a better balance” of park users could backfire by causing yet another blow to the sagging tourist industry. Some believe that limiting the number of vendors allowed to teach surfing, scuba, windsurfing, kayaking and kite boarding, and the number of park locations where such activities are allowed, is one more nail in small, local businesses’ coffin. Recently, the Maui County Council backed down an ordinance that would have prohibited the largest big box store outlets from obtaining permits to build or expand. The Council’s waffling came after heavy lobbying from certain businesses, including WalMart, which flew in corporate representatives from the Mainland to help plead their arguments.

H

see BUDGET, page 10

LC Watch There’s a tricky thing about this column. Our purpose is to shine a light on the LC, but in the process we sometimes end up inadvertently burning the victims of the department’s capricious oversight. Because of this, while we periodically get tips from bar and club owners about stuff the LC has done to them, or threatened to do, they rarely want their names used for fear of reprisal. Their fear is well-founded. In 2007, Director Frank Silva admitted that “we do pay attention to your paper.” That quote was in response to a rumor that Tip Ups Tavern and Grill had caught heat for a story that ran in Maui Time. The piece, titled “Booty Money,” was about a dance contest. Contributor Heidi King wrote that one of the participants “was wasted,” though in the next sentence she added: “Well, I hope she was wasted because she looked like a whore.” At the time, Silva said the bar wasn’t in any immediate trouble, but hinted that stories like that one pique the LC’s interest (overserving is one of their favorite things to bust venues for, right after selling to a minor decoy). And it’s not just our editorial content they peruse. In June 2008, this column noted a couple instances of liquor-serving restaurants being cited for using shortened versions of their trade names in Maui Time advertisements, which is a violation of the LC’s rules. Late last year, we got multiple reports from establishments that run ads in this paper that they were being targeted for nitpicky language, some of it relating to Halloween costume contests. In most cases, the law is technically on the LC’s side. But that doesn’t mean it’s right, or a good use of government resources. Anyway, all that is a set-up to a recent tip we received, about how an entry in Maui Time’s Da Kine Calendar put an event on the LC’s radar. Tune in next week for details. - Jacob Shafer

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

9


ROBREPORT BUDGET, continued from page 9 Nationwide, many communities have rejected the shift toward allowing corporations to supplant local businesses, under the guise of job creation and low prices. But for now, it seems that such a bold move is beyond the will of the current County Council and, for that matter, the Chamber of Commerce. ounty officials, including Mayor Charmaine Tavares, are still being criticized for shutting down unlicensed vacation rental operations, reversing a previous stance that recognized their presence, without penalties, while suitable guidelines and parameters

C

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

were being crafted by ordinance. Now, more than two years after the closure has put hundreds of operators out of business, new draft permits and rules would require a transient vacation operation in a neighborhood to pay the same property tax rate as hotels, or nearly four times the residential rate. Such onerous, punitive, anti-business measures are hard to comprehend, especially against businesses that are islandbased and not linked with large corporations. Just a few days ago, I was walking down the streets of Carmel, California, where residences and vacation rentals coexist peacefully, side-by-side. The result is a community that is accessible to visitors, yet retains its singular personality. Still, like Hawaii, California is faced with dire problems and monumental chal-

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*Fourth of July Coupon Sale Saturday, July 4, 2009 Save 15% off your Bath & Body purchase at the Lavender farm. Coupon required. Lavender Beading Workshop Sunday July 5, 2009 1pm - 3p $30 per person + tax. Easy, creative & fun. Includes instruction, materials & 2 bracelets ($40 value) Lavender Wreath Making Every Friday & Saturday @ 10am. $35 per person + tax. Includes fresh cut lavender, wreath base and instruction. Plein Air Artist Paint off featuring “Summer Colors at the Lavender Farm” Saturday July 11, 2009 9am – 2pm. Maui’s top artists will take easel and brush in a contest to capture the essence of the breathtaking vistas only found at Ali`i Kula Lavender. Lavender at Sunset Saturday July 11, 2009 4pm - 6:30pm. Live Music with Grammy Award Winner, George Kahumoku, delicious food prepared by the MCC Culinary Academy of Lavender Shrimp & Sweet Kula Corn. Bring your beach chair and/or blanket. No coolers please. $12 per person, kids 5 & under free. No coolers please. *Ladies Day Out On July 18 & 19, 2009, we are offering Ladies Day out which includes Lavender Tea with scone and FREE walking tour along with a bonus discount of $15% off all Bath & Body purchases for every lady in your party. Coupon is required. Price is $10 per person, plus tax. ($30 value) Picnic at the Lavender Farm Escape the heat! Pre-order a delicious Gourmet Lavender Lunch Basket for $25 per person and choose your favorite spot. Offered daily. *Go to www.aklmaui.com to download special coupons for July’s events. To book a reservation, call 808-878-3004 from 9a-4pm, or email: aklreservations@aklmaui.com Gift shop is open daily from 9a-4pm | www.aklmaui.com

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

lenges. The state now ranks 50th—dead last—in per capita spending for education. And you thought Hawaii’s public school system was behind the times. The California legislature did, however, recently reject Gov. Schwarzenegger’s plan to lop another $700 million from the education budget. o a degree, each state’s budget woes are the result of decreased return from property taxes. As home values decline, tax revenues follow. The San Francisco Chronicle recently reported that thousands of Bay Area residents will receive notices this summer that their property taxes are being cut because of plummeting real estate assessments. Such valuations generally are based on recent sales. But,

T

bracket for those earning over $250,000, a strategy that alone could generate an estimated $4 billion annually. All those proposals, however, have been voted down by California Republicans, or vetoed by Gov. Schwarzenegger. California voters also turned back four ballot initiatives that would have increased taxes in one form or another to help address the budget shortfall. Hawaii’s representatives passed a measure this year—House Bill 1271—that levies a dollar surcharge on each barrel of imported petroleum, setting aside an estimated $30 to $40 million each year to fund clean energy projects. Additionally, about one-third of the funding will be used for a new program to support local food production, another of our major imports (currently, 85-90 percent of food

The county’s punitive, anti-business measures are hard to comprehend, especially against businesses that are island-based and not linked with large corporations. given a dearth of transactions, could Maui County follow suit in lowering property tax rates? The biggest question at hand is how to compensate for the changes wrought by a sagging economy and diminished revenues. Among the suggestions made in California are taxing each barrel of oil extracted, increasing alcohol and tobacco taxes and restoring a higher income tax

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consumed in Hawaii is flown or shipped in). The bill is currently on Gov. Lingle’s desk, awaiting her signature. Many have touted the opportunity to reduce our dependence on imports, especially with rising oil prices and shipping costs, and to return to a simpler model of local-based economies. Local food and energy production have been heralded by Maui’s elected leaders, but so far little has come of the talk—aside from Mayor Tavares tootling about in an electric car. On Monday, U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie offered advice to Hawaii residents and officials on how to utilize federal funds for “green jobs.” Rather than high tech solutions that might only benefit a few venture capitalists, Abercrombie believes moves toward energy efficiency and independence can be made using simpler, existing technologies and resources. As much as $620 million may be available to Hawaii through federal stimulus funding, much of it in block grants for energy upgrades and conservation. Abercrombie stated these clean-energy investments will help create as many as 7,000 jobs throughout the islands. If those projections are on target (with apologies for the between-the-lines reference to another big box chain), there may yet be an awakening to the new paradigm of local sustainability. Hawaii deserves that. MTW


MAUICOUNTY

COCONUT WIRELESS THE WEEK IN REVIEW

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 The Great Furlough War of 2009 rages on: As various labor unions filed lawsuits, the head of the Hawaii Government Employees Association, Randy Perreira, released a statement calling Gov. Lingle’s cost-cutting move “unfair” and “unconstitutional.” Lingle’s counterpunch? If you defeat the furloughs, I’ll issue layoff notices—as many as 10,000 of them. The law is murky, meaning the governor’s right to go unilateral and circumvent the collective bargaining process is open to interpretation. One thing is clear: Lingle may be a lame duck, but she’s still quacking.

THURSDAY, JUNE 18 Yes, the bad lame duck jokes are gonna keep coming ’til 2010.

Photo: hawaii.gov

FRIDAY, JUNE 19 By now you’ve surely heard that, according to a widely disseminated report by Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper, North Korea is planning to launch a missile in Hawaii’s direction, possibly on July 4. Though it’s believed the missile’s range is insufficient to reach us, military officials and the Obama Administration say they’re preparing contingencies just in case. And we’re left to wonder: is North Korea really trying to instigate an armed conflict with the United States? Are they that crazy? The North’s motives are shrouded in mystery, but ailing “Dear Leader” Kim Jong Il is reportedly planning to hand the reins to his youngest son,

BY JACOB SHAFER JACOB@MAUITIME.COM

Kim Jong Un, in the near future. At a time when the country could appear weak and rudderless, the Kims (who have held onto power since the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea was born) are trying to project an air of strength and defiance. So goes the theory. Anyway, whatever the impetus behind the North’s posturing (and whatever the outcome) one thing is certain: there will be a lot of wild rumors and hysterical misinformation floating around. To be jittery is natural; to be alert is wise. But remember: verify reports— especially those from less-than-credible sources, aka a text message from your friend’s sister or the mumblings of some dude at the bar—before you go scrambling into your makeshift bomb shelter, arms laden with canned goods… In other, related news: Seizing the opportunity to press the hot button and revive an evergreen Republican issue, Gov. Linge is making noise about ramping up missile defense spending. Never mind that more than $100 billion has already been spent on missile defense, and groundbased interceptors have been deployed to Hawaii and Alaska. Or that Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (a Bush era holdover who is certainly no dove) said, in a June 17 AP report, that “some of the program was wasteful or unrealistic.” Hey, “wasteful and unrealistic”—wasn’t that our foreign policy slogan for the last eight years?

SATURDAY, JUNE 20 Last week we told you about mounting tension between Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls Rep. Neil Abercrombie and Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann. Well, the other side’s got infighting of its own. That Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona is the odds-on favorite to earn his party’s nomination is no secret, but his opponent, attorney John Carroll, says Aiona’s front-runner status has translated into a near coronation, with little or no separation between the Hawaii Republican Party headquarters and Duke’s campaign war room. Carroll’s campaign manager, Eric Ryan, isn’t pulling punches. “We’re all supposed to be Republicans, playing fair and honest,” Ryan told the AP. “But if they’re going to cheat, they’re going to pay.” As a party stalwart and Lingle’s boy, the smart money’s on Aiona to get the nod. But it’s always nice to see a politician bloodied early in the fight… In other news: The term “senseless killing” gets thrown around a lot, to the point where it’s lost some of its meaning. Either all killing is senseless, in which case it goes without saying, or certain killings are especially senseless, in which case we should reserve the phrase only for those instances. Anyway—that bit of linguistic parsing was a set-up for one of the more disturbing stories of the year: according

to the Honolulu Advertiser, someone shot two monk seals to death on Kauai; one of the seals had recently given birth to pups. Monk seals are, of course, extremely endangered (their population in the Hawaiian Islands hovers around 1,000, though they’ve been making a small comeback) and harming or killing one can land you a hefty fine and prison time. But forget that—what the hell is the point? Especially if you’re just going to leave the poor beasts to rot (and serve as evidence)? Really, this is the sort of thing that saps my faith in humanity.

SUNDAY, JUNE 21 Yet another casualty of the recession: A program that helped current and former inmates put their lives back together through treatment, education and training (you know, that often-ignored “rehabilitation” part of the equation) is being gutted because of budget woes. The program, which goes under the acronym BEST and is an offshoot of Maui Economic Opportunity (MEO), will have to lay off more than half its employees and dramatically scale back services, according to a recent Maui News report. Finding victims in these lean times is easy; almost everyone has been impacted in some way. But it’s always worse for those on the bottom of the heap—people who have, through bad luck, bad decisions or some combination of the two, found themselves teetering on the brink of the proverbial cracks. Nothing new, but still, as MEO chief Sandy Baz succinctly put it, “sad.”

MONDAY, JUNE 22 Want to tell Gov. Lingle what to do? OK, it’s more suggest what you’d like her to do—but still. It’s participating, which is good. Here’s what I’m blathering about: applications are being accepted through June 30 for positions on the Neighbor Island advisory councils, which are meant to bring non-Oahu perspectives to the table, especially on energy issues. Maui, Molokai and Lanai each have a council. For info, Maui folks should call 243-5796 or send an e-mail to mauigov@hawaii.gov c/o Governor’s

You’re not king, Duke. Liaison George Kaya; if you’re on Molokai or Lanai, call 586-0034 or e-mail charen.ching@hawaii.gov.

TUESDAY, JUNE 23 According to a report in today’s Honolulu Advertiser, state officials are fighting to bring liquidation proceedings in the Superferry case to Hawaii. Where are they being held, you ask? Delaware. That makes sense when you remember Delaware is a known corporate haven; more than half of publicly traded U.S. companies are headquartered there, including Hawaii Superferry. The First State (how’s that for a nickname?) has lax usury laws (hello skyrocketing interest rates) and charges no income tax on companies that don’t do business in the state. Under federal law, corporations are bound—for the most part—only by the laws of the state in which they’re incorporated, even if they expand their reach to all the other 49 states. So basically, Delaware, which has about 100,000 less residents than Honolulu, gets to set the rules for the rest of us, and there’s not a damn thing we can do about it, except, I guess, move to Delaware. Isn’t democracy great? MTW

OVERHEARD...

point of arm hair?"

"What's the

- Man outside Foodland in Kihei

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

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f our calculations are correct, you’re reading the 500th issue of Maui Time Weekly. Those 500 issues have been produced over a 12-year span dating back to 1997; during that time, the paper has gone through a lot of growth and change. One thing that hasn’t changed? Our independence. Being independent isn’t always easy. Often, it means we’re swinging without a safety net. At the same time, it means we can swing pretty hard and pretty high. As a recognized alternative weekly, part of our job is to take aim at Maui’s rich and powerful, to expose corruption and malfeasance and, hopefully, to inform and protect our readers in the process. Have we ever regretted something we’ve written? Sure. Do we sometimes look back and wish we could change a story? Of course. But in all, we’re pleased with the work we’ve done, even as we’re acutely aware of the work that’s left to do. As we prepare to launch our next 500 issues—and to keep growing, innovating and embracing cutting-edge technologies, just as we’ve done with pdf and digital formats, podcasting and microblogging—we’d like to pause and look back at a few stories we’re especially proud of. In some cases we were the only ones willing to cover a certain aspect of these stories, or to cover them at all. Thanks for your support, input, criticism (constructive and otherwise) and for helping us remain a truly independent voice.

FLIPPER BEHIND BARS (vol. 4, issue 7) The story: In September 2000, the County Council approved a project slated for North Kihei. Dubbed Maui Nui Park, the facility was to include a “lagoon” boat ride, a luau amphitheater, a wedding chapel and educational exhibits on Hawaii-related topics like volcanology. Oh, and giant tanks for four performing “research” dolphins courtesy of the Oahu-based Dolphin Institute. “The dolphins, though less than 100 yards from the ocean, will likely not see, taste or smell it,” wrote Maui Time contributor Cynthia Matzke. “They will be surrounded on three sides by heavily used roadways, in arguably the island’s worst traffic intersection.” The aftermath: According to Councilmember Jo Anne Johnson, the initial draft of the project had nothing to do with dolphins, which is why the council approved it at first. But after the “dolphinarium” was added to the plan—and an onslaught of public outcry ensued—the county passed an HSD ordinance barring captive display of cetaceans. “Nobody wanted it,” said Johnson in a recent interview. “Nobody supported it.” After the ordinance passed, Johnson said the council got letters from all over the world thanking them for the bold move. ACCESS DENIED (vol. 4, issue 12) The story: It’s home to two well-known West side surf spots, but management at the waterfront Puamana condo complex decided to crack down on surfers cutting through the area to access the beach. Contributor Nicole Chipman reported on confrontations

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

between surfers and security guards at the complex, and questioned whether the property owners were honoring state beach access laws. “All of the beaches in the state of Hawaii are public property up to the vegetation line,” she wrote, “though many resorts have planted a vegetation line of their own and thus extended the perimeter of their property.” Puamana even constructed a gate across the complex’s main entry in an attempt to make it clear that outsiders weren’t welcome. “They act like they are afraid,” said surfer Wayne “Wayno” Cochran. “They might as well get barbed wire and gunners to guard their property.” The aftermath: As contributor (and surfer) Beau Ewan’s Febrary 2008 story, titled “What’s happening to beach access?”, clearly demonstrates, the issue is still very much alive. Ewan mentions getting yelled at by security when he tried to access the spot. However, Ewan wrote, “Paumana PUD (Private Urban Development) is currently listed in the Maui County 2005 Shoreline Access Report’s inventory of public shoreline access points. The only problem is that surfers somehow have to pass through locked gates and harassment from security personnel before making it into the lineup.”

PAY TO PLAY (vol. 9, issue 9) The story: In August 2005, The Maui News ran a prominent front-page story titled “She Craves a Normal Life” about Iraq War veteran Jessica Lynch. The writer of the piece acknowledged that West Virginia-based Ogden Newspaper Group, which owns The Maui News and many other publications, paid for Lynch’s travel expenses. That this was a bald-faced violation of journalistic ethics may have been lost on Maui’s daily newspaper, but it wasn’t lost on Maui Time editor Anthony Pignataro, who wrote: “Behold: The Maui News is now a travel agency! Who cares that Lynch hasn’t been news for over a year—we’ll fly her out here at our expense and then just write a story about that.” Pignataro went on to quote Maui News publisher Joe Bradley, who said he hoped “that Jessica’s trip will be seen as a tribute to all of those in the military who have served in the Middle East.” Concluded Pignataro: “In other words…Ogden Newspaper Group…paid Lynch to fly to Maui so its papers could then write a big story about her that would generate a lot of publicity about what a great a company it is.” Pignataro’s piece was picked up by prominent journalist and blogger Jim Romenesko. Photo: Zuma Press/ Jeffrey Geller


THE SORDID TALE OF BOB AWANA (vol. 10, issue 51) The story: In June 2007, Maui Time contributor Greg Mebel chased a story, based on an anonymous tip, involving Gov. Linda Lingle’s Chief of Staff Bob Awana, a mysterious Filipino woman named Jullie Mae and an Indian man named Rajadatta Paktar, who was thrown in a Honolulu jail for alleged blackmail. It was a juicy scoop that no other Hawaii papers seemed to be touching. In the story, Mebel interviewed Charudatta Paktar, the brother of the jailed man, who said Mae was called on to “entertain” Awana and other state officials when they visited the Philippines. Wrote Mebel: “When I asked if this included sexual entertainment, Chardutta said, ‘Yes.’” Mebel also spoke to Awana, who refused to explain why he was the target of a blackmail scheme. “When I asked for a copy of the emailed blackmail or letters from Jullie Mae, Awana declined,” wrote Mebel, “saying he’d ‘turned all of that over to the FBI.’” The aftermath: Less than 24 hours after Mebel contacted Awana, the Honolulu Advertiser ran a front-page story titled “Lingle’s top aide helped FBI sting.” The story didn’t discuss the reason for the alleged extortion or any wrongdoing on Awana’s part. Gov. Lingle called on Awana to resign “immediately” in light of the blackmailing issue and another, unrelated corruption investigation. Then on July 5, 2007, the Honolulu StarBulletin picked up the story. Connecting the dots between Mebel’s reporting and the Advertiser story, the Star-Bulletin ran an op-ed calling on the governor “to explain why Awana’s resignation was necessary ‘immediately’ last week but not when, according to Awana, she learned about the allegations more than a year ago.” I JUNE 14, 2007

I VOLUME 10

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A DUI IN THE LC (volume 11, issues 43 & 46) The story: Even casual readers know that Maui Time keeps tabs on the county Department of Liquor Control in our column, LC Watch. It’s a lonely beat, and our criticisms of the department’s rules and procedures often fall on deaf ears. But LC Watch got concrete results in early 2008. James Viela of Wailuku had just been tapped by Mayor Charmaine Tavares to serve on the Liquor Commission. Viela had previously served on the LC’s Adjudication Board from 2000 to 2004. Digging through the criminal justice database, editor Pignataro discovered that Viela was arrested for DUI in March 2005 and subsequently plead no contest to the charge. Noted Pignataro: “It’s unknown whether the County Council or Mayor Charmaine Tavares knew (or cared) about Viela’s DUI when she nominated him to the Liquor Commission. There is no space on the official application form for prior criminal convictions.” The aftermath: Two months after starting his five-year term on the commission, Viela resigned. He cited “personal reasons,” though he admitted to Pignataro, “I resigned when your article came out in the paper.” But the case was about more than Viela. As Pignataro pointed out: “[A]nyone applying for a liquor license needs to disclose any and all criminal convictions ‘other than a minor traffic violation,’ but those on the Liquor Commission who approve all new licenses do not.”

NISHIKI GETS A LOAN (vol. 12, issues 22 & 23) The story: One of the most heated races in the 2008 election was the South Maui County Council scuffle between Wayne Nishiki and Don Couch. The two men traded frequent barbs, with Nishiki painting Couch as too developer-friendly and casting himself as an independent voice with no ties to the island’s big business interests. In a Maui Time interview conducted two weeks before the election, Nishiki told us he hadn’t “taken any money from developers,” adding, “No developer is going to come into my office. I’m sorry, that’s not how I operate.” In the end, Maui Time endorsed Nishiki, and he went on to a narrow win. Then, less than three weeks after the election, new information came to light: according to an ethics form filed months after the deadline, Nishiki accepted a $100,000 personal loan from developer Everett Dowling while out of office. We

broke the story, and the following week rescinded our endorsement, writing: “It should never come as a surprise when a politician is shown to be less than honest. But we believed what Nishiki told us—and more important, what he told the people of Maui. He let us all down.” The aftermath: The loan revelation set off a firestorm of criticism, especially from Couch supporters, and caused Nishiki supporters to circle the wagons. The county Board of Ethics launched (and recently concluded) an investigation into the issue. The contents of the board’s findings are sealed—but Nishiki remains in office and will almost certainly serve out his term. The real test of his reputation will come if he decides to seek reelection.

SINKING THE SUPERFERRY (vol. 12, issue 38) The story: The Hawaii Superferry was a frequent target of criticism in these pages, both because of the dubious circumstances surrounding its launch and serious questions about its operation and financial viability. The issue came to a head in March, when Rob Parsons wrote a feature titled “Superferry Progress Report.” Parsons gave the vessel grades in a number of areas, including: environmental safety/protection (“D”); government integrity/accountability (“D”); and, wise use of taxpayer’s money (“F”). The story concluded: “The infusion of large amounts of capital to bolster HSF by CEO John Lehman…has led many to believe he is less interested in seeing HSF succeed financially and more interested in doing a test run for the prototype Joint High Speed Vessel program. It is widely believed that Lehman’s investments in shipbuilding could be the principal reason for his involvement in promoting FREE HSF, as an awarded Pentagon contract to construct the aluminum-hulled JHSV fast-catamarans could be worth billions of dollars.” The story was picked up and disseminated by blogs from Oahu to San Francisco. The aftermath: On March 16, less than a week after Parsons’s story appeared, the Hawaii Supreme Court ruled that Act 2—the special law passed by the legislature and signed by Gov. Lingle that allowed the Superferry to operate without a completed Environmental Impact Statement—was unconstitutional. The ruling shut HSF down, despite protests from Lingle and other officials (and a number of Hawaii residents who supported the ferry). New developments in April bolstered Parsons’s assertion that HSF was put in the water with ulterior motives. As editor Jacob Shafer noted in an April 7 Coconut Wireless entry: “[I]n November the Defense Department awarded a contract to build high-speed military transport ships to Austral USA, the company behind...the Superferry!…[CEO Tom] Fargo offered a telling ‘no comment.’ Which brings us to this juicy nugget from the Press-Register of Mobile, Alabama, new home of the Alakai: ‘Industry analyst Tim Colton said the military is a natural fit for the ferries, now adorned with colorful swimming manta rays. ‘Any day now, they’ll be painted gray,’ Colton said.’” THURSDAY, MARCH 12

2009

VOLUME 12

ISSUE 38

MAUITIME.COM

TrendSetters! SOMETHING IN THE WIND (vol. 2, issue 3) We’ve been focusing on political issues, but that’s not all Maui Time is about. Especially in the early days, a huge part of the paper was dedicated to covering the local entertainment and water sports scenes. In the summer of 1998, contributor Dave Sweedler predicted the popularity of kite boarding when most media outlets didn’t even know it was a sport: “For years, people have migrated to the Valley Isle to chalk out new ways to test the boundaries between man, wind and water,” wrote Sweedler. “This is the [dawn] of kite surfing.” Sweedler acknowledged that old school surfers would resist the new sport, just as they resisted wind surfing and other newfangled trends (and just as some today decry standup paddle boarding). But, in the end, he wrote, “We are soon to see a new wind blowing.” MTW

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

Photo by Ingrid Taylar

The aftermath: The prescience of Pignataro’s critique was revealed in March 2006, when Ogden was again accused of pay to play journalism, this time involving a considerably more powerful player. As Pignataro noted in a Coconut Wireless entry: “Ogden helped pay President George W. Bush’s expenses when he visited [West Virginia] to press the flesh and hold one of his town hall meetings.” The story was also noted by a Washington Post media critic, who called the move a “journalistic blunder.”

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Betty set go New eatery breathes life into old 505 hangout ears ago, back in the day when people dialed up to the Internet and tweeting was still something cheerful birds did in the morning, Maui Time staffers crammed into a tiny little office upstairs from what is now Betty’s Beach Cafe. In those days of writing

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articles on cocktail napkins and delivering papers from the basket of a beach cruiser, the restaurant downstairs was a dusty old joint called Hecocks, where one could often find Holoholo Girl Samantha Campos sipping martinis and collecting fodder for her weekly column. It’s a sentimental spot. But now Maui Time has spacious new headquarters in Wailuku and, after nearly a year of emptiness, the shiny, new Betty’s has cleared the dust and breathed new life into the location. In fact, the whole 505 center is getting a bit of a facelift after being hit hard by the slow economy. Shops that had closed their doors are reopening, while trendy clothes stores, activity stands, spas and—gasp!—a night club fill the empty spaces. Leading the way is the enthusiastic Betty’s, where I have been a regular basically since they opened. Wise enough to know they’re in a tough spot

for business, Betty’s came out of the gate offering great happy hour specials, like the $2 margarita, from 2-5pm every day, and bottomless champagne mimosas for $10 every Sunday for brunch. They’re also carrying on an old Hecocks tradition—serving whole Maine lobsters on Wednesdays for less than the price of two movie tickets. Recently, the boyfriend and I strolled in for dinner. Luckily for me, we arrived on “birthday night,” which happens once a month. Since my birthday falls in the month of June, I was awarded a special table, colorful leis and a whole bottle of California champagne for $1. Happy birthday to me! From our table we had an unobstructed view of the sun setting dramatically over the ocean and free back row seats to the Feast at Lele luau. The menu is unpretentious; burgers, salads and sandwiches are the main offerings. We started with hot wings, meaty little chicken drumettes with a spicy vinegar sauce and ranch for dipping. As we were enjoying them the luau started, and we surveyed the crowd of well-dressed visitors sipping their mai-tais while watching a handful of scantily clad dancers perform the hula. For dinner I ordered the mahi mahi tacos. My two tacos came out piled with fresh lettuce and pico de gallo, lots of cilantro, homemade salsa and a side of chili-flavored pinto beans. I offered one up to my boyfriend in exchange for a go at his plate of kalua pork. His generous portion of flavorful pig meat was perfectly salty and smoky, accompanied by tender cabbage and rice. It was a meal that could have come strait from a local auntie’s kitchen. For dessert we shared a very satisfyingly warm, gooey apple crisp topped with Roselani vanilla ice cream. One of my favorite things about Betty’s is how they do simple things well. They’re not trying to be

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n’t claim to be something it’s not, but here’s what it is: well worth checking out. MTW Photos: (top to bottom) bartender Jessica and manager Misty; mahi mahi tacos; chicken wings; apple crisp.

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Steel the one Henry Kaleialoha Allen carries on a musical legacy t’s the musical equivalent of sea glass, a sound drenched in Malibu rum and day-old sunshine. In its more lackadaisical moments you can almost hear the sunburned steps of slowdancing honeymooners mixed in with the beats. Uptempo, it lends itself to old-timey mischief.

I

Henry Kaleialoha Allen Steel Guitar Festival June 26-28 at the Kaanapali Beach Hotel It may be one of the definitive elements of Hawaiian music, but don’t call it Hawaiian guitar (a misnomer that’s actually an alternate handle for slack key). Although it’s one of

eran musician whose life’s work has helped keep the form alive. County Councilwoman Joanne Johnson played a key role in getting Maui resident and steel guitar veteran Henry Kaleialoha Allen recognized in Maui Nui. A ceremony that took place at the county building this past Tuesday made it official, and this weekend’s Steel Guitar Festival (part of the Maui Invitational Music Festival) will further serve to recognize and celebrate his legacy. “I’m really honored to even know Henry,” Johnson says. “He’s just done so much to help perpetuate steel guitar.” In addition to years spent performing in venues ranging from radio (Hawaii Calls) to cruise ships (which he still does to this day), Allen has helped immortalize steel guitar by teaching and writing textbooks. What makes steel guitar, which was invented in the Isles more than a century ago, different from plain old guitar is that its strings are lifted another half-inch off

When it comes to playing Hawaiian steel guitar as well as ukulele, Allen can literally say he wrote the book. the sonic components to Hawaiiana—evoking images of postwar tourism posters—it may be a dying art form. Yet some have set out to preserve it, as the designation of June as Steel Guitar Month, among other things, clearly demonstrates. Especially during this week, Hawaiian steel guitar, also known as kika kila, will get its due in Maui County. And so will a vet-

the fretboard. This makes it impossible to play in a traditional manner. It requires a heavy steel slide, which blurs the notes in a most intoxicating manner. Born in Hilo and raised in the Manoa Valley, Allen started on ukulele in the third grade, but later embraced his signature instrument as well as jazz guitar. Early on, he says, he was determined to learn from the best. At one point this meant choosing Honolulu’s Washington Intermediate over Kamehameha Schools since he favored the former’s music program. “I made sure that the teachers were good,” Allen says. “The good school was Washington Intermediate.” Highlights of his early career include being a frequent guest on Hawaii Calls, an emblematic radio show that ran

from 1935 to 1975, playing the kind of hapa haole numbers that continue to brand Hawaii in the minds of suncreenslathered Minnesotans to this day. Allen got his union card (Honolulu Local 677), which enabled him to play the hotels in Waikiki (there were, of course, far fewer in those days). He then had a stint on the Mainland—namely LA (where the musicians’ union cards read Local 47, he says). It was in these early days that he was shown the path. “In your younger years you have to decide what you’re gonna do,” Allen says. “In the musicians’ union you find out who you are.” He went on to share venues with the likes of Don Ho (Greek Theatre) and George Benson (Castle Theater) and to work in television and film (he says he helped ensure correct pronunciation of the “Hawaiian Wedding Song” in the 1961 Elvis film Blue Hawaii). He relocated to Maui in 1971. “I liked Maui,” Allen remembers, “because they had no traffic and the beaches were free.” But it was in producing educational materials where he truly shined—when it

comes to playing Hawaiian steel guitar as well as ukulele, this guy can literally say he wrote the book. He has transcribed thousands of pages of music into three-ring binders, an epic collection he keeps in his home. “I’m running out of shelves,” Allen says of his everexpanding library. His two textbooks—one on steel and one on uke—are housed at Johns-Hopkins University’s Peabody Conservatory of Music. “I feel really honored to be there,” he says. He has already been honored at the state level by both the Senate and the governor’s office, and even has a day named in his honor (April 4). The Valley Isle has recently dedicated the month of June to the man and his instrument. This comes at an uncertain time for a culture and customs—musical and otherwise—that have been around for generations but now have to compete with influences from every corner of the globe. If Henry Allen has anything to say about it, steel guitar will stand the test of time. MTW

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

17


FILMCRITIQUE

BY BARRY WURST II BARRY@MAUITIME.COM

Modest ‘Proposal’ Take one sitcom setup, add two likable stars, mix in a dash of predictable plot twists and serve andra Bullock stars as a hardas-nails publishing editor who terrorizes every employee under her, particularly her longsuffering assistant (Ryan Reynolds), who eventually must pretend to be her fiancée in order to prevent her from

S

The Proposal

★★★ ★★★ Rated PG-13/107 min.

being deported back to Canada. To pull off this ruse, the couple must pretend to be madly in love during a weekend trip back home to Alaska, where the parents of Reynolds’s character, played by Craig T. Nelson and Mary Steenburgen, have to believe

18

JUNE 25, 2009

their clean-cut son and his visibly distant, testy boss are head over heels. This is standard sitcom stuff, with jokes you can see coming minutes away and oneliners delivered with pauses long enough to insert a laugh track. Yet the movie works better than it should because of the performances. Bullock hasn’t been this good in a comedy since the first Miss Congeniality and, while her character is never as terrifying as Meryl Streep’s in The Devil Wears Prada, she underplays it perfectly and is suitably nasty. Likewise, Reynolds tones down his usually smarmy, wink ’n smirk act and is recognizably human, even vulnerable. Despite some amusing bits, the movie contains what I refer to as the Irredeemable Moment—a scene so bad, the movie can never recover. Where Spider-Man 3 had that musical number, The Proposal has a sequence in the woods in which Bullock encounters Betty White, playing her standard Wacky Grandma role. For reasons too cringe-inducing to divulge, White dons a Native American

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Nothing like getting fondled by a Golden Girl. headdress and does a painfully unfunny bonfire dance that she coerces Bullock into joining. The movie never bounces back and has a third act that uses every tired romantic comedy cliché in the book. What makes a movie like Sleepless in Seattle or My Best Friend’s Wedding special is the attention to character and a plot that teases expectations. Here we get a climax Xeroxed from dozens, maybe thousands of other, better screenplays. You can probably read my brief story synopsis, guess how the movie ends and be exactly right. Though it exceeded my low expectations, the film settles for being decent

when it could’ve been special. It has two leads in their element, gorgeous scenery, the equally gorgeous Malin Ackerman, a handful of really funny moments and the game-for-anything Betty White who, sans headdress, steals pretty much every moment she has, even in a movie this unexceptional. Bullock’s career has survived awful sequels (Speed 2 and Miss Congeniality 2) and, like Reynolds, she can hold her own in films both deadly serious and laughout-loud funny. She needs to hop onto a better comedy vehicle and not settle for The Next Proposal. MTW


MOVIECAPSULES Maui Film Festival Candlelight Cinema Check back next week.

New This Week MY SISTER’S KEEPER - PG13 - Drama When faced with the death of their daughter via leukemia, a married couple makes a difficult choice that raises ethical questions. 109 min. TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN - PG13 - Art, Foreign - If there are two things I can’t get enough of, they are sequels and giant robots. In this case, the revisited giant robot race once again battles other giant robots that happen to be evil. 150 min.

Now Showing ANGELS AND DEMONS - PG13 Thriller - Based on the smash hit Dan Brown airplane page-turner of the same name, this flick follows a similar arc as that of Brown’s ‘Da Vinci Code’ in that it involves uncovering some trippy cryptoconspiracy type stuff involving the Vatican. I’m guessing this, much like the novel, will be more widely consumed aboard aircraft than anyplace else. 138 min.

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

party and end up having to piece together what happened after they booze copiously. They’re already making a sequel to it. I’m not joking. 100 min. IMAGINE THAT - PG - Family - Eddie Murphy portrays a financial executive who turns to his daughter’s dream world of magic as his career takes a nose dive. 97 min. LAND OF THE LOST - PG13 - Comedy - Will Ferrell plays a scientist who gets sucked into a vortex that spits him out in a land ruled by dinosaurs. Unfortunately it’s the Jurassic (judging by the T-rex) and not the Cretacious, when dinosaurs where smaller. 93 min. NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM II - PG - Comedy - A Ben Stiller-induced security guard finds himself in yet another museum wherein a pharaoh’s curse makes stuff come to life at night. This time it’s the Smithsonian. It’s got Steve Coogan and Christopher Guest, among others, which is what confuses me. 105 min. THE PROPOSAL - PG13 - Romance - This is one of those romantic comedies that periodically gets pushed out. Sandra Bullock is a domineering executive who happens to be Canadian. She marries her assistant in order to stay in the U.S. Laughs presumably ensue (for some). 107 min. STAR TREK - PG13 - Sci-Fi - This babe-fest is a prequel to the series of events we all know and love from the original flicks and TV shows, with a few time travel-related mind humps thrown in for good measure. Plus: Simon Pegg - of ‘Shaun of the Dead’ fame - plays Scotty. I would go full nerd for Simon Pegg. 126 min.

SHOWTIMES Front Street Theater 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-F until 6:30pm, Sa-Su until 3:30pm, Discount Tue), Imagine That - PG - Th only 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Land of the Lost - PG13 - Th-Tu 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 My Sister’s Keeper - PG13 - F-Tu 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 The Proposal - PG13 - Th 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30. F-Tu 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9. Taking of Pelham 123 - R - Th-Tu 6:45, 9:15 Year One - PG13 - Th-Tu 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45.

Ka’ahumanu 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 1-800326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Night at the Museum II - PG - Th-Tu 11:30, 2, 4:30, 7 The Proposal - PG13 - Th-Tu 10:40, 11:45, 1:05, 2:10, 3:30, 4:35, 5:55, 7, 8:20, 9:25, 10:45 Taking of Pelham 123 - R - Th-Tu 12:30, 3, 5:20, 8, 10:20 Terminator: Salvation - R - Th-Tu 9:30

Hawaii’s

FASTEST INTERNET SERVICE Upgrade to Road Runner and get TWO MONTHS FREE! Offer expires June 30, 2009

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - PG13 F-Sa 11, 2:10, 5:20, 8:30, 11:40. Su-Tu 10, 11, 1:10, 2:10, 4:20, 5:20, 7:30, 8:30.

Kukui Mall 1819 South Kihei Road, 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Departures - Unrated - F-Sa 11, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10. Su-Tu 11, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15.

Call 643-2337

*Looney Tunes, characters, names and all related indicia are trademarks of Warner Bros. 2009

Easy Virtue - PG13 - Th only 2:10, 7 The Hangover - R - F-Sa 11:10, 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8, 10:15. Su-Tu 11:10, 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8. Taking of Pelham 123 - R - F-Sa 11, 3:20, 9:20. Su-Tu 11, 4:30. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - PG13 F-Sa 10, 1:10, 4:20, 7:30, 10:40. Su-Tu 10, 1:10, 4:20, 7:30.

Maui Mall Megaplex Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm), Angels and Demons - PG13 - Th 3, 8:30. F-Tu 12:10, 3:15, 6:20, 9:20. The Brothers Bloom - PG13 - Th only1:35, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Drag Me To Hell - R - Th 1:45, 4:10, 6:35, 9. FTu 1:45, 4:10, 6:35, 9. The Hangover - R - Th 1:40, 2:10, 4:05, 4:35, 6:30, 7:05, 8:55, 9:25. F-Tu 1:40, 2:10, 4:05, 4:35, 6:30, 7:05, 8:55, 9:25.

Giant robots! Run! THE BROTHERS BLOOM - PG13 Comedy - A pair of strapping brothers (Mark Ruffalo and Adrien Brody) attempt to con money out of a young heiress, who happens to be pretty. Mishaps ensue. 115 min.

TAKING OF PELHAM 123 - R - Thriller - A remake of a 1974 film involving a group of terrorists taking over a subway train. Passengers are held hostage and are likely subjected to suspense-filled situations. 106 min.

DEPARTURES - Unrated - Art, Foreign This Japanese film follows a young cellist whose orchestra is dissolved. Jobless, he spots a job opening at a place called Departures, which turns out not to be a travel industry like he first thought. 131 min.

TERMINATOR: SALVATION - R - Action Hey, you know what cash cow action franchise hasn’t been revisited on the big screen in a while? Only this time it’s 2018. John Conner is all grown up and presumably dreamy. Humanity is on the brink of eradication. Conner leads the human resistance when a mysterious and equally dreamy stranger shows up. Do the math. 115 min.

DRAG ME TO HELL - R - Horror - When a young, pretty, blonde loan officer evicts an old woman from her home, said loan officer becomes cursed, which turns out to be loads of fun. 99 min. EASY VIRTUE - PG13 - Romance - A young English chap brings his boorish American girlfriend home to meet his stuffy parents. What transpires is a cross between ‘Cool Hand Luke’, ‘Wuthering Heights’ and a fork. 93 min. THE HANGOVER - R - Comedy - A bunch of dudes go to Vegas for a bachelor

UP - PG - Animation - The latest from Pixar chronicles the voyage of an old widower who, after tying a balloon or two to his house, is bound for South America, where he has dreamed of visiting all his life. 96 min. YEAR ONE - PG13 - Comedy - Michael Cera and Jack Black are two hunter-gatherer types who get banished from society and have to fend for themselves. A timely post-apocalyptic howto. 100 min.

Imagine That - PG - Th 12, 12:30, 2:30, 5, 6:05, 7:30, 10. F-Tu 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. Land of the Lost - PG13 - Th 12:35, 2:35, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. F-Tu 12:05, 2:35, 4:55, 7:20, 9:45. My Sister’s Keeper - PG13 - F-Tu 1:35, 4:15, 6:55, 9:35 Star Trek - PG13 - Th 1:50, 4:40, 7:35. F-Tu 1:50, 4:40, 7:35. Up - PG - Th 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30; 3D 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9. F-Tu 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30; 3D: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9. Year One - PG13 - Th 12, 1:25, 2:25, 3:50, 4:50, 6:15, 7:158:40, 9:40. F-Tu 12, 1:25, 2:25, 3:50, 4:50, 6:15, 7:15, 8:40, 9:40.

Wharf Cinema Center 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day), The Hangover - R - F-Tu 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45. Sa-Su 2:15, 4:45, 7:15. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - PG13 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:10 Up - PG - F-Tu 1:45, 4:125, 6:45, 9:15. Sa-Su 11:30, 1:45, 4:125, 6:45, 9:15.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

19


THIS WEEK’S PICKS Slammin’ body

Reggae bomb

Thursday (June 25), 10pm, Casanova, Makawao

Saturday (June 27), 10am-7pm, War Memorial Stadium, Kahului

Body painting is an under-explored and over-sexualized art form. Artist Rachel DeBoer of Fabulous Faces seems to have the market cornered here in terms of paint applied to skin, which is still rather obscure worldwide and unheard of on-island (DeBoer’s “Mona Lisa” is pictured). Tonight she and the MauiSLAM folks will be forging a dual showcase combining slam poetry with live body painting demonstrations. The body painting portion will be inspired by the slam performances, audience response, etc. Slam poets performing will be competing for a $100 prize. The Liquor Control Commission will probably be disappointed to hear that the canvas (i.e. the model) getting painted will be covering all of her Satan parts with valid articles of clothing while on stage during the demonstration—no areolas or merkins (unfortunately) in this PGrated display. Nevertheless, should be a pretty intriguing and probably very titillating night. Combine with beer and enjoy. DJ Boomshot spins beforehand and between sets. $5.

My Paukukala residence is quite proximal to War Memorial Complex. This means that, if the wind is right, I will wake up Saturday morning to blaring live Jawaiian music. (For my neighbors this will probably be a welcome change from the Zappa I am known to blast.) The source of this island music stream is the all-day First Annual 808 Unite concert, brought to us by KPOA and Waiehu Records. It will bring together some of Hawaii’s biggest musical acts, including Ekolu (pictured), Rebel Souljahz, Maoli, Testifiyah, Kealaokala, 3 Scoops of Aloha and many others. The description for this event on BJPenn.com reads “going be one nutts concert!!!”(all in caps). Promoters say the event aims to help support music in schools, which is a damned fine cause if ever there was one. Find tickets at Super Stop (Waiehu and Kahului), Solid Clothing (Queen Kaahumanu Center), Oceans Bar and Grill (Kihei) and West Side Vibes (Lahaina). $20/$30 door. Free for keiki under 10.

THURSDAY

➤➤➤➤➤ FRIDAY ➤➤➤➤➤ SATURDAY ➤➤➤➤➤ SUN

844 FRONT ST., LAHAINA • 667-7758

20

JUNE 25, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600


BY KATE BRADSHAW

London calling

Save this ass

Saturday (June 27), 7:30pm, Seabury Hall Performing Arts Studio, Makawao

Tuesday (June 30), 5:30-10pm, Flatbread Pizza, Paia

If there were a Facebook quiz entitled “Which heavy-boozing early 20th century author are you?” my result would probably be Jack London. At once a conflicted champion of rugged individualism and a staunch socialist, he was impossible to pigeonhole. The first full-length Hollywood feature was based on one of his stories. And though he’s best known for penning Yukon tales like The Call of the Wild, London wrote extensively on his travels in the Pacific Isles. He set his last story, “The Water Baby (Keikiwai),” in the Hawaiian Isles. The story was posthumously published in Cosmopolitan in 1918 (good God! What I wouldn’t do to live in a world where effing Cosmo published the short stories of Jack London), and opens with one of the best religious debates I’ve ever read. This Friday the Ebb & Flow Arts Ensemble is staging a multimedia production of “Keikiwai,” which is a most vivid portrayal of Hawaiian life before all this. Check out the text of this amazing tale at jacklondons.net/water_baby.html. Free.

DAY

The terrible things that humans do to each other have never ceased to amaze me. The fact that our economic system as we know it seems based on people manipulating, lying to, using and abusing one another shows that we value self preservation, or at least comfort, over the well being of others. If individuals have the ability to isolate themselves enough to ruthlessly turn others into means to ends, think about what that implies for sentient beings that aren’t human. Nothing good. But some humans want to make things better for other humans, and even want to help animals. Strange, huh? Flatbread Pizza has been hosting benefits for local nonprofits every Tuesday night for some time now. A portion of proceeds from every pizza bought during peak dinner hours goes to a given nonprofit, as do proceeds from a silent auction held in the bar area. This week Leilani Farm Sanctuary, a Haiku nonprofit that takes in and rehabilitates injured and abused animals, is the beneficiary. Show some love.

➤➤➤➤➤MONDAY ➤➤➤➤➤TUESDAY ➤➤➤➤➤WEDNESDAY

Saturday, June 27 • 8 pm

ROCK K FEST T 2009

FISH H TANK ERIN N SMITH KETTLEE PRIME

Sunday, June 28• 6:30 pm

CELTIC C TIGERS $3

GREEN BOTTLES

all night Sunday!

An evening with

In the heart of Olde Makawao Town

WILD WAHINE WEDNESDAY CASANOVA’S FAMOUS

LADIES NIGHT Q103 and the Big Hawaiian present

Dj Styles

THE EVENING THAT EARNED CASANOVA THE AWARDS

“BEST LATE NIGHT IN MAUI” and “BEST SINGLES SCENE IN MAUI” Music Starts at 10:00pm $10 Cover

Friday, July 3

PAULA FUGA & MIKE LOVE & Special Guests • Tickets on Sale Now!

Spoken Word Competition Live Body Painting Show starts at 9:30pm $5 Cover

KEYS OF CREATION Reggae from Oahu

on Wednesday, July 1

Dining starts at 6pm Music from 7:30pm–9:30pm

MAUI SLAM AND BODY SLAM

Friday June 26th

Sunday, June 28 • 10 pm

WILLIE K MANGO PICKERS

Thursday

June 25th

Saturday

June 27th

KOHOMUA with SUPER DUB 5 $12 Cover

Music Starts at 10:00pm $10 Cover

Sunday

June 28th MANA’O RADIO PRESENTS

UPCOUNTRY SUNDAYS

ACOUSTIC STYLE

with Steve Sargenti, Cyrus Clarke & Tony Zane Music starts at 2pm • $7 Donation

LOCATED AT THE WAILEA BLUE GOLF COURSE (Across from the Kea Lani)

874-1131 • w w w. M u l l i g a n s o n t h e B l u e . c o m

Make it a memorable evening. Dine and dance at Casanova. For dinner reservations call 572-0220 www.casanovamaui.com

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

21


Big Shows

is calling for four male principals, four female princi-

bly sell out quickly. A portion of proceeds from tick-

Pearls for the Cure - A two-day event to help

pals and six female and four male singer/dancers.

et sales go toward an effort to improve living condi-

raise breast cancer awareness. Fri, 6-9 p.m.: Maui

Elmo Makes Music - Fri, Sat & Sun, Jun 26-28.

18+. Bring head shot and sheet music for an

tions in African villages. $65/$55/$45. 7:30 p.m.

guitarist and singer Brian Mansano performs at

That adorable little red Muppet will be rocking out

uptempo musical piece. Call to schedule. Sat 9

Castle Theater, MACC. 242-7469.

the Black Pearl Gallery. Sat, 2-7 p.m.: Author,

on Maui with buds Zoe, Big Bird and others. Tunes

a.m.-2 p.m.; Sun 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Steppingstone

they’ll be playing include “The Hustle,” “Rockin’

Playhouse, Queen Kaahumanu Center, 275 W.

Robin” and, yes, “C is for Cookie.” $10/$20/$33.

Kaahumanu Ave. 877-3369.

Fri.: 7 p.m.; Sat.: 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. & 5:30 p.m.; Sun., 1 & 4:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One

Cameron Way, Kahului. 242-7469.

Tickets on Sale

Jimmy Mac and the Kool Kats - Fri, Jun 26.

3. I’m going to guess that this show will mellow

This dude has been rocking Maui for years with

with island vibe undertones. Find tickets at

covers of beachy classics. Kinda one of those audi-

Mulligan’s on the Blue and Request Music in

about. $5. 9 p.m. Hard Rock Cafe, 900 Front St.

667-7400.

Wailuku. 8 p.m. Mulligan’s on the Blue. 874-1131. Mulan - Thu-Sun, Jul 9-12. This is based on the Disney version, but it is a Maui Academy of the

Texas Ho-Down - In celebration of the upcoming

Performing Arts keiki summer camp performance

staging of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas

type deal. Thu-Sat 7:30 p.m.; Sun 2 p.m.

Maui OnStage presents this Iao mixer event, which

Steppingstone Playhouse, Queen Kaahumanu

features the tunes of Haiku Hillbillys, a performance

Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave. 877-3369.

by the Kit Kat Club and an appearance by Mona’s girls, not to mention cocktails and gourmet pupus. $40. Iao Theater, Wailuku, 242-6969.

10 get in free). 10 a.m.-7 p.m. War Memorial

Stadium, Wailuku.

Flow Arts production is an adaptation of Jack London’s final story, based on a Hawaiian folk legend. See This Week’s Picks for more. 7:30 p.m.

Seabury Hall Performing Arts Studio, 480 Olinda Rd., Makawao. 876-1854.

ly human and very Hawaii. He will be on hand Thursday and Friday evenings. 7-10 p.m. Sargent’s

Fine Arts, 802 Front St. 667-4030.

FRIDAY, JUN 26

p.m. Maui Ocean Center, Maalaea. 270-7075.

annual Chamber of Commerce event will feature a

Sting Guitarist Miller and Grammy-winning pianist

keynote speech/ABBA tribute from none other than

Kater come together for a night of

the adorable Governor Linda Lingle.

very mellow music. $30. 7:30 p.m.

time again. This gigantic MACC fundraiser is considered the wine tasting event of the year, and features musical performances, gour-

olden days after the sun goes down. Films on this topic will also screen. Happens every Friday. $2. 1-

661-3262. Hui No’Eau Membership Meeting - The public is welcome to check out the hui as members vote on the new Board of Directors and discuss the

No’eau

Pete Kater & Dominic Miller - Thu, Jul 23.

Maui Calls - Fri, Aug 14. It’s that

some rare Chinese artifacts and other facets of the

past year’s accomplishments. 3:30 p.m. Hui

Maui Chamber Installation Luncheon - This

SOME HERE

ALL

online

Arts

Center,

2841

Baldwin

Ave,

39th Annual Home Expo - Brought to you by the Maui Contractors’ Association. Friday and Saturday. 4-9 p.m. War Memorial Gym, Kahului.

270-7389. The Little Mermaid - The Children’s Playdance Performing Arts Camp will perform this classic tale about voicelessness and talking fish. 6 p.m. Trinity

by the Sea Episcopal Church, Kihei. 205-3971.

$45 members/$75 nonmembers

Akaku Media Salon Feat. Todd Yamashita

invited

a.m.

- Activist and Molokai Dispatch publisher Yamashita

Fairmont Kea Lani, Wailea. 871-7711.

will discuss media matters with Akaku. $5 suggest-

by

members.

11

Free Class: Evaluating Your Idea - A companion class to

ed donation. 6 p.m. Akaku Studios, 33 N. Dairy

Rd., Kahului. 871-5554.

Starting A Venture in Hawaii, this

Kamaaina Nights - A most KPOA event. Live

CALENDAR

course helps you get a grasp on

entertainment. You know. Free. 6-8 p.m. Queen

on mauitime.com

your vision for your business. 11:30

Kaahumanu Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave.

more. Vintage aloha wear is

On Maui? Really? Bitchen! Aotearoa-based song-

encouraged. $175. 6 p.m. Events Lawn, MACC.

Stage

will be on display. King’s subjects are metal, typical-

and more. Included in park admission. 10 a.m.-3

McCoy Studio Theater, MACC.

Wo Hing After Dark - A chance to check out

8 p.m. Wo Hing Museum, Front Street, Lahaina.

Meet the Artist - The work of sculptor Tim King

Hawaiian entertainment, an ono plate lunch special,

Eddie Vedder - Mon, Jun 29. Eddie Vedder? Really?

MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului. 242-7469.

984-3231.

look at a smalltown brothel frequented by politi-

met food from top chefs and

writer Liam Finn opens. Sold out. Castle Theater,

9 p.m. Maui Community College (OCET), Kahului.

ties including traditional games and crafts, live

242-7469.

Keikiwai - Sat, Jun 27. This multimedia Ebb &

Learn about organic and edible landscaping. $49. 6-

Sun, Jul 10-Aug 2. This musical is a lighthearted

Iao Theater, Wailuku. 242-6969.

Westside Vibes (Lahaina). $20/$30 door (keiki under

and ugly reminders of our unsustainable ways.

The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas - Fri-

cians and others. Fri & Sat, 7:30 p.m.; Sun 3 p.m.

(Kaahumanu Mall), Ocean Bar & Grill (Kihei) and

Wailea. 891-6770.

Grow it, Don’t Mow it - Lawns are wasteful

Makawao. 572-6560.

al music festival is going to be gigantic. Features

Super Stop (Waiehu & Kahului), Solid Clothing

ready to sign books, and talk story. Shops at

No Ka Oi Friday - Enjoy Hawaiian cultural activi-

808 Unite Concert - Sat, Jun 27. This first annu-

Testifiyah, Maoli, Ekolu and more. Find tickets at

Pearl Gallery, Mary Olsen Kelly, will be present

THURSDAY, JUN 25

Paula Fuga, Mike Love & Friends - Fri, Jul.

ence participation deals your mom is always talking

breast cancer survivor, and co-owner of the Black

Events

242-2787 ext. 225.

a.m.-1:30

p.m.

Maui

County

877-3369.

Business Resource Center, Maui Mall. 873-8247.

Henry Kaleialoha Allen Steel Guitar

Sleep with the Sharks - A sleepover for keiki

Festival - Part of this year’s Maui Invitational

in third through eighth grades. Learn about noctur-

Music Festival, this event celebrates the legacy of

The Fixx - Thu, Aug 27. King Michel Productions

nal fish, eat pizza and play educational games.

Allen and the instrument he has helped to promote

brings this 80s fixture to Maui. The Fixx is perhaps

Dinner and breakfast provided. $60. 5:30 p.m.-8

on the Mainland and beyond. Friday is opening

best known for the tune “One Thing Leads to

a.m. Maui Ocean Center,. 270-7075.

night and will feature a workshop and demonstra-

Casting Call: Cabaret - Sat & Sun. Pro-Arts of

Another,” or maybe “Saved by Zero.” $33.50-$43.50.

the Pacific is calling for people to go out for roles in

7 p.m. Maui Theatre, 878 Fronth St. 800-745-3000.

the upcoming production of this super-sexy musical

John Legend - Thu, Sep 10. No way. This most

games and more. 9:30-11 a.m. Wailuku Hongwanji

Tahitian Hula Performance - A most enter-

set in a cabaret in the pre-World War II era. Pro-Arts

excellent young soulful singer/composer will proba-

Mission, 1828 W. Vineyard St. 244-0406.

taining performance by Maui based Tahitian hula

22

JUNE 25, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Wailuku Hongwanji Hoolaulea - A local style celebration involving food, dance, live entertainment

tion with Allen as well. Free. 6-9 p.m. Kaanapali

Beach Hotel, Tiki Terrace. 667-2805.


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

Thursday 06/25

Friday 06/26

Saturday 06/27

Sunday 06/28

Monday 06/29– Wednesday 07/01

House of S.I.N. No cover, 10pm

House Boutique No cover, 10pm

Erin Smith No cover, 10pm

Escape Sundays

MON - A Kettle Prime/Casa Del Sol; TUE - Slackin’ Tuesdays; WED - Dub Step Wednesdays

Tom Cherry Band

Faces Oasis Tribal Mirage

Dr. Nat & Rio Ritmo

Body Slam (Poetry and Body Painting); $5, 10pm

Keys of Creation $10, 10pm

Kohomua/Super Dub 5 $12, 10pm

Upcountry Sundays w/Steve Sargenti; $7; 2pm

WED - Ladies’ Night, $10, 10pm

Alternative Night

TBA

TBA

Teen Night (coming soon)

TUE - Front Street Jam/Open Mic; WED - DJ Rozak (Rock)

Wavetrain $5, 9pm

Studio 142 w/ DJs Ray & Mad Max; $10, 10pm

The Flying Sheep Problem

Paia Fest Manao Radio Benefit

Orin & Junior

Dave Carroll No cover

Dave Carroll No cover

Erin Smith No cover

MON - Peter; TUE - Live Jazz; WED - Whaleshark, No cover

Quiz Night w/ DJ Chile Dog; 8pm

Pau Hanas

Jarod 10pm

Ms. Beaver

MON - Manic Mondays; TUE - Dart Night

Cheryette Sapphire

Homestead

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON - Karaoke; TUE - Pool Tournament; WED - Jam Night

Girly Show $5, 10pm

Ultra Fab w/ DJ Michael Fong; $5, 10pm

Pac Vibe

Karaoke

Karaoke

TUE - Pool Tournament; WED - Ladies’ Night

AMBROSIA 1913 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 891-1011

CAFE MARC AUREL 28 N. Market St. Wailuku - 244-0852

CASANOVA 1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

CELLAR 744 744 Front St., Lahaina 661-3744

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

COOL CAT CAFE Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

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

EHA’S POOL BAR 1234 Lower Main, Wailuku - 242-1177

GIAN DON’S 1445 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-4041

GREEN LEAF SPORTS BAR

Ladies’ Night

1088 Lower Main St., Wailuku - 244-4888

HARD ROCK CAFÉ

MON - Manao Radio Jazz Cafe; TUE - Diana Arp

WED - Wii Game Night; No cover, 10pm

Jimmy Mac & the Kool Kats; $5, 10pm

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH

Rampage

Ko Mele

Manalii

Karaoke Night

MOM - Karaoke Night; TUE - DJ Nexus; WED -Pac Vibe (No cover)

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON-WED - Karaoke

Pio Marasco: Chill’n Deep 9pm

DJ Boomshot $10, 9:30pm

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891–8010

ISANA 515 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-8199

JACQUES 120 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8844

halau Manutea. Free. 6:30 p.m. Maui Mall, 70 E.

kidney transplant fund of a Pukalani man who oth-

Kanahele Room, Kaanapali Beach Hotel, 2525

features live music, food, art and a farmer’s market.

Kaahumanu Ave. 871-1307.

erwise may not have means to afford the proce-

Kaanapali Pkwy. 661-0011.

Free. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 505 Front St., Lahaina. 667-

Obon Festival - Tis the season. A festive and col-

dure. 7-11 a.m. Lihikai Elementary School,

Ileina’s Karaoke Group - A chance to belt out

2514.

orful celebration of departed ancestors. Friday and

Kahului. 873-3033.

some tunes, if you have the guts. Free. 5:30-8 p.m.

Maui Young Business Roundtable BBQ - An

Saturday. 7:30-9:45 p.m. Lahaina Hongwanji

Rummage Sale - Proceeds will benefit Pookela

Queen Kaahumanu Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu

excellent, laid back networking opportunity. Free for

Mission, 551 Wainee St. 661-0640.

Church Youth Group. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Pookela Church,

Ave. 877-3369.

members, $5 for guests. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Polo

Junior Tennis Open - A singles and doubles

200 Olinda Rd., Makawao. 573-0903.

19th Annual Hoolaulea - Event kicks off with

Beach, Wailea. 250-1836.

tournament open to young’ns aged 10 to 18. Friday

Food Garden Workshop - Learn how to turn

opening remarks and a pule and continues with a

SCCA Autocross - This monthly event

to Sunday. $35. Wailea Tennis Club, 131 Wailea Ike

your lawn into something useful, something that

dinnertime performance by Kilohana. A ceremony

demonstrates drivers’ handling ability and the

Pl. 879-1958.

provides food. $45. 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Makawao, call

will recognize the class of 1959. A performance by

overall awesomeness of vehicles. Interested par-

Meet the Artist - The work of Ron Macedo will

for specifics. 268-4095.

Jimmy Mac and the Kool Kats will follow. $40. 5:30-

ties are welcome to join. $25 members, $50

be on display and he’ll be on hand to talk story

Ko’ie’ie Fishpond Workday - Fishponds were

9:30 p.m. St. Anthony Junio-Senior High School,

nonmembers. 8:30 a.m. Maui Raceway Park,

about stuff at this free event. Lahaina Gallery

vital to ancient Hawaiians. ‘Ao’ao O Na Loko I’a O

1618 Lower Main St. 244-4190.

Puunene. 281-1273.

(Lahaina), 727 Wainee Street. 667-7795.

Maui seeks to restore this south Maui fishpond to

Henry Kaleialoha Allen and Friends

Makawao

its original state, and invites the public to come

Concert - Honolulu radio personality Skylark

“Sunday Drive” - Will feature plein air painters

help. 8-11 a.m. South Kihei Road, Kihei. 359-1172.

Rossetti will emcee this, the highlight of the

demonstrating their art. They will likely be inspired

Rummage Sale - Proceeds will benefit the

Hawaiian Steel Guitar Festival Allen brings his

by the scenery up at Ulupalakua. Paintings will be

Gamma Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma a society

unique brand of mellow tropical jazz to the stage.

available for sale. Free. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Tedeschi

of women educators. 8-11 a.m. Kahului School

Akaka & The Islanders. special guest Senator

Winery, Ulupalakua. 572-5979.

Cafeteria. 873-3055.

Brickwood Galuteria and the Colin John Blues Band

Steel Guitar Fest Brunch - Will feature cham-

will also perform. Free. 7 p.m. Kaanapali Beach

pagne and a performance by Alan Akaka and the

Hotel, 2525 Kaanapali Pkwy. 661-0011.

Islanders. 9:30 a.m. Kaanapali Beach Hotel, 2525

SATURDAY, JUN 27 Weekend Herbal Intensive - This two-day workshop will address topics including traditional plant gathering, listening to plants and practitioner-as-shaman.

$149.

10

a.m.-4

p.m.

Makawao. 937-4218. Excel Wrestling Camp - Open to 8-12th Farm Tour and Organic Lunch - An excellent opportunity to take in the sights, tastes and smells of east Maui while learning about Hawaiian agricul-

graders, this three-day camp will take place in the

Garden Farm, Huelo. 572-9300.

Workshops - Today’s free workshops include a

Paia Fest - Over twenty music acts and dozens of

uke demonstration by Henry Kaleialoha Allen (10

local artists and vendors are providing family friend-

a.m.), a steel guitar workshop by Colin John (11

ly entertainment that will benefit nonprofits includ-

a.m.) and a course in the History of Hawaiian steel

ing Maui Food Bank, the Dharma Center, Maui

guitar with Alan Akaka (2 p.m.). Kaanapali Beach

Breast Cancer Fund, and Mana’o Radio. Free. 12-10

Hotel, 2525 Kaanapali Pkwy. 661-0011.

p.m. Paia. 579-9199.

is open to all keiki between the ages of 4 and 14. Swap Meet - From camo hunting gear and koa carvings to vintage aloha postcards and delicate,

Registration occurs in person. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Sports

Authority, Maui Marketplace, Kahului. 442-2919.

locally-crafted jewelry, this place pretty much has it all. Killer produce market, too. Admission: 50 cents. 7 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Community College, Kahului

Harbor side. 877-3100. Rummage Sale - Will help raise money for the

Festival

Kaanapali Pkwy. 661-0011.

Hawaiian

871 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina. 662-3965. Flag Football Registration - This kids league

Guitar

Invitational:

school cafeteria. $75. 9 a.m. Lahaina Intermediate,

ture. Call to register. $35. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Hale Akua

Steel

Paint-Out

Free Film: Legends of Hawaiian - Part of the Maui Invitational Film Festival, this film features

SUNDAY, JUN 28

Henry Kaleialoha Allen and other great purveyors of

Maui Summer Festival - Check out the West

Hawaiian music. A performance by Alan Akaka and

Side’s first annual weekly summer festival, which

the Islanders follows in the Tiki Courtyard. 5 p.m.

Wine Tasting - This time it’s chardonnay. Five of these will be paired with five cheeses. Good times, my friend. $28. 3-5 p.m. Stella Blues, 1279 South

Kihei Rd., # 201. 874-3779.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

23


DA KINE CALENDAR MONDAY, JUN 29 Hula Show - A dazzling and reverent demonstration of this most important art. Free. 10 a.m.

Queen Kaahumanu Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

Leilani Farm Sanctuary Benefit - Bunnies.

Dept. of Health. Free Hepatits A & B Vaccines also

Horsies. Puppies. Leilani Farm Sanctuary rescues

available. Times and locations vary around the

them. Partial proceeds from pizzas sold tonight go

island. 984-2129.

toward this vital nonprofit. 5:30-10 p.m. Flatbread

Low Cost Accupuncture - Mon-Fri. This

Company, 89 Hana Hwy. 808-579-8989.

Upcountry clinic offers treatments for under

Ave. 877-3369.

$30. No appointment necessary. Mon.-Fri., 8-1

WEDNESDAY, JUL 01

DOT Advisory Group Meeting #4 - The pub-

and

lic is welcome to come check out what these

Summer Junior Golf Program - Kids learn

meetings are all about and find out about the Paia

golf. Yay. A six-week session. $60. 3:30-5 p.m.

relief route. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Paia Community

Kaanapali Golf Resort. 661-3691.

Center, Hana Highway. 572-8122.

Workshop: Foundations of Hip Hop - This

4-7.

1170

Makawao

Ave.

(Next

to

Casanova). 276-6037. Maui Singles Investment Club - Tue. This event gives Maui singles a chance to mingle while

TUESDAY, JUN 30

Maui Invitational Music Festival workshop explores

learning about investments. 5:30-7 p.m. Cary &

Eddie’s Hideaway, Kahului. 579-9249.

the origins of this wildly popular musical form. Makawao

Paint-Out

Invitational:

“Harvest Day” - This branch of this annual event will feature plein air artists painting during

Oahu performer John Sypert (iNTREPiD) instructs. $20. 5:30-9 p.m. MACC, One Cameron Way,

Free Yoga Class - Wed. Rejuvenate your senses

Ongoing

able for sale. Free. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 551 Waipoli Rd.,

with this Hatha Yoga class. It takes place on the

Kula. 572-5979. Building Supplies Drive - Mon-Sat. Donate to learn the why and how of starting this type of organization. Free. 12-1 p.m. Maui County

the old. Find supreme deals on building supplies.

together. 5-7 p.m. Island Sign, 355 Hukilike St.,

Kahului. 877-7711.

p.m. 399 N. Market St, Wailuku. 986-8050.

being involved is encouraged to attend this dinner

Biofeedback - Fri. Mary Higgins, QXC/SCIO prac-

on its request for funding to the US

titioner, helps you energetically

Department of Justice that would pro-

program manager position. Visit www.mauicounty.gov and select Departments, Prosecuting Attorney. Cell Phone Recycling - Daily. Donate your old cell phones to help

The MauiTime

Comments section is LIVE & OPEN Go to

www.mauitime.com and sound off!

Maps! Links! Addresses! Phone #s!

only. Sliding scale pricing. 2-5 p.m.

Dragon’s Den. 573-2424. Job Club - Fri. Get help preparing resumes, contacting prospective employers and interviewing. Free.

find a cure for breast cancer. Cell

3-5 p.m. Job Connections of Maui.

phones will be recycled by EPA standards, and

871-4143.

100% of funds raised will go to 2009 Avon Walk for

Papale Pepe Na Kupuna Knitting &

Breast Cancer. Call for time. Island Honda, 110

Crocheting Club - Every Fri & Sat. This group

Hana Hwy; Printer’s Ink, Wailuku Industrial

meets every second Saturday and last Friday to knit

Center. 344-6552.

and crochet caps, scarves and lap blankets for

Daily Yoga - Daily (except Sun & Wed). Yoga class-

chemo patients, Hale Makua and Women Helping

es for all levels are offered in lower Kula.

Women. 1 p.m. Kahului, call for details. 214-9864.

Restorative yoga, asana alignment, vinyasa flow

Habitat for Humanity - Sat. Spend a few hours

and women’s yoga classes. Georgi Abelenda

helping a family in need get secure shelter. 9 a.m.

instructs. Call for more information. Kula. 280-6171.

Call for details. 893-0334.

East End Nature Hike - Daily. A kanaka tour

Boo Boo Zoo Volunteer Orientation - Mon.

guide will lead hikers through the Kipahulu area of

The East Maui Animal Refuge rescues and rehabil-

Haleakala Park, including a bamboo forest,

itates goats, sheep, pigs, deer and the like. This no-

Waimoku Falls and Kapahu Living Farm, which fea-

kill shelter invites the public to come help care for

tures lo’i kalo. An excellent way to learn about the

these adorable little guys. It’s probably one of the

area’s history, nature and culture. Organized by the

most rewarding things one can do. 9 a.m.-12 p.m.

Kipahulu Ohana. 12:30-4 p.m. Kipahulu, Hana

25 Malu Aina Place, Haiku. 572-7964.

Keiki

Neeraja leads kirtan in the tradition of Jai Uttal,

After-School Help - Mon-Fri. Hui Malama

Krishna Das and others. $5-$10. 7 p.m. 115 East

Learning Center offers after-school homework help

Lipoa St. Ste. 202, Kihei. 874-9642.

and classes. Call for directions and hours. 244-5911.

Free

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

day in a toxin-filled world. Walk-ins

on mauitime.com

Ecstatic Chanting Kirtan - Tue. Heather

JUNE 25, 2009

rebalance after living yet another

CALENDAR

side. 248-8558.

24

meeting. 6 p.m. Maui Beach Hotel. 243-7402.

prosecutor’s office seeks comment

vide means for a community violence

Got something to say?

a.m. Waipualani Park, Kihei. 344-8068. Kahului Lions Club - Thu. Anyone interested in

Call for Public Comment - Daily. The county Island Sign are hosting this Maui Chamber get-

green between tennis courts. And it’s free. 8-9:15

Help a needy family build a decent home. 9 a.m.-4

Business Resource Center, Maui Mall. 873-8247. Business Afterhours - The kind folks at

techniques to impress your friends with. Free. 5:45 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-5304.

Kahului. 283-3576.

O’o farm workers’ harvest. Paintings will be avail-

Talk Story: Starting a Nonprofit - A chance

Ukulele Lessons - Tue. Learn some strumming

HIV/Hepatitis

C

Testing

and

Athletic Club Outreach - Every Tue & Thu. Got

Counseling - Mon-Fri. Available from the Hawaii

tough kids? Get them instruction on Olympic


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

Thursday 06/25

Friday 06/26

Saturday 06/27

Sunday 06/28

Monday 06/29– Wednesday 07/01

Vince Esquire Band No cover

Kenny Roberts No cover

Way Back Machine No Cover

Kahala No cover

TUE - Da Ha-Y-ans, No cover WED - Chico & Da Kine, No cover

All Access Smokin Hot Thursdays

Halemanu

KAHALE’S BEACH CLUB 36 Keala Pl., Kihei - 875-7711

KAHULUI ALE HOUSE 355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001

KIMOS

808 Connects’ Hip Hop for All Access Rehab Sundays Peace; 9:30pm

845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

De Aquino Braddahs

Oren & Junior

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

Karaoke

Karaoke

136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

LOS PELONES

MON - Karaoke; TUE - Bring Your Own Uke; WED Movie Night: National Lampoon’s Vacation

Salsa Night $7, 10pm

Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-9900

LULU’S KIHEI 1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944

Salsa w/ Barbara & Neto No cover, 9pm

Hot Heineken Nights 10pm

Junior & da Boys

Rock Fever Remedy 9pm

Pacific Vibes $10, 10pm

All Access Xclusive Saturdays; $10, 10pm

LULU’S LAHAINA Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

TUE - Industry Night Kenny Roberts

MON - Industry Night; TUE - Classic Surf Cinema: Watermen; WED - DJ

MAI TAI LOUNGE 839 Front St., Lahaina - 661-5288

MAUI BREWING CO.

Halemanu No cover, 9pm

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S

The Silky Ringo 9pm

DJ Decka 9pm

DJ Crest 9pm

Soft Rock

MON - Soft Rock; TUE - DJ Decka; WED - Rock Fever Remedy

Curtis Love

Fishtank / Throwdowns / A Kettle Prime

The Mango Pickers

TUE - Louise & Ortiz; WED - Willie K

Wee D’ono No cover, 10pm

The Silky Ringo No cover, 10pm

Yoahmama No cover, 10pm

The Silky Ringo No cover, 10pm

MON - Dubfire, No cover, 10pm; TUE - Unifires; WED Open Mic

808 Connects Hip Hop Party 10pm

All Access DJ LX 9pm

≈Humble Soul $10, 9:30pm

√√Latin Nite 9pm

WED - Wet Wednesdays w/ DJ Blast, No cover, 10pm

Scotty Rotten

Damien Awai

Brian Como & Friends

844 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7758

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

MULLIGAN’S AT THE WHARF Cinema Center, Lahaina - 661-8881

OCEANS BAR & GRILL 1819 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-2414

WED - Open Mic Night

PINEAPPLE GRILLE 200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

weightlifting, power lifting, body building and

Toddler Story Time - Thu. Brush up on the lat-

Hula Show - Every Sat & Sun. Get a taste of

sports-specific weight training by an experienced

est in children’s books with your little one. Free. 10

Hawaiian history and culture. Free. 1 p.m. Maui

team of coaches. Ages 11-19. Free. 4:45-6 p.m. St.

a.m. Makawao Public Library. 573-8785.

Mall, Kahului. 877-8952.

Daily Onsite Coral Reef Naturalist

Mark

Environment

Yu-Gi-Oh - Sat. Little gamester get out your cards

Line Dancing - Every Sun. Practice your tush

Program - Mon-Fri. Learn names of fish you’ve

Episcopal Church, Wailuku. 244-4656.

and get ready for a Yu-Gi-Oh tournament! Free. 3

push ya’ll and come on down for some line dancing

seen while snorkeling and how to protect Maui’s

Summer Junior Golf Program - Kids learn

p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-4766.

by the Maui Paniolo Posse. Lessons: 6:30 p.m.;

reefs at PWF’s free Coral Reef Information

golf. Yay. A six-week session. $60. 3:30-5 p.m.

Swimming Lessons - Sun. Valley Isle Aquatics

Dancing: 7 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall.

Weightlifting

Hall,

Good

Shepherd

Station. 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Ulua Beach, Wailea.

808-249-8811.

Kaanapali Golf Resort. 661-3691.

is offering keiki swimming lessons in conjunction

Israeli and International Folk Dancing -

Free Keiki Art Classes - Every Mon, Tue, Wed

with the County of Maui, Community Classes.

Every Sun & Tue. Israeli and international folk

Kanaha Beach Project - Every Tue & Thu. Join

& Fri. Lahaina Arts Society offers free children’s art

Folks can call or go to www.valleyisleaquatics.com

dancing takes place at Grace Church, Kula,

group leader Val Magee in helping restore the natu-

classes island wide. MON - Lahaina Surf Hawaiian

for further information. 12:15-4:15 p.m. Kihei

Sundays 4-6 p.m. Israeli folk dancing happens at

ral landscape. Bring water, snacks and sunscreen.

Housing, 3-5 p.m. TUE - Baha’i Faith Maui Center,

Aquatics Center. 572-4665.

The Jewish Congregation of Maui, Kihei, Tuesdays

Meet at the Canoe Hale. . 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.

Makawao, 9-11 a.m. Ka Hale A Ke Ola, Wailuku, 4-

Yo Yo Workshop & Demo - Sun. Yo Yos are

6-8 p.m. 280-1051.

Kanaha Beach Park. 808-294-8811 ext. 1.

6 p.m. WED - Baha’i Faith Maui Center, 9:30-11:30

silent, so encourage your kids to learn how to use

High Hopes Square Dance Club - Every

Save Honolua - Tue. Meeting to inform, educate

a.m.; Honokowai Kau Hale, 2:30-4:30 p.m. THU -

them and finally get some peace and quiet! Free. 4-

Mon. A place for beginners to pick up some steps

and involve the community on the proposed devel-

Paia Elementary, 2-4 p.m. FRI - Kahekili Terrace,

5 p.m. Maui Toy Works. 661-5304.

and seasoned square dancers to show off their

opment of Honolua Bay. 6:45 p.m. Lahaina Civic

Keiki Chess Club - Mon. For little masterminds

moves. Free. 7 p.m. Hannibal Tavares Community

Center. 870-0052.

age 8-12. Taught by magician Neil Bruce. Free. 2:30-

Center, Pukalani. 572-0671.

Smarter than a Sand Crab? - Mon-Fri. Get

4 p.m. Makawao Public Library. 573-5313.

Pipe Up - Every Mon. No experience is needed

free info about marine life and answers to all those

for drummers and bagpipers at these open, free

pesky questions that keep you up all night at this

Wailuku, 3-6 p.m. Haiku Boy’s and Girl’s Club, 3-5 p.m. For more info call 661-0111. West Side Storytime - Every Tue & Sat. Lahaina’s biggest bookseller is hosting keiki story

DANCE

lesson and practices for the Isle of Maui Pipe Band.

PWF info stand. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Ulua Beach, Wailea.

6 p.m. Call for Direction. 876-0154.

249-8811.

dancers in adorable outfits doing the cultural dance

Senior Line Dancing - Every Mon. Line dance

World Ocean Day Celebration - Daily. MOC

of their ancestors. Free. 3:30 p.m. Lahaina Center,

lessons for people 55 or better. 8:30-10 a.m.

celebrates this international recognition of the

900 Front St. 667-9216.

Kaunoa Senior Center, Sprecklesville. 270-7313.

importance of the ocean. Includes special naturalist

Dance Jam - Every Fri. Celebrate the end of the

Swing & Lindy Hop Dancing - Every Mon.

month with a free-form dance party with great music

You’re money, baby. This group incorporates rock, hip

and no instruction, just come to shake your booty.

hop and anything else rooted in jazz. 7-10 p.m. Kenolio

$13. 7:30-10 p.m. The Studio Maui, Haiku. 575-9390.

Recreation Center, 131 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei. 344-8180.

Hula

Halau

Non-Profit Polynesian Dance - Tue. Support

Kawaianuhealehua holds open hula classes for chil-

the kids of the Napili Kai Foundation by watching

dren, teen and adult wahines and kanes. 9 a.m.

their Polynesian dance show. $10 adults, $5 kids.

Maui Waena School.

5:30 p.m. 669-6271.

time, so get them hooked on reading early. Tue., 10 a.m.; Sat., 11 a.m. Barnes and Noble, Lahaina.

Shakin’ Keiki - Every Fri. Come see little hula Keiki Dance With Lori Lewis - Every Thu & Fri. Creative Movement for ages ranging from 15 mos. to 5 years old. Call Lori for details. Studio Maui, Haiku

(Thu.); Little Explorers, Wailuku (Fri.). 573-5456. Keiki Issues? - Thu. The Parent Project, a program for parents of strong willed children. Wrestle the phone away from the child and make that call. Free. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Hui Malama Learning Center. Classes

-

Every

Sat.

289-5050. Story Time - Thu. Keiki story time and crafts. Free. 10 a.m. Hawaiian Village Coffee, Kahana. 665-1114.

presentations and exciting aquarium activities. Price included with admission. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Maui

Ocean Center, Ma`alaea. 270-7000. Weed and Pot Club - Wed. Did that get your attention? Push up your sleeves and rake, hoe and pull weeds in a beautiful garden setting. 8:3010:30 a.m. Maui Nui Botanical Gardens, Kahului.

249-2798.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

25


DA KINE CALENDAR

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

Maui Coastal Land Trust Service Project -

Lahaina Canoe Club Weekly Paddle - Daily.

noon-12:45 p.m. State Building Plaza, Wailuku.

Ho`olokahi Arts & Crafts Fair - Every Tue &

Fri. PWF’s Volunteering on Vacation program gives

Get buff, talk story, check out the scenery. Thu., 8

984-8200.

Fri. Fresh flower lei-making classes from 9-11 a.m.

you a chance to help save unique dune ecosystems

a.m.; Sun., 10 a.m. Hanako’o Beach Park (Canoe

Free Racquetball Lessons - Sat. Yoofs aged

on Fridays. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Wailea Beach Marriott

in Waihee. Help weed out invasive plants and get a

Beach). 870-6466.

13-17 can learn beforehand, backhand and other

Resort south lobby. 879-1922.

free t-shirt for your efforts!. 7:45 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui

Maui Croquet Club - Every Sun, Tue & Thu. You

serving techniques. Games will be played for the

Ohana Farmers & Crafters Market - Every

Coastal Land Trust, Waihee. 808-294-8811.

could be an amazing croquet player and not even

course’s final four weeks. Course goes until July

Tue, Wed & Fri. 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Queen Ka’ahumanu

Honokowai Valley Restoration - Sat. Visit

know it. No mallet? No problem. 2-5 p.m.

18. 10 a.m.- 12 p.m. Maui Family YMCA. 242-9007.

Shopping Center. 877-3369.

remote Honokowai Valley, and help save archeolog-

Waipuilani Park, Kihei. 879-0087.

Kimo’s 32nd Annual Longboard Contest -

Farmers Market of Maui - Every Mon, Wed &

ical sites of old Hawaii, pull invasive plants and pos-

Naish

Championship

Every Sun & Sat. In memory of Rob Thibault, this

Fri. Sample the goods at this local market for fresh

sibly plant native species. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Honokowai

Registration - Daily. The fourth-annual what-

no cord, single fin 9 ft.+ contest is now in the hold-

produce. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 61 S. Kihei Rd.

Valley, West Maui. 808-294-8811 ext. 1.

have-you will take place July 12th, dude. A 9.54

ing period. Competition happens every weekend,

Honokowai Farmers Market - Every Mon,

Save the Forest - Sun. The Pacific Whale

mile course going from Maliko Gulch to Kahului

granted there are waves. Call Jack Starr for more

Wed & Fri. Lots of fresh local produce plus

Foundation is hosting a group of ten volun-

Harbor. Open to dudes and chicks over 18. Visit

info. 205-9500.

baked and canned goods. 7-11 a.m. Lower

teers to pull invasive pine trees near Hosmers

www.mauipaddleboard.com to register. $50.

Volleyball Day - Sat. Bump, set, spike! Open

Honopiilani Hwy.

Grove. Transportation is provided. Pick ups:

Group Run - Wed. Group meets at Kihei

to everyone. Free. 12 p.m. Kamaole III Beach

Napili Craft Fair - Every Mon, Wed & Sat.

7:30 a.m., Harbor Shop, 300 Ma`alaea Rd;

Community Center. Open to runners of all ages and

Park, Kihei.

Proceeds earned from sales of these locally-

8:15 a.m., Upcountry Tavares Community

fitness levels. Sponsored by Valley Isle Road

Center. 856-8341.

Runners. Free. 5:30 p.m. Piilani Highway and

Paddleboard

Lipoa Parkway.

Art

crafted goods go to Maui Family Support Services. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Napili Plaza, Napili.

Altered Forms: A Ceramic Exhibition -

242-0900.

Paddling for Women Cancer Survivors -

Daily. A showcase of Hawaii artists that highlights

Resort Craft Fair - Every Wed & Fri. Hawaiian

Healing Movement Classes for Cancer

Every Mon & Wed. Get together with the Pink

strange and new ways of dealing with ceramics. 10

arts and crafts. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Renaissance Wailea

Patients - Every Tue & Thu. Using Dragon &

Ladies of Mana’olana for canoe paddling.

a.m.-5 p.m. Hui No’eau Arts Center, Makawao.

Beach Resort.

Tiger, an ancient self-healing system based on Chi

Sponsored by the Pacific Cancer Foundation. 8:30

572-6560.

Gung, this movement series releases stress,

a.m. Maui Canoe Club. 243-2999.

Sports/Fitness

lessens pain and illness, and increases energy for cancer recovery and prevention. Free. 3-4 p.m.

Everything Made on Maui - Thu. This craft fair

Art Maui - Daily. This juried art show contains the

is tops because, as the name may indicate, it fea-

Tai Chi - Every Mon & Fri. Get your Tai Chi in dur-

vastly diverse works of over 300 artists and runs

ture only products made by artisans living on island,

ing your lunchbreak with Dr. Lorrin Pang. Free.

through Jul. 5. Don’t tell Senator Tankerbell. 11 a.m.-

so your dollars stay on Maui - a rare thing. 10 a.m.-

Kahului YMCA. 243-2999.

5 p.m. Schaefer International Gallery, MACC, 1

3 p.m. Keaolahou Church, 177 South Kihei Rd.,

Cameron Way, Kahului. 242-7469.

Kihei. 875-1911.

Meet the Artists - Daily. The Four Seasons’ resi-

Aloha Craft Fair - Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Maui Mall.

dent artist will be on hand to discuss his or her work.

872-4320.

8 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Four Seasons Resort and Spa,

3900 Alanui Drv., Wailea. 874-8000. WOW! - Every Wed. Wailea on Wednesdays presents live island music, gallery receptions, artist

FRIDAY JUNE 26 9–MIDNIGHT • $5

FIREWORKS

BROADCAST LIVE FROM THE HARD ROCK

SATURDAY, JULY 4

appearances and more. Featured artists this week include the Twins and Ben Kikuyama, whose work will be on display at Lahaina Gallery. 6:30-8 p.m.

897-6770 x2.

KBH Craft Fair - Fri. Cultural crafts and live demos. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Ka`anapali Beach Hotel

lobby. 667-5978. Westin Kaanapali Ocean Resort Villas Craft Fair - Fri. An array of island made crafts for sale, dag nabit. Artisans from Maui here to share their unique products and take home gifts for friends and family. Free parking. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

Art Night - Fri. Stroll through Lahaina Town’s many

Ocean Lawn, Westin Kaanapali Ocean Resort

art galleries. Special gallery shows, featured artists-

Villas. 667-3254.

in-action and refreshments. Each week features a different guest artist. Featured artists this week include the Twins, whose work will be on display at

Organic Farmers Market - Sat. Fresh produce that’s cheaper than the grocery store. 6:30 a.m.noon. Eddie Tam Memorial Center.

Lahaina Gallery. Free. 6:30 p.m. Lahaina. 661-6284.

Poetry

Artist Demonstration - Fri. Artist Kathleen

FRIDAYJULY 3 • $5 900 FRONT STREET 26

JUNE 25, 2009

Open Mic - Every night is open mic night at

ing the complex interplay of light and shade within

Hawaiian Village Coffee. Kahana Gateway location,

Maui’s landscape. 3:30-7 p.m. Maui Hands Gallery,

call 665-1114.

84 Hana Hyw., Paia. 579-9245.

Poetry Slam - Every First Fri. Poets 13 and over

Farmers market, Art/Craft Fairs LAHAINA, MAUI 667-7400

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

O’Bryan demonstrates her use of pastels in depict-

Farmers’ Market and Craft Fair - Every Tue, Wed, Fri & Sat. Great deals on locally grown pro-

are encouraged to share their stuff with the First Friday crowd. Pieces are limited to three minutes. $5. 8 p.m. The Promenade (Wailuku Food Court),

2050 Main St., Wailuku, 244-3993. Express Yourself - Every Mon. Open Mic Night

duce and locally made goods. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Maui

with music, song, poetry! Free. 7 p.m., Cafe Marc

Mall, Kahului. 871-1307.

Aurel, Wailuku, 244-0852.


The Grid lists nightly entertainment at bars, clubs, cafes and other non-dinner serving establishments, as well as restaurants with entertainment after 9pm.

Thursday 06/25

Friday 06/26

Saturday 06/27

RB STEAKHOUSE 2290 Kaanapali Pkwy - 661-3123

Bingo Pajama

Unifires

Karaoke

Karaoke

Bingo Pajama

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

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

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

SANTA FE CANTINA 900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7805

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-6444

Monday 06/29– Wednesday 07/01

Live Music

Kahana Gateway, Kahana - 669-8889

RUSTY HARPOON

Sunday 06/28

DJ Slackin No cover, 10pm

DJ Sonny No cover, 10pm

SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR

MON - Silky Ringo;TUE - Willie K

Ugly Dress Pageant w/ DJ Toben

Kamaaina Night

MON - Ladies’ Night;TUE - Dominick; WED - Oren & Junior, No cover, 10pm

DJ Magnetic No cover, 10pm

Kanoa of Gomega No cover, 10pm

MON - DJ Blast; TUE - DJ Nature Boy; WED - ADD Twins; All no cover, 10pm

Kulture Klash

2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602

STELLA BLUE’S 1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-3779

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR

Maui Underground $3, 10pm

1127 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-1380

TIFFANY’S 1424 L. Main St., Wailuku - 249-0052

TIMBA 505 Front St, Ste. 212, Lahaina - 661-9873

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON - WED - Karaoke

DJ Del Sol

Uncovered

Passion w/ DJ Del Sol

Tradewinds

WED - Freshly Squeezed w/ N8 Castro

Da Ha-Y-Ans

MGM

Gina Martinelli / Open Mic Night

MON - DJ Slackin; TUE - Karaoke; WED - Rick G

TIP-UPS TAVERN 1279 2. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-9299

UNISAN 2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku - 244-4500

WATERCRESS

Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku-243-9350

Karaoke

MON - WED - Karaoke

Live Music

Karaoke

MON -Karaoke; TUE - Live Music; WED - Karaoke

Karaoke

Poetry Reading - Every second Tue, read your

“TBA”; Sun, Ryan Tanaka & Friends; Mon,Oversized

Sea House Restaurant - Thu, Fri & Sat,

Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Café - Wed, Sat,

original work, your favorite poem, or just come to

Productions; Tue, Roy & Friends; Wed, An Den. Late

Kincaid Basques; Su, Andrew Kaina; Mon, Albert

Merv Oana; Sun, Howard Ahia Thu; Fri Margie; Tue

be inspired. Free. 6:30 p.m., Lahaina Public

sets 6-8:30 p.m. 2435 Ka`anapali Parkway, Building

Kaina, Tue, Kincaid Basques; Wed, Albert Kaina. All

Jamie Lawrence. All sets 6-10 p.m. The Shops at

Library, 662-3950.

P, 667-6636.

sets except Sat. 7-9 p.m. Sat set is 6:30-9p.m.

Wailea, 875-9983.

Open Mic - Every Saturday the Maui Media Lab

Java Jazz/Soup Nutz - Mon-Sat, Acoustic

Napili Kai Beach Resort, 5900 Honoapi`ilani Rd.,

Tradewinds Poolside Cafe - Thu, Kawika Lum

hosts an open mic night for poets, musicians and

music. All sets 7 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapi`ilani

Napili, 669-1500.

Ho; Fri, Gina Martinelli; Sat, Monda Kane; Sun Merv

others who want to be heard. Sessions are record-

Rd., Honokowai, 667-0787.

ed and fed to the internet. All ages are welcome.

Kimo’s - Mon- Wed, Sat, Sun, Sam Ahia. Fri,

Free. 6-9 p.m., Maui Media Lab, Baldwin Ave,

zumatribe@yahoo.com.

Oana, Mon, Bobby Ingram & Fulton Tashombe; Tue,

SOUTH MAUI

deAquino Bradaz. All sets 6:30-8:30 p.m. 845 Front

Rama Camarillo; Wed, Kaleo Cullen. All sets 6-9 p.m. Beach Bums Ma’alaea - Tue, Randall Rospond,

The Maui Coast Hotel, 2259 S. Kihei Rd., 874-6284.

5-8 p.m. 300 Ma’alaea Rd. 243-2286.

St., Lahaina, 661-4811.

CENTRAL MAUI

Haui’s Life’s A Beach - Thu,

DINNER MUSIC

Leilani’s On The Beach - Fri, Scott Baird;. Sat, JD and Harry; Sun,

WEST MAUI BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria - Wed-Fri, John Kane;

Kilohana. All sets 2:30-5 p.m. 2435

Ka`anapali Pkwy, Building J, 661-4495.

Sat, Harry Troupe; Sun, Greg DiPiazza; Mon, Tue,

Moose

Marvin Tevaga. All sets 7:30-9:30 p.m. 730 Front

Lahaina - Fri, Llayne & Pro Ed; Sat,

St., Lahaina, 661-0700.

Mark & Mike. All sets 6-9 p.m. 844

Canoes - Sun, Jazz w/ John Maritano, Brian

McGillycuddy’s,

Front St., 667-7758.

Cuomo & Friends. 3-6. 1450 Front St., Lahaina.

Mulligan’s at the Wharf - Fri,

661-0937.

Hawaiian music with Uncle Louie. 5-

Cheeseburger In Paradise - Mon, Tue, Scotty

Submit Your

Listings CALENDAR on mauitime.com or calendar@ mauitime.com

7 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 661-8881.

Erin Smith. 1913 South Kihei Rd.,

Café Marc Aurel - Live Music on various days.

891-8010.

Mon, Open Mic Night. 7:30 p.m. 28 N. Market St.,

Longhi’s - Sat, acoustic music.

Wailuku, 244-0852.

10:30-11 p.m. 3750 Wailea Alanui

Kahului Ale House - Thu, O‘Kaleo. 5 p.m. Wed,

Dr., 891-8883

Kilohana. 6 p.m. 355 E. Kamehameha Ave.,

Ma`alaea Grill - Thu, Fri, Sat,

Kahului. 877-9001.

Benoit Jazz Works.

Wed., Kenny

Main Street Bistro - Th-Fri, Rhythm & Blues

Roberts. All sets 6:30-9 p.m.

with Freedom. 5-7:30 p.m.. 2051 Main St.,

Maalaea Harbor, 243-2206.

Wailuku, 244-6816.

Mulligan’s on the Blue - Thu, Rick Glencross

UPCOUNTRY MAUI

Fri, Gail Swanson; 6-8 p.m.; Sun, Celtic Tigers, 6:30

Rotten; Wed, Fri, Harry Troupe; Thu, Sat, Sun,

Pioneer Inn - Thu, Ah-Tim Eleniki; Tue, Captain

Brooks McGuire. All sets 4:30-10:30 p.m. 811 Front

Billy Bones; Wed, Greg Di Piazza. All sets 6-8 p.m.

St., Lahaina, 661-4855.

658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636.

Cool Cat Cafe - Thu, Erin Smith; Fri, Sat, Dave

Rusty Harpoon - Thu, George Kahumoku, Jr., 7-

Carroll; Sun, Wed, Whale Sharks; Mon, Mickie

9 p.m., Tue, Willie K., 7-9 p.m., Wed., Evan

Moore; Tue, Jazz; . all sets 7:30-10 p.m. Wharf

Schulman, 7-9 p.m. 2290 Kaanapali Pkwy.,

Cinema Center, Lahaina, 667-0908.

Ka’anapali. 661-3123.

p.m.; Mon, Acoustico, 7 p.m. Tue, Louise & Ortiz; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Wed, John Cruz, 7:30 p.m. 100

Santa Fe Cantina - Tue, Ryan from Silky Ringo;

Pua’a; Sun,Mon, Kawika Lum Ho; Tue, Jarret

5-8 p.m. Fri, Mike Carrol & Friends, 4-7 p.m. Sat,

Roback. Early sets 3-5 p.m. (Followed by) Thu,

Damien Awai; 5-8 p.m. 900 Front St., Lahaina,

Braddah Brian & Roy; Fri, Brian, Roy & Kawika;. Sat,

667-7805.

Adam with Vince Esquire. Thu, Haiku Hillbillys. Sat, Live music. Mon., The Hula Honeys All sets 6-9

Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131.

p.m. 810 Haiku Rd, Haiku Cannery, 575-2661. South Shore Tiki Lounge - Sat, Erin Smith; Mon, Kanoa. All sets 4-6 p.m. 1913 Kihei Rd., Kihei

Moana

Cafe

&

Bakery - Wed, Benoit

Jazzworks; 6:30-8:30 p.m. Fri., Poni Brendan, 6:30-

Kalama Village, 874-6444.

9:30 p.m. Sat, Steve Sargenti 6:30-8:30 p.m. 71 Stella Blue’s - All sets 4-6 p.m. Thu, Steve

Hula Grill - (Early sets) Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat Ernest

Hana Hou Cafe - Wed, Dorothy Betz and Les

Sargenti; Bennett;

Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9999.

Fri,. Ahamanu Elu; Sat, Joe Mon,

Mondokane;

Tue,

Tom

Conway; Wed, Dan & Anne. 1279 S. Kihei

Rd., Kihei, 874-874-3779

Flatbread Pizza - Every first Wed, Toma Conway & Randall Rospond. 6-9 p.m. Flatbread Pizza, 89

Hana Hwy., Paia. 579-8989.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

27


DA KINE CALENDAR

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

Green Banana Cafe Music - Tu, Shea Argel.

Mon, Mitch Kepa; Sun, Keali’i Lum; Tue, Steve

Th, Indio. 6-8 p.m. Green Banana Cafe-The Shops

Sargenti; . All sets 6-9 p.m.

at Paia Bay, Paia. 579-9130.

SOUTH MAUI

RESORT SHOWS

■ FOUR SEASONS RESORT WAILEA

3900 Wailea Alanui, 874-8000

WEST MAUI

Lobby Lounge - (Early sets) Thu, Steve Repollo ■ HYATT REGENCY MAUI RESORT & SPA

and Alan Villeran; Sat, Mon, Island Style Trio with

200 Nohea Kai Dr, Lahaina, 661-1234

hula dancing. Early sets 5:30-7:30 p.m. (Followed

Umalu - Thu, Off Tomorrow, 6-9; Live music

by) Thu, Sal Godinez and Marcus Johnson; Sat,

nightly All sets 4-6 & 7-9p.m. Torch lighting cere-

Mon, Nils and Anastasia; Sun, Pam Peterson and

mony nightly.

Rudy Baria; Late sets 8:30-11:30 p.m. Torchlighting

■ KAANAPALI BEACH CLUB

ceremony nightly.

104 Ka`anapali Shores, Lahaina, 661-2000

■ GRAND WAILEA RESORT HOTEL & SPA

Ohana Bar & Grill - Wed, Thu, Live music; Fri,

3850 Wailea Alanui, 875-1234

Patrick Major; Sun, Wayne and Friends; Mon, Tue,

Botero Bar - Wed, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Live music.

Ernest Pua`a. All sets 5:30-9:30 p.m. Torch lighting

Humuhumunukunukuapua`a - Nightly, 5:30

ceremony nightly.

p.m., Strolling Hawaiian Duo.

■ KA`ANAPALI BEACH HOTEL

■ THE FAIRMONT KEA LANI MAUI

2525 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0011

4100 Wailea Alanui, 875-4100

Tiki Courtyard -

Lobby Bar - Nightly, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Live music.

Sun-Thu, Leokane, 6 p.m.

Friday, Halau Friday Hula show. 6-9 p.m.

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE

■ KAPALUA RESORT

100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131

1 Bay Drv. Lahaina, 669-6400

Wailea Wednesdays w/ WIllie K - Wed,

Merriman’s - Fri & Sat. Ranga Pae, 5:30-

7:30-10 p.m.

8:30 p.m.

■ THE SHOPS AT WAILEA

■ NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT

3750 Wailea Alanui

5900 Honoapi`ilani Hwy, Napili,

East Wing - Wed, 6:30-8 p.m.,

669-1500 Thu, Fri, Tue. Kincaid Kupahu; Sat, Coelho Morrison; Sun & Wed, Andrew Kaina; Mon, Albert Kaina. All sets 7-9 p.m.

Marti Kluth.

See into the

future

■ RITZ CARLTON

CALENDAR

1 Ritz Carlton Drive, Kapalua, 669-

on mauitime.com

6200

Lower Courtyard - Wed, 6:30-8 p.m.,

Jamie

Lawerence

and

Friends. ■ WAILEA MARRIOTT

3700 Wailea Alanui, 879-1922 Kumu Bar & Grill - Nightly, Hula dancing. 6-9 p.m.

The Lounge - Sun, Ron; -Mon, Joshua K; Tue, Tarvin; Wed, Howard, Thu, Hallie.; Fri, Espresso; Sat, Crazy Fingers. Sun-Thu 7-10 p.m., Fri-Sat 7:30-11 p.m. 6:15-9:45 p.m. ■ ROYAL LAHAINA RESORT

2780 Keka`a Dr., Ka`anapali, 661-3611 Royal Ocean Terrace - Thu, Fri, Sat, Live Hawaiian. 6-8 p.m. ■ SHERATON MAUI HOTEL

Mele Mele Lounge - Nighly, Live music. 9-11 p.m. ■ MAUI PRINCE HOTEL

5400 Makena Alanui, 874-1111 Molokini Lounge - Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat, Mele `Ohana Duo. Tue, Thu Ron Kuala’au; Sun-Thu sets 69 p.m.; Fri, Sat sets 6-10 p.m. Sun, Mele `Ohana Duo, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mon, Wed, Fri, Hula performance, 6-6:45 p.m.

2605 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0031

EAST MAUI

Lagoon Bar - Live music nightly, All sets 6-8 p.m. Torchlighting and cliff diving ceremony at

■ HOTEL HANA-MAUI

sunset nightly.

Hana, 248-8211

■ THE WESTIN MAUI RESORT & SPA

Paniolo Lounge - Thu-Sun, Live music. 6:30-9:30

2365 Kaanapali Parkway, 667-2525

p.m.

Ono Bar & Grille - Fri, Brian Haia; Sat, Keali’i

Main Dining Room - Thu, Sun, Hula dancing.

Lum; Sun, Raz Shaggai; Wed, Scott Baird Duo. All

7:30-8:15 p.m.

sets 6-9 p.m. Tropica - Thu, Fri & Wed, Benny Uyetake; Sat &

28

JUNE 25, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


CAERIEL CRESTIN SIGN.LANGUAGE.ASTROLOGY@GMAIL.COM

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)

While it might feel unkind to deprive your fat dog of food, or tell your tone deaf kid he can’t sing, those are actually the kindest things you can do. The alternatives are potentially an early entrance to doggie heaven, or a disastrous televised audition on American Idol. Love, ironically, can look an awful lot like being mean, especially to those on the receiving end. But that doesn’t make it any less loving— in fact, I’d argue that it’s more selfless and generous than anything that also happens to make you look good. Don’t stop yourself from doing the right thing simply because your act of love may make someone hate you. They may never thank you for it. But they sure as hell won’t hate you less or thank you more for not doing it.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)

A truth gone astray could be your best friend this week. An email or text sent to the wrong address, while potentially humiliating and dramatic, might also reveal a truth you would never have had the guts to spill otherwise. These things always come out one way or another, and a technological Freudian slip could be the best thing for this particular relationship. Once you’ve weathered the fallout from your little social slip-up, the door to greater intimacy and honesty is wide open. That by itself is worth a lot—certainly far more than the price you’ll have paid.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)

Even though we like to think we’ve come a long way from our ape ancestors, humans are still quite territorial. We’ve just come up with vastly more sophisticated and sometimes subtle ways to delineate and defend our personal boundaries—which is why sometimes people don’t get the clue. Although these borderline brutes might respond better to you pissing in the corners or growling when they get too close, that’s certainly a bit beyond the pale, and not your style in any case. However, I would suggest, for the benefit of these socially inept cave people, try and make things a bit more obvious than you have so far.

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LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22)

Neighbors can be a blessing or a nuisance. Sometimes the line between the two is so faint that we opt for the minimal contact approach, and treat them like strangers. However, this week is a good time to make connections with the people who share your environs. I know it’s considered totally weird to approach your neighbors in some contexts these days, and your efforts are likely to be greeted at first with some degree of suspicion, but you should do it anyway. There’s no reason you can’t invent your own paradigm for interacting with the people you live close to. Just keep in mind—make yourself more of a blessing than a nuisance, and you should get the same in return.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)

Some states have Good Samaritan laws, more or less requiring people to do the right thing. I wonder how effective they are; if the only reason you’re going to help someone who needs it is because you want to avoid getting in trouble with the law, there’s something wrong. That, however, shouldn’t be a problem for you Scorpios, who are almost always guided by your own particular moral compasses, regardless of the context. That can often be more of a handicap than a strength (especially if they aren’t perfectly aligned with prevailing thought), but this week it ought to serve you well. Don’t let anyone divert you; once you’ve hit on the right thing you should be doing, do it.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)

Why make a distinction between snorting and shooting heroin? Really, they’re both pretty extreme. The line you’re trying to draw between two possibilities—this side is okay and that side’s not—is artificial, arbitrary, and fairly preposterous. Both options are about as bad as each other, and your feeble attempts to legitimize one are transparent. Don’t bother with that. If you want to do something, just do it, without trying to make it seem legit or okay if it’s not. If those ideas are really what’s holding you back, maybe you need to reconsider what you’ve been thinking about doing; it might simply be a bad idea.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)

I’m a big believer in mind over matter. Probably, if you could convince yourself it was possible, you could bend a steel bar with your bare hands. It’s the convincing that’s difficult. We’re inclined to believe that such a feat is impossible, that reality is what it is, regardless of how we think about it. It’s not, though—or at least it’s slightly more malleable than you think. I can tell you for certain that you’re capable now of doing one thing you considered completely impossible last year. If you were wrong about that, what else might you be wrong about?

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)

People are always making money. When the stock market crashes, some people are raking in shitloads of money. There are people who know how to profit from a recession, or even a depression; some families became filthy rich during the Great Depression. My point is that there is some benefit to be reaped from any situation, regardless of how disastrous it appears to be. Whether or not you are willing to profit from it is up to you; don’t for one second, though, deny that it’s there. Admit to yourself that it’s you keeping yourself from what you might want, not the situation—then and only then can you—at least theoretically—make the decision to change it up.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)

Brand loyalty should only take you so far. If a company drew you in because it made a quality product, but then (perhaps secretly) downgraded, why should you stay loyal to them? In fact, since it’s a kind of betrayal, you might want to make a point of taking your business elsewhere. Naturally, this lesson in conscious capitalism applies to your interpersonal relationships as well. If the qualities that caused you to invest in someone are no longer there, why should you keep squandering your time and attention upon them? Take your business elsewhere, already.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)

Being happy is often just a matter of habit. Sure, it takes a great effort of will and conscious perspective to be cheerful in stressful moments, and it’s easy to be joyful when things are amazing. But most of life’s moments are actually fairly neutral. Unfortunately many people have made their default setting sour and disgruntled, or some degree of such. What’s yours? Changing a longstanding ingrained habit isn’t easy, but it’s still possible—this week it would at least be easier than usual. Take this time to begin to shift your default settings a little closer to perpetually happy, since you can.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)

The choices you’ve made lately are an awful lot like running to the store for a bottle of chemical fertilizer for your garden, and drenching your poor plants in the stuff. Sure, it might get results, but not necessarily the ones you want. Overall, it’s a poor choice, considering your options. In this case, having a compost heap would accomplish the same intended effect at a fraction of the price, in a way that’s healthier, more sustainable, and more environmentally responsible. If you have a choice that’s just full of win, please choose it, even if it requires a bit more planning and effort. Ultimately, you won’t feel good about settling for anything less.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)

There are two main methods of losing weight: eating less and exercising more. Common sense dictates that the most viable and sustainable strategy is a combination of the two—moderate physical activity coupled with a modest reduction of food intake. And yet you are so attached to extreme solutions that you’re unwilling to consider the middle road. I like the fascinating nature of extremes, but arbitrarily choosing them every time has gotten kind of boring, and kind of dumb, too—since the middle road in this case is the best one, won’t you please consider it?

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

29


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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 FREE AND ANONYMOUS HIV

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

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Pouchi Couture “Pamper your pouchi with style”

30

SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Looking for enthusiastic individuals to enter our fastpaced business as a Sales Management Trainee on Maui, Oahu and Kona. We will reward your dedication and sales ability with great career opportunity. BS/BA preferred, satisfactory abstract, strong communication skills. Apply Online: www.enterprise.com For any questions, email lei.a.ikeda@erac.com We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/D/V

878-2698

ISLAND WIDE SERVICE AMERICAN • ASIAN • CARS • SUVS • TRUCKS

COMPUTER EQUIPMENT

250-5808

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DIESEL • BIODIESEL • HYBRIDS

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BODYWORK FOR MEN BY JEN! CALL 344-5999

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AUTOMOTIVE 10% DISCOUNT ON until MAY PARTS & LABOR 31, 2009

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CLOUD 9 HEAVEN You will be taken to new levels of erotic and sensual pleasure and intimacy. Tantra training. Call now: Athena 808-264-9922 MOUNTAIN BUTTERFLY Deep Relaxing Bodywork, Loving Luxurious Tantra, Genuine Heart Connection & Intimacy Coaching. Upcountry & Outcall. 269-0453

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OF HEALTH Kihei-Mondays at Keolahou Church 11am-2pm. Wailuku-Monday thru Tursday at Wailuku Health Center 8:30 am-12pm. Paia-Wednesdays at Haiku Community Center 12:00pm-3:00pm. LahainaThursdays at Lahaina Comprehensive Health Center 9am-12pm. Results returned in 2 wks. Sponsored by State Dept. of Health, for more info call 984-2129

HOUSES FOR RENT HOUSES FOR RENT Browse thousands of rental listings with photos and maps. Advertise your rental home for FREE! Visit: http://www.RealRentals.com (AAN CAN)

SHARED HOUSING, ROOMMATES ALL AREAS - RENTMATES.COM Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Rentmates.com. (AAN CAN) ROOM FOR RENT $950 plus deposit, share utilities, at Lahaina Baby Beach, private bath. Call 870-3401

VACATION RENTALS CLEAN, AFFORDABLE Accommodations in our vacation rental from $69 per day. Call Toll Free Wailuku Guesthouse 877-9868270 or www.wailukuhouse.com

Kaimana’s Beach Hale

at Baby Beach www.kaimanasbeachhale.com Special this month. $145-$195 a day. Your own private Ohana. Continental breakfast served. Full kitchen with espresso machine & D/W. Call 667-6968 for info.


CLASSIFIED Sex life on hold? Sex therapist with 25+ 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 consult. Call Dr. Bouchard today at 891-0952. www.sexhappiness.com High Touch Jin Shin Jyutsu Experience profound healing results with Jin Shin. This affordable and effective technique balances all body systems. Reiki and Cranial Sacral also offered. Call: Wendy Areus at 283-9248 HEALING HANDS M4M Experience whole body, therapeutic, and nurturing touch for men using a variety of healing energy modalities. In-calls as well as outcalls, serving all of Maui. Call 1877-303-2009. “Mind/Body Therapies” Release trauma, anxiety, depression, illness, pain, unwanted habits and weight. Hypnosis, EMDR, PSYCH-K, NLP and more. Most Insurance Accepted. Maribeth Theisen MSW, LCSW, CHt. Instructor, 30 years exp. Kihei. www.MauiTransformations.com. 269-2923. Find Maui’s Holistic Events! Visit www.mauivision.net today and explore our extensive mind, body & spirit listings. New June/July Maui Vision Magazine Out Now! Call 669-9091 for info.

A Spa Wailuku...

Green Ti

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MASSAGE: 50 min. Swedish - $55

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Hour Massage

249.8280

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244-4444 1325 Lower Main Street, Ste. 101

MAT#8003

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1816 Mill Street • Wailuku

GODDESS ALCHEMY MEDITATION . . . . . . . . .$ 75/hr DIAMOND-LIGHT-BODY ATUNEMENTS . . . . . . . .$100 SOUL RETREVAL & EMPOWERMENT . . . . .$100/hr SPECIALIZED BODY-WORK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$150/1.5 hr Cellular Regeneration, Quantum Healing, Kinesiology-Touch for Health™ FIRES CODES IGNITION - 24 DNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$300

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MASSAGE LICENSED MASSAGE THERAPY Enjoy a Relaxing Professional Massage. Private, Comfortable Haiku Lanai by a Certified LMT $60/hr. For Pregnancy Massage, Deep Tissue, Lomi or Swedish, call Susan 276-2114. Same day appts. available. MAT#8984

JUNE SPECIAL!

MAE #10969

Ho’omaluhia Therapeutic Bodywork Incorporate a Swedish-based session with a variety of therapeutic bodyworks, Deep Tissue, Sports, Reflexology, and Acupressure. Schedule a relaxing and healing session in Pukalani by calling Richard at 280-8557.

MIND BODY SPIRIT

Call NOM in Pukalani 344-2695

PLACING AN AD IS EASY! CALL 283-3260

40 N. Market St. Wailuku • 242-8788 Mon–Wed 10-6 Thu–Fri 10-7 Sat-Sun 9-5

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

BODYWORK BY NICKY $50/HR INCALL • $60/HR OUTCALL

205-7199

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JUNE 25, 2009

31


side

CALL (808) 283-3260 for complete details!

DIESEL • BIODIESEL • HYBRIDS

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

Toll Free 1-800-590-0133

Large Luxury Studio Condo Anew Tattoo Your Pain is our Pleasure Vacation Rental in Kihei For an appointment with Nancy or Hano call 808-872-1113. Private tattoo studio by appointment. Email inquires to tat2oasis@yahoo.com, or view gallery at myspace.com/wwwpiratebitchcom. Anchored at the Harbor, 111 Hana Hwy, #202B, Kahului. Above Bounty Music in the back.

(#RD 3881)

Yellow Seed Bamboo

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HENRY KALEIALOHA ALLEN HAWAIIAN STEEL GUITAR FESTIVAL

MAUI’S HOTTEST “CALL-IN” RADIO PROGRAM

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, 2009. For reservations call 877-7005

$1000 DISCOUNT FOR NEW CUSTOMERS

There's never been a better time to go solar! Call Hawaii Solar & Wind, LLC at (808) 214-7798

Call

283-3260 for Details Hurry! Space is Limited!

3135 Lower Kula Road • Behind Kula Hardware

On The UPside with TERI

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I’AO ACUPUNCTURE & SPA JUNE SPECIAL!

Tune in every FRIDAY at *NOON* on KNUI 900 AM. Call in 808-871-5900. Check us LIVE online at www.stickam.com/terionupside

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for as low as $115/wk

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THIS SPACE IS NOW AVAILABLE!

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BMW / MINI • VOLVO MERCEDES • VW / AUDI

For women who have no medical insurance or are underinsured. For more information and to see if you qualify, call Cassie or Rebecca at 442-6856

Friday, June 26th to Sunday, June 28th at Kaanapali Beach Hotel. For more info visit www.aecg.org

PRE-FORECLOSURE CONDOS

Kihei and Central Maui locations. Prices from $54,900 and up. Contact Josh Jerman, Realtor 808-283-2222 The Wailea Group, LLC

ELECTRIC EEL TATTOO IS NOW OPEN IN LAHAINA!

“Crazy Chris” and “Hano” are now offering Custom Tattoos, Body Piercing and Laser Tattoo Removal at their new shop located at 840 Wainee Street, next to Maui Tacos. 661-7711 electriceeltattoo.com

D R . ROBERT LEY Comprehensive Pain Management • Spinal Trauma and Orthopedic Injuries • Neurologic Injuries & Diseases • Chronic Neck and Back Pain • Shoulder, Knee & Hip Pain Helping Patients to Find Exceptional Surgical Care and Alternative Therapies NOW OPEN IN OUR NEW LOCATION 411 Huku Lii Place - Suite 301 • Kihei

875-7595

3rd Floor • South Shore Plaza “the only 3 story building in the area”

Royal Kahana Studio

paid $440,000 now $219,000

Southpointe 2bd/1.5ba

paid $280,000 now $159,999

Keonekai Villages 2bd/1ba paid $298,000 now $174,000

Josh Jerman, Broker 808.283.2222 Direct Josh@joshjerman.com www.JoshJerman.com

Maui’s Smoker

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