13.05 Giving Shape, July 23, 2009, Volume 13, Issue 5, MauiTime

Page 1

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

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CONTENTS

VOLUME 13 • ISSUE 05

4 MAUI COUNTY We correct some Best Of Maui boo-boos in Editor’s Inbox. Eh Brah! calls out a woman hater...in rhyming verse! A family surpasses dysfunction in News of the Weird. Rob

12

Beauty is in the ears of the beholder:

Call anywhere in the USA for free!

Report thinks outside the box house. As though we still care, LC Watch brings up dancing yet again. Nishiki’s ethics case finally goes public in Coconut Wireless.

12 FEATURE STORY THIS WEEK’S QUESTION

Beau Ewan talks story with legendary

A drink has been created in your honor. What’s in it?

shaper Bob “Ole” Olsen, who helped usher

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

in the sport and is showing no signs of slow-

Calendar Editor/Staff Writer: Kate Bradshaw (808) 264-8039 / calendar@mauitime.com Sailor Jerry, champagne, Reed’s Ginger Ale

15 ONO KINE GRINDS

Proofreader: Dina Wilson

ing down.

Anu Yagi says the food at Sarento’s is worth a splurge.

Contributors: Jessica Armstrong, Caeriel Crestin, Lloyd Dangle, Beau Ewan, Doug Levin, Jared Libby, Greg Mebel, Rob Parsons, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II, Anu Yagi Photographer: Sean Michael Hower Vodka, Watermelon Pucker, cranberry juice and pineapple juice Art Director: Brittany Shaw (808) 281-8975 / brittany@mauitime.com Malibu rum and pineapple juice Graphic Designer: Kellee LaVars Tequila in a dirty glass Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers (808) 283-3260 / brad@mauitime.com Purple Drank and PCP General Manager: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com Kimo’s rum, fresh mint, cachaca and ice Administrative Executive: Judy Toba (808) 244-0777 / judy@mauitime.com Grenadine and 7-Up Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown Web Design: Linear Publishing www.linearpublishing.com Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com Orange juice and cranberry juice

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.

17 ART SCENE Jessica Armstrong digs the high wire act at

And get 2 months free, free installation and 6 months free of Showtime.

Cirque Polynesia.

18 FILM Barry Wurst II says Harry Potter and the

Half-Blood

Prince

is

a

butt-numbing

marathon...but in a good way.

19 Movie Listings

20 DA KINE CALENDAR Kate previews the week’s choice diversions,

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22 Calendar Listings 23 Grid

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29 BACK PAGES Sign Language tells Scorpio it’s time to quit dancing and face the music.

30 Classifieds 31 Mind, Body, Spirit First and sixthmonth of Home Phone Service free. Two free months only available for new Nationwide Home Phone Service customers in a package. Offer valid for Standard Cable residential customers in Home Phone serviceable areas. Oceanic Home Phone Service does not include back-up power and, as in the case with an electric-powered home cordless phone, should there be a power outage, Oceanic Home Phone Service, including the ability to access 9-1-1 services, will not be available. Additional charges apply for taxes, fees, Directory Assistance, Operator Services and International locations. Digital Cable box needed for Caller ID on TV. Caller ID on TV not available in all areas. May not be combined with other offers. Must be a new Showtime customer with Digital Cable Service. Service may not be available in all areas and some restrictions may apply. ® 2009 Time Warner Cable Inc. All rights reserved. Offer expires 12/31/09.

Maui Time Weekly 33 N. Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 • fax (808) 244-0446 www.mauitime.com Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 18,000 copies of the MauiTime Weekly

ON THE COVER: Photo by Sean Michael Hower

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

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Re last week’s Eh Brah! about the lady and her boyfriend who almost got hit by the white Ford Ranger: I was pulling out of Mistah Licka in Lahaina, and some wahine comes waltzin’ across the street with some big dude— right in front of my white Ford Ranger! They nearly get run over! And the dude bangs my hood with his fist. Then, he makes like he’s gonna kick my ass! Except he’s one of these sissy guys who has to have a girlfriend to “pull him back” so he doesn’t actually get in a fight, he just huffs and puffs. I wuz gonna call the fuzz, but I figure, these two idiots found each other, so there must be a God. Anonymous, posted at mauitime.com

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JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Last week, we ran a letter that contained baseless accusations against Best Seafood winner Mama’s Fish House. Though we don’t always agree with the opinions expressed in Editor’s Inbox (it says so there at the end), we do have two key requirements: letters must comment on our coverage, and they must not contain factual falsehoods. The letter in question failed the second requirement. It accused Mama’s of lying in an advertisement by thanking readers for voting it Best Dinner and Best Restaurant. Mama’s has won both of those awards in the past; since establishments aren’t informed of wins in advance, past awards are often cited. The letter also suggested information about the fish on Mama’s menu is sometimes inaccurate, an accusation for which there is no proof. Though we welcome critical letters, and generally allow even trollish comments to appear on our Web site, publishing the letter in the paper was a serious

error on the part of the editorial department, and we sincerely apologize. … This year, for the first time, we attached a “local” label to certain categories, meaning the winners had to be locally owned establishments that aren’t part of a national chain. One of the “local” categories was Best Pizza, but we went ahead and crowned a winner and runner-up— Flatbread and BJ’s—that didn’t fit the bill. That’s not to take away from either one; both serve fine pizza and do more than their share of good work in the community, and we understand why people like and support them. But to follow our own rules, Best Pizza should have gone to Shaka Pizza (1770 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 874-0331), with second place going to Dollies Pub & Cafe (4310 L. Honoapiilani Hwy., Kahana, 669-0266). Congratulations to both. … Finally, we’d like to acknowledge an omission. We threatened to add a Best Ballot Stuffer category this year, but even though there was a clear winner we neglected to put it in the paper. So “congrats” to Makena Grill, which tried without success to put one over on us. We won’t give other would-be jury riggers any hints as to how they did it (or, rather, attempted to do it). Suffice it to say our crack team of CIA-trained ballot sleuths doesn’t miss much, which, given how long this list of corrections ended up being, is more than we can say for ourselves.

SEND YOUR FEEDBACK 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. We reserve the right to edit letters. Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Maui Time Weekly.


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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

ehbrah@mauitime.com Eh brah, you was there that Thursday night. Eh brah, you the pussies who stepped into the fight. Eh brah, who the hell you think you are? Calling out some girls at the Wailuku bar. Eh brah, remember the two sistas you mobbed? Because your girls couldn’t finish the job? Eh brah, you the braddah who choked two chicks. It must be because you one supa-sized prick. Eh brah, you thought you had action, you think he got game, but I spit, crap and puke on your worthless name. Eh brah, this bitch slap goes out to you, ’cause beating up girls was all you could do. It’s OK, you no more shame, ’cause that night you got arrested. When you sat in that cell I hope your sorry ass got molested.

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JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


NEWSOFTHEWEIRD REVENGE, GERMAN STYLE Two formerly well-off retired couples in Speyer, Germany, whose nest egg was largely wiped out by investments in sub-prime Florida mortgages, vented their anger by kidnapping their investment adviser, James Amburn, in June. They took him to the vacation home of one of the couples near the Austrian border, bound him like a mummy and beat and tortured him over several days, fracturing two ribs, in repeated attempts to punish him and extort his own property as partial compensation for their losses. Police rescued him after he managed to send a coded message by fax.

MONEY WELL SPENT (1) A resident at 48 Commonwealth Ave. in Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood paid $300,000 in June for one outdoor, uncovered parking space, according to the listing agent. (2) Texas accountant Randy Reeves, 50, paid $1,500 cash in April for the dentist’s mold of the upper and lower teeth of Tiny Tim, which the late singer had given to the seller.

FAMILY BUSINESS Mykal Carberry, 13, was arrested in Hyannis, Mass., in March and charged with arranging for the murder of his 16-year-old half-brother, Jordan, so that, according to police, he could take Jordan’s place atop the family’s prosperous Cape Cod cocaine distribution ring. (The boss’s job was open following the boys’ father’s recent imprisonment.)

FOREGONE CONCLUSIONS (1) Researchers from Cleveland State University, for a recent journal article, assessed the physical traits of 195 female characters from the first 20 James Bond films, revealing that more were brunette than blond and that at least 90 percent were young, slim and of aboveaverage looks. (2) In June, a branch of the National Institutes of Health

BY CHUCK SHEPHERD CHUCK@MAUITIME.COM

awarded a $423,000 grant to the Kinsey Institute to find out why men seem to prefer not to use condoms during sex. (ABC News, reporting the announcement, contacted a sex-advice blogger, who revealed, free of charge, that it’s because the condom reduces sexual sensation.)

KIBBLES NEVER TASTED SO GOOD Nestor Waddell had to rush his 11-yearold Labrador mix, Jack, to the vet in May when he started acting strange during a walk, which had taken him into some bushes. The vet concluded that Jack had discovered and devoured some dry, harvested marijuana. According to Waddell, “[Jack’s] eyes were kind of glossed over…When he was trying to walk, he was looking at his paw, and then looking at the ground and then trying to get his paw to reach the ground, but was unsuccessful.”

DOUBLE JEOPARDY (1) A 34-year-old man survived a singlecar rollover accident in Nelson, Calif., in May, extricating himself and walking away, but was struck and killed minutes later by an Amtrak train as he crossed the railroad tracks. (2) In April in Houma, La., a 23-year-old motorist, having sideswiped a driver waiting to make a turn, drove away without stopping and was killed minutes later when he crashed into another car.

INCOMPETENT CRIMINALS (1) Victor Delfi was arrested and charged with robbing the Lincoln Park Savings Bank in Chicago, having tipped off authorities when he tried to deposit reddye-stained money into his own account at another bank. (2) Marlon Moore, 39, was indicted in Miami in June in what the Internal Revenue Service said was a series of attempts to cheat the U.S. Treasury. Using several aliases, Moore allegedly requested bogus tax refunds in the amounts of $5.959 trillion, $2.975 trillion and $6 trillion. (Also, under his own name, he asked for a tax refund of $10 million.) MTW

SPIN CYCLE Organization changes v. A blanket term used to indicate the firings, demotions and increased workloads of employees at a company that’s losing money. See also: restructuring, workforce reduction Usage: “Alexander & Baldwin, Inc…today announced key organization changes in its agribusiness segment, which includes Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company…the state’s only remaining operating sugar company.”

BY THE

NUMBERS

1,100 Number of state workers who could receive layoff notices in the coming months, according to Gov. Lingle

$172

Nothing to Wear?

Average nightly cost of a hotel room in Hawaii, an 18.1 percent decline compared to the same time last year

2 Number of Hawaii Tourism Board meetings that were cancelled last week because not enough members showed up

2 hr. 35 min.

...We Know

Time that elapsed between when a Wailuku woman left a courtroom where she had car break-in charges against her dropped and when the same woman was arrested for allegedly breaking into another car in Lahaina Sources: The Associated Press, Pacific Business News, Smith Travel Research, Hospitality Advisors, The Maui News

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

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JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


ROBREPORT

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

The home stretch

LC Watch Stop at ten

Eleventh-hour efforts are vital to island planning sk your average Maui resident how the land use and planning process works and you are likely to be greeted with a blank stare, or at best, a confused look. “The planning process actually works?” would probably be the unspoken response. Despite bona fide volunteer efforts by citizens dedicating countless hours to review the County’s General Plan, Community Plans, and individual project proposals, Maui’s unchecked urban sprawl advances year-by-year. Construction workers rally for more jobs, regardless of the location or aesthetics of a new development. Likewise, a glut of licensed real estate professionals clamors for more inventory, even in a flat market. The rest of us, visitors included, bemoan the trade-offs to quality of life that accompany unfettered growth. Traffic, crowded beaches, homogenization with the addition of Mainland corporate chains and the loss of our sense of place are among the impacts felt after the temporary prosperity provided with each project build-out. What, exactly, is the tipping point at which a coveted place to live begins teetering towards being undesirable? Indeed, many of Maui’s newest residents are those who relocated here because the places they moved from were becoming “too crazy.” Yet there is a paradox built into this paradigm: To a Maui resident, Honolulu would qualify as being too busy, too crazy, too built-up and built-out. But it must still be desirable, or else why would nearly a million people live there? Those hoping to capture and keep the nostalgic charm of some “Good Old Days” are likely to wind up as frustrated as one trying to catch lightning in a bottle. Recession or no, progress keeps on slipping, slipping into the future—a future that apparently calls for WalMart, Zippy’s, and Krispy Kreme. Over the past few decades, the planning process has been defined by wellremembered skirmishes over proposed projects: Makena and Wailea 670, North Beach/ Keka‘a, Pulelehua, Pu‘unoa, Spreckelsville Mauka, Kulamalu and the Barto Project. Each region of the island has waged its own turf battles, seeking to slow growth or maintain the character of their own neighborhoods, with varying degrees of success.

A

The future of Maui? But more often than not, the persistence of landowners and developers wears down resistance to their plans. Promises are given, and concessions made—a bikepath here, some native Hawaiian plant landscaping there—and citizens are left wondering if the whole thing was a slam dunk from the start, the system rigged to favor big money interests. sk an average Maui resident the status of the General Plan Advisory Committee review process, and if they know the policies or proposed urban growth boundaries in the plan, and watch them shrug their shoulders. It’s not that they don’t care, but really, who can keep up with the GPAC’s progress over the 3-plus years? Who remembers that the GPAC passed an amendment back in early 2006 that no new large projects be submitted to the Planning Department while their review was underway, only to have the County’s legal counsel rule that consideration was not within their power? While most Valley Isle residents have been doing their best just to stay afloat in the choppy waves of economic downturn, planning consultants have been lobbying hard for inclusion of their pet projects in the Maui Island Plan under review. Most of the proposals, in places ranging from Olowalu to Makena, and from North Kihei to Waikapu, seek to convert agricultural lands to urban uses. Focus Maui speaker (in 2007) and author James Howard Kunstler reminded us in his book, The Long Emergency, that Americans invented urban sprawl, that it is dependent upon “the availability of inordinately cheap oil,” and that it spread with “the efficiency of cancer.” Yet, despite sponsoring a Smart Growth conference eight years ago in 2001, Mauians haven’t

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incorporated a great deal of intelligence into their overall planning since then. The recently completed Hawaii 2050 Sustainability Plan was a statewide planning effort that vowed it would serve as a living document, and not merely gather dust on a shelf after completion. Yet, many of its nine benchmarks for action don’t seem to have gained much traction: develop a more diverse and resilient economy; develop a sustainability ethic; increase production and consumption of local foods and products, particularly agricultural products; preserve and perpetuate our Kanaka Maoli and island cultural values. Two news reports from last month call into question whether our planning policies are working, and if so, for whom. One story announced developer Jesse Spencer’s plans to build 1100 homes on 257 acres of prime agricultural land adjacent to Ma`alaea, while the other article trumpeted Alexander & Baldwin’s petition approval for designation of Important Agricultural Lands. Spencer, the septuagenarian patriarch of Spencer Homes, Inc., bought the Ma`alaea acreage a year ago for $10.5 million from California developers who acquired it back in 2004 from W a i l u k u Agribusiness, for $6.6 million. (See: “PrestoChange-o Zoning,”

Much has been made (by us and Maui Dance Advocates, mostly) about the LC’s restrictive dancing rules. Even if you dip into this column only occasionally, chances are you’re aware of the controversy. But there’s another aspect that hasn’t gotten as much attention: while the dancing rules impact every would-be booty shaker and toe tapper, they really put the squeeze on minors. This what the pertinent portion of section 08-101-61 of the department’s rules says: Public dancing by minors in licensed premises shall be permitted only when: (1) Accompanied by a legal, responsible adult; and (2) Food service, music, and entertainment are being provided; and (3) An approved area is set aside and designated a non-consumption area where minors shall remain; and (4) The dancing concludes by 10:00 p.m. The rules go on to allow the Commission to “authorize an extension of hours for special occasions, events, or circumstances.” But in most cases, if you’re under 21 years old (that’s how the LC defines “minor”, as opposed to the more traditional under-18 definition), you cannot dance in a place where alcohol is being served after 10pm. That means, technically, if a 20-year-old woman wanted to bob her head and wave her arms in a rhythmic fashion to a little slack key guitar at a liquorselling restaurant at 10:01pm in the designated dancing area, she’d still be in violation—or, more accurately, the restaurant would be in violation. If that seems ridiculous, it’s because it is.

see STRETCH, page 10

- Jacob Shafer To share or save this article, type: mt.smub.it/lc2 into your smartphone or pc

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

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ROBREPORT STRETCH, continued from page 9 8/14/08.) He said he wants to build more affordable homes, such as his recent Waikapu Gardens project, a 412-unit subdivision laid out in a geometric grid on what once served as an agricultural open space buffer between Wailuku and Waikapu towns. The land at the breezy foothills of the ridge stretching up towards the twenty wind turbines of Kaheawa Pastures obtained Kihei-Makena Community Plan designation as the Ma`alaea Mauka Project District more than a decade ago. However, it remains agricultural in state land use designation and county zoning, and would require changes for urban use. Needing approvals from both the Land Use Commission and County Council, Spencer could choose to “fast-track” his applications through the state’s 201 H process, which requires that decision makers give affordable housing projects a thumbsup or down within 45 days. Watchdog organizations concede the value in addressing low-cost housing in an expeditious manner, but believe the 201 H statute does not fully incorporate valuable input or conditions along with permit approvals.

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JULY 23, 2009

BY ROB PARSONS ROBPARSONS@EARTHLINK.NET

Would Spencer’s proposed Ohana Kai Village project at the Ma`alaea site be truly affordable? A Honolulu Advertiser story from last month said he anticipates that 660 units, or sixty percent, would be priced between 80 and 140 percent of Maui’s calculated annual median income. Those houses might be priced roughly from $260,000 to $500,000. The remaining 440 homes, or forty percent of the project, would be sold to those qualifying at 140 to 160 percent of median income, that is, earning $113,100 to $120,640. But the biggest clamor over building in that area hasn’t been over whether true affordability is being offered. It revolves around location. Limited services and infrastructure are available—schools, medical, shops, parks, emergency services, water—and the GPAC also penciled in a prospective alternative transportation corridor as relief for overcrowded highways. For these reasons, and the “prime ag” land classification, former Mayor Alan Arakawa and his Planning Director Mike Foley didn’t support the previous owner’s bid to develop the property. Current Planning chief Jeff Hunt agrees. But Hunt and the GPAC are not the final arbiters; that powers lies with the LUC and County Council. Spencer believes most Councilmembers will support Ohana Kai.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

“I really feel we will sell out,” said Spencer, referring to his proposed houses. cross the Honoapi`ilani Highway, tall fields of sugar cane stretch across Maui’s Central Valley isthmus. A 650-acre triangle owned by the plantation’s parent company, A&B Properties, Inc., was also designated as a Project District in the 1998 KiheiCommunity plan revision. This was the first step in anticipation of eventually building 2,000 housing units adjacent to Kealia Pond, and across from the Maui Electric diesel generating stations. Though a glimmer in the company’s development eye, it is not listed among the current projects portfolio on the A&B Properties website. (That list includes 168 single family units at Haliimaile, Kahului Town Center and `Aina O Kane mixed-use residential commercial projects, 179-acre Maui Business Park Phase II, and four Wailea projects.)

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hen the LUC approved A&B’s Maui petition to designate Important Agricultural Lands (IAL) last month, the 650 acres of prime ag land at Ma`alaea—community plan designated, but not urban zoned—was left off the list. So were tracts of ag land in North Kihei, 800 acres near Waiale Road (abutting Maui Lani, Kuihelani Highway,

W

and Waiko Road) coveted for a new community, and vast acreage close to the Hana Highway, from Spreckelsville through Paia, across Maliko Gulch and into the Haiku region. In keeping with new state legislation purported to protect farmlands state wide, a landowner faces more restrictions against developing lands with the IAL designation. But incentives also exist. When selecting 85 percent of lands for IAL designation, landowners can also seek fasttrack reclassification for urban uses on the remaining 15 percent. Many have suggested that A&B’s motive with the money-losing, polluting Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar (HC&S) plantation is to tie up water resources while land-banking lands held in ag designation, and taxed at a rate sometimes less than a dollar per acre. The boon from converting cane fields to urban projects, they say, more than offsets the financial and public relations problems of the sugar industry. As the GPAC review heads into the home stretch, it could be time to dust off those benchmarks in the Hawaii 2050 Sustainability Plan. How else can we safeguard our shared future? MTW

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MAUICOUNTY

BY JACOB SHAFER JACOB@MAUITIME.COM

FRIDAY, JULY 17

COCONUT WIRELESS THE WEEK IN REVIEW

I didn’t go through the Maui public school system and my son has yet to enter it. I am also the son, grandson and brother of public school teachers. Additionally, I think standardized test scores are an incomplete measure of student achievement. I tell you all that as a disclaimer, because I’m about to report some bad news about the County’s schools and I don’t want it to be seen as a shot at public education in general. OK, enough with the windup. Here’s what the headline in today’s Maui News says: “County schools make progress.” Here’s what the first line of the accompanying story says: “Eight out of 32 Maui County public schools met state and federal reading and math benchmarks this year…” When two-thirds of the schools tested are failing and that’s considered “progress,” it’s safe to say we’ve got a long way to go.

SATURDAY, JULY 18

WEDNESDAY, JULY 15 Interesting wrinkle in the ongoing tussle between Gov. Lingle and Hawaii’s labor unions: As reported in today’s Maui News, the state’s mayors are joining forces against the governor, complicating negotiations. Lingle gets four votes in the contract process and each mayor gets one; that means the Guv has to lure only one mayor to her side to get her way. In the past, that’s how it’s gone. But this year, according to Mayor Tavares, she and her colleagues have decided to “stay together as a group.” In the same Maui News piece, Tavares called Lingle’s furloughs “draconian.” We’ve taken shots at the Mayor before and we will again, but it’s nice to see her breaking ranks with Her Majesty.

THURSDAY, JULY 16 Speaking of Lingle’s ever-increasing political isolation: the Dem-controlled legislature overrode 34 of the governor’s vetoes yesterday, crushing the previous state record of 19, according to an AP report. In an early contender for understatement of the year, House Minority Leader and lonely Republican Lynn Finnegan (who opposed the overrides) was quoted as saying her fellow lawmakers “were kind of flexing their muscle.” One veto that was left alone was a tax hike on imported oil. If we’re serious about embracing alternative energy sources and seeing less of our money poured back to Mainland corporate behemoths, that would have been a good place to start.

As the news business (like all other businesses) struggles to stay relevant through reinvention, it’s interesting to ponder the legacy of Walter Cronkite, who died yesterday at age 92. Cronkite was the template for the nightly news anchorman: he embodied the trustworthiness and gravitas that became prerequisites for the job. What Johnny Carson was to late night stand-up and celebrity interviews, Cronkite was to news. Even his famous tagline—“And that’s the way it is…”—suggested unquestioned authority; he wasn’t asking you, he was telling you. Now, of course, the whole idea of the nightly news seems quaint. We don’t wait for the day’s end to get our news, we digest it in bits and pieces ’round the clock and our sources are as diverse as our means of consumption. On the surface, this seems like a good thing—and it is, mostly. As long as you teach yourself to sort the good information from the bad, the reliable from the unreliable (and that’s your job as a citizen, by the way), more is better. But while we’ve gained, we’ve also lost. (Isn’t that always the way?) Cronkite (and Carson) offered something that none of their contemporaries can: a collective experience. When you watched them, you knew lots of other people were watching them, too, and watching them the same way you were—on a TV set, in their home, probably on a couch or some other piece of furniture. It may seem silly and sentimental, but in the age of the iPhone and YouTube, microblogging and RSS feeds, the rabid individualism that has always informed the American experience has been kicked into overdrive. We’re more connected than ever (most of us, anyway) but we’re also, in some respects, surprisingly isolated. This isn’t a rant against technology— far from it. It’s just interesting to note how things have changed, and the passing of cultural icons affords an obvious opportunity to do exactly that.

Unlike that other thing, this really will make you go blind.

SUNDAY, JULY 19

MONDAY, JULY 20

The County Board of Ethics finally released its opinion in the complaint against Councilman Wayne Nishiki. (Well, to be fair, it could be a complaint against a different Maui County Councilman who accepted a $100,000 personal loan from a major developer and failed to reveal it until well after the deadline despite repeated reminders and warnings—names were withheld.) What does it say? Not much. Basically, the board tells Nishiki that, as a longtime public servant, he should have known better and that he needs to go back and read the rules concerning financial disclosure. To call it a slap on the wrist is an insult to slapping… In other news: On this day 40 years ago, no one could utter the phrase, “They put a man on the moon but they can’t [insert thing that’s less difficult than putting a man on the moon].”

Then, on this day 40 years ago, they could.

TUESDAY, JULY 21 Amusing item in today’s Honolulu Advertiser about safe and unsafe ways to view the impending solar eclipse. Under “unsafe,” the fourth item listed is “looking at the sun with the naked eye.” I don’t know what’s worse—that people still need to be reminded it’s not a good idea to stare at the sun sans protection, or that it was the fourth thing on the list. MTW Jacob Shafer is also available in Twitter form. Visit twitter.com/jacobshafer or text “follow jacobshafer” to 40404.

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OVERHEARD...

missed my plane, but I was able to go to Burger King."

"I

- Man going through security at the Kahului Airport

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

11


By Beau Ewan

I

’ll take it black,” says Bob “Ole” Olson, keeping it simple as he always does. I stash the sugar packets in my pocket and hand him a steaming cup of dark coffee. Lahaina’s merciless sun is winning the battle against the air conditioner inside the small industrial unit that Olsen has transformed into a vintage shaping room. But Ole—calm, collected and cool— gulps his cup of warm Joe, sits it on a shelf and grabs an electric planer from a wall-spanning collage of basic shaping tools: tape measures, hand saws, levels, t-squares, calipers and dozens of his time-tested templates. Even at 79 years old, Olsen’s still-chiseled arms glide the planer down the rails of a Styrofoam blank with effortless precision. Ole operates like a surgeon, but one who wears board shorts instead of scrubs. His smile illuminates the room. His tanned bare feet appear snow-covered from the two inches of foam dust accumulated on the floor. After a few passes with the planer, Ole looks up at me and explains, “I’m so happy to still be doing what I’m doing. I’ve always

O

le was born in Long Beach, California on November 27, 1929, one month after the stock market crashed and the Great Depression began. At 18, cruising down to San Onofre in his Ford Model A, Ole was one of a small handful of Mainland surfers. His redwood surfboard was ridiculously heavy and the waters were frigid without a wetsuit. “It’s funny when I look back at it. We never thought surfing would become so popular,” Ole remembers. “We just thought of it as a passing fad.” After serving a tour in the Korean War, Ole returned to California and took a job teaching woodshop at Garden Grove High School in Orange County. During his summer vacations he shaped surfboards and sold them out of an old quonset hut in Sunset Beach, just north of Huntington. A close friend of Ole’s, Dick Metz, is the founder of The Surfing Heritage Foundation, which serves as the unofficial archive of all things surfing. “That old shop of Ole’s was definitely one of the first surf shops ever,” says Metz. “Sure, there

ued shaping into the early ’60s, as surfboard materials switched from balsa and redwoods to polyurethane foam and fiberglass. But instead of pursuing it full time, Ole stuck with teaching wood-shop and sold the rights to his business to Hobie Alter. Alter would continue to sell surfboards under the distinguished “Ole” name. As the surfing population continued climbing worldwide, Metz believes few of the surfers from that early generation realized, or even cared about, the sport’s monetary potential. “We were from the Depression generation, and we just want-

foam,” says legendary surfer and original Ole team rider Corky Carroll. “But being a true craftsman, he was never a high volume guy. I don’t think he ever wanted to put out 10,000 boards a year—he’s happier with a few good ones.” n 1971, Ole moved to Maui, worked as a finish carpenter and eventually started making custom surfboards full-time. To this day, he continues to create some of the finest surfboards in the business. Although the shaping industry has undergone massive changes with regard

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“Each of his creations is a special work of art that no machine could duplicate.” - Matt Kinoshita, owner, Kazuma Surfboards

done things a certain way and that’s always worked for me.” The surrounding clippings, letters, autographed celebrity photos, posters and trophies are a testament that both surfing and shaping have been good to Ole—and Ole good to them.

12

JULY 23, 2009

were people building surfboards and selling them, but Ole actually had a shop where people could go and buy one.” Besides some small corner advertisements in the first issues of Surfer magazine, Ole never did much marketing. He contin-

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

ed to surf as much as we could,” says Metz. “We were never into it for the money.” Ole’s handcrafted approach to shaping has always emphasized the quality of his product over profit. “Ole has always been one of those guys who can make art out of

to materials, technology and theory, Ole’s methodology remains the same. “Bob is one of the few shapers with a link to the beginning of modern surfing,” says Matt Kinoshita, owner of Kazuma Surfboards. “He has knowledge and


experience that younger shapers like myself will never know.” Ole uses his hands and eyes to make his cuts instead of relying on computer programs. Because of this, Kinoshita says Ole’s handcrafted boards can’t be reproduced by today’s technology. “I believe that Bob knows his tools so well that it would actually be harder to get the same perfect, finished product that he gets by hand-shaping. Each of his creations is a special work of art that no machine could duplicate.” To the surfboard connoisseur, purchasing a good Ole board is like investing in a blue chip stock. Randy Rarick is a surf industry luminary, the man behind the Triple Crown of Surfing and event producer of the annual Hawaiian Islands Vintage Surf Auction. “We actually won’t have any classic Ole boards at the auction this year,” says Rarick. “And I think the reason is that whoever has a really good Ole simply doesn’t want to get rid of it.“ Continues Rarick: “While other shapers have come and gone, Ole’s work has transcended five generations of surf-

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A signed photograph from Jimmy Buffett reads: “Ole, thanks for the board, she’s beautiful, and we don’t look bad either for a bunch of old farts.” ing. And so a classic Ole board from the ‘60s could easily sell from $5,000 to $10,000 at the auction.” s I listen to Ole talk story from across the shaping room, it becomes clear that he’s one of the most singular characters I’ve ever met, with some of the best stories. His shaping has built friendships with surfing celebrities like Jimmy Buffet; a signed photograph from Jimmy reads: “Ole, thanks for the board, she’s beautiful, and we don’t look bad either for a bunch of old farts.” As a prank, Ole once bought a cheap drum set for the six-year-old son of some friends, knowing the little guy would keep them up all night. Some 30 years later, that six-year-old had turned into a man and introduced himself to Ole as Tris Imboden, the drummer for Chicago. When he was 66, Ole was featured in the second edition of a book by Etta Clark titled, Growing Old Is Not for Sissies: Portraits of Senior Athletes. Another legendary Maui surfer, the late Woody Brown, who surfed until he was 89, is featured on the cover of the same book holding an Ole

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HALEAKALA DISTILLERS! surfboard. At 79, Ole continues to surf. There must be something in the water. Before we say our goodbyes, Ole and I discuss why we love surfing so much. “It has something to do with the chemistry of moving water and all those positive ions bouncing around,” he says. “Surfers are surrounded by, and addicted to, that positive energy.” But Ole believes this holds true for all people. “Ask anyone to close their eyes and imagine a peaceful place, and most people will describe themselves besides an ocean, river, lake, or waterfall,” he says. “Moving water puts people at ease.” Pulling away from Ole’s shop, with his shaka in my rearview, I think about how some people can have that same effect on us—and how Ole’s shaping goes far beyond foam and fiberglass. MTW

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY


ONO KINEGRINDS

BY ANU YAGI ANU@MAUITIME.COM

Wailea chic Beachfront eatery offers more than a view t’s late. The last, lingering couple sits at a table just past ours, their hands touching, enjoying the vestiges of their vintage selection from one of the state’s best cellars, a collection boasting over 450 selections and 4,500 bottles. At the close of a long night,

I

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Executive Sous Chef and Kitchen Manager Rory Butts graciously takes time to sit and speak with us while we finish a decadent dessert of his doing. Nestled at the end of South Kihei Road, Sarento’s On The Beach is quintessential Wailea-style dining. One of Tri Star Restaurant Group’s tetrad of

establishments, everything oozes effervescent South Side chic—crisp, rich, intimate, comfortable. The restaurant’s low makai wall reveals its hallmark open-air panorama that seems to spill you right atop the sands of Keawakapu, a choice view for diners as they dive into the culinary fusion waters of Mediterranean meets Pacific Rim. The genuine hospitality of its superb team makes this acclaimed upscale experience delightfully warm and unpretentious. Chef Butts speaks with candid sincerity about the opportunities and challenges of a chef’s trade. He details his commitment to topnotch product—sought out domestically and abroad—as well as the careful orchestration that’s needed to balance seasonal offerings with his own epicurean innovation. Yet no matter where the conversation takes us, Chef Butts always relates his own passions back to the vision of the company at large. “We hire by the heart. If someone comes to me and says, ‘Chef, I’m here for the food. I’m here to learn and to use the best

product . . . That’s the guy I want in the kitchen,” he says. From the kitchen to the table, the staff works to make the food the star attraction. After all, service and view aside, I am here for fine dining. And dine finely I do. Were a rainbow distilled into a sweet and savory dish, it would be Sarento’s Mango & Avocado Ceviche. A Molokai sweet potato chip towers from the martini glass, an indigo obelisk nestled at the edge of a spring pallet mound of creamy avocado and mango, delicately cubed and contrasted against the crunchy bursts of tart lilikoi. Bridging the colors and flavor of the deep, dusky chip and early morning avo are bold toppings of spicy heart-shaped microgreens and—a personal favorite—the garnet flesh of vibrant blood orange, a late-season treat. The roasted beet carpaccio was the table favorite; I found the hazelnuts to be the most delightful element of the golden pea sprout and daikon salad, atop the Venn Diagram of ultra slim slices of burgundy and gold beets, dressed with a horseradish vinaigrette and sprigs of watercress. The al dente Butternut Squash Risotto, with highly complementary pumpkin seed oil, an orange pistachio gremolata and slivers of shaved shiitake mushrooms, was a close second. Named for Placourakis’s granddaughter, the Gabriella salad is a lovely chopped mix of Maui onions, cherry tomatoes, feta, baby artichokes and bay shrimp. My taste buds rejoiced with the salad’s crown jewel: a long, thick slice of avocado, first lightly grilled with the charred outsides carefully

cut off, leaving it soft and sweet but permeated with a savory smokiness. If you save room for dessert, the Chocolate Profiterole and Tiramisu with a teardrop-cut ladyfinger sent straight from heaven, is purely divine. If Sarento’s seems like a treat out of reach, fear not. The recently intorduced Starlight Menu, offered from 8pm until the last seating at 9:30pm, allows diners to indulge on three courses from a select menu—salad, entrée and dessert—for a mere $25. Economic options aside, Sarento’s offers a dining experience with flavor and heart that’s worth every penny. MTW

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY


ARTSCENE

BY JESSICA ARMSTRONG JESSICA@MAUITIME.COM

Under the high wire Up close and personal with Cirque Polynesia ’ll admit I was a little nervous. I lucked out with front row seats at Maui’s newest stage show, Cirque Polynesia, but from where I was sitting, it seemed like the two pretty blondes

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Hyatt Regency Resort and Spa, Kaanapali 200 Nohea Kai Drive 667-4540 $61.90 show only $116.10 with dinner teetering net-less across the high wire could have easily taken a misstep and fallen on me. I’d been holding my breath for most of the show—which included a variety of stunning acrobatic feats interspersed with theatrical and comedic performances. We’d seen acrobats, contortionists, magicians, extreme hula hoopers and even a cube manipulator. Cirque Polynesia producer Cornell “Tuffy” Nicholas explained to me that the show tells the tale of several cirque performers who get stranded on an island inhabited by ancient Polynesians. The two groups come together to learn the other’s form before blending them into a modern hybrid of Polynesian circus. The storyline isn’t essential to the show, however. Much more important is the blending of two artistic genres and the perfect execution of difficult circus acts performed in a lively theater atmosphere. Nicholas achieves that in an entertaining, if sometimes obvious, way. At the beginning of the show, after a comical but long opening act by an elaborately dressed and painted Polynesian “warrior” (funnier if you or someone you’re with gets pulled up on stage), the circus begins as one group of traditional Polynesians perform a quick hula while a set of outrageously costumed cirque performers begin a hula hoop routine involving one woman impressively spinning her full body length in rings. The theme seems to fall away after that as more serious circus acts follow. I had to peek through my fingers

to watch as one woman dangled precariously from a rope by her ankle while holding another rope that swung her partner around in dizzying circles by the neck. The small but impressive cast is pulled mostly from two longtime circus families, the Wallendas and Arestovs, but includes artists from Brazil, Germany and Eastern Europe, and even a few from Oahu. Perhaps the most remarkable performance came from rola bola artist Simon Arestov, who climbed to impossible heights aboard a rickety, rocky contraption built of cylinders and tiny platforms. It’s a balancing feat that attains the skill and difficulty levels usually reserved for the more popular (and more elaborate) Cirque Du Soleil productions. But despite all the death-defying acts that we saw that night a different type of performance stole the show. Just to the left of the main stage, in her own tiny spotlight, stood cellist Diane Rubio. Petite as she was, this dark beauty commanded attention behind an instrument taller than she. Local artists, Rubio and her partner, percussionist Daniel Cruces, perform a magnetic, live original score that melds rock and classical music for a sound that stays perfectly in tune with the action on stage. After the show Rubio hinted she’s been practicing aerials and may someday take her incredible Cirque performance off the ground. “The show is evolving,” said Rubio. “We’ve just joined the circus, and this is only the beginning.” MTW

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MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

17


FILMCRITIQUE

BY BARRY WURST II BARRY@MAUITIME.COM

Not ‘Half’ bad Latest Potter flick is one of the best despite epic runtime y teen years were sometimes tough, but I’ve got nothing on Harry Potter. Now in his sixth year at the Hogwarts School, the young wizard’s days are full of betrayal, teen longing, assassination plots, peer pressure and death.

M

Harry Potter and the HalfBlood Prince

★★★★★ ★ Rated PG/153 min.

Daniel Radcliffe returns as the title role, the “chosen one” asked by headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) to keep an eye on the eccentric returning professor (Jim Broadbent). Meanwhile, Harry’s best friends Hermoine (Emma

Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) battle the deadliest aspect of their young adult lives: hormones. The biggest problem with this film is the same flaw that ails the other Potter films: it’s overstuffed and too long. There is so much here that it’s easy to overlook the wonderful Quidditch match (always a highlight of these movies) or the eye popping opening set piece. The PG rating is just right, as the film is as scary and intense as an Indiana Jones or Lord of the Rings movie. Each Potter film has gotten progressively darker, which fits the character’s gradual maturity. But the scariest things in this film, by far, are the duel performances by HeroFiennes Tiffin (Ralph Fiennes’ nephew) and Frank Dillane as the young Voldemort (the super-villain of the series); their scenes will give you serious chicken skin. The film this entry reminded me the most of is The Empire Strikes Back which not only has a similar closing image but also a likewise climax that is downbeat,

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Magic is no match for teen angst. moving and hopeful. Director David Yates has made this one of the most visually rich entries in the series, with atmospheric shots of dreamlike landscapes. The cast is in top form, particularly the core three actors. Yet it’s Gambon’s commanding performance that is the stand out. Those who are a sequel behind or are new to Potter may be playing catch-up for the first 30-minutes, but the uninitiated will likely be drawn into the story. I once thought the series peaked with the third entry, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, as the special effects

in the following sequels have had more impact on me than the stories. I was skeptical that the sixth entry in an eight-year old film series could offer anything new or make me care. Boy, was I wrong. Despite being overlong, this is funny, emotionally rich and exciting stuff, with action scenes that hold their own next to the other, bigger summer blockbusters. I’ll admit that I’m a mere Muggle and not a rabid Potter fan, but at the end of the new film, I found myself truly touched and excited for the next installment, which is a first for me. MTW


MOVIECAPSULES Maui Film Festival Candlelight Cinema CHECK BACK IN AUGUST.

New This Week G-FORCE - G - Art, Foreign - Zack Galifiankis and Will Arnett are among the cast members supplying voices to a squad of guinea pigs who have been sent on a mission to stop an evil billionaire from taking over the world. 86 min.

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

HARRY POTTER AND THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE - PG - Fantasy - This is the one where he dies. Just kidding. Now in his sixth year at Hogwart’s, Potter begins learning some dark secrets about one of his close mentors. And discovering his feelings toward a certain young lady. 133 min. I LOVE YOU, BETH COOPER - PG13 - Art, Foreign - A nerd of the class valedictorian variety professes his love for said Beth during the graduation ceremony. A highly improbable series of events ensues. 102 min. ICE AGE: DAWN OF THE DINOSAURS - PG - Animation - The adorable creatures from this animated franchise carry on, only this time there are dinosaurs, which will probably mislead another

SHOWTIMES Front Street Theater 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-F until 6:30pm, Sa-Su until 3:30pm, Discount Tue), Bruno - R - Th 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30. F-W 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10. The Hangover - R - Th only 7:15, 9:45 Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs - PG - Th 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15. F-W 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9. My Sister’s Keeper - PG13 - Th only 2:15, 4:45 Orphan - R - F-W 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45 The Proposal - PG13 - Th only 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 The Ugly Truth - R - F-W 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45

Ka’ahumanu 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 1-800326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), I Love You, Beth Cooper - PG13 - Th 11:05, 1:20, 3:40, 6, 8:20, 10:40. F 2:10, 4:30. Sa-W 11:35, 5:05. Orphan - R - F-W 11:50, 2:20, 4:55, 7:30, 10:05

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Scuba diving rodents? I smell Oscar. ORPHAN - R - Horror - A couple who recently lost a baby adopt a 9-year-old named Esther, who ends up not being the innocent little girl she claims to be. We’re an American band. Woo. 123 min. THE UGLY TRUTH - R - Comedy Basically, an uptight talk show producer (Katherine Heigl) is routinely put off by the antics of one of the show’s strapping correspondents (Gerard Butler). I’ll give you one guess as to the outcome. 101 min.

Now Showing AWAY WE GO - R - Comedy - An oh-soquirky couple goes on a cross country road trip after discovering their first accidental pregnancy, and meets all kinds of characters on the way. 98 min.

generation of kids about the nature of the fossil record. 89 min. MY SISTER’S KEEPER - PG13 - Drama - When faced with the death of their daughter via leukemia, a married couple makes a choice that raises ethical questions. With hilarious results. 109 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. PUBLIC ENEMIES - R - Action - Johnny Depp stars as John Dillinger, who robbed the same banks that drove the US into the Great Depression. Christian Bale stars as the FBI dude who was on his trail under the auspices of a cross-dressing J. Edgar Hoover. 100 min.

BRUNO - R - Comedy - Clad in skin-tight mesh, Sacha Baron Cohen (‘Borat’, ‘Da Ali G Show’) makes red-blooded homophobes painfully uncomfortable and lampoons shallow celebrity culture in one delightfully fabulous swoop. 83 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.

CHERI - R - Art, Foreign - Set in 1920s Paris, this flick delves into the weird fantasy life of a young rich dude who was forced to end his relationship with an older woman. 86 min.

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.

THE HANGOVER - R - Comedy - A bunch of dudes go to Vegas for a bachelor 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.

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 how-to. 100 min.

Maui Mall Megaplex Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm), Bruno - R - Th 12:05, 12:40, 2:15, 2:50, 4:25, 4:55, 6:35, 7:10, 8:45, 9:20. F-W 12:40, 2:50, 4:55, 7:10, 9:20. G-Force - G - Th-W 12:45, 1:30, 3, 3:45, 5:15, 6, 7:30, 8:15, 9:45. 3D 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20. The Hangover - R - Th-W 1:40, 4:05, 6:30, 8:55. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - PG Th-W 12:15, 12:45, 1:45, 3, 3:30, 4, 5, 6:15, 6:45, 7:15, 8:15, 9:30, 10. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs - PG - Th 1:20, 3:40, 5:55, 8:10. Th 3D: 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20. F-W 1:20, 3:40, 5:55, 8:10. My Sister’s Keeper - PG13 - Th-W 1:35, 4:15, 6:55, 9:35. Up - PG - Th-W 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30. Year One - PG13 - Th only 1:25, 3:50, 6:10, 8:40

Wharf Cinema Center 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day), G-Force - G - F-W 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - PG Th 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:10. F-W 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:10. F-W 12:15, 3:35, 6:45, 9:55. Public Enemies - R - Th only 12:45, 4, 7:15, 10:20 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - PG13 Th-W 12:15, 3:35, 6:45, 9:55.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

19


THIS WEEK’S PICKS Spawn, baby, spawn

Talkin’ story

Friday (July 24), 7:30-9:30pm, Maui Ocean Center, Ma’alaea

Saturday (July 25), 1pm, MCC

Nobody knows why coral spawn at the precise moment they do. Whether it’s the moon, the tide, the temperature of the water or something beyond our sensory abilities is a mystery scientists have yet to successfully deduce. When the event does occur, it’s quite a spectacle: millions of glowing orbs, floating around in eerie formations before settling into the substrate, potentially becoming the progenitor of a coral reef. Chances, of course, are slim, what with all the predators that tend to lurk. For anyone who wants to see this take place before 2010, this Friday’s the night. Maui Ocean Center will be home to several spawning sites within its walls, featuring primarily rice coral, illuminated by red spotlights. Naturalists will be on hand to describe what’s happening. Plus, the Hawaiian Islands National Marine Humpback Whale Sanctuary will provide live footage of the spawning that will take place in the center’s Discovery Pool. R e s e r v a t i o n s required. $27 general/$22 keiki.

One of the most crucial elements of identity is the narrative. Individuals and cultures alike rely on stories to reinforce who they are and why they do what they do. Just look at Republicans. One of the things that made them so successful in the first half of the decade was the fact that they had an impossibly simple narrative about who we are and why we fight (all crap, of course)... I mean, can you name a country song that doesn’t tell a story (“Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy” notwithstanding)? In one form or another, stories also serve as a primary source of recreation. This weekend’s Talk Story Conference will feature workshops with storytellers from all walks. George Kaimiola will offer a compelling discussion of Lahaina’s history. Australian Annie Eyers will discuss her journey across Australia with Aboriginal guides. Wajuppa Tossa will discuss the revival of Thai folk tales. At 7pm the event will culminate with a “concert” featuring the conference’s keynote speakers. $25.

THURSDAY

➤➤➤➤➤ FRIDAY ➤➤➤➤➤ SATURDAY ➤➤➤➤➤ SUN

Friday, July 24 6:30–8:30 pm

10 pm– Midnight

GAIL CURTIS SWANSON LOVE

Founding member of Hapa

KELI‘I

Sat. July 25 7:30pm–9:00pm $10 Advance $12 at the Door

KANEALI‘I Sunday, July 26 • 6:30 pm Sunday, July 26 • 10– Midnight CELTIC C JIMMY Y MAC TIGERS & THEE KOOLL KATS

$3HEINEKEN HEINKEN LIGHT An evening with

WILLIE K on Thursday, July 23 and Wednesday, July 29

all night Sunday!

Dining starts at 6 7:30pm–9:30pm $25 Show only $49 Dinner $69 Dinner/Drinks

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

20

JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY


BY KATE BRADSHAW

Disco sucks

Alive at five

Saturday (July 25), 10pm, Casanova, Makawao

Sunday (July 26), 2pm, Casanova, Makawao

From time to time the ’70s genre that brought us tunes like “Funky Town” is brought back to life and reanimated for no particular reason, other than perhaps novelty. This doesn’t mean that disco doesn’t suck, at least the bubblegum offshoots that came to overshadow disco’s funky origins. Orange County-based DJ Poppa is doing something different. A founding member of Double-Fisted Underground and Smartbeat Sound System, he and DJs DirtyLo and Scotty Coats constitute a project called Suck My Disco, which distills the more soulful elements of disco and sets them to a different beat. The result is a rich, highly danceable sound that lacks the aspects of disco that make most of us cringe. Poppa’s Facebook fan page gives a pretty solid description of their sound: “We enjoy and demand wicked mind-massaging disco and weird spaced-out dance rock…” Not bad. Saturday’s show is brought to us by ‘a‘a Disco, which hosts Mainland and neighbor island DJs “who are instrumental in the cosmic disco edit craze” in an attempt to foster the genre on the Valley Isle. DJ Keegan also plays. $5 before 11pm.

Twice monthly, Maui’s airwaves–and Internet tubes worldwide–are infused with something unique and dynamic. Every second and fourth Sunday Casanova hosts an afternoon soiree featuring acoustic performances by local and national acts alike. Said performances are broadcast courtesy of the sound wizards at Mana‘o Radio 91.5 FM, the nonprofit community station that is the beneficiary of these shows. As of this week, Manao’s Upcountry Sundays has been running strong for a whole five years–not bad for a place with so transient a population. Past acts include Vince Esqire, BrownChicken BrownCow String Band, Willie K and many, many others. (They even asked me to play once.) In celebration they’re going all out for this Sunday’s installment. Slated performers include the Mana‘o Radio Orchestra (Unplugged), Dr. Nat, Eddie Tanaka, Steve Grimes, Randall Rospond and Steve Sargenti, among many others. Pints of some of the most excellent tap beers around will be available, as will some killer pizza. Plus: free birthday cake. $7.

DAY

➤➤➤➤➤MONDAY ➤➤➤➤➤TUESDAY ➤➤➤➤➤WEDNESDAY 2 DJs, 4 Turntables

DEL SOL • CIA No Cover 50% off for S.I.N.

DJ CIA Suck My Beat

In the heart of Olde Makawao Town

WILD WAHINE WEDNESDAY

Thursday July 23rd

CASANOVA’S FAMOUS

ERIN SMITH 10PM – No Cover

DJ ASTRO RAPH

Trip Hop-Downtempo-Acid Jazz-Breaks Happy Hour All 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

10pm–2am TEQUILA TWILIGHTS

OFF

$7

No Cover 6–9pm WHISKEYS

DJ CIA $2 OFF TEQUILAS

50% OFF WINE LIST

DJ NATURE BOY No Cover 10pm

1913 SOUTH KIHEI RD

| 891-1001

TRIBUTE IN MEMORY OF

MICHAEL JACKSON Music by DJ Boomshot Music Starts at 10:00pm $5 Cover

July 24th

The Kryptones Presents

Casa del Sol

$2

DUB STEP

LADIES NIGHT

Saturday July 25th

`A`A DISCO PRESENTS

DANDELION

DJ POPPA

CALI DISCOROCKER

DJ KEEGAAN

Underground One Live Vinyl Mix Music Starts at 10:00pm $5 Cover before 11PM $10 after 11pm

(of Vegetation) ALSO FEATURING

TEOMON

Sunday

Roots-Rock-Reggae

July 26th Music starts at 10:00pm MANA’O RADIO PRESENTS $10 Cover

UPCOUNTRY SUNDAYS

BIG 5TH BIRTHDAY BASH Featuring

The Mighty Mana‘o Orchestra “Unplugged” & Special Guests Show 2–5pm • $7 Donation

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

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

21


Big Shows

Tilden Trio - Sun, Jul 26. Music from Three

Tickets on Sale

that caught the ear of Jack Johnson’s Brushfire

Pete Kater & Dominic Miller-Thu, Jul 23. Sting Guitarist

Takemitsu, Pollock, Mendelssohn, others. An Ebb

Plantation Days - Thu-Sun, July 30-Aug 2.

Moon” demonstrate the dynamic nature of his

Miller and Grammy-winning pianist Kater come together for a

and Flow production. 5 p.m. Makawao Union

Celebrate Lahaina’s colonial days with food, drink

songwriting ability. 10 p.m. Hard Rock Cafe, 900

night of very mellow music. $30. 7:30 p.m. McCoy Studio

Church, 1445 Baldwin Ave. 579-9261.

and entertainment. Tickets available at Maui Grown

Front St. 667-7400.

Continents. includes performances of works by

Records. Songs like “Sunshine” and Behind the

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

Upcountry Sundays 5th Anniversary

Coffee on Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina. $5 for a three-

Maui Calls - Fri, Aug 14. It’s that time again. This

2 Pistols/Young Joe - Sat, Jul 25. On the heels

Bash - Sun, Jul 26. This Mana’o Radio Mainstay

day pass. Poineer Mill site, surrounding the historic

gigantic MACC fundraiser is considered the wine

of his latest, Arrogant, this up-and-coming Tampa

has been going strong for a damned long time.

smokestack on Lahainaluna Rd. 661-3262.

tasting event of the year, and features musical per-

Bay area-based rapper comes to Maui. You may

Now they celebrate with performances by veteran

Diplo - Sat, Aug 1. This producer and DJ is referred

formances, gourmet food from top chefs and more.

know from from his collaboration with T-Pain on the

Maui acts. See this Week’s Picks for details. 2 p.m.

to as the ambassador of Baile Funk. Tickets avail-

$175. 6 p.m. Events Lawn, MACC, One Cameron

song “She Got It.”. 10 p.m. Oceans Beach Bar &

Casanova Italian Restaurant and Deli, 1188

able at honoluluboxoffice.com, Wokstar (Kihei) and

Way. 242-2787 ext. 225.

Grill, 1819 S. Kihei Rd. 891-2414.

Makawao Ave. 808-572-0220.

The Wine Corner (Paia) or by calling 550-8457.

The Fixx - Thu, Aug 27. King Michel Productions

DJ Poppa - Sat, Jul 25. An ‘a’a Disco production,

Tilden Trio: French Faire - Tue, Jul 28. The second

$15/$20. 9 p.m. Charley’s, 142 Hana Hwy. 579-

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

this Cali Disco rocker turns your idea of disco music

installment of this Ebb & Flow concert series, this

9453.

best known for the tune “One Thing Leads to

on its head. See This Week’s Picks for more details.

show will include performances of works by Ravel and

Priscilla Party 2009 - Sat, Aug 1. This annual

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

10 p.m. Casanova Italian Restaurant and Deli,

Debussy. 7:30 (Pre-concert discussion at 6:30).

LGBT shindig is brought to us by Both Sides Now.

$43.50. 7 p.m. Maui Theatre, 878 Front St. 800-

1188 Makawao Ave. 572-0220.

Keawalai Congregational Church, Makena. 876-1854.

It should be a most excellent blowout with food,

745-3000.

drink, dancing and entertainment. This year’s

Slava’s Snow Show - Daily, Aug 28. This spec-

theme is vintage military attire. Tickets available at

tacular show dazzles with vivid imagery and theatri-

both-sides-now.org. $25/$35 door. 2-8 p.m. (no at-

cal performances by clowns wearing big shoes.

event parking, but free shuttles will run from the

Involves fog machines, precipitation and loud

Keli’i Kaneali’i - Sat, Jul 25. This most magnifi-

Stage

cent performer of a number of styles - and a founding member of the band Hapa - comes to Maui for a solo performance. 7:30 p.m. Mulligan’s on the

Blue, 100 Kaukahi St. 874-1131.

Mulan - Thu-Sun. Based on the Disney version, but performed by the Maui Academy of Performing Arts summer camp keiki. $12. Th-Sat 7:30 p.m.; Sun 2

Shops at Wailea) Sugarman Estate, Makena.

music. Fri: 7:30 p.m.; Sat: 1:30 & 7:30 p.m. Castle

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

Leiohu Ryder Save Honolua Benefit - Sat,

p.m. Steppingstone Theatre, 275 W. Kaahumanu

America - Sat, Aug 8. These dudes sing the “A

Jul 25. This extremely spiritual purveyor of Hawaiian

Ave. Queen Kaahumanu Center, Kahului. 877-3369.

Horse With No Name” (shame on you for thinking

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

music will perform in a remote and absolutely

The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas - Thu-

that was Neil Young!). $40-65. 6 p.m. A & B

excellent young soulful singer/composer will proba-

beautiful location in the Honolua Valley. Bring a

Sun, through Aug. 5. This musical is a lighthearted

Amphitheater, MACC, One Cameron Way. 242-

bly sell out quickly. A portion of proceeds from ticket

flashlight, lawn chair and cooler. Special seating will

look at a smalltown brothel frequented by politi-

7469.

sales go toward an effort to improve living conditions

be available for kupuna. $20. 5 p.m. Honolua Valley

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

Matt Costa - Fri, Aug 14. This singer-songwriter

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

(just past the one-lane bridge). (909) 891-0084.

Iao Theater, 68 N. Market St. 242-6969.

has penned some catchy and unique tunes, tunes

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

844 FRONT ST., LAHAINA • 667-7758

22

JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600

2511 S. KIHEI RD., KIHEI • 891-8600


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

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

Thursday 07/23

Friday 07/24

Saturday 07/25

Sunday 07/26

Monday 07/27– Wednesday 07/29

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

CAFE MARC AUREL CASANOVA 1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

Dandelion / Teomon $10, 10pm

DJ Poppa $10, 10pm

Upcountry Sundays

WED - Ladies’ Night, $10, 10pm

Dance Hall

DJ Nature Boy

DJ Nature Boy

Teen Night (ages 14-18)

TUE - LahainaJam/Open Mic; WED - Black Powder Band

Wavetrain $5, 9pm

Studio 142 w/ DJ Ray Masters; $10, 10pm

Ga Vinci $15, 10pm

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

Crunch Pups 10pm

Ms. Beaver

MON -Jordan & Friends; TUE - Erin Smith

Cherryette Sapphire

Homestead

Karaoke

Pool Tournament

TUE - Pool Night; WED - Jam Night

Disco Dinner Dance AIDS Found. Benefit; $5, 10pm

Ultra Fab $5, 10pm

Pac Vibe

Karaoke

Karaoke

TUE - Pool Tournament; WED - Ladies’ Night

744 Front St., Lahaina 661-3744

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

COOL CAT CAFE Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

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

MON - Jazz Cafe w/ Manao Radio

Michael Jackson Tribute $5, 10pm

CELLAR 744

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB

Dr. Nat & Rio Ritmo $10, 9pm

Mojomana

28 N. Market St. Wailuku - 244-0852

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

TUE - Danyal Alana

WED - Patricia Watson Piano Singalong

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

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

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

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

Rampage

A Kettle Prime

Ko Mele

Karaoke Night

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

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON-WED - Karaoke

JACQUES 120 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8844

Hale O Na Ali’i Hawaii Gathering - This is

Swap Meet - From camo hunting gear and koa

the 3-day 59th annual gathering of this statewide

carvings to vintage aloha postcards and delicate,

Sleep with the Sharks - A learning sleepover.

Native Hawaiian advocacy group. This year’s theme

locally-crafted jewelry, this place pretty much has it

Takes place in the shark area and involves games

is “Continuing the Legacy.” Maui Beach Hotel, 170

all. Killer produce market, too. Admission: 50 cents.

Solutions”

and other educational activities. Includes dinner,

W. Kaahumanu Ave. 877-0051.

Workshop - Learn how to save money for your

snack and breakfast. For keiki in third through

business by, um, not having to pay so much for

eighth grade. 5:30 p.m.-8 a.m. Maui Ocean Center,

those pesky employees. Learn from local busi-

Maalaea. 270-7075.

Doggie Luau - A chance to mingle with other dog

ness leaders in this free lecture. 12-1:30 p.m.

Wo Hing After Dark - A chance to check out

owners and check out some free samples for the

Maui County Business Resource Center, Maui

some rare Chinese artifacts and other facets of the

pup. Dog trainer Lisa Giesick will be on hand from 1-

Mall. 873-8247.

olden days after the sun goes down. Films on this

2 p.m. Plus: Free shave ice. . 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Pouchi

Class: Stress to the Limit - Learn the healthi-

topic will also screen. Happens every Friday. $2. 1-

Couture, 400 Hana Hwy., Unit B. 893-2275.

est ways to cope with stress and prevent the many

8 p.m. Wo Hing Museum, Front

health hazards it poses. 6-7:30 p.m. Kaiser

St., Lahaina,. 661-3262.

Permanente Maui Lani Clinic, 55 Maui Lani Pkwy.

Shower

243-6050.

Competition - Round One -

Film: A Sea Change - Imagine a world with-

The preliminary round for this talent

out fish. This documentary will enlighten you

showcase because Maui, after all,

on the threat of ocean acidification and one

has got talent. 6 p.m. Queen

man’s quest to find out about it. 6-7:30 p.m.

Kaahumanu

Pacific Whale Foundation, 300 Ma’alaea Rd.

Kaahumanu Ave. 877-3369.

249-8811.

Art Exhibition - Shawn Ardoin

Tournament - This is the 25th

Bon Dance Practice - Rinzai will host Bon danc-

knows fish. His work consists of

year of this Maui Trailer Boat Club

ing Tuesdays and Thursdays throughout the season.

mixed media on canvas boldly portraying colorful

fishing tournament. A two-day event. 6 a.m.

This colorful ritual serves to honor departed ances-

marine life. A chance to talk story, have a glass of

Kahului Harbor. 244-3449.

tors. 7:30 p.m. Rinzai Zen Mission, 120 Alawai Rd.

wine and check out his stuff. Free. 7 p.m. Maui

Connect @ QKC - This back to school event fea-

579-9921.

Hands Galleries, 612 Front St. 573-2021.

tures a fashion show, Wii competitions, A Miss

Cinema Night - Cafe Mambo will be host-

Obon Festival - An Upcountry installment of

Maui pageant winner meet and greet and a chance

ing an evening of classic and cult classic films

this Buddhist tradition to honor ancestors.

to donate school supplies and gently used denim.

for the 21 and older crowd. This week’s flick

Continues on Saturday night. 7:30-9:30 p.m.

2-5 p.m. Queen Kaahumanu Center. 877-3369.

is Whale Rider . 9 p.m. Cafe Mambo, Paia.

Makawao Hongwanji Mission, 1074 Makawao

Relay for Life - This American Cancer Society

579-8021.

Ave. 572-7229.

event involves keeping a relay going for more than

Rotary Club of Valley Isle Sunset - Maui’s

Coral Spawning Spectacle - Coral spawning

12 hours to help raise money for cancer research.

newest Rotary chapter meets weekly to network

will take place tonight. A most spectacular event.

Includes live entertainment, crafts, food and keiki

and discuss community events. 5:30-6:30.

Check out This Week’s Picks for more. 7:30-9:30.

activities. 6 p.m.-6 a.m. Lahaina Aquatic Center

Maalaea Grill, 300 Maalaea Rd. 264-4903.

Maui Ocean Center,. 270-7075.

Rec. Field II. 661-7611.

FRIDAY, JUL 24

Events THURSDAY, JUL 23 “Creative

Funding

of

Stars

Center,

W.

SATURDAY, JUL 25

CPR Certification Class - Leomer Domingo

Keiki Hula Festival - This key

SOME HERE

Talent

275

7 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Community College, Kahului

Harbor side. 877-3100.

ALL

online CALENDAR on mauitime.com

Maui event features not only hula, but also Hawaiian cultural arts and crafts. Includes performances by Mana Toa, Na Pua Malia and Halau Manutea. A two-day event. 11 a.m.-

teaches this course that fulfills OSHA requirements for CPR and First Aid, including how to perform emergency measures for heart attacks, strokes, seizures, and many other situations requiring immediate attention. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. VITEC - MCC Office of

Continuing Education and Training,. 984-3231. Ko’ie’ie Fishpond Workday - Fishponds were vital to ancient Hawaiians. ‘Ao’ao O Na Loko I’a O Maui seeks to restore this south Maui fishpond to its original state, and invites the public to come help. 8-11 a.m. South Kihei Rd., Kihei. 359-1172.

5 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall,. 661St. Ann’s Keiki Feast - Includes food, activities,

5304.

entertainment by Na Leo Lani O Maui, Richard North

Shore

Hanapaa

Hoopii, KanHai Sisters and Kekona Ohana. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. St. Ann’s Church, Waihee. Aging with Aloha Festival - This event aims to highlight ways for people of all ages to ensure longevity. Booths where people can get information about healthy aging will be around, as will entertainment and food vendors who will offer both healthy and traditional foods. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Maui

Community College (OCET), Kahului. 871-7749. He’ui Art Fair - This two-day art fair is more like a festival. It features locally-made cultural arts and crafts, music and much much more. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Banyan Tree Park, Lahaina. 661-4685. Kanaha Beach Cleanup - Volunteer to help clean up this important stretch of Central Maui coastline. Bring water, snack and proper clothing. 9-

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

23


DA KINE CALENDAR 11 a.m. Kanaha Beach Park, Kahului. volun-

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

SUNDAY, JUL 26

teerkanaha at gmail.com. Wheelchair Tennis Clinic - A chance for those in wheelchairs to glean skills at the sport of tennis. 9-11 a.m. War Memorial Complex,

THURSDAY

Kahului. 270-7979.

3–10 PM

UR EX TE ND ED HA PP Y HO $2.50 Drafts $2.50 Mai Tais Cocktails & Pupus F OF $2

FRIDAY

Red Carpet

Hosted by

t Universal Motown Artis

2 PISTOLS

Maui’s Sexiest Gogos in’ DJ Big Mike Video Mix

Available General Admission & VIP Door the at le iab Tickets Ava

SATURDAY t

Universal Motown Artis

2 PISTOg’Ls S LP Recordin Newest R&B Artist

YOUNG JOE

LIVE ON STAGE

Doors Open at 9 PM Show Starts at 10 PM or kets Avaiable at the Do

Tic

$3

Kaahumanu Ave. 871-1307.

Side’s first annual weekly summer festival, which fea-

story and storytellers. See This Week’s Picks for

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

more details. 1 p.m. Maui Community College,

10 a.m.-3 p.m. 505 Front St., Lahaina. 667-2514.

MS

in

Bay Swim -This Valley Isle Roadrunners event involves

Balance:

Strategies

for

Managing Your MS - Participate in a group discussion led by local neurologist Monique Canonico regarding real life strategies on how to live well and manage your MS. Includes complementary lunch. 12 p.m. 2500 Honoapiilani Hwy.,

Wailuku. 1-877-329-8327.

a one-mile swim through the waters of Kapalua Bay. 9 a.m. Kapalua Bay, near Ritz Carlton. 463-8012. Class: Exercise for the Cardiac Patient Because everybody needs sufficient exercise no matter what condition they’re in. 6-7:30 p.m. Kaiser

Permanente Maui Lani Clinic, 55 Maui Lani Pkwy. 243-6050.

Reiki Workshop - This two-day course will result in the achievement of level-one Reiki certification.

MONDAY, JUL 27

12:30-6:30 p.m. Unity Church Maui, 483 High St.

Ebb and Flow Workshop - A free opportunity

280-7704.

to learn new approaches to playing your musical

Book Signing - Dr. and Mrs. Carolan will be sign-

instrument. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Makawao Union

ing copies of their latest, A President from Hawaii

Church, 1445 Baldwin Ave. 579-9261.

Will feature performances by Hoku winners Amy

Government

Hanaialii and Kealii Kanealii. 4-5 p.m. Barnes &

Businesses - MEO’s Business Development

Noble, 325 Keawe St., Ste. 101. 662-1300.

Corporation (BDC) joins the Hawaii Procurement

Backyard Jam - This weekly pa’ina features

Technical Assistance Center to teach small busi-

hula

Tihati

ness owners to successfully bid on Federal govern-

Productions as well as an all you can eat island

ment contracts. Evette Lau of MEO’s BDC leads

food buffet and discounted drinks. $30. 5:30

this workshop. 12-1 p.m. Maui County Business

p.m. Sheraton Maui Resort and Spa, 2605

Resource Center, Maui Mall. 873-8247.

Kaanapali Pkwy. 661-0031.

Reiki Healing Circle - Reiki Master Shalandra

Girls Soccer Tornament - Open to teams

Abbey and her students will congregate and talk

aged 14 and under. Limit: eight teams per divi-

with prospective students of this ancient healing

performances

courtesy

of

Contracts

for

Small

sion. Continues through Sunday. $50. Hailiimaile

practice. 6-8 p.m. Unity Church Maui, 483 High

Gym. 276-7900.

St., Wailuku. 280-7704.

, rs of A. e ea in rd M.I. p z o S a c y ey Re s” b ag itn r r N M fo e ,B OO AIA te e lan ni L e s a a in r P ef SA P St & IN –P om ape T ” en d… N s w l AN d “P iu , G go ar of UR st nti w A en r e a ST G y A ce ye Wis, S RE m du l n ad e S a am ro K ,K Y’ “M Gr r: P ars: anti LE R 9 a t h 0 e S s HA e A 20 he Y th ty, !C f r K t o a ) C ei er P DE ix loc ih ) N M K B ( t , e aia EO ea . B .I.A dl (P IV L o r M o e

WEDNESDAY

WET WEDNESDAY with DJ BLAST

N n i ’l or h nt C iplo I e ar in /d st W t.ly 457 k S o he /bi .8 ET W T p:/ 50 K : & tt .5 C e 8 TI fflin :h 0 8 fo O

M

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Maui Summer Festival - Check out the West

Talk Story Conference - An exploration of

$4 Marg $2.50 Tacos rona & Dos Equis Co $2.50

JULY 23, 2009

Bank. Bring a nonperishable and get two bucks off your ticket. 10 a.m. Cycle City Maui/Maui Harley-

DAY TACO TUES aritas

24

Because motorcycles rule. A benefit for Maui Food

Davidson. 877-1878.

TUESDAY

$1 10–11 Power Hour ll It 10–Close $3 You Ca

other rider contests. Lunch at 2 p.m., show at 3.

this marvelous hula halau. 1 p.m. Maui Mall, 70 E.

Heinekens Wells Shots

Ladie’s NightWells

cle includes a ride to Lahaina, lunch, the show, and

Na Pua Malia - A performance at center stage by

Kahului. 727-1774.

YOUNGSignJinOgEPa’S rty

Extreme Stunt Show - This awesome specta-

In e : or all rC O


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

Thursday 07/23

Friday 07/24

Saturday 07/25

Sunday 07/26

Monday 07/27– Wednesday 07/29

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 Ent. Smokin Hot Thursdays

Father Psalms Studio

Da Ha-Y-Ans w/ Mikey Mina

Bpat Night w/ All Access

MON - Karaoke; TUE - Open Mic; WED - Rampage

845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

De Aquino Braddahs

Mike & Mark: Good Times

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

Karaoke

Karaoke Motorcycle Roundup

TUE - Crispy Taco Band

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

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

KIMOS 136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

LOS PELONES

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

LULU’S LAHAINA Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

Hot Heineken Nights 10pm

Junior & da Boys

All Access Fusion Fridays (House and Dance) 10pm

Xclusive Saturdays Summer Shakedown; $10, 9pm

TUE - Industry Night Kenny Roberts

MON -All Access Industry; TUE - Classic Surf Cinema; WED - Latin Night

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

MAUI BREWING CO.

Bingo Pajama No cover, 9pm

WED - Open Mic Night

DJ Hurricane 9pm

DJ Hurricane $5, 9pm

TUE - Dollasr Night, $5, 9pm; WED - Lion Vibe, $5, 9pm

Curtis Love 10pm

Kelii Kanealii

Jimmy Mac & the Kool Kats;10pm

WED - Willie K

Catfish Ringo No cover, 10pm

Sounds of Addiction No cover, 6pm

Ryan Silky No cover, 10pm

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

2 Pistols / Young Joe Signing Party; $10, 10pm

2 Pistols / Young Joe $20, 10pm

Damien Awai

Brian Como & Friends

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S

Silky Ringo 9pm

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

Sounds of Addiction No cover, 10pm

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

PINEAPPLE GRILLE 200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

Scotty Rotten

WED - Wet Wednesdays w/ DJ Blast

High Hopes Square Dance Club - A place for

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

Free Hatha Yoga Class- Kihei - Wed. Classes

beginners to pick up some steps and seasoned

es for all levels are offered in lower Kula.

focus on breathing as you gently stretch into and out

square dancers to show off their moves. Free. 7

Restorative yoga, asana alignment, vinyasa flow

of a variety of poses and postures, revitalizing and

Non-Profit Polynesian Dance - Tue. Support

p.m. Mayor Hannibal Tavares Community Center,

and women’s yoga classes. Georgi Abelenda

toning the entire system creating a sense of flexibil-

the kids of the Napili Kai Foundation by watching

91 Pukalani St., Pukalani. 572-0671.

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

ity, well-being, peace and much much more. All lev-

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

East End Nature Hike - Daily. A kanaka tour

els. 8-9:15am. Waipuilani Park, Kihei. 344-8068.

5:30 p.m. 669-6271.

guide will lead hikers through the Kipahulu area of

Kahului Lions Club - Thu. Anyone interested in

Ukulele Lessons - Tue. Learn some strumming

Haleakala Park, including a bamboo forest,

being involved is encouraged to attend this dinner

techniques to impress you friends with. Free. 5:45

Waimoku Falls and Kapahu Living Farm, which fea-

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

p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. 661-5304.

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

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

Hula

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

titioner, helps you energetically

Kawaianuhealehua holds open hula classes for chil-

Kipahulu

rebalance after living yet another

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

Maps! Links! Addresses! Phone #s!

day in a toxin-filled world. Walk-ins

Maui Waena School.

CALENDAR

employers and interviewing. Free.

TUESDAY, JUL 28 Green Building Certifications - LEED and Energy Star certifications are kind of a big deal. Learn how to build up to their green standards. 5:30-7:30 p.m. VITEC - MCC

Office of Continuing Education and Training,. 984-3231.

Ohana.

12:30-4

p.m.

Kipahulu, Hana side. 248-8558.

Bon Dance Practice - Rinzai will host Bon dancing Tuesdays and Thursdays throughout the season. This colorful ritual serves to honor departed ancestors. 7:30 p.m. Rinzai Zen Mission, 120 Alawai Rd.

579-9921.

Free HIV/Hepatitis C Testing and

Counseling

- Mon-Fri.

Available from the Hawaii Dept. of Health. Free Hepatits A & B Vaccines also available. Times and

WEDNESDAY, JUL 29

locations vary around the island. 984-2129.

on mauitime.com

Starting A Business in Maui County - This workshop helps prospective entrepreneurs get a handle on the many things involved in launching a venture. Ann Ribucan leads. 12-1:30 p.m. Maui

County Business Resource Center, Maui Mall. 873-8247.

Israeli

and

International

instrument. Today’s focus is percussion 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Baldwin High School. 579-9261.

Building Supplies Drive - Mon-Sat. Donate the old. Find supreme deals on building supplies. Help a needy family build a decent home. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 399 N. Market St, Wailuku. 986-8050.

resumes, contacting prospective 3-5 p.m. Job Connections of Maui.

871-4143. Na

Kupuna

Knitting & Crocheting Club - Every Fri & Sat. This group meets every second Saturday and last Friday to

Kula, Sundays 4-6 p.m. Israeli folk dancing hap-

knit and crochet caps, scarves and lap blankets for

pens at The Jewish Congregation of Maui, Kihei,

chemo patients, Hale Makua and Women Helping

Tuesdays 6-8 p.m. 280-1051.

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

Low Cost Accupuncture - Mon-Fri. This

Habitat for Humanity - Sat. Spend a few hours

Upcountry clinic offers treatments for under

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

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

Call for details. 893-0334.

4-7.

1170

Makawao Ave.

(Next

to

-

Sat.

Every

Sat.

Halau

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

Mall, Kahului. 877-8952. Dance Jam - Sun. Celebrate the end of the month with a free-form dance party with great music and no instruction, just come to shake your booty. $13. 7:30-10 p.m. The Studio Maui,

Pepe

tional folk dancing takes place at Grace Church,

Casanova). 276-6037.

Classes

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

Job Club - Fri. Get help preparing

Folk Dancing - Tue & Sun. Israeli and interna-

and

Ongoing

Dragon’s Den. 573-2424.

Papale

Ebb and Flow Workshop - A free opportunity to learn new approaches to playing your musical

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

Dance

Haiku. 575-9390. Line Dancing - Sun. Practice your tush push ya’ll and come on down for some line dancing by the Maui Paniolo Posse. Lessons: 6:30 p.m.; Dancing: 7 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall. Shakin’ Keiki - Fri. Come see little hula dancers in adorable outfits doing the cultural dance of their ancestors. Free. 3:30 p.m. Lahaina Center, 900

Front St. 667-9216.

Boo Boo Zoo Volunteer Orientation - Mon. The East Maui Animal Refuge rescues and rehabil-

Maui Singles Investment Club - Tue. This

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

event gives Maui singles a chance to mingle

kill shelter invites the public to come help care for

while learning about investments. 5:30-7 p.m.

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

Cary & Eddie’s Hideaway, 500 N. Pu’unene

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

Ave., Kahului. 579-9249.

25 Malu Aina Pl., Haiku. 572-7964.

Pipe Up - Mon. No experience is needed for drummers and bagpipers at these open lessons and practices for the Isle of Maui Pipe Band. Free. 6 p.m. Call for directions. 876-0154. Senior Line Dancing - Mon. Line dance lessons for people 55 or better. 8:30 a.m. - 10 a.m.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

25


DA KINE CALENDAR Kaunoa Senior Center, 401 Alakapa Pl., Paia.

Swimming Lessons - Sun. Valley Isle Aquatics

270-7313.

is offering keiki swimming lessons in conjunction

Swing & Lindy Hop Dancing - Mon. You’re

with the County of Maui, Community Classes.

money, baby. This group incorporates rock, hip hop and

Folks can call or go to www.valleyisleaquatics.com

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

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

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

Aquatics Center. 572-4665.

Hula Show - Mon. A most dazzling performance

Yo Yo Workshop & Demo - Sun. Yo Yos are

executed with the aim of helping perpetuate the

silent, so encourage your kids to learn how to use

culture. 10 a.m. Queen Kaahumanu Center, 275

them and finally get some peace and quiet! Free.

W. Kaahumanu Ave. 877-3369.

4-5 p.m. Maui Toy Works. 661-5304. Keiki Chess Club - Mon. For little masterminds

Keiki

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

After-School Help - Mon-Fri. Hui Malama Learning Center offers after-school homework help and classes. Call for directions and hours. Hui

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

Environment

Malama Learning Center, 375 Mahalani St.,

Daily

Wailuku. 244-5911.

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

Athletic Club Outreach - Every Tue & Thu. Got

seen while snorkeling and how to protect Maui’s

Onsite

Olympic weightlifting, power lifting, body building and sports-specific weight training by an experienced team of coaches. Ages 11-19. Free.

Submit Your

Listings

Naturalist

Information Station. 8 a.m.-12 p.m.

Ulua Beach, Wailea. 808-249-8811. Kanaha Beach Project - Every Tue & Thu. Join group leader Val

CALENDAR

Magee in helping restore the natu-

Hall, Good Shepherd Episcopal

on mauitime.com or calendar@ mauitime.com

ral landscape. Bring water, snacks

Free Keiki Art Classes - Every

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

Beach Park. 294-8811 ext. 1.

Mon, Tue, Wed & Fri. Lahaina Arts Society offers free children’s art

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

Reef

4:45-6 p.m. St. Mark Weightlifting

Church, Wailuku. 244-4656.

JULY 23, 2009

Coral

reefs at PWF’s free Coral Reef

tough kids? Get them instruction on

26

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

Save Honolua - Tue. Meeting to

classes island wide. MON - Lahaina Surf Hawaiian

inform, educate and involve the community on the

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

proposed development of Honolua Bay. 6:45 p.m.

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

Lahaina Civic Center. 870-0052.

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

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

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

free info about marine life and answers to all those

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

pesky questions that keep you up all night at this

Wailuku, 3-6 p.m. Haiku Boy’s and Girl’s Club, 3-5

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

p.m. For more info call 661-0111.

249-8811.

West Side Storytime - Every Tue & Sat.

Volunteers Needed - Daily. Volunteers, poten-

Lahaina’s biggest bookseller is hosting keiki story

tial board members, etc. for 12-year native restora-

time, so get them hooked on reading early. Tue., 10

tion project coastline North Kihei, which is subject

a.m.; Sat., 11 a.m. Barnes and Noble, Lahaina.

to a great number of environmental threats. Call

Keiki Issues? - Thu. The Parent Project, a pro-

250-6253.

gram for parents of strong willed children. Wrestle

Weed and Pot Club - Wed. Did that get your

the phone away from the child and make that call.

attention? Push up your sleeves and rake, hoe

Free. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Hui Malama Learning

and pull weeds in a beautiful garden setting.

Center. 289-5050.

8:30-10:30 a.m. Maui Nui Botanical Gardens,

Story Time - Thu. Keiki story time and crafts.

Kahului. 249-2798.

Free. 10 a.m. Hawaiian Village Coffee, Kahana.

Maui Coastal Land Trust Service Project -

665-1114.

Fri. PWF’s Volunteering on Vacation program gives

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

you a chance to help save unique dune ecosystems

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

in Waihee. Help weed out invasive plants and get a

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

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

Storytime Under the Tree - Sat. Each week,

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

keiki can sit down and hear one of their favorite

Honokowai Valley Restoration - Sat. Visit

stories under a tree. They may even get a visit

remote Honokowai Valley, and help save archeologi-

from one of their favorite characters. 11 a.m.-12

cal sites of old Hawaii, pull invasive plants and possi-

p.m. Barnes & Noble, 325 Keawe St., Ste. 101.

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

662-1300.

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

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

Save the Forest - Sun. The Pacific Whale

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

Foundation is hosting a group of ten volunteers to

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

pull invasive pine trees near Hosmers Grove.


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

Thursday 07/23

Friday 07/24

Saturday 07/25

RB STEAKHOUSE

Sunday 07/26

Monday 07/27– Wednesday 07/29

Live Music

Kahana Gateway, Kahana - 669-8889

RUSTY HARPOON 2290 Kaanapali Pkwy - 661-3123

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

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

Bingo Pajama

Unifires

MON - Silky Ringo;TUE - Willie K

Karaoke

Karaoke

TBA

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

SANTA FE CANTINA

Kamaaina Night

MON - Ladies’ Night; TUE - Ryan from Silky Ringo; WED - Unifires

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

Karaoke

MON - WED - Karaoke

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7805

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE

DJ Sonny No cover, 10pm

DJ Slackin No cover, 10pm

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-6444

SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR

Yoah Mama

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

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

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR

The Edge $3, 9pm

1127 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-1380

TIFFANY’S

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Shaken & Stirred 9pm

Christmas in July 9pm

Closed for Private Party $10, 9pm

Closed

for

Remodeling

1424 L. Main St., Wailuku - 249-0052

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

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

UNISAN 2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku - 244-4500

WATERCRESS

Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku-243-9350

WED - Freshly Squeezed w/ Q Ross Closed for Remodeling

Closed

Karaoke

MON - WED - Karaoke

Live Music

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON -Karaoke; TUE - Pac Vibe; WED - Karaoke

Karaoke

Transportation is provided. Pick ups: 7:30 a.m.,

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

Meet the Artists - Every day the Four Seasons’

Farmers Market of Maui, Kihei - Every Mon,

Harbor Shop, 300 Ma`alaea Rd; 8:15 a.m.,

ing your lunch break with Dr. Lorrin Pang. Free.

resident artist will be on hand to discuss his or her

Wed & Fri. Sample the goods at this local market

Upcountry Tavares Community Center. 856-8341.

Noon-12:45 p.m. State Office Building, 54 High

work. 8 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Four Seasons Resort, 3900

for fresh produce. Mon - Thurs 8 a.m. - 4 p.m., Fri 8

St., Wailuku. 984-8200.

Wailea Alanui Dr., Wailea. 874-8000.

a.m. - 5 p.m. Farmers Market of Maui, 61 S. Kihei

Sports

Kimo’s 32nd Annual Longboard Contest -

WOW! - Wed. Every Wed. Wailea on Wednesdays

Rd., Kihei. 875-0949.

Ashtanga Northshore - Daily (except Sat). This

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

presents live island music, gallery receptions, artist

Napili Craft Fair - Every Mon, Wed & Sat.

series of Ashtanga yoga moves is performed in the

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

appearances and more. Featured artists this week

Proceeds earned from sales of these locally-crafted

Tradition of Shri K Pattabhi Jois. $10 suggested

ing period. Competition happens every weekend,

include the Twins and Ben Kikuyama, whose work

goods go to Maui Family Support Services. 9 a.m.-

donation. Mon-Fri 10 a.m. & 6 p.m.; Sun 11 a.m.

granted there are waves. Call Jack Starr for more

will be on display at Lahaina Gallery. 6:30-8 p.m.

4 p.m. Napili Plaza, Napili. 242-0900.

Spreckelsville (Call for details). 269-9003.

info. 205-9500.

897-6770 x2.

Resort Craft Fair - Every Wed & Fri. Hawaiian

Healing Movement Classes for Cancer

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

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

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

Patients - Every Tue & Thu. Using Dragon & Tiger,

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

art galleries. Special gallery shows, featured artists-

Beach Resort.

an ancient self-healing system based on Chi Gung,

Park, Kihei.

in-action and refreshments. Each week features a

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

this movement series releases stress, lessens

Badminton Nights - Mon. West Maui Parks and

different guest artist. Featured artists this week

872-4320.

pain and illness, and increases energy for cancer

Recreation presents this opportunity for folks to

include the Twins, whose work will be on display at

recovery and prevention. Free. 3-4 p.m. Kahului

play this most delightful shuttlecock-centric sport.

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

YMCA. 243-2999.

6-9 p.m. Lahaina Civic Center, 1840 Hono`apiilani

Lahaina Canoe Club Weekly Paddle - Daily.

Hwy. 661-4685.

Get buff, talk story, check out the scenery. Thu., 8 a.m.; Sun., 10 a.m. Hanako’o Beach Park (Canoe

Art

Beach). 870-6466.

Altered Forms: A Ceramic Exhibition -

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

Daily. A showcase of Hawaii artists that highlights

could be an amazing croquet player and not even

strange and new ways of dealing with ceramics.

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

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

Waipuilani Park, Kihei. 879-0087.

Makawao. 572-6560.

Farmers market, Art/Craft Fairs Farmers’ Market and Craft Fair - Every Tue,

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

lobby. 667-5978. Organic Farmers Market - Sat. Fresh produce that’s cheaper than the grocery store. 6:30 a.m.noon. Eddie Tam Memorial Center.

Poetry

Wed, Fri & Sat. Great deals on locally grown produce and locally made goods. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Maui

Open Mic - Every night is open mic night at

Mall, Kahului. 871-1307.

Hawaiian Village Coffee. Kahana Gateway location, Ho`olokahi Arts & Crafts Fair - Every Tue &

call 665-1114.

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

Group Run - Wed. Group meets at Kihei

Deybra Fair & Wayne Zebzda - Daily (except

Community Center. Open to runners of all ages and

Sun & Mon). Maui-based Fair exhibits her towers

fitness levels. Sponsored by Valley Isle Road

constructed from found objects. Zebzda, who

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

comes from Kauai, has chosen to express his vision

Lipoa Parkway.

by way of road signs and the like. Free. 11 a.m.-5

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

Paddling for Women Cancer Survivors -

p.m. Schaefer International Gallery, MACC, One

Shopping Center. 877-3369.

Every Mon & Wed. Get together with the Pink

Cameron Way. 242-7469.

Farmers Market of Maui, Honokowai -

Ladies of Mana’olana for canoe paddling.

Photography Show - Daily. Eight of Maui’s top

Every Mon, Wed & Fri. Lots of fresh local produce

Sponsored by the Pacific Cancer Foundation. 8:30

photographers will exhibit some of their best pho-

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

a.m. Maui Canoe Club, Ka Ono Ulu County Beach

tos in this vivid and diverse exhibit. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Farmers Market Maui & Deli, 3636 Lower

Park, 650 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei. 243-2999.

Maui Hands Galleries, 84 Hana Hwy. 579-9245.

Honoapiilani Rd., Honokowai. 669-7004.

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

Poetry Slam - Every First Fri. Poets 13 and over are encouraged to share their stuff with the First

Resort south lobby. 879-1922.

Friday crowd. Pieces are limited to three minutes. Ohana Farmers & Crafters Market - Every

$5. 8 p.m. The Promenade (Wailuku Food Court),

2050 Main St., Wailuku, 244-3993. Express Yourself - Every Mon. Open Mic Night with music, song, poetry! Free. 7 p.m., Cafe Marc

Aurel, Wailuku, 244-0852. Poetry Reading - Every second Tue, read your original work, your favorite poem, or just come to

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

27


DA KINE CALENDAR

BY KATE BRADSHAW CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

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

Sea House Restaurant - Thu, Fri & Sat,

Library, 662-3950.

Kincaid Basques; Su, Andrew Kaina; Mon, Albert

Open Mic - Every Saturday the Maui Media Lab

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

Hana Hou Cafe - Wed, Dorothy Betz and

hosts an open mic night for poets, musicians and

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

Les Adam with Vince Esquire. Thu, Haiku

others who want to be heard. Sessions are record-

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

Hillbillys. Sat, Live music. Mon., The Hula

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

Napili, 669-1500.

Honeys. All sets 6-9 p.m. 810 Haiku Rd, Haiku

SOUTH MAUI

Moana

zumatribe@yahoo.com. Beach Bums Ma’alaea - Tue, Randall Rospond,

■ THE WESTIN MAUI RESORT & SPA

2365 Kaanapali Pkwy., 667-2525

Cafe

&

Ono Bar & Grille - Fri, Brian Haia; Sat, Keali’i Lum; Sun, Raz Shaggai; Wed, Scott Baird Duo. All sets 6-9 p.m. Tropica - Thu, Fri & Wed, Benny Uyetake; Sat &

Cannery, 575-2661.

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

DINNER MUSIC

UPCOUNTRY MAUI

Bakery - Wed, Benoit

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

Mon, Mitch Kepa; Sun, Keali’i Lum; Tue, Steve Sargenti; . All sets 6-9 p.m.

SOUTH MAUI

5-8 p.m. 300 Ma’alaea Rd. 243-2286.

9:30 p.m. Sat, Steve Sargenti 6:30-8:30 p.m. 71

Five Palms Maui - Music every third Tue. 5:30-

Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9999.

7:30 p.m. 2960 S. Kihei Rd. 879-2607.

Flatbread Pizza - Every first Wed, Tom Conway

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

Haui’s Life’s A Beach - Thu, Erin Smith. 1913

& Randall Rospond. 6-9 p.m. Flatbread Pizza, 89

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

South Kihei Rd., 891-8010.

Hana Hwy., Paia. 579-8989.

Longhi’s - Sat, acoustic music. 10:30-11 p.m.

Green Banana Cafe Music - Tu, Shea Argel.

Style Trio with hula dancing. Early sets 5:30-

3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., 891-8883

Th, Indio. Sa, Soundwave, 6-8 p.m. Green Banana

7:30 p.m. (Followed by) Thu, Sal Godinez and

Cafe-The Shops at Paia Bay, Paia. 579-9130.

Marcus

WEST MAUI

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

St., Lahaina, 661-0700. Canoes - Sun, Jazz w/ John Maritano, Brian Cuomo & Friends. 3-6. 1450 Front St., Lahaina. 661-0937. Cheeseburger In Paradise - Mon, Tue, Scotty Rotten; Wed, Fri, Harry Troupe; Thu, Sat, Sun, Brooks McGuire. All sets 4:30-10:30 p.m. 811 Front St.,

Ma`alaea Grill - Thu, Fri, Sat, Benoit Jazz Works. Wed., Kenny Roberts. All sets 6:30-9 p.m. Maalaea

Harbor, 243-2206. Mulligan’s

on

the

Celtic Tigers, 6:30 p.m.; Mon,

Cool Cat Cafe - Thu, Erin Smith; Fri,

WEST MAUI

Blue - Thu, Rick

Glencross Fri, Gail Swanson; 6-8 p.m.; Sun,

Lahaina, 661-4855.

RESORT SHOWS ■ HYATT REGENCY MAUI RESORT & SPA

■ FOUR SEASONS RESORT WAILEA

3900 Wailea Alanui, 874-8000 Lobby Lounge - (Early sets) Thu, Steve Repollo and Alan Villeran; Sat, Mon, Island

Johnson;

Sat,

Mon,

Nils

and

Anastasia; Sun, Pam Peterson and Rudy Baria; Late sets 8:30-11:30 p.m. Torch lighting ceremony nightly. ■ GRAND WAILEA RESORT HOTEL & SPA

3850 Wailea Alanui, 875-1234

200 Nohea Kai Dr, Lahaina, 661-1234

Acoustico, 7 p.m. Tue, Louise &

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

See into the

Ortiz; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Wed, John

future

Cruz, 7:30 p.m. 100 Kaukahi St.,

Wailea, 874-1131.

Hula Grill - (Early sets) Wed, Thu,

CALENDAR

Sat,

Fri, Sat Ernest Pua’a; Sun,Mon,

on mauitime.com

Yamanoha. All sets 4-6 p.m. 1913

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

Kihei Rd., Kihei Kalama Village,

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

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE

874-6444.

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

100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131

ceremony nightly.

Wailea Wednesdays w/ WIllie K - Wed,

Sargenti; Fri,. Ahamanu Elu; Sat, Joe Bennett;

■ KA`ANAPALI BEACH HOTEL

7:30-10 p.m.

Mon, Mondokane; Tue, Tom Conway; Wed, Dan &

2525 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0011

■ THE SHOPS AT WAILEA

Anne. 1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 874-3779.

Tiki Courtyard -

3750 Wailea Alanui

Taqueria Cruz - Tue & Sat Live music. All sets 6-

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

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

9 p.m. 2395 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei. 875-2910.

■ KAPALUA RESORT

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

Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Café - Wed, Sat,

1 Bay Dr. Lahaina, 669-6400

Lawerence and Friends.

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

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

■ WAILEA MARRIOTT

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

8:30 p.m.

3700 Wailea Alanui, 879-1922

Wailea, 875-9983.

■ NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT

Kumu Bar & Grill - Nightly, Hula dancing. 6-

Tradewinds Poolside Cafe - Thu, Kawika

5900 Honoapi`ilani Hwy, Napili, 669-1500

9 p.m.

Thu, Fri, Tue. Kincaid Kupahu; Sat, Coelho

Mele Mele Lounge - Nighly, Live music. 9-

Morrison; Sun & Wed, Andrew Kaina; Mon,

11 p.m.

Albert Kaina. All sets 7-9 p.m.

■ MAUI PRINCE HOTEL

■ RITZ CARLTON

5400 Makena Alanui, 874-1111

Sat, Dave Carroll; Sun, Wed, Whale Sharks; Mon, Mickie Moore; Tue, Jazz; . all sets 7:30-10 p.m. Wharf

Cinema Center, Lahaina, 667-0908.

Kawika Lum Ho; Tue, Jarret Roback. Early sets 3-5 p.m. (Followed by) Thu, Braddah Brian & Roy; Fri,

Smith;

Mon,

Rob

Stella Blue’s - All sets 4-6 p.m. Thu, Steve

Brian, Roy & Kawika;. Sat, “TBA”; Sun, Ryan Tanaka & Friends; Mon,Oversized Productions; Tue, Roy & Friends; Wed, An Den. Late sets 6-8:30 p.m. 2435 Ka`anapali Pkwy, Building P, 667-6636. Java Jazz/Soup Nutz - Mon-Sat, Acoustic music. All sets 7 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapi`ilani

Rd., Honokowai, 667-0787. Kimo’s - Mon- Wed, Sat, Sun, Sam Ahia. Fri, deAquino Bradaz. All sets 6:30-8:30 p.m. 845 Front

St., Lahaina, 661-4811. Leilani’s On The Beach - Fri, Scott Baird;. Sat, JD and Harry; Sun, Kilohana. All sets 2:30-5 p.m.

2435 Ka`anapali Pkwy, Building J, 661-4495. Moose McGillycuddy’s, Lahaina - Fri, Llayne & Pro Ed; Sat, Mark & Mike. All sets 6-9 p.m. 844

Front St., 667-7758.

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

Lum Ho; Fri, Gina Martinelli; Sat, Bobby Ingram; Sun Sultry Sunday w/ Gene and Makana, Mon, Bobby Ingram & Friends; Tue, Halemanu; Wed, Mondo Kane. All sets 6-9 p.m. The Maui Coast Hotel, 2259 S. Kihei

Rd., 874-6284.

Humuhumunukunukuapua`a - Nightly, 5:30 p.m., Strolling Hawaiian Duo.

mony nightly.

South Shore Tiki Lounge Erin

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

■ KAANAPALI BEACH CLUB

104 Ka`anapali Shores, Lahaina, 661-2000

Sun-Thu, Leokane, 6 p.m.

1 Ritz Carlton Dr., Kapalua, 669-6200

■ THE FAIRMONT KEA LANI MAUI

4100 Wailea Alanui, 875-4100 Lobby Bar - Nightly, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Live music.

Molokini Lounge - Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat, Mele

The Lounge - Sun, Ron; -Mon, Joshua K; Tue,

`Ohana Duo. Tue, Thu Ron Kuala’au; Sun-Thu sets 6-

Tarvin; Wed, Howard, Thu, Hallie.; Fri, Espresso;

9 p.m.; Fri, Sat sets 6-10 p.m. Sun, Mele `Ohana

Brigit & Bernard’s Garden Cafe - Fri. Joe

Sat, Crazy Fingers. Sun-Thu 7-10 p.m., Fri-Sat 7:30-

Duo, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mon, Wed, Fri, Hula perform-

Cano and Eddie Aviles, 6:30-9 p.m. 335 Hoohana

11 p.m. 6:15-9:45 p.m.

ance, 6-6:45 p.m.

St., Kahului. 877-6000.

■ ROYAL LAHAINA RESORT

Café Marc Aurel - Live Music on various days.

2780 Keka`a Dr., Ka`anapali, 661-3611

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

Royal Ocean Terrace - Thu, Fri, Sat, Live

Wailuku, 244-0852.

Hawaiian. 6-8 p.m.

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

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

■ SHERATON MAUI HOTEL

Ka’anapali. 661-3123.

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

2605 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 661-0031

Mulligan’s at the Wharf - Fri, Hawaiian music

CENTRAL MAUI

with Uncle Louie. 5-7 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center,

Lahaina, 661-8881. Pioneer Inn - Thu, Ah-Tim Eleniki; Tue, Captain Billy Bones; Wed, Greg DiPiazza. All sets 6-8 p.m.

658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636. Rusty Harpoon - Thu, George Kahumoku, Jr., 79 p.m., Tue, Willie K., 7-9 p.m., Wed., Evan

Santa Fe Cantina - Tue, Ryan from Silky

Kahului. 877-9001.

Lagoon Bar - Live music nightly, All sets 6-8

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

Main Street Bistro - Th-Fri, Rhythm & Blues

p.m. Torch lighting and cliff diving ceremony at

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

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

sunset nightly.

Lahaina, 667-7805.

Wailuku, 244-6816.

28

JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

EAST MAUI ■ HOTEL HANA-MAUI

Hana, 248-8211 Paniolo Lounge - Thu-Sun, Live music. 6:309:30 p.m. Main Dining Room - Thu, Sun, Hula dancing. 7:30-8:15 p.m.


SIGNLANGUAGE

CAERIEL CRESTIN SIGN.LANGUAGE.ASTROLOGY@GMAIL.COM

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)

It’s good that you’re willing to experiment, try something new, or a new way of doing things. It’s all too easy for the fixed signs (Leo, Aquarius, Scorpio, and Taurus) to get stuck in a rut, unable or unwilling to change. So the more adventurous and open-minded you can be, the better. However, that doesn’t mean that every experiment is bound to be a success. This one, for instance, might be better classified as a flop. You gave it a good go—now it may be time to go back to your old tried-and-true methods, at least in this particular case.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)

I know your excellent intentions have mostly to do with doing a good job, but you’re actually making the situation far more complicated than it needs to be. Perhaps you’re overanalyzing it a bit? Take a step back and access your most pragmatic side. Although they seem useful, you can probably eliminate 75% of the steps between your starting point and end goal, and still get there just fine—probably without annoying or overworking anyone, including yourself. Yes, some theoretical situations might throw a wrench in the works, but why don’t you just deal with them if and when they happen, instead of trying to prepare for every eventuality? You (and everyone involved) will ultimately be much more relaxed, and have loads more fun.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22)

An implied threat isn’t the same as an actual gun to your head, but it can certainly feel as intense. Many people act out of fear of what might happen, even if it’s never been explicitly spelled out. While it would take courage (or foolhardiness) to hold your ground with a loaded pistol at your temple, it’s no less courageous to not back down to the more subtle ominous hints you’ve been facing. It just won’t be as obvious to anyone watching. That shouldn’t matter. Marshal your bravery and stand up for what you believe in. That’s the right thing to do, gun or no gun.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)

You can only dance around the subject for so long. You’ve been stonewalling and avoiding giving a straight answer, because you have an inkling about what kind of fallout might result, and because it’s just easier leaving things open-ended. But eventually you will get pinned down and forced to say something conclusive, once and for all. If it gets to that point, I don’t need to tell you: things will not go well. Do yourself a favor and control the situation by taking a stand while you’re still on your feet. Trying to do so while you’re on your back just won’t work.

SAGGITARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)

When did you start taking doormat lessons? I almost didn’t recognize you lying there, with footprints all over your back. It’s not your usual style to let people walk all over you. Where’s your fire, your spirit of independence and rebellion? Perhaps you lost track of it for a bit? Luckily, it’s lurking right nearby, waiting to blaze up in an inferno of glory and light. You just need to give it a bit of a reminder spark. A few of the newest people in your life might be shocked and surprised to see this fiery, tempestuous you. The rest of us, of course, will welcome back that hotheaded rabble-rouser like an old friend.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)

Children, of course, often need goading, pushing, and scolding in order to be convinced to do what’s right, especially when it’s not the easy thing. Although theoretically adults should have outgrown this juvenile tendency, and be willing to do the right thing despite how difficult or uncomfortable it may be, as it turns out many grownups are essentially spoiled children in disguise; they’re loathe to take any route but the easiest way out. Since you’re in a position to potentially help steer someone down a more ethically responsible path, won’t you please do so this week?

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)

People might not take kindly to you going around and pointing out the truth. Yes, it’s the truth, and people ought to be able to take it, but somehow in reality exposing falsehoods, bursting bubbles, and shattering illusions never goes over well. I would hate for you to give up your noble crusade, but I would advise you to pick your battles more carefully than you have so far. Waging a war on too many fronts will just doom you to failure. Pick a few where some bold truth-telling might do some actual good, and just let the rest slide (at least for now).

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)

Stories keep changing because memories are malleable. They’re not like a DVD, burned with a certain bit of video and audio that can be endlessly replayed without variation. We perpetually edit or rewrite them, or even cast them with different actors. Few people acknowledge this, and regard their recollections as inviolate as words chipped into a stone tablet. That, however, is simply not the case. Ask any two people about an event they were both privy to and the details they recall will be so different you’ll doubt they were in the same place. Because this week’s decision is mostly based on past events, try to collect as much hard evidence as you can, instead of relying on how people remember something, since that’s not very likely to be particularly accurate.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)

Right now you’re like a seven-foot basketball player. You think you’ve got the game wrapped up just because you can do a slam dunk. What you’ve forgotten is that that only works if you can get the ball to the basket. A wily five-footer with great aim could still beat you to the shot from the three-point line. Basically, what I’m trying to get at is: don’t get cocky. Yes, you have the advantage in this particular match, but it’s by no means a sure thing. You’ve still got to bring your A-game and play it like the other team is in it to win it. They are.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)

Like a visible panty-line or a boob job, a whiff of desperation will attract as many people as it puts off. But are they the kind of people you’d want in your life? It’s a tricky line to walk. Of course, you want to be real and genuine, but how hard you try to draw someone into your life could have a direct correlation as to whether or not you succeed. Too little and they’ll decide you’re not interested and move on—too much and you’re likely to freak them out. Naturally, finding the perfect line to walk between the two extremes is exceedingly difficult; nevertheless, you should get a little more practice giving it a go this week.

Guess the exact amount in the KPOA Jackpot and you and your guest will Come-Along with us to Las Vegas courtesy of Vacations-Hawai‘i, Neighbor island connections courtesy of Go!. All winners will receive Come-Along gifts from Minit Stop and Coca-Cola. Visit KPOA.com for contest details

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)

A neglected garden will quickly become overrun with weeds, because they are by definition, hardier, more aggressive, and better suited to the environment than the cultivated flowers and vegetables we would rather grow there. In order to ensure that the plants we want to flourish do so, human intervention of one sort of another is required. The situation before you is much the same. As much as you’d rather not get your hands dirty, and simply sit back and watch the situation unfold, it’s guaranteed to play out in a way that’s not to your satisfaction if you don’t take a hand in shaping it. Roll up your sleeves, grab a spade, and get to work.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)

If you were creating a road, from scratch, to connect points A and B, you could of course just draw a straight line between the two, and simply blast the shit out of anything in your way. The result would be a very efficient highway, but at what cost? The other option, of course, is to take into account who or what is between the two places, and plot a course that avoids destroying most of the nicest bits, resulting naturally in a much more meandering (but probably prettier, and cheaper) road that still does the job. Either option is available to you now. Which, though, will you be happiest with, long-term? Please choose that.

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

29


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EMPLOYMENT

REAL ESTATE

EARN $75 - $200 HOUR Media Makeup Artist Training. Ads, TV, Film, Fashion. One week class. Stable job in weak economy. Details at http://www.AwardMakeUpScho ol.com 310-364-0665 (AAN CAN)

30

JULY 23, 2009

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

CENTRAL MAUI CONDOS Five 1 and 2 bedroom condos across the street from the blue Pacific ocean and walking distance to Maui Community College, the MACC, shopping, and restaurants. Investors, these units rent for $1100 - $1250/m. Price from $54,900 to $74,000. Josh Jerman, Realtor (808) 283-2222 The Wailea Group LLC

HEALTH

CLASSES & INSTRUCTION

ATHLETIC BODY...

For Body & Spirit

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

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

by 4 pm on Monday

808-205-3977

~ Waves of Love ~ Sensual Pleasure ~ Irresistable Erotic Energies

BMW/ MINI • VOLVO MERCEDES • VW / AUDI

Call 344-5999

in Maui Time Weekly!

LOCAL ADS

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

283-4756

sensuallyjane.com

For a Sweet & Sexy Good Time Call 280-6875

CLASSIFIED

DISTRESS SALE Lowest priced 2bd/1.5ba condo in Southpointe, Kihei. Great location in center of complex with a westerly facing lanai. Two parking stalls. Only $179,000 Josh Jerman, realtor (808) 283-2222 The Wailea Group LLC

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 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. 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. Visit my website at www.hoomaluhia.massagetherapy.com

MIND BODY SPIRIT

Green Ti

Boutique & Massage

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

FIND PEACE NOW “This man can TRANSFORM lives!” C. Doan

Sauna Massage or Sonic Vibrational Therapy to NEW Patients of Acupuncture or Massage

MASSAGE: 50 min. Swedish - $55 (Deep Tissue Upgrade - $10)

Unique Gifts, Local Artist Jewelry, Therapeutic Products, Aromatherapy

Call for more details. Must mention ad for special. Expires 7/31/09

Healthy Gift Certificates Available

Now Accepting Workers Comp and No Fault Insurance

Book today:

• Massage • Acupuncture • Facials • Waxing

249.8280

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

Spa Sessions Talk Story Therapy Hot Tub/Bodywork Nurturing & Pampering

Krystal - 864-0416 Upcountry Area

MAT #6199

A Spa Wailuku...

REJUVENATING THE SENSES

New Health & Beauty Spa Massage Therapy, Esthetics, Waxing, Sauna, Herbal Medicine, & Meditation Classes

244-4444 1325 Lower Main Street, Ste. 101

in Nature

Authentic THAI Bodywork

What better place to open up and let go?

Individuals • Couples Family Counseling SPECIALIZING IN RELATIONSHIPS • Stress & Anxiety • Depression • Marriage & • Substance Abuse & Addictions Sabrina Lee Dixon Relationships M.A. Clinical Psychology • Family & Parenting • Life Challenges Talk Story Therapist 344-0230 • sleed7@hotmail.com

Neo-Shamanic Alchemy Benjamin Jaymz Hubbard 808-333-0966

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™ ADOM KADMON: FIRES CODES IGNITION-24 DNA . . . . . .$300

• Ancient Techniques Herbs • Balms

just

for a FULL HOUR session!

Call NOM in Pukalani 344-2695

Aloha Bodywork Spa environment

using aromatherapy herbs & oils

A journey of the senses by Sophia

205-4168

PLACING AN AD IS EASY!

CHARGE IT!

CALL 283-3260

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

205-7199

www.mauimassagewest.com

GRAND REOPENING

SALE! NOW TWICE THE SPACE! • NEW MERCHANDISE • NEWLY EXPANDED

Alice In Hulaland

50% OFF ALL CLOTHES & PURSES

Green Lotus • Cystals • Minerals • • Asian Art • Jewelry •

19 Baldwin Ave Paia 579-9922

Open 10am - 5pm Tuesday - Saturday

244.2300

1816 Mill Street • Wailuku

I CAN HELP YOU LET GO OF PAIN & STRESS FOREVER

Ray Baskerville

MAT#8003

Traditional Japanese Acupuncture • Herbs • Skin/Body Restoration

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

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. PSYCHIC READERS Seeking heart centered, full time psychic readers/intuitive counselors for busy phone line. Work from home, make up to $60 per hour. Suzanne 626-482-0833

JULY SPECIAL! FREE TRIAL of our Quality Far-Infared

BOOK YOUR AD TODAY! Call 283-3260 by 4 pm on Monday to get your ad in Maui Time Weekly!

Make a choice for positive change Now

Certified Hypnotherapist & Gifted Healer

CALL

214 3684

No fluff - Just Positive Transformation www.raybaskerville.com

375 Huku Li‘i Place • Kihei • (808) 264-1695

MAUI TIME WEEKLY

JULY 23, 2009

31


with each Adult Ticket purchase at regular price. Offer expires August 31, 2009 • Redeem offer through Box Office only *Offer valid for show only. Cannot be combined with any other offers and/or discounts.

SPORTFISHING

side

CALL (808) 283-3260 for complete details!

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

FREE

(808) 667-2774 Toll Free 1-800-590-0133

Yellow Seed Bamboo

www.YellowSeedBamboo.com

Large Luxury Studio Condo PRE-FORECLOSURE CONDOS Anew Tattoo Your Pain is Kihei and Central Maui locations. Prices from Vacation Rental in Kihei $54,900 and up. Contact Josh Jerman, Realtor our Pleasure Beautiful View, Ocean View from Front Door, Mountain and Pool Views from the Lanai. Steps from Kamaole ll beach, walk to shops, restaurants, bus stop. Full Kitchen. Wireless Internet, just $75 per night. Lowest price ever! Photos available at vrbo.com/58185 call 2693333 for more details.

808-283-2222 The Wailea Group, LLC

WAKEBOARDING CLUB

KIHEI SIDE We meet once a week. We have wakeboarding boat and boards. Throw down on expenses and you’re in. 808-223-5070

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.

CHRYSLER EXPERTS!

Specializing in Glass Art, Jewelry, Crystals, Water Pipes, Incense, Tobacco Accessories, Rasta Gear and more!

BMW / MINI • VOLVO MERCEDES • VW / AUDI SERVICE • PARTS • ACCESSORIES

10% DISCOUNT

FREE MINI-DETAIL WITH LARGE SERVICE • Scheduled Maintenance to Major Overhauls • Towing • Extended Warranty Service • Custom & Performance Products & Installation • Collision Repair • Restorations • Detailing • Tires • Wheels • Mufflers • Batteries • Air Conditioning Computer & Electronic Diagnostics

HEMP

DIESEL • BIODIESEL • HYBRIDS

Maui’s ACCESSORIES TOO! ORIGINAE L SMOK SHOP!

(#RD 3881)

ISLAND WIDE SERVICE

878-2698

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

THIS SPACE IS NOW AVAILABLE! for as low as $115/wk Call

I’AO ACUPUNCTURE & SPA JUNE SPECIAL!

Quality Far-Infared Sauna Massage with Heated Jade Stone starting at $20 Call 249.8280 for more details & must mention ad for $15 discount. Expires 6/30/09

Air Maui Helicopter Tours 2 for 1 Special!

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

DJ - DJ - DJ - DJ - DJ Music 4 your event!

Dance/HipHop/Island/Reggae. Prices from $99. www.myspace.com/MauiIslandDJ 808-223-5070

MAUI BEACH HOTEL SUSHI BUFFET!

Every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Just $14.95 for one pass, $26 for all-you-can-eat! 170 West Kaahumanu Avenue in Kahului, call 877-0051 for reservations

DR. ROBERT LEY PAIN MANAGEMENT

Hawaiian Islands Osteopathic Physician since 1985

CALL TODAY!

NEW REDUCED FEES

283-3260 for Details

Behind Blackie’s Pit Stop in Kihei

Hurry! Space is Limited!

www.DrLey.com

411 Huku Lii Place - Suite 301

875-7595

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

SUPER STORE with Mainland/Online Prices!

X

• Detox Kits 420 420 • Drug Tests • Blunt Wraps Huku Lii Pl • Digital Scales • Hookas Piilani Hwy • Shisha 80+ Flavors www.HawaiianHolySmokes.com et

HIGH VISIBILITY! LOW COSTS! BACK SIDE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!

Ohuka iS tre

back

The Fastest Growing Privacy Hedge Available!

LOCATED at 320 Ohukai, #404 • Kihei

808•879•2826


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