13.34 Giving Life, February 11, 2010, Volume 13, Issue 34, MauiTime

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February 11, 2010 ✚ Volume 13 ✚ Issue 34 ✚ FREE

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HAW OD B A AII— CON NK O F NEC TING T

D O N O

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THO S E IN BY ANU

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ALSO INSIDE: Top Five Presidential SEX Scandals pg.7

LOVE for Lahaina’s Wo Hing pg.8


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February 11, 2010


Contents

VOLUME 13 ✚ ISSUE 34

5 NEWS & VIEWS Rep. Joe Souki tries to resurrect the Superferry in Coconut Wireless. In honor of Presidents’ Day and Valentine’s Day, we rank the top five Presidential sex scandals (and Bill Clinton doesn’t crack the list).

12

MauiTime Machine looks at the history of Lahaina’s Wo Hing building. Bejeweled vibrators penetrate News of the Weird. Hawaii’s minimum wage gets a (possible) boost in By the Numbers. Spin Cycle questions Hawaiian Airlines’ priorities.

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION

A film caption sets off indignant Reader

What’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever done on Valentine’s Day?

Feedback. Eh Brah! wonders if highways are more important than education.

Editor: Jacob Shafer (808) 283-1308 / jacob@mauitime.com Remembered it Calendar Editor/Staff Writer: Anu Yagi (808) 264-8039 / calendar@mauitime.com Pepperoni at the old Kahului Pizza Hut Data Managers: Philippa Tilley, Kaley Niemann Proofreader: Dina Wilson Intern: Sierra Brown Made a pop-up Valentine of two bluebirds kissing Contributors: Jessica Armstrong, Caeriel Crestin, Beau Ewan, Nancy Kanyuk, Doug Levin, Jared Libby, Greg Mebel, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Sara Tekula, Ynez Tongson, Barry Wurst II Photographer: Sean Michael Hower Shot Cupid Art Director: Chris Skiles (808) 281-8975 / chris@mauitime.com Dinner and a movie, toots Graphic Designers: Megan Baker, Amy Mendolia, Christina Tarleton Advertising Executive: Brad Chambers (808) 283-3260 / brad@mauitime.com A stun gun, duct tape, a shovel and a bag of lime General Manager: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com Accepted Tommy’s proposal

12 FEATURE STORY Blood Bank of Hawaii is coming to Maui. Anu Yagi explains who can give, and why they should.

15 FOOD & DRINK Jen Russo digs the tunes and grinds at Stella Blues’ weekly Supper Club.

FOR MORE INFO CALL 877-2524 OR M_LANE@HOTMAIL.COM

Barry Wurst II says Crazy Heart star Jeff Bridges hits all the right notes.

19 Film Capsules/Listings

20 THIS WEEK’S PICKS Sierra Brown swoons for the week’s love-

Web Design: Linear Publishing www.linearpublishing.com

liest haps, including an appearance by

Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com Proposed to Jen

Valentine’s roundup.

Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon

FEB 13TH 8-12

PARTICIPANTS IN THE CLEAN UP NOT ONLY LEAVE FEELING SQUEAKY CLEAN ABOUT A MORE TIDY MAUI, BUT ALSO GET AN ACCESS CODE TO BUY (2) TIX PRE-SALE TO THE KOKUA FESTIVAL IN OAHU APRIL 23 &24! MORE INFO AT KOKUAFESTIVAL.COM

18 FILM CRITIQUE

Administrative Assistant: Jennifer Brown

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

KAHULUI HARBOR PARK (BOAT RAMP)

Administrative Executive: Judy Toba (808) 244-0777 / judy@mauitime.com Yeah right

MauiTime is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2009 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $70 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. MauiTime may be distributed only by MauiTime’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime.

MEET AT:

Ozomatli, a beach cleanup in Kauhului and a

22 Da Kine Calendar 23 Grid

29 BACK PAGES Sign Language tells Taurus to quit making an “ass” out of “u” and “me”

30 Classified 31 Mind, Body & Spirit

Circulation: 18,000 copies of MauiTime

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D AY INE’S ! T N E VA L PE C I A L S S

ON THE COVER: Design by Chris Skiles

February 11, 2010

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February 11, 2010


by Jacob Shafer

News + Views

jacob@mauitime.com

Ferry Bills & Crib Notes HYPER LOCAL

process.” Somehow that’s not reassuring….

Got cc’d this week on a letter Akaku CEO Jay April sent to various policymakers and media types regarding HB2902, a bill that would change the way money from cable franchise fees is distributed and could impact the future of community access television in Hawaii. By law, a percentage of a cable company’s gross annual revenue has to be earmarked for PEG (public, education, government) programming; it’s the “rent” the companies pay for running their wires through public land. In his letter, April writes that HB2902 would “effectively destroy successful PEG access on the neighbor islands by diverting 2/3 [of] funds to the state sector which cannot and does not operate with the same mission: ‘Empowering our Community’s Voice through Access to Media.’” Akaku has been fighting for survival for years (see our October 2008 feature “The Pirates of Public Access”). So far, they’ve weathered each storm and remain Maui’s only unfiltered television outlet. Sure, their community-produced programming is sometimes strange or downright nonsensical, but often it’s entertaining and incisive, too. The best analogy is one April gave me when I interviewed him for the ’08 story: Akaku is like a public park—sometimes folks deliver the Gettysburg Address, sometimes they whiz in the bushes. Either way, you don’t want to lose the park…. Update on the Dowling/Morgan Stanley Makena postmortem: The resort formerly known as the Maui Prince—which has been managed since September by Benchmark Hospitality—will be auctioned off in April. Chris Lau, a Honolulu broker, has been tapped to oversee the auction; in a prepared statement quoted in Pacific Business News, Lau promised things would remain “business as usual throughout the

LOCAL Money’s tight. The legislature’s in session. Inevitably, that means another attempt to legalize gambling in Hawaii. Multiple bills have been introduced, but two appear to have momentum: HB2251, which would establish “a gaming commission to oversee casino gaming” and allow “the gaming commission to issue one 5-year license to a casino gaming operation in a county with a population of more than 500,000” (aka Oahu); and HB2759, which would authorize “the Hawaiian Homes Commission to allow gaming on Hawaiian Home Lands and to designate specific Hawaiian Home Lands parcels for the purposes of establishing casino gaming operations.” Moral objections aside, lawmakers who are hoping this will be an economic boon may be in for a rude awakening: according to a September 2009 Esquire report, 2008 was the first year in history that casino revenue fell nationwide. “The boom in Vegas,” the article concludes, “might have led states to misread casino gambling’s upside potential.” And even Vegas has been hit hard. On the other hand, Hawaii’s isolation and built-in tourist appeal could mitigate some of the problems faced by other regional casinos. Appropriately, this looks like a roll of the dice…. Supporters and opponents of the Superferry have surely heard about HB2667, a bill introduced by Maui Rep. Joe Souki, along with Rep. Karen Awana and Speaker Calvin Say, that would establish “the Hawaii state ferry system and the Hawaii state ferry system special fund for the operation of a ferry system between the islands”—basically a reboot of the Superferry with public money. Because hey, if something failed with mostly private financing, the best idea is to try it again, only this time hurl gobs of taxpayer

cash at it, right? (Incidentally but instructively, the bill is very poorly written; “Superferry” is frequently not capitalized and is sometimes written as two words, and at one point the word “available” is spelled “ayailable.”) Even if HB2667 sinks, joint high-speed vessels (JHSV) may still cut through Hawaii’s waters. As reported February 9 by the Honolulu Advertiser, the Army is considering basing “up to three” JHSVs in Pearl Harbor. And those vessels might not merely be like the Superferry, they could actually be the Superferry. Quoted in the Advertiser, Department of Transportation harbor director Mike Fromby said no decision was imminent, but that the idea of using the Alakai and her never-launched sister ship, the Huakai, had been “discussed.”…

NOT LOCAL I really don’t want to turn this space into a weekly chronicle of Sarah Palin’s gaffes (mostly because she seems like one of those mythical creatures that gets stronger as you attack it), but she’s making this far too easy: On February 6, Palin delivered a speech to the National Tea Party Convention in Tennessee, during which she lambasted Obama for, among other things, using a teleprompter. Palin herself was reading from prepared remarks, but here’s the kicker: sharpeyed observers noticed she had something written on her hand, and photo zoom-ins revealed it was a short series of talking points: “Energy,” “Tax,” “Lift American Spirits” and “Budget Cuts,” with, inexplicably, the word “Budget” crossed out. So does that mean if her palm had gotten sweaty she would have advocated raising taxes, increasing the budget and dashing American spirits? ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/coconut31

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THE BLOG ROLL Anyone who strolls along N. Market St. knows about the sorry condition of the distribution box on the sidewalk outside our office. Rusty, grimy and tagged past recognition, it got… Read more at mauifeed.com

Everyone spends a lot of time talking about global warming and the rising sea levels it’s causing. So what exactly are we going to do about it? Well, to start off, there should… Read more at mauiganic.com

About to dig into a heapin’ plate of nachos made by my better half, featuring tomatoes, avocado and green onions from Kula Country Farms’ produce delivery service. The photo doesn’t… Read more at mauidish.com

On February 6, acclaimed photographer Spencer Tunick— known for shooting less-than-clothed subjects—presented an exhibition at the Paia Tattoo parlor. If this is the press release photo, just imagine… Read more at mauivents.com

February 11, 2010

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February 11, 2010


by Jacob Shafer

News + Views

jacob@mauitime.com

Sex and the Presidency Love triangles, illegitimate children and closeted gay affairs—just another day at 1600 Pennsylvania

O

n February 15, after the chocolate hearts and platitude-filled greeting cards have been exchanged, Americans will celebrate Presidents’ Day. It’s an opportunity to recognize those honorable men who have held our nation’s highest office. Or, in some cases, not so honorable. Everyone remembers the tawdry tale of Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky and the stained blue dress, but that’s merely one example of Presidential philandering—and it’s far from the most salacious. Sure, Clinton was the only POTUS ever impeached for cheating on his wife (and then lying about it under oath), but extramarital affairs were par for the course for many of his predecessors. (Beloved chief executives Franklin Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower, among others, strayed from the marital bed.) If not for an overzealous special prosecutor and morally vindictive—not to mention wildly hypocritical—Republican Congress, Clinton’s scandal would never have gotten as far as it did. The details of the affair—young intern, Oval Office shenanigans, a strategically placed cigar—were downright pedestrian. Don’t believe us? Let’s take a look at the top five Presidential sex scandals… 5. Warren G. Harding Considered one of the worst Presidents in history, Harding was also a topnotch horndog. He carried on an extended affair with his wife’s married friend, who later blackmailed him while he was in office. But the real scandal involved his alleged relationship with young Nan Britton. Despite a 34-year age difference, the two supposedly had a lovechild, Elizabeth Ann, who was the subject of Britton’s tellall book, The President’s Daughter. Harding died of mysterious causes while in office, and Britton, who lived until 1991, was never able to prove the veracity of her claims. 4. Grover Cleveland In 1884, while running for President, Cleveland was hit with allegations that he had an illegitimate son with a woman named Maria Crofts

Halpin. Cleveland took responsibility for the boy and was elected anyway (a lesson other politicians have failed to heed). Then, two years after taking office, he got married— not to the mother of his child, but to the 21-year-old daughter of his friend, Oscar Folsom, who also had an affair with Halpin. Oh, and the name Halpin gave her bastard child? Oscar Folsom Cleveland.

sister of Jefferson’s wife, Martha.

3. John F. Kennedy Kennedy’s affair with Marilyn Monroe is the one history remembers, but a dalliance with another, much less famous woman led to allegations of mafia connections. Judith Campbell Exner (who, like Monroe, was supposedly introduced to Kennedy by Frank Sinatra) was linked to both Kennedy and Chicago mob boss Salvatore Giancana in the 1960s. In 1988, Exner told People magazine that she’d carried messages between Kennedy and Giancana. She later said she had Kennedy’s child aborted and also slept with the President’s brother, Bobby.

niece, Harriet, assumed First Lady duties— and he lived for more than a decade with Senator William Rufus King, who, according to biographer Jean Baker, was variously referred to as “Aunt Fancy,” “Miss Nancy” and, most unambiguously, Buchanan’s “wife.” In an 1844 letter written while King was in Europe, Buchanan complained of “having no

2. Thomas Jefferson In the 18th century, it was no scandal for the President of the United States to own slaves. But for the President to have sex with one of those slaves and father her child? Another matter entirely. And yet that is, according to some accounts, exactly what iconic Founding Father Thomas Jefferson did. Allegations of an affair between Jefferson and Sally Hemings first sprouted up during his Presidency. But it wasn’t until almost 200 years later that a DNA test on descendants of Jefferson and Hemings confirmed a genetic link. Adding another layer of intrigue is the fact that Hemings may have been the half-

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companion in the house with me,” and said he’d “gone a wooing to several gentlemen, but [had] not succeeded with any of them.” Of course, Buchanan never came out of the closet—to do so would surely have ruined his political career, a fact that, sadly, hasn’t changed 150 years later. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/upfront31

February 11, 2010

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News + Views

by Anu Yagi anu@mauitime.com

Living History SHOE DESIGN CONTEST The winning designer receives:

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West side Chinese Society House is a link to Hawaii’s past and an asset for the future

F

ront Street’s Wo Hing Museum is a thriving treasure. Whereas in the last installment of MauiTime Machine we explored the ruins of the Wo Hing’s Wailuku brethren, the Chee Kung Tong Society building (Vineyard Street’s up-for-sale plot, upon which little more than foundation blocks, old fruit trees and an intriguing archway remain), the wooden Wo Hing has a freshly-scrubbed colorfulness and is carefully maintained. One of just two surviving Chinese Society Houses, the former Wo Hing Society Hall— now managed by the Lahaina Restoration Foundation—is a vibrant historical resource and an important local artifact. Best of all, for a paltry $2 admission, it’s open to the public, and its substantial body of centuryold documents (most of which surfaced in 1999) are available for research purposes.

a white wash with its plentiful architecture details painted pale teal. The veranda’s (three sided, on both stories) balustrades are a distinctly Chinese, geometric pattern. The bold crosshatch contrasts with the circular gingerbread detailing, corner posts bearing carved patterns of scrolls and stars. The soft color scheme of the exterior

and signifies prosperity. Often, merchants would hang these knots from their shops’ entryways to attract wealth, Brenda explained. Her fingers move quickly, and even with a display board and printed instructions, you must pay close attention. We used sturdy polyurethane cording from the hardware store, as it holds its shape and is

plays well with the dark wood floors and authentic furniture inside and the deep crimson coloring underlying the bulk of its contents. The bright red, glittery modern décor and quirky accents work aesthetically. True to its museum status, like a carefully packed sea trunk it bursts with unique antiquities such as ornate currency and scrolls. And the modest museum gift shop—more of a gift hutch, really—lets you take home a memento of your visit, while helping support the museum’s maintenance.

easy for beginners to manage. As you become more practiced, Brenda said encouragingly, you can experiment with different types of more delicate cording, and by creating a continuous strand of the double coin knot, can make necklaces and bracelets. Secondly, she teaches a “cross knot technique”—boxed shape on one side, a cross on the other—which, in her display, can make a simple key chain. On February 20, the Wo Hing will host a Chinese New Year event with food, entertainment and demonstrations. See next week’s Da Kine Calendar or go to mauitime. com for more info. Beyond special events and demos, whether you’re perusing the displays, lighting incense in the upstairs temple or watching the loop of period footage, the Wo Hing is a wonderful spot for everything from casual meandering to hardcore research. It’s the sort of thing you love to see in a town like Lahaina: a resource for locals and visitors alike. And as the last living and, to our community’s great fortune, public example of a significant part of Hawaii’s history, it is not only something to treasure but something worth keeping alive for generations to come. ■

A

A prototype of the winning shoe design will be hand-crafted in the I.T.S.F. workshop, with the possibility of going into production. All entries will be presented in a Public Showing at

Café Marc Aurel in Wailuku February 20 to March 20, 2010

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February 11, 2010

ll of Maui’s original six Chinese Society Houses were built at the turn of the 20th century, serving as the cornerstones of fraternal structure for migrant Chinese workers who came to work the sugar plantations. Though founded out of the secret societies of ancient Chinese Freemasonry, the Hawaii societies—by virtue of their geographical separation—naturally came to place an emphasis on brotherhood and distanced themselves from their parent-society’s stronger political themes. Maintaining spiritual and cultural practices gave ground to the moral foundations, fueling camaraderie. The only thriving example of their lifestyle and worship is preserved at the Wo Hing’s upstairs temple. Experiencing decline in the late ’40s and subsequently severe disrepair culminating in the early 80s, the remaining three houses were placed on first the State then National Register of Historic Places. The Wo Hing boasts the earliest listing, according to a National Register report—it was first listed as part of the National Registered Lahaina Historic District on October 15, 1966, nearly two decades before the Chee Kung Tong or Kula’s privately owned Ket Hing. Were it not for the Lahaina Restoration Foundation, the Wo Hing would likely have collapsed due to termite damage and suffered the same fate as the Chee Kung Tong (which was removed from the State register two years after its collapse in 1996). Rehabilitation of the Wo Hing, beginning in 1983, and operation of the museum is owed to the efforts of the foundation, which cares for 11 major historic structures in Lahaina town. And it is cared for beautifully. The exterior’s color palette is fresh and inviting,

D

aytime tours—during which you can appreciate the attached cookhouse’s displays of “old cooking woks, steamers and other utensils” of the day—are wonderful, but the museum’s most unique offering is its extended Friday night hours. The knowledge the docents share through cultural demonstrations gives lively air to this unique piece of history, backed by a soundtrack of modern Chinese music, piped outside, floating into the street. Recently, I participated in a special Chinese knotting demonstration. The instructor, Brenda, told me about growing up on Front Street, playing with siblings and friends on the hall’s grounds while her mother attended church inside. Brenda teaches two Chinese knotting techniques, the first being a “double coin knot,” which represents overlapping coins

Museum Hours: Saturday through Thursday, 10am-4pm; Friday, 1pm-8pm. Info: 6615553 or lahainarestoration.org To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/mtm31


by Chuck Shepherd

News + Views

chuck@mauitime.com

HONEY, WE’RE MOVING TO DENVER As of early January, at least 390 new Denver businesses had applied for sales-tax licenses as dispensaries for legal (medicinal) marijuana. By comparison, Starbucks coffee shops number 208 in the entire state of Colorado. Among the first cannabis-centered businesses to open, in December, was the Ganja Gourmet on South Broadway, featuring lasagna, pizza, jambalaya, paella, flavored cheesecakes and other delicacies, all “spiced� appropriately for customers with doctors’ prescriptions.

A GIRL’S OTHER BEST FRIEND Jeweler Colin Burn, of Broome, Australia, announced in October at the Asia Adult Expo in Macau that he will make the world’s most expensive “personal vibrator,� in 10 limited editions, out of smooth platinum, each with 1,500 white diamonds. He said he planned to shoot for a price of $1 million (U.S.) and noted that he currently offers a similar sex toy with only 450 diamonds (but with a handle made of rare conkerberry wood) that he sells for $38,000.

COZY QUARTERS After the New York Post reported in December on the 175-square-foot Manhattan apartment recently purchased by Christopher Prokop and his wife (for $150,000, with $800 monthly in maintenance fees), residents of even smaller Manhattan digs told the Post they were unimpressed. For instance, Felice Cohen, 39, rents a 90-square-foot apartment ($700) with a loft bed, but admits that she must sit sideways on the toilet. Freelance eventplanner Eddie Rabon rents a 55-squarefoot palace for $800 a month (closer to midtown than Cohen’s). He can almost touch both side walls simultaneously and cannot easily turn around while showering. Commented the residents, respectively: “We love it,� “I love it,� and “It’s fantastic.�

THE RIGHT PART He’s a man of distinction, but that is of little comfort in the tight economy. Actor Jonah Falcon, 39, is out of work and living once again with his parents in New York City, according to a January report on AOL News. A 1999 HBO documentary touted Falcon as

possessor of the world’s longest penis (13 1/2 inches, aroused). He has appeared in mainstream film and TV roles (Law and Order, Melrose Place, The Sopranos), but has refused to do pornography. “If I did porn, nobody would take me seriously.� However, he added, “I wouldn’t be opposed to doing a nude scene [in a mainstream film] if I got the right part.�

PUDDING THEM ON The recent Christmas bonus season was rough at the RF Brookes pizza-ingredient factory in Wigston, England. Workers received only gift containers of pudding (“plum duffs�) with a use-by date of March 2009, but accompanied by a letter from management assuring them that food technicians had certified the product as safe to eat in January 2010. (After numerous employee complaints, the company apologized and offered fresh plum duffs.)

DIRTY BIRDS A team of researchers led by a University of Connecticut professor, writing recently in the ornithology journal The Auk, declared the local saltmarsh sparrow to be America’s most promiscuous bird, in that 95 percent of the females hook up with more than one male during a mating season. The likelihood that any two chicks in a nest had the same father was only 23 percent, and in one-third of the nests, all chicks had different fathers. The researchers hypothesized that the frequent flooding of Connecticut’s marshes destroys so many nests that non-choosy females have gained evolutionary advantage. (A wren in Australia and a parrot in Madagascar are said to be comparably promiscuous.)

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SPIN CYCLE Time to play, “Not Necessarily In That Order,â€? in which CEOs list their priorities‌

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February 11, 2010

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10 February 11, 2010


News + Views

Re the February 4 analysis of Obama’s State of the Union: I commend you for doing a fair job of criticizing the President’s faults and praising his strengths, but the larger point is that no speech can lead to change. Action is required, and that’s what’s been sorely lacking in this Administration. Of course, we got plenty of action with the last Administration, and look where that got us.

auto accidents and other trauma. To become certified is no easy task and I have studied some myself and used it on friends and animals with amazing results. I wonder if Mr. Butler has experienced any energetic healing, read anything about it or the studies done all over the world? I suggest reading The Intention Experiment by Lynne McTaggart. You don’t even need an open mind to get it.

Rheychol Paris, Lahaina, via e-mail

Re the January 21 MauiTime Machine story “A Treasure”: In 1997 I took some photos Louder Than Words, of the Chee Kung via e-mail Tong because it was such a cool Re the January of the building. I then 28 Film Capsules: created a painting TTHE HE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY Whoever wrote of the building the caption for the and it was selected film Precious really as part of a juried made a mistake— exhibit at the Hui what an ignorant, No‘eau. What was transparently puerile so surprising was remark. The person that shortly after who wrote that I began painting obviously needs ALSO INSIDE: RIDING LIFE’S WAVES WITH SURF-PHILANTHROPIST JANE ROBERSON the building, to see that movie QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “She told police that he needed the gun to protect her from vampires…” it completely and then have it collapsed. I did not explained, because price the piece because I felt too attached they obviously don’t understand what is to it. I just felt that there were stories going on. Precious is no laughing matter there that I wasn’t ready to sell off with and the attributes of beauty and youth so my painting. I’m so glad you wrote the important here on Maui are not what rule article—I have cut it out and I plan to tape the rest of the world. it to the back of my painting. The way you Anonymous, via e-mail describe the building is so much the way it looked. You must have a picture of the Re Kurt Butler’s letter in response to Anu old building. Mahalo for your efforts to Yagi’s article in the January 28 Mind, Body, preserve a part of our island culture. Spirit issue: I have had the privilege of Verdine, via e-mail healing touch sessions for over 10 years by a nurse who practices healing touch and is on staff at the University of Oregon in Eugene, Oregon. She practices healing touch two days Send your FEEDBACK a week in the health center where the nurses to the editor via e-mail and doctors ask for her on a regular basis for (editor@mauitime.com), or post specific cases. Personally I have experienced (Editor’s Inbox, MauiTime, 33 N. everything and more described by Anu, and Market St., Ste. 201, Wailuku, although I have not needed healing touch HI 96793), or check us out on for anything as serious as she, I can tell you Twitter (twitter.com/mauitime) it is real and it does work. Energy medicine and Facebook (facebook. isn’t meant to take the place of massage, body com, search “MauiTime”). work or physical connection—it is a healing modality that goes beyond the physical. I We reserve the right to edit feedback. have experienced long-distance healing Views expressed do not necessarily and recommended it to others who have reflect those of MauiTime. greatly benefited from it following surgery, February 4, 2010 ✚ Volume 13 ✚ Issue 33 ✚ FREE

.com

STATE UNION PG. 11

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 MauiTime, 33 N. Market St, Ste. 201, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

ehbrah@mauitime.com To the County of Maui and the State of Hawaii: Glad to see that Piilani Hwy. is getting a makeover when it never seemed all that necessary. I would think that the funds it took to pay for the patch job would be better suited for our keiki to be at school on Fridays. Another fine example of how this state and county have their priorities and heads up their asses once again. I’m guessing this is a continuation of Lingle’s plan to ensure Hawaii’s future adults will be here to greet the tourists instead of them playing tourists somewhere else themselves, due to lack of funds derived from a lack of education and a state that doesn’t care. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/ehbrah31

BY BEAU EWAN PG.13

pg.9

OVERHEARD “We thought we saw a zombie, but it turned out it was just a really homeless guy.” - Man on N. Market Street in Wailuku February 11, 2010

11


Blood.

WHAT IS BLOOD?

B

BY ANU YAGI

BLOOD BANK OF HAWAII—CONNECTING DONORS TO THOSE IN NEED

GIVING LIFE

12 February 11, 2010

In some it inspires fear; in others, fascination. So essential to our concept of bodily existence, it is the synonymy of life and death. Our species’ ritual, art and science have been steeped in it for millennia, and while, as Shakespeare wrote, “blood will have blood,” even those that go bump in the night know, as Bram Stoker added, “the blood is the life.” It is from centuries of both battlefield need and morbid fascination that we are able to utilize blood in a lifesaving way—by intravenous transfusion. From cannibalism to Catholicism, the consumption of blood is inexorably tied to attaining vitality. But for those in medical need of blood—such as by blood loss due to surgery or trauma, or for the treatment of blood diseases like leukemia or sickle cell anemia—blood’s vitality is literal, and there is no substitute for it.

The life of all flesh is in the blood thereof - Leviticus 17:14 » types of leukocytes and, as with any army, each are specialized warriors. Neutrophils, for example, target bacteria and fungi, while basophils address necessary inflammatory responses by releasing histamines. Malignancy of these cells is known as leukemia. Platelets—or thrombocytes—are a curious cellular constituent. Anuclear (without nucleus), they resemble dollops of coleslaw and are key in hemostasis (blood clotting). Thrombocytopathy refers to abnormalities with platelets—too high of a count, and vessels can become blocked, too little and excessive bleeding and bruising occurs. When any of these multifarious, delicately balanced functions are compromised by disease, or when the quantity of blood the body needs to churn through its cardiovascular system (about 5 liters) is depleted, intravenous transfusion is a do-or-die necessity. But, as tied to life as blood may be, blood has a life of its own—literally. Erythrocytes, for example, take seven days to develop and mature, then live for about 100 to 120 days

in circulation. Thrombocytes, on the other hand, only live for about eight to 12 days. This means, in short, that blood is perishable, posing challenges for collection and usage. Living blood—without substitute and beyond synthesis—can thus be attained in only one way: donation.

WHY GIVE?

T

wo, simple words: Volunteer Donor. It is as if the label imprinted with those words has unstuck itself from the blood bag, and is now fluttering in my field of vision like a proud moth—its bold proclamation black and broadcast on white wings. Volunteer Donor. “Is there any other kind?” I ask my pair of nurses. They are, with great professional ceremony, connecting the contents of the blood bag to the peripheral IV in my left arm. Laughing inquisitively to indicate a need for clarification, they ready themselves to kindly

lood is considered a specialized connective tissue, the body’s hydraulic system, which acts as transporter, repairman, messenger and waste remover. Whole blood consists of three basic types of cells—red, white and platelets—all of which are created in bone marrow and suspended in plasma (the aqueous base accounting for 55 percent of whole blood’s makeup). Mostly water (about 90 percent), plasma contains and circulates proteins and lipoproteins as well as other essential components such as immunoglobulins (antibodies), trace minerals and electrolytes. Of the three types, red cells—or erythrocytes—are the most common. Within the membrane of these jelly donut-esque cells, in the cytoplasm, is the iron-containing metalloprotein, hemoglobin. Oxygen binds to (and is thus transported by) hemoglobin, fulfilling the erythrocyte’s most essential function. The iron of hemoglobin gives these cells their characteristic red color, and a deficiency thereof is known as anemia. White cells—or leukocytes—are a wellknown component, though the least prevalent in whole blood. We know them as the knights in shining armor of our immune system, though electron microscopes reveal they look more like snowball pastries that got stiffed on the full serving of coconut. There are several »

field yet another question; one of a volley I’d hurled since my arrival at Maui Memorial Medical Center just a few hours prior. “I mean, are there involuntary donors? Where does this blood come from?” Every drop—unless banked by me in advance, say, in preparation for surgery—came from local, volunteer donors during blood drives, the nurses explain. “Do we know who they are? Can they be reached? Can I thank them?” The nurses crumple their chins and lower lips, shaking their heads saying that I could not. Reasons of anonymity, privacy and things of that nature. Still, it was all I could think of, those two words. Volunteer Donor The blood bag hangs, its bottom bulbous with viscous weight. As the blood drips into a cylindrical chamber before conjoining to a tube twain to a bag of saline, the color diffuses. It is at first coffee berries in Kula dew, then ohia lehua cast in shadow and finally hibiscus in Lahaina sun. With every churn and click of the IV pump,


the blood creeps closer to my veins. I lie, barely breathing, watching the slow crawl. The blood drips on, but the realization is a wave. Right now, someone else’s blood is in my body— and right now, it’s saving my life. Despite my refusal to accept the truth—I have cancer, leukemia to be exact—I needed blood and I needed it soon. Not necessarily because of any losses I’d experienced (the more than a month I’d spent trying to hide the fact I woke every morning with a mouth full of blackened blood or that with the slightest nick, I’d ooze red all day), but because my blood is doing something highly abnormal, and only good blood—from someone else—could stave symptoms and provide treatment for what would otherwise eventually kill me. This transfusion of two units—the first in what will, over the next month, amount to dozens—takes all night. Each unit is 450ml, and must run slowly into the system, taking about four hours. Morning comes. The last bag flattens as its contents dwindle, the faint mottling of bubbles like tempera paint blown and popped on paper in grade school. In the last eight hours I didn’t sleep, but instead watched color return to my skin, my arms flushing pink as if I’d smeared on a thick layer of Calamine lotion. I’d forgotten, until now, what it was like to feel good. I remain hospitalized on Oahu for five weeks, largely due to my medical need to be close to a blood bank. The Blood Bank of Hawaii is based entirely on Oahu and serves 19 civilian hospitals throughout the state—eight of which are based on outer islands. However, the highly regulated storage and processing of blood can only be handled through a blood bank, and for patients like myself, Oahu hospitalization eliminates the foul prospect of not being able to acquire the right blood at the right time. Though it is the best healthcare choice, this distance adds financial and emotional burden to outer island patients and their families, already under duress. Meanwhile, outer island donors are inconvenienced by their limited opportunity to give blood. Though restricted to donating at a minimum of 56-day intervals, donors are relegated to a specific few days of blood drives, held but once every other month. This can clash with schedules and discourage participation. Challenges aside, Blood Bank of Hawaii’s Oahu-based operation has saved a lot of lives statewide since 1941. Two months after my first-ever transfusion, home again on Maui, I am at the Cameron Center. The Blood Bank of Hawaii is holding a four-day blood drive, for which a specially trained crew and their equipment have been flown in. Maui donors have come out in full force. These drives require not only lodging and transportation for the large crew, but for the blood itself. Given blood’s perishable nature, the blood bank relies heavily on the support of Hawaiian

Airlines, with whom they schedule regular shipments every couple of hours, explains Rose Espina, the crew’s team leader on the third day of the drive. Before shipping, Espina says they divide the blood into about ten segments, wrapping and packing the segments in ice. She points to a neat stack of empty white boxes, labels and packaging prepared in advance. It’s barely past midday and they’ve already worked with over 90 donors. Exceeding their goals (though there is always need and room for more), their daily count has numbered between 135 and 145 donors per day. Managing such volume, the impressive crew works with speed and polish. Admirable as the blood bank’s satellite operations are, I am distracted by the fact that I am standing in a room full of Volunteer Donors, amidst the very people who saved my life and the lives of countless others. Most immediately apparent is how diverse the donors are. It’s the kind of spirit-lifting mix usually only seen in TV commercials—people of all ages and ethnicities, their dress and demeanor suggesting a slew of occupations from construction workers to executives, retirees, students and teachers. There is something very telling about they way they all sit so patiently and politely, awaiting their appointments. Then, I notice how each and every one of them, upon standing when their name is called, smiles. “It’s one of the last idealistic, altruistic things you can do,” a longtime donor tells me as we chat after his appointment. He’s given “a couple of gallons,” here in Hawaii, cleverly adding he’s left a half-dozen gallons back on the Mainland, too. “I’m healthy as a horse. Nothing precludes me from doing it. It doesn’t hurt me,” he says. “Anyone who is strong enough to do it, and has time, should.” “Sometimes you don’t really realize the meaning behind it all—how it really is like paying something forward,” says a female donor, as she rejoins her husband outside for refreshments. Her husband says they’ve donated individually for years, but that this is the first time they’ve come as a couple. Enjoying the time spent together, they plan to share the experience more regularly. The next day, the drive has moved to Maui Economic Opportunity, just up the street. It’s a steamy, Christmas Eve morning and the room smells of Portuguese bean soup, apple pie and warm manju. “We thought it would be a nice way to spend the holiday,” says one young man—a first time donor—who is there with his long-time donor father. “I can’t surf today,” he continues, of having to take a break from the waves so as to comply with the recommended 24-hour refrain from strenuous activity, “but it’s worth it.” I also meet several professional women, having planned their appointments during lunch breaks, » Continued on page 28

MEDICATIONS

CAN NO CAN

Allergy

Antibiotics (Oral or Intravenous)

Birth Control

Blood Pressure

Cholesterol regulators

Diabetes (insulin) Diabetes (oral)

Diet Pills

Diuretics

Malaria Pain Relievers like Aspirin, Ibuprofen or Tylenol

Sleeping Pills

Tranquilizers

VACCINATIONS

SCOOPS So long as donor not symptomatic at time of appointment 14-day wait from last dose and symptom free for 72 hours

Too high or low blood pressure may defer your donation. FDA says “normal” blood pressure value is 90-180 mm/50-100 mm

If dose has remained unchanged for 2-weeks, donation may not be deffered

Cannot donate, with or without medication So long as donor feels fine at time of appointment

CAN NO CAN

Flu

SCOOPS So long as donor not symptomatic at time

Hepatitis B

Measles

Possible one-month wait

Mumps

Possible one-month wait

Rubella

Possible one-month wait

POKES & PRODS Acupuncture, Professional

CAN NO CAN

SCOOPS So long as with sterilized equipment

Body Piercing

12-month wait

Ear Piercing, Non-Professional

12-month wait

Ear Piercing, Professional Surgery with Blood / Blood Product Transfusion Surgery without Blood / Blood Product Transfusion

CONDITIONS

12-month wait

12-month wait

Tattoos

Acne / Boils / Poison Ivy Rash / Psoriasis

So long as with sterilized equipment

CAN NO CAN

SCOOPS So long as phlebotomy (veinpuncture) area unaffected

AIDS / HIV

Anemia / Bleeding Disorders

Cancer

Chagas’ Disease

Parasite

Colds / Flu

Donors must wait until non-symptomatic, as may be early indications of more serious illnesses

Convulsions

Diabetes

If taking medication orally, cannot donate if relies on insulin injections

Heart Disease

Hepatitis (after age 11)

Jaundice (after age 11)

Malaria

Cannot donate, with or without medication

Pregnancy

Six-week wait after delivery, miscarriage or abortion

Syphilis

Tooth Extractions

Tubuerculosis

Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (“Mad Cow”)

Menstration

Or, if you have been in close contact with a hepatitis patient, 12-month wait

72-hour wait

February 11, 2010 13


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14 February 11, 2010


by Jen Russo

Food + Drink

jen@mauitime.com

Dinner and a Show Stella Blues revives an old, entertaining and delicious tradition Stella Blues Supper Club 1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 874-3779 Remaining shows: February 13, 19, 20, 26-27; reservations required

Music aids the digestion.

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Saturdays & Sundays 11AM-2PM

DINNER HOURS 4:30-9PM PHOTOS BY SEAN MICHAEL HOWER

he term Supper Club has a colorful history. It’s a social destination, with classy cocktails, upscale dining and on-stage entertainment. In the 1930s and ’40s, some went underground to become prohibition clubs. At least on Maui cocktails are legal thanks (or no thanks) to the LC, and Stella Blues Supper Club is rockin.’ Their recently renovated entertainment and dining room is casual and distinguished. It’s separate from the regular dining room; as you check in you’re led past the bar to the back. The mood is festive and dressy. The open-beam ceiling and wood walls give the room a warm overtone, like being in a lodge or a chateau. The white tablecloths and stemmed water glasses are a nice touch— just fancy enough. The four-course meal, wine pairings and the fantastic duo of Barry Flanagan and Eric Gilliom stimulate your senses completely. The room is full of good sounds all night: the clanking of forks and glasses and the din of happy conversation eventually give way to Barry and Eric’s easy banter and amazing acoustic guitar stylings. The food changes with each show and features items not on the regular menu. The ceviche appetizer was a wonderful starter, fresh and citrusy with a bit of coconut milk. A recent supper club menu featured stuffed mushroom caps with smoked marlin dip.

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It’s a pre-fixe menu set by the chef; in many ways, it’s refreshing not to have to make a decision about the meal. Your job is to sit down and enjoy. I can do that. A crisp salad follows; fresh greens, fruit and cheese break up the meal. If you are familiar with Stella Blues, you already know that they love to use locally made ingredients, putting an emphasis on sustainable menus and adding a healthy element to their comfort food. The entree does come with a decision, but it’s not a difficult one—generally beef or fish. (Vegetarians needn’t worry—they have an array of veggie-friendly dishes, just

A pre-fixe menu makes ordering easy.

let your server know you’d like that option.) The mahi mahi crusted with macadamia nuts and a lilikoi butter sauce is one of my favorite items. The sauce is heavenly and complements the tender and flaky mahi. They also have a wonderful prime rib, New York steak and pastas. Red or white wine pairing is another option you’ll have to make a decision on. The dinner finishes with a fabulous dessert. Amid the brownie ala mode and cheesecake, the sweet tooth gets fed as the lights go down and guitars heat up. Barry Flanagan is an award-winning Hawaii musician well known from his band Hapa. A virtuoso slack key guitar legend, at first glance you wouldn’t expect this pretty haole boy to throw down the chicken skin Hawaiian music, singing in Hawaiian no less. But that’s only if you don’t know him; Flanagan is renowned in the Hawaiian music realm. His 1993 album won 6 Na Hoku Hanohano awards including album, song and artist of the year. His 2006 album, Maui, also won album of the year at the Na Hoku Hanohano and a number of other awards, including a graphics prize for Maui’s own Scott Johnson of Dogtowne Designs. Eric Gilliom is the second half of the musical team, with a great story of his own. A Maui Boy from an entertainment family, he left the islands to pursue music and theater. After many successful projects on the Mainland and abroad he found himself back on Maui pursuing and feeding the local arts scene. His performance as Franknfurter in the production of The Rocky Horror Picture Show is infamous in the best possible sense. His band, Barefoot Natives, a joint venture with Willie K, was also very successful, and he plays with Mick Fleetwood’s Island Rumours Band. According to Gilliom’s » Continued on page 17

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by Jen Russo

Food + Drink

jen@mauitime.com

by food and wine, your ears swayed by the acoustics around you. Hawaiian music history is being made on the stage as well. The chemistry between the two performers is palpable. To be a part of that is the best part of the evening, compliments to the chef aside. â–

Mac nut crusted mahi...hungry?

Got a hot food scoop? Contact Jen Russo at 808-280-3386 or fax to 808-244-0446. To share or save this article, type:

mt.hy.pr/dining31 For more foodie news, visit MauiTime’s food blog at: mauidish.com

PHOTOS BY SEAN MICHAEL HOWER

 Continued from page 15 MySpace blog, it’s Flanagan who taught him to play slack key and sing in Hawaiian, resulting in Eric’s touring with Hapa a few years back. More recently, Gilliom performed at the Grammys along with his sister, Amy Hanaialii Gilliom, who was nominated in the Hawaiian music category.

That camaraderie and aloha surfaces while Gilliom and Flanagan perform together. Gilliom steals the show with his stories and self-effacing jokes; it’s practically a comedy sketch in between sets. Barry goes along with it and interjects with explanations, the stories behind the songs and the music. It’s a history lesson you want to hear, your mind opened

Thursday, February 11th JEFF NEW -ISLAND STYLE MUSIC

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Eric Gilliom, left, and Barry Flanagan, right, with the tools of their trade.

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February 11, 2010 17


Film Critique

by Barry Wurst II barry@mauitime.com

‘Crazy’ Love Jeff Bridges hits a career high note as a down-on-his-luck country singer Crazy Heart

★★★★★

Rated R/112 min.

T

he first time we see “Bad� Blake, he’s stumbling out of his beat up ’78 automobile, pouring out a plastic container he peed into during the long drive and grumbling that he has to perform a concert in a rundown bowling alley. Jeff Bridges plays Blake, a self destructive alcoholic whose once shining country music career is now a series of drunken episodes, awkward encounters with middle aged groupies and gigs in small towns with appreciative fans who seem to excuse or ignore the fact that the man on stage is clearly wasted. From the haunting songs composed by T-Bone Burnett and Stephen Bruton and ably crooned by Bridges to the scene where Blake tip toes out of a one-night-stand’s hotel room and is careful to grab the booze on the way out the door, the details always feel right. This is a lived-in movie, a refreshing break from fabricated Hollywood fluff.

I think you’ve got White Russian in your beard, Dude. I love country music and am proud that my first concert was seeing Willie Nelson at the Oskie Rice Arena 20 years ago. But the great thing about this movie is that, even if you hate C&W tunes, you’ll still be spellbound. This isn’t a series of cornball “maw dawg and maw truckâ€? songs interrupted by cowboy movie clichĂŠs and a gag-worthy love story. This is about how a washed up has-been gets one last shot at greatness and strives for both artistic and personal redemption. It’s kind of like The Wrestler with honky-tonk bars and eightgallon hats instead of bloodstained rings and

Mickey Rourke. Bridges vanishes for two hours into the body of Blake; this is another milestone Bridges performance in a career full of them. I frequently forgot that I was watching one of my favorite actors, who always underplays and goes for realism over showy, “tour de force� acting. Words like “towering� and “powerhouse� were made to describe this portrayal, but I’ll use pure, as Bridges never goes astray, even when the screenplay sometimes heads in obvious, familiar directions. There are a couple of

scenes that feel over-written (particularly a contrived bit involving a lost child in a crowded mall) but the characters never come across as artificial and the actors who play them never hit a false note. Maggie Gyllenhaal shines in a vulnerable turn as a smitten reporter and, while it takes a minute to accept him as a country singer, Colin Farrell is first rate in a rare character turn, and is as good a singer as Bridges. Robert Duvall, one of the film’s producers, has a small role as one of Blake’s few friends, a bartender who understands the man Blake was and is, and tries to steer him in the direction he so badly wants to go. This may end up being Bridges’s greatest performance, which is saying an awful lot. In the past, his exceptional work has often carried a mediocre movie. But here, his craft as an actor compliments a hugely rewarding film that fades in and out like a crackling country song on an old radio. â– To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/ďŹ lm31 SPECIAL BENEFIT CONCERT FOR MIKE PULLMAN

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18 February 11, 2010


by Kaley Niemann + Jacob Shafer

Film Capsules

film@mauitime.com

New This Week CRAZY HEART - R - Drama - “Bad” Blake is a hard-living country music singer who’s had way too many marriages, too many years on the road and one too many drinks. And yet, he can’t help but reach for salvation with the help of Jean, a journalist who discovers the man behind the musician. Maggie Gyllenhaal and Jeff Bridges star. 112 min. CELINE: THROUGH THE EYES OF THE WORLD - NR - Concert - A documentary chronicling Celine Dion’s 2008-’09 world tour, which, depending on your opinion of Celine Dion, either sounds like a fun date or Dick Cheney-approved torture. 117 min. PERCY JACKSON AND THE OLYMPIANS: THE LIGHTNING THIEF - PG - Fantasy - A teen discovers he is a descendant of a Greek God and sets off on an adventure, presumably stopping on the way to settle a few scores with bullies. Rosario Dawson, Pierce Brosnan, Uma Thurman and Logan Lerman star. 134 min.

and they aren’t showing any merci. Jonathan Rhys Meyers and John Travolta star. 95 min. ITS COMPLICATED - R - Comedy - During her son’s graduation, Jane hooks up with her ex-husband, and sparks start to fly again, along with some good old family drama. Meryl Streep, Alec Baldwin and Steve Martin star. 112 min. LEGION - PG13 - Action - A secluded diner becomes the unlikely battleground for the survival of the human race. When God loses faith in humankind, he sends his legion of angels to bring on the Apocalypse. Their only hope lies in the group of strangers. 130 min. PRECIOUS - R - Drama - Based on a bestselling novel, this uplifting heart-wrencher follows the travails of a 16-year-old girl twice impregnated by her deadbeat father and abused by her unfeeling mother who somehow finds redemption in 1980s Harlem. 109 min.

THE WOLFMAN - R - Horror - After returning to his homeland, a man runs into and is bit by a werewolf, meaning full moons seriously suck from now on. Emily Blunt, Benicio Del Toro and Anthony Hopkins star. 117 min.

SHERLOCK HOLMES - PG13 - Drama - Arthur Conan Doyle’s iconic detective gets updated by flashy, frenetic British director Guy Ritchie, which, depending on how much of a purist you are, is either very intriguing or very depressing. Robert Downy, Jr. is Holmes and Jude Law is Watson. 128 min.

VALENTINE’S DAY - PG13 - Romance - The inevitable seasonal rom-com centers on a Los Angeles couple making and breaking up over the pressures and expectations of Valentine’s Day. Jessica Alba, Jamie Foxx and Ashton Kutcher are among the star-studded ensemble. 140 min.

THE BOOK OF ELI - R - Action - A man journeys across post-apocalyptic America to protect a sacred book that holds the clues to saving mankind. Some would kill to have it, he would kill to protect it. Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman and Mila Kunis star. 118 min.

Now Showing

THE LOVELY BONES - PG13 - Drama - A young girl is murdered and watches over her family...and her killer. She must decide between vengeance and healing. Mark Wahlberg, Saoirse Ronan and Susan Sarandon star. 135 min.

A SINGLE MAN - R - Drama - After the sudden death of his partner, an English professor tries to go about his typical day in Los Angeles. Colin Firth and Julianne Moore star. 99 MIN. ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS THE SQUEAKQUEL - G - Art, Foreign - Talking rodents Alvin, Simon and Theodore juggle school, fame and their rival all-girl group, the “Chipettes”. Christina Applegate, Anna Faris, Amy Poehler and Jesse McCartney star. 89 Min.

THE SPY NEXT DOOR - PG - Action - Former CIA agent Bob Ho tackles a tough assignment: taking care of his girlfriend’s three young children. And when one of the kids accidentally downloads a top-secret formula, Ho’s nemesis, a Russian terrorist, comes to visit. Jackie Chan, George Lopez and Billy Ray Cyrus star. 92 MIN.

AVATAR (3D) - PG13 - Fantasy - Jake Sully, a paraplegic war veteran, is brought to another planet, Pandora, and tasked with infiltrating the Na’vi, a humanoid race with their own language and culture. Who will change who? Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana and Sigourney Weaver star. 156 min.

TOOTH FAIRY - PG - Comedy - A bad deed on the part of a tough minor-league hockey player results in an unusual sentence: He must serve one week as a real-life tooth fairy. Dwayne Johnson, Ashley Judd and Ryan Sheckler star. 101 min.

DEAR JOHN - PG13 - Drama - A conservative college student falls for a young soldier who is back home on leave. Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried star. 108 min. EDGE OF DARKNESS - R - Thriller - Mel Gibson as a hard-ass, butt-kicking detective who plays by his own rules? Who’da thunk? 117 min. FROM PARIS WITH LOVE - R - Action - A young employee of the U.S. Ambassador’s office in Paris teams up with an American spy to stop a group of terrorists planning to attack the city...

UP IN THE AIR - R - Comedy - Ryan Bingham lives a simple life out of his suitcase, constantly traveling the country firing people. His life is turned upside down when his company decides to keep him on the ground. George Clooney and Vera Farmiga star. 118 min. WHEN IN ROME - PG13 - Romance - Do as the teeny boppers do! A New York girl heads to Italy, where she gets chased by an array of cute boys. Sounds like my trip, only substitute “cute boys” with “pick-pocketing gypsies.” 91 min.

Single, hairy male seeks SWF for long walks in the moonlight. (The Wolfman)

SHOWTIMES FRONT STREET THEATER 900 Front Street, Lahaina, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-F until 6:30pm, Sa-Su until 3:30pm, Discount Tue), From Paris with Love-R-THU- (4:30), 7:00, 9:30. FRI- (4:30) 7:15, 9:45. SAT-SUN- (2:00, 4:30) 7:15, 9:45. MON-WED- (4:30) 7:15, 9:45. Percy Jackson and The Olympians: The Lightning Thief-PG-FRI- (4:00) 6:45, 9:30. SAT-SUN- (2:00, 4:00) 6:45, 9:30. MON-WED- (4:00) 6:45, 9:30. The Book of Eli-R-THU- (4:15), 7:00, 9:45. THU5:00, 8:30. FRI- (4:00) 6:30, 9:20. SAT-SUN- (1:20, 4:00) 6:30, 9:20. MON-WED- (4:00) 6:30, 9:20. Valentine’s Day-PG13-FRI- (1:30) 4:15, 7:00, 9:45. SAT-WED- (4:15). KA’AHUMANU 6 Queen Ka’ahumanu Shopping Center. 1-800326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Alvin and The Chipmunks The Squeakquel-GTHU- (11:15, 1:20) 3:25, 5:30, 7:35. FRI-SUN(11:00, 1:10, 3:20) 5:30, 7:50. MON-WED- (11:00, 1:10, 3:20) 5:30, 7:50. Crazy Heart-R-FRI-SUN- (11:30, 2:00) 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. MON-WED- (11:30, 2:00) 4:30, 7:00. Edge of Darkness-R-THU- (11:50, 2:20) 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 Legion-PG13-THU- (11:00, 1:15) 3:30, 5:45, 8:00. FRI-SUN- 6:00, 8:10, 10:25. MON-WED- 6:00, 8:10. The Spy Next Door-PG-THU- (11;05, 1:10) 3:15, 5:20, 7:25. FRI-WED- (11:10) 1:25, 3:45. Tooth Fairy-PG-THU- (11:00, 1:15) 3:30, 5:45, 8:00, 10:10. FRI-SUN- (11:05, 1:15, 3:30) 5:45, 8:05, 10:10. MON-WED- (11:05, 1:15, 3:30) 5:45, 8:05. Valentine’s Day-PG13-FRI-SUN- (11:00, 1;40) 4:20, 7:00, 9:40. MON-WED- (11:00, 1;40) 4:20, 7:00, 9:40. KUKUI MALL 1819 South Kihei Road, 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: everyday until 4pm), Avatar-PG13-THU- (2:10) 5:20, 8:30 Dear John-PG13-THU- (1:10) 3:35, 6:00, 8:25. FRISUN- (11:45, 2:10) 4:35, 7:00, 9:25. MON- (11:45, 2:10) 4:35, 7:00. TUE-WED- (1:00) 3:25, 5:50, 8:15. Edge of Darkness-R-THU- (1:05) 3:35, 6:05, 8:35 From Paris with Love-R-THU- (1:10) 3:20, 5:30, 7:40. FRI-SUN- (11:05, 1:15) 3:20, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50. MON- (11:05, 1:15) 3:20, 5:30, 7:40. TUEWED- (1:15) 3:20, 5:30, 7:40. The Wolfman-R-FRI-SUN- (11:00, 1:15) 3:30, 5:45, 8:00, 10:15. MON-WED- (11:00, 1:15) 3:30, 5:45, 8:00. Valentine’s Day-PG13-FRI-SUN- (11:10, 1:50) 4:30, 7:10, 9:55. MON-WED- (11:10, 1:50) 4:30, 7:10, 9:55. MAUI MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, 249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm), A Single Man-R-THU- (2:20, 5:10) 7:30, 9:50. FRISUN- (1:35) 6:55. TUES-WED- (1:35) 6:55. Avatar 3D-PG13-THU- (3:30, 4:00, 4:30) 7:00, 7:30, 8:00. FRI-SUN- (1:30) 4:15, 7:00, 9:45. FRI-SUN- (12:00, 12:30) 3:30, 4:00, 7:00, 7:30. TUES-WED- (3:30, 4:00) 7:00, 7:30. Celine Dion: Through the Eyes-PG-WED-THU- 7:30 Dear John-PG13-THU- (1:55, 4:00, 4:30) 6:35, 7:05, 9:10, 9:40. FRI-SUN- (1:25, 1:55) 4:00, 4:30, 6:35, 7:05, 9:10, 9:40. TUES-WED- (1:55, 4:00, 4:30) 6:35, 7:05, 9:20, 9:40. From Paris with Love-R-THU- (2:50, 5:10) 7:30, 9:50. FRI-SUN- (12:35, 2:50) 5:10, 7:25, 9:50. TUES-WED- (2:50, 5:10) 7:25, 9:50. Percy Jackson and The Olympians: The Lightning Thief-PG-FRI-SUN- (12:30, 1:45, 3:15) 4:30, 6:00, 7:15, 8:45, 10:00. TUES-WED- (1:45, 3:15, 4:30) 6:00, 7:15, 10:00. Sherlock Holmes-PG13-THU- (3:20) 6:20, 9:20. FRI-SUN- (4:05) 9:20. TUES-WED- (4:05) 9:20. The Book of Eli-R-THU- (1:30, 4:15) 7:00, 9:45. FRI-SUN- (1:30) 4:15, 7:00, 9:45. TUES-WED(1:30, 4:15) 7:00, 9:45. The Wolfman-R-FRI-SUN- (12:15, 1:30, 2:40) 3:50, 5:05, 6:15, 7:30, 8:40, 9:55. TUES-WED(1:30, 2:40, 3:50, 5:05) 6:15, 7:30, 8:40, 9:55. When in Rome-PG13-THU- (2:25, 4:40) 6:55, 9:10. FRI-SUN- (12:10, 2:25) 4:40, 6:55, 9:10. TUES-WED- (2:25, 4:40) 6:55, 9:10. WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front Street, 249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day), Avatar-PG13-THU- (1:30, 5:00) 8:30 Dear John-PG13-THU- (1:45, 4:15) 7:00, 9:30. FRI(1:45) 4:15, 6:45, 9:45. SAT-SUN- (11:15, 1:45) 4:15, 6:45, 9:45. MON-WED- (1:45) 4:15, 6:45, 9:45. Edge of Darkness-R-THU- (1:30, 4:00) 6:45, 9:30. FRI- (1:30, 4:00) 6:45, 9:15. SAT-SUN- (11:00, 1:30, 4:00) 6:45, 9:15. MON-WED- (1:30, 4:00) 6:45, 9:15. The Wolfman-R-FRI- (2:00, 4:30) 7:00, 9:30. SATSUN- (11:30, 2:00, 4:30) 7:00, 9:30. MON-WED(2:00, 4:30) 7:00, 9:30. TH- (2:00, 4:30) 7:00, 9:30.

February 11, 2010 19


Picks

This Week's Picks Down for Some Dirty Work

Valentine’s Day Roundup

Saturday (February 13), 8am-noon, Kahului Beach Park

Sunday (February 14)

Join MauiTime, The Kokua Hawaii Foundation, Community Work Day and organizer Matt Lane for the Kahului Beach Cleanup. Meet at the Kahului Beach Park boat ramp and work your way to Waiehu Beach, playing up your altruistic side in front of your sweetie before making a hopeful stab at a grand romantic gesture on the 14th. (Note: For all men and boys who don’t realize the significance of the 14th, you should definitely get some do-gooder points in on the 13th before the girlfriend/wife expedites the date of your Judgment Day.) Water, gloves and food will be provided, though if possible, bring your own. Participate for at least two hours to receive an access code to purchase pre-sale tickets to the Kokua Festival on April 23-24 on Oahu. Volunteers will also be eligible for a raffle and could win free tickets to the Kokua Festival or other prizes. 877-2524 or e-mail m_lane@hotmail. com [Sierra Brown]

Live Music 7 Days A Week

Iris Pub+ Restaurant Irish Trivia Night

“Think while you drink!” Wednesdays 7-9PM

$5 Wells

$4 Bud Light Drafts 10pm

Friday Ni Nights ht ht SOUNDS of Addiction THURS/SAT 10PM

KAMA’AINA NIGHT with Ryan Palma 10pm Sundays

Wharf Center, Lahaina t 661-8881 61-88881 t w www.MulligansAtTheWharf.com ww w.M .M

20 February 11, 2010

The looming aisles of Valentine’s Day cards tower on either side of the empty shopping cart, cutting deep shadows in the fluorescent atmosphere, and the infinite choices grow more threatening with each step. Valentine’s Day is like the high school prom—escape it free from pig’s blood, 10,000-calorie binges and with your relationship intact, and I will personally send you a “Congratulations!” card. Alright, enough pessimism for one holiday (just hope you don’t run into me on Christmas). Before the lights dim, read Da Kine Calendar and make reservations at one of the romantic restaurants offering special Valentine’s Day menus, music, drinks and dancing. At the MACC, Keali‘i Rachel will perform in the Castle Theater at 7:30pm, while at 6pm in the McCoy Theater, Smooth Jazz Nights XII will feature Peter White, Micheal Paulo, and Brian Simpson (242-SHOW or mauiarts.org). Another interesting idea is to play tourist for the evening, and sign up for a dinner cruise. The Pacific Whale Foundation (249-8811 or pacificwhale.org) has reasonably-priced offers, and the proceeds go to a good cause. As a final note, just remember to put aside all the red paper hearts, confetti, and creepily human-sized Teddy bears, and focus not on what you do for Valentine’s Day, but rather on who you do it with. [SB]


by Anu Yagi calendar@mauitime.com

Plein Awesome

Ozo Good

February 13-20, various locations

Saturday (February 20), Castle Theater, MACC, Kahului, $25-$35 PHOTO BY SHARON HUDSON-DEAN

Plein-air artists are going on tour this February, with performances spread out over the second half of the month. There is something lovely about watching talented people appreciate and re-create our island in their works, reminding us just how much we have to be grateful for. Artists will be seen around the island at Lahaina Harbor, Kamehameha Iki Park, Kapalua Bay and many other locations. Watch the masters, who hail from Hawaii and the Mainland, at work, or join them at one of the gallery showings for free lectures, conversation, and the chance to enjoy and possibly purchase the works they’ll create throughout the week. Just like listening to great music can make many wander over to Bounty Music to pick out “Stairway to Heaven” for the umpteenth time on a pretty acoustic guitar, watching an artist in his or her element is a unique and inspiring experience. Check out the Da Kine Calendar to find the exact dates and times of the Maui Plein-Air Invitational Paint-Out events to find out when is the best time to take a few moments (or hours) to fall in love with Maui again. [SB]

These are the guys to take a euro-trip with. They radiate cool, un-calculated charisma, a vivid spiritstoking fire and love in the blood of their audiences. The members of Ozomatli are the kind of people who act like their own sun, effortlessly pulling others toward them with their gravitational force. Jiro started out playing the tablas at a southern Indian vegetarian niche, Justin played in Disney’s Lion King Parade, Uli might be the mysterious man with trench coat and clarinet who you quietly scooted around on an LA side street, and Wil-dog used to play with Macy Gray. These disparate guys bonded together to start up the band for a labor protest movement. The band members are proud of their eclectic lives; for proof just read up on their adventures at ozomatli.com. Their music, meanwhile, is a strange yet endearing mix of hip-hop, funk and salsa that deserves its own genre. If this concert is anything like their last one, it’s sure to be spilling out over the top with dancing fun-seekers, so watch out for flailing arms from the lady spinning in circles in her floor-length white dress. [SB]

“BEST LATE NIGHT IN MAUI” DNESDAY “BEST HINE WEESNIG WILD WA SINGLES SCENE IN MAUI” HT ’S FAMOUS LADI

CASANOVA

STARTS AT 10PM ◆ $10 COVER Q103 & THE BIG HAWAIIAN present DJ STYLES ◆ MUSIC

THURSDAY, FEB. 11

TH

CASANUEVO TANGO

TANGO CLASSES, EXHIBITION Y MILONGA ◆ MUSIC STARTS

AT 7:30PM ◆ $5 DONATION

PAULA FUGA & FRIENDS

FRIDAY, FEB. 12TH

WITH SPEC IAL GUES T KOKO MON FROM INNA VISIO MUSIC STARTS AT 10PM ◆ $10 COVER

SATURDAY, FEB. 13

TH

N

SHOW STARTS AT 10PM ◆ $10 COVER

IT’S CARNIVAL TIME W/ DR.NAT & RIO RITMO ROSINELLI

RMANCE BY TROPICAL LATIN DANCE Y CAPOEIRA ◆ SAMBA PERFO TH UNTRY SUNDAYS ACOUSTIC STYLE

, FEB. 14 UNCO SUNDAY 2PM ◆ $7 DONATION S EDDIE TANAKA & MOLTEN SOUL ◆ MUSIC STARTS AT

HULA HONEY SHOWSTARTS AT 9PM ◆ $10 COVER THE KIT KAT CLUB ◆ BROWN CHICKEN BROWN COW ◆

YS TUESDA $10 COVER AT 9PM ◆

WILLIE K

& HIS BAND

MAKE IT A MEMORABLE EVENING IN MAKAWAO TOWN. DINE AND DANCE AT CASANOVA. FOR DINNER RESERVATIONS

CALL 5720220 ◆ CASANOVAMAUI.COM February 11, 2010 21


Calendar

by Anu Yagi calendar@mauitime.com

MAUI’S COLDEST BEER

THROWBACK THURSDAY w/DJ Big Mike All ACCESS 10pm

$2 Kamikaze & Washington Apples

FRIDAY NITE LIVE

DONOMICK FROM THE EDGE 5-7pm OFF TOMORROW 10pm STATUS SATURDAY

RICKY G 5-7pm

DJ ALL ACCESS 10pm SUNDAY’S w/ GENA Gena Martinelli Band 6-9pm

SCREW CUPID PARTY, DJ 9pm

SINFUL MONDAY

SIN W/ DJ MIT

50% OFF Industry Specials 10pm BOMB IT TUESDAY

CRAZY FINGERS 10pm $3 Bud Light Draft WHAT’S UP WEDNESDAY

KULTURE KLASH 10pm

$3 STELLA

PLUS

Happy Hour

3-7pm, 10pm-12am $5 Martinis, $3 Beers, $4 Drafts

Open 11am-1:30am 1279 S.Kihei Rd. 874-9299 22 February 11, 2010

Da Kine Calendar BIG SHOWS

TICKETS ON SALE

BLACK GRACE - Thu, Feb 11. This contemporary dance group with roots in the Samoan and Maori communities of Aotearoa (New Zealand), is becoming the world’s leading exponent of Pacific contemporary dance. $12, $25, $35. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808242-7469; www.mauiarts.org

OZOMATLI - Sat, Feb 20. Their music - a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa. $25- $35. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org

THE BEACH BOYS CONCERT - Fri, Feb 12. The Beach Boys, the iconic band from California, will be playing their chart-topping hits “under the stars.” $35-$65. 6-10 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; http://mauivents.com/bigshows/beach-boys-playing-macc/ KEALI‘I REICHEL IN KUKAHI 2010 - Sat, Feb 13. One of Hawai‘i’s most popular recording artists, Keali‘i is the award-winning kumu hula of Halau Ke‘alaokamaile. His music, chant and hula represent the best of Hawai‘i‘s traditional and contemporary poetry and dance today. Tickets: $12, $35, $45, $55. $12, $35, $45, $55. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www. mauiarts.org THE MIGHTY DIAMONDS - Sat, Feb 13. Tribute to Na Kupuna Fundraiser for Hawaiian Non Profit Kumuola Foundation featuring roots vocal trio The Mighty Diamonds along with Dubkonscious and Maui’s own Innavision. Kumuola booth will leave with a awa and culture education. $25 - $30. 4-10 p.m. Events Lawn, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org EDDIE GRIFFIN TAKES ON HAWAII’S OWN! - Sun, Feb 14. Comedian Eddie Griffin is performing with Hawaii’s Kaleo & Champ. Show starts at 8pm. $30 presale- $40 at he door. $35 pre-sale first five rows. $45 at the door. $30-$45. 8 p.m. Baldwin High School, 1650 Kaahumanu Ave., Wailuku SMOOTH JAZZ NIGHTS XII: PETER WHITE, MICHAEL PAULO, AND SPECIAL GUEST BRIAN SIMPSON - Sun, Feb 14. Keep it smooth this V-day with the twelfth installment of Smooth Jazz Nights. Peter White-one of Smooth Jazz’s best known artists-recently released his album ‘Good Day’, and is known for such hits as San Diego, Caravan of Dreams, Bullseye, as well as collaborations with Basia, Dave Koz, David Benoit and Rick Braun. $40. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org

KALICHSTEIN-LAREDO-ROBINSON TRIO - Sun, Feb 21. The Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio continues to dazzle audiences and critics alike with their performances. Tickets: $12, $30, $40, $45. $12, $30, $40, $45. 5 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org MAKANA - Sat, Feb 27. One of the hottest young musical protégés to emerge from Hawai‘i, on both the slack key and world music charts. $32. McCoy Studio Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org THIRD EYE BLIND - Sat, Feb 27. In concert at the Royal Lahaina Resort. Intimate oceanfront setting for this amazing band and event. Tickets on sale now and are limited! $65 General Admission $85 VIP. 5:30-10 p.m. Royal Lahaina Resort, Kekaa Dr., Lahaina; 808-661-3611; www.hawaiihotels.com MATISYAHU - Sun, Feb 28. This contemporary and amazingly Reggae artist performs with Ooklah the Moc, The Throwdowns and The Alliez. All ages welcome. $25. Win tickets at MauiTime.com. Lahaina Civic Center; www.bamparmy.com PINK MARTINI - Thu, Mar 4. “Pink Martini is a rollicking around-the-world musical adventure … if the United Nations had a house band in 1962, hopefully we’d be that band,” writes Thomas Lauderdale, bandleader and pianist of the eleven member ensemble. $37 advance / $45 day of. 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, One Cameron Way, Kahului; 808-242-7469; www.mauiarts.org

SHOE DESIGN CONTEST - If the Shoe Fits is putting on a Group Art Show- Shoe Design Contest. The Concept: Design (draw) a pair of eco-friendly shoes, we want to use product that will help soften our impact on our planet (ex- plastic, cans, tires, etc.) The winner will receive one pair of shoes a month.Present your design on an 8.5 x 11 piece of paper. If the Shoe Fits, 28 N. Market St, Wailuku; 808-242-6969

EVENTS THURSDAY, FEB 11 COWS WITH GUNS: VEGETARIAN MUSIC AND COMEDY, PRESENTED BY DANA LYONS - Musician, storyteller, and comedian Dana Lyons will present an evening of environmental and vegetarian songs & entertainment. Free Admission. 7 p.m. Kaunoa Senior Center, 401 Alakapa Pl., Sprecklesville; Call Laurelee Blanchard 808-298-8544; http://www. cowswithguns.com/cgi-bin/all_albums.cgi

THE VANDALS & SPECIAL GUESTS AT HARD ROCK CAFE - Fri, Mar 12. The Vandals & Special Guests at Hard Rock Cafe. Celebrating 15 years of Hawaiian Express! Age 21+. $19 presale. 9 p.m. The Hard Rock Cafe, 900 Front St., Lahaina; 808-6677400; http://www.808shows.com MAUI HUMANE SOCIETY’S 2010 FUR BALL “DISCO INFERNO” - Sat, Mar 20. Slip into your Disco duds and platform shoes, and prepare to get your groove on with the Maui Humane Society at their annual Fur Ball Fundraiser for Maui’s homeless animals. $150$1,250. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Grand Wailea Resort, 3850 Wailea Alanui Dr., Wailea; 808-877-3680 x32; www. mauihumanesociety.org

SOUTH MAUI SUSTAINABILITY FORUM: CHARTING OUR COURSE TO A SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY - Join South Maui Sustainability for an opportunity to connect with others to learn, plan, and take action for a more sustainable South Maui. FREE. 6:30-8 p.m. Kihei Charter High School, 300 Ohukai Rd. #209, Kihei; 808.874.5955; www.southmauisustainability.org

ANNOUNCEMENTS

AUDITIONS FOR “GODSPELL” AT IAO THEATRE - Sun. Open Auditions for the “Godspell” production at Iao theatre. 4 p.m. Iao Theater, 68 N. Market St., Wailuku; 808-242-6969; www.mauionstage.com

MAYOR CHARMAINE TAVARES WILL GIVE HER FOURTH STATE OF THE COUNTY ADDRESS - Thu. The event is open to the public, but seating is limited. There will be a live broadcast of the address on Akaku: Maui Community Television, cable Channel 53, and a radio broadcast on KNUI AM 900. Rebroadcasts of the speech will be at 11am Feb. 11 on KAOI 96.7 FM and 1110 AM, and at 6 and 11am Feb. 12 on KPMW 105.5FM. The text of Tavares’ speech will also be available online at mauicounty.gov.mayor. 10 a.m. Eighth-floor Council Chambers, Kalana O Maui building,

CIRQUE POLYNESIA - Daily. It’s Circue du Soleil meets Polynesian hula with amazing high-wire acts, aerial acrobatics, illusions, and mind-boggling contortionist and balancing-acts. Visit www.cirquepolynesia. com for details. $129 Dinner & Drink; $75 VIP; $62; $52.50 Keiki. 6 p.m. Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., Kaanapali; 808-667-4540; http://maui.hyatt.com/hyatt/hotels/index.jsp

ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS FOR THE ANNUAL “MASURA ‘PUNDY’ YOKOUCHI” AWARD - Daily. The award is given to any local who has made cultural or artistic contributions to our communites. Winner receives a free stay at the Wailea Marriott. Anyone who wishes to nominate someone, conatct: Elaine Slavinsky at 242-8636. Last day to nominate February 20th. Maui Community College, 310 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-984-3500; http://maui.hawaii.edu/

REAGAN DINNER WITH GOVERNOR LINDA LINGLE Join us for a special tribute to President Ronald Reagan. There will be live music, dancing, buffet dinner, photo opportunity, no host bar, and a silent auction. $75.00. 5:30-9 p.m. King Kamehameha Golf Club, Marilyn Monroe House, 2500 Honoapiilani Hwy, Wailuku; 808-250-9555, jhphoto@hawaii.rr.com; http://www.gopmaui.com

STAGE

VALENTINE’S DAY: THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES BENEFIT PERFORMANCE - Sun. The Vagina Monologues with Kathy Collins, Rochelle Dunning, Robin Garrison, Julie Kawamura & Kristi Scott. The goal of V-Day Maui 2010 is to raise awareness to stop violence against women and girls. $15. 6:30 p.m. Steppingstone Theatre, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave. Queen Kaahumanu Center, Kahului

ES INFORMATION LINE - Daily. Honoapiilani Widening Project Announces Information Line: the number is (808) 270-5918. Messages left will be returned within 24 hours. 808-270-5918

1ST ANNUAL WATER CONSERVATION POSTER CONTEST (FOR STUDENTS K-12) - Daily. Students are encouraged to design a poster for the Water Resources & Planning Division Office that depicts the theme “By water, all things live.” Water resources & Planning Division Office, 59 Kanoa St. or South High St., Wailuku HONOAPIILANI WIDENING PROJECT ANNOUNC-

THURSDAY NIGHT YOUTH GROUP - Get together at Hope Chapel North Shore in the Haiku Cannery for a time of food, fun and fellowship. If you are between 9-18 then this is the place to come and make quality friends. Come check it out and see for yourself. Free. Hope Chapel North Shore, 810 Haiku Rd, Haiku; 808575-2650; http://www.hopechapelnorthshore.org

FRIDAY, FEB 12 “ARTISIDE AND THE ENDLESS REVOLUTION” FILM SHOWING - A film about the Haitian earthquake disaster. Film depicts Haitian people struggling for independence and democracy, yearning for a peace movement. Come support and learn! FREE. 7 p.m. Maui Community College, Ka Lama 103, 310 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-984-3500; http:// maui.hawaii.edu/ STARGAZING CRUISE - A stargazing cruise featuring professional astronomer Harriet Witt. Adults $49.95, children ages 3-12 $39.95. 7:30-9 p.m. Lahaina Harbor, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808-249-8811; www.pacificwhale.org ISLAND RHYTHMS COCKTAIL CRUISE - Special


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

2/11

2/12

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

2/13

2/14

MONDAY - WEDNESDAY

2/15 - 2/17

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

ALE HOUSE

Country Western Night DJ Jedd

Flashback Fridays! $10; 9:30pm

Throwdowns & Ryan Robinson Band Soul Pkg.

Boat Night w/ DJ Jammin J - 9pm

MON- Blackpowder Blues Band TUE - Johnny Ringo Band; WED - Island Rhythms

AMBROSIA

House of S.I.N. w/DJ Del Sol & DJ CIA

Fris Fridays w/Forrest

Sunrise Saturdays w/ DJ Decka

Anti-Valentine’s

MON - Erin Smith; TUE - Mardi Gras; WED Whatever Wednesdays

355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001

1913 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 891-1011

Johnny Ringo Band 10 pm No Cover

BUBBA GUMP SHRIMP CO. 889 Front St., Lahaina - 661-3111

Rio Thing 7:30 pm

Electric hillbillys 7:30 pm

Jamallad - Black History Month - 9 pm; $10

CASANOVA

CasaNuevo Tango $5 8pm

Paula Fuga & Friends $10 9:45 pm

Carnival with Dr. Nat & Rio Ritmo,10pm $5

CHARLEY’S

WaveTrain with BrwnCkn BrwnCow- $5

Haiti relief benefit Show10 pm $10

Mana’o Radio Benefit 10 pm $10

Jr. & Orin 7:30-12am

Dave Carroll 7-10pm

DIAMONDS ICE BAR

Throw Back with DJ Big Mike 10 pm

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

EHA’S POOL BAR

CAFE MARC AUREL

28 N. Market St. Wailuku - 244-0852

1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220

142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8085

COOL CAT CAFE

Wharf Cinema, Lahaina - 667-0908

1279 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-9299

1234 Lower Main, Wailuku - 242-1177

Kit Kat Club- V-Day Cabaret; Brown Chicken Brown Cow - 6 pm

TUES - Willie K & his band $10 WED - Ladies Night

Dave Carroll No Cover, 7:30 - 10pm

Erin Smith 7:30-10pm, No Cover

MON - Ryan; TUE - Live Jazz WED - Whaleshark, All No Cover, 7:30 - 10pm

Off Tomorrow

All Access DJ & Video Music - 10pm

Gena Martinelli Band

MON - S.I.N. w/ DJ MIT; TUE - Crazy Fingers; WED - Kulture Klash

Quiz Night w/ Laura & Ollie

Jarod 10 pm

Crunch Pups 10 pm

Drilly & Bad Dogs Bartender’s Call

MON - Jordan; TUE - Jarod WED - Jessica & Guest

Bad Kitty

Kanekoa 8-11 pm

Ladies Night

FERNANDOS

DJ Jammin J

GIAN DON’S

The Girly Show - 10 pm $10

Queen Kaahumanu Center, Kahului, HI - 873-7759

1445 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 874-4041

GREEN LEAF SPORTS BAR 1088 Lower Main St., Wailuku - 244-4888

whalewatch cruise, featuring cocktails, appetizers, and music, hosted by local reggae star Marty Dread. Adults $49.95, children ages 3-12 $39.95. 4:30-6 p.m. Ma’alaea Harbor, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808-249-8811; www.pacificwhale.org KARAOKE AT KAAHUMANU - Belt it out then buy a belt to either congratulate yourself on fine singing, or help ease the sting of embarrassment. Either way, a good time! 6-8 p.m. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-8773369; http://www.queenkaahumanucenter.com

SATURDAY, FEB 13 BLACK HISTORY MONTH PRESENTATIONS - by Sodengi, Ayin Adams, and Drums of Passion. Free. 1-2 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 325 Keawe #101, Lahaina; 808-283-3578; http://www.aecg.org 101 VALENTINES ART SHOW & ENTERTAINMENT AT PAIA TATTOO PARLOR - 101 Valentines Art Show: will be hosting an unusual art show, where the artist Justin Yates, will be creating a one-of-a-kind 5x7 valentine just for you! $20 each. Also Brown Chicken Brown Cow will be performing. Come with your sweetie, a friend or stag for a great time! 6-10 p.m. Paia Tattoo, 120 Hana Hwy. Upstairs, Paia; 808-579-8515 BIRKEN & BAILEY’S VALENTINE’S PAWTY Come to Azeka’s Shopping center February 13th for some canine photos, freebies & fun! You’ll receive 10% off dog food if your pet wears red. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Birken & Bailey’s, Azeka Shopping Center, 1279 South Kihei Rd, Kihei KOKUA BEACH CLEAN-UP - Kokua Hawaii Foundation, Community Work Program, MauiTime & STAR 101.9 host Kokua Festival 2010 Pre-Sale Beach Clean-Up. Volunteers come meet us at 8am to receive instructions, get supplies & get registered. Clean-Up will take place from 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Kahului Harbor Park; See picks on pg.20 & 21 for more information. MAUI PLEIN AIR PAINTING INVITATIONAL KICK OFF PAINT OUT - Artists begin the event with the Kick off Paint Out in Kapalua at Kapalua Bay and the D.T. Fleming Beach areas. The freshly painted works of art will be displayed for sale at 4 p.m. at Village Galleries in The Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua and throughout the week. 12-3 p.m. Kapaulua Bay and D.T. Fleming Beach

MON- Open Mic Night

Karaoke

MON- Free Pool ; TUE - Pool League WED - Open Mic Night

Red Dress party W/ DJ Michael Fong 10 pm

Ant & Louise

DJ Zinn 9pm-2am

Karaoke

Maui’s biggest yard sale every Saturdays. Non profits can get free space to fundraise too. $35 a day. 7 a.m.-4 p.m. Old Kahului Shopping Center, 65 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 1-808-333-2478

MAUI WHALE FESTIVAL WATCHING WHALES, SAVING WHALES: SYMPOSIUM - Presentations, talks and workshops by renowned researchers, educators and those involved in watching and protecting whales from all around the world. Free. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Westin Maui Resort & Spa, 2365 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Lahaina; 1-800-942-5311; www. mauiwhalefestival.org

MAUI’S SWAP MEET - From camo hunting gear and koa carvings to vintage aloha postcards and delicate, locally-crafted jewelry, this place pretty much has it all. Killer produce market, too. Admission: 50 cents. 7 a.m.-1 p.m. Maui Community College, 310 Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-2443100; http://www.mauiexposition.com

MAUI WHALE FESTIVAL WILD AND SCENIC FILM FESTIVAL - Award-winning short films relating to the ocean, water, climate change and the environment presented by Patagonia and Pacific Whale Foundation. The films which are entertaining and educational have been selected to appeal to children and adults. Door prizes will be awarded throughout the evening. Visit the Pacific Whale Foundation website for more information. $10 per person. Buy one get one free for tickets ordered in adva. 6:30-8 p.m. Westin Resort and Spa, 2365 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Lahaina; 1-800-942-5311; www.mauiwhalefestival. org

SUNDAY, FEB 14 BLACK HISTORY MONTH - Black Scientists and Inventors with Yoellah Yuhudah. Free. 12-1 p.m. Borders Books & Music, Maui Marketplace, 270 Dairy Rd., Kahului; 808-283-3578; http://www. aecg.org

SOME HERE

MAKAWAO TOWN JAMBOREE sponsored by Makawao Town Merchants Association. Mike Carroll’s Community Service house band, other musicians will play outdoors “under the stars”. Free. 5-8 p.m. across from Rodeo General Store, 808-3574943; rc@mauifuturearts. org

ALL ONLINE

SECOND SATURDAY ART FOR KIDS - Children will be able to make Valentine cards, heart baskets, valentine animals, and people. Also. there will be a Valentines Day sale on February 12 and 13th. 20% off all items with any pink, red, or hearts on it. 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Thing, 7 N. Market St., Wailuku; 808-249-0215

Calendar Listings on mauitime.com

VALENTINE’S DAY CELEBRATION - 11:30 Hawaiian Entertainment. 12:30 Guess the values of the prizes and you could win them! 1:00 Hui Lanikila. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Maui Mall, 70 E. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-871-1307; http://www.mauimall.com “GOT CHOICE-THINK LOCAL” - Sat & Sun. Free reusable shopping tote promotion. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; http://www.queenkaahumanucenter.com MAUI’S BIGGEST YARD SALE - Farmers Market, crafts, food, artist, t-shirts, masssage and more.

MONDAY, FEB 15 HULA SHOW - A most dazzling performance executed with the aim of helping to perpetuate the Hawaiian culture. Free. 10 a.m. Queen Kaahumanu Shopping Center, 275 W. Kaahumanu Ave., Kahului; 808-877-3369; http://www.queenkaahumanucenter.com

TUESDAY, FEB 16 MAUI PLEIN AIR PAINTING INVITATIONAL JEAN STERN LECTURE - Jean Stern, Executive Director of the Irvine Museum in Irvine, California and a recognized authority on California Impressionism will present a lecture at Pioneer Inn. The lecture is free and open to the public. FINS & FLIPPERS TOUR PACKAGE - Upgrade to the Fins & Flippers tour package and learn fascinating facts about hammerhead sharks and Hawaiian green sea turtles! $10/person, park admission not

TUE - Pool Tournament WED - Ladies Night

included. 11:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Maui Ocean Center, 192 Ma’alaea Rd., Ma`alaea; 808-270-7000; http:// www.mauioceancenter.com KEIKI STORYTIME - Keiki preschool-age through 6 are invited to listen to stories read aloud, sing songs, and learn simple finger plays and rhymes. Following the story time, keiki will have the opportunity to color with crayons or learn a simple craft. All keiki must be accompanied by a parent or caregiver. Contact the library three weeks in advance if a sign language interpreter or other special accommodation is needed. Free. 10-10 a.m. Wailuku Public Library, 251 S. High Street, Wailuku; 808-243-5766; www.librarieshawaii.org THE PARENT PROJECT CLASS - Baldwin High School is sponsoring an 11-week class to teach parents effective, common-sense ways to deal with defiant or out-of-control teens. $25. 6-9 p.m. Baldwin High School, 1650 Kaahumanu Ave., Wailuku; Shevaun Bitzig 808-984-5656 ext. 263; http://www. parentproject.com

WEDNESDAY, FEB 17 CHINESE NEW YEAR LION DANCE - Chinese New Year Lion Dance at Whalers Village. Free. 3:30 p.m. Whalers Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Pkwy., Ka’anapali; 808-661-4567 MAUI PLEIN AIR PAINTING INVITATIONAL PACIFIC’ O SUNSET PAINT OUT - The Pacific ‘O Sunset Paint Out at Kamehameha Iki Park is another chance to see all of the artists in the same vicinity. The artists will gather at the popular beach park next to 505 Front Street to find inspiration in the sunset, beach scenes, and canoes on display in the park. 4-6 p.m. Kamehameha Iki Park O’O FARM - Through Volunteering on Vacation, a free program offered by Pacific Whale Foundation, work on an organic farm in upcountry Maui. Free. 7:30-9 a.m. Upcountry Farm, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808-249-8811; www.pacificwhale.org PACIFIC WHALE FOUNDATION SEEWEES- Ocean Edventure for Preschoolers - Preschoolers can enjoy field trips, activities, songs and stories. The theme for 2/10 is “Terrific Turtles.” For ages 3-5 (must be accompanied by parent/caregiver). $50 for 5 sessions, Member discounts available. 9-10 a.m. Pacific Whale Foundation’s Discovery Center, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808-249-8811; www.pacificwhale.org

February 11, 2010 23


THE WEEKEND DOESN’T END ON SATURDAY! VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIALS

Appetizer: Shrimp Ceviche $10 Homemade Shrimp Ceviche served in a martini glass with fresh tortilla chips Entrees: Rib-eye Steak $28 10 oz rib-eye steak from the Maui Cattle company grilled with a roasted black pepper demi glaze and served with mashed potatoes and asparagus Crab Stuffed Mahi Mahi $34 Pan roasted fresh mahi mahi stuffed with crab meat with a citrus beurre blanc and served with mashed potatoes and asparagus Dessert: Chocolate Covered Strawberries $9 Three strawberries dipped in chocolate and served with macadamia nut brittle with vanilla ice cream and fresh whipped cream Drink Special: Champagne Blossom $9 With a sweet edible hibiscus flower

THURSDAY

STARTING THIS VALENTINE’S DAY & EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT!

9PM-12PM NO COVER CHARGE!

EXTENDED HAPPY HOUR unt

il 7pm

$2.50 Mai Tais $2.00 Bud/Bud Lights $2.50 Drafts $2.00 OFF Cocktails FRIDAY

DROP IT LOW

CONTESenTt DANCEcess Entertainm With All Ac

SHOTS $2 DRINKS & $2 -CLOSE

SATURDAY

10

N LIV E MU SIC W/ OA HU ’S OW

ATIONS NATURA10L-CVILOBR SE WET WEDNESDAYS

BUCK NIGHTTS

AF $1 DRINKS & DR Cover All Access DJ No

'SPOU 4U Â… -BIBJOB

661-5288

". 1. Â… %BZT " 8FFL 2009 BEST OF MAUI WINNER

XXX NBJUBJMPVOHF DPN

10pm

TUESDAY

TACO TUESDAYS 4-10pm en $2.50 Tacos - Steak, Pork, Chick $2.50 Coronas $2.50 Dos XX $4 Margaritas

5 pm Monday - Friday

24 February 11, 2010


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY - WEDNESDAY

2/11

2/12

2/13

2/14

2/ 15- 2/17

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

HANG LOOSE LOUNGE 333 Dairy Rd., Kahalui - 877-6284

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

Danny & Alicia - No Cover

Kanaka Gamm No Cover

TBA No Cover

Danny & Alicia No Cover

Rampage 9 pm

Jamallad 10 pm

Maui Roller Girl’s Party 9pm-1:30am

Karaoke 8pm - 1:30am

MON - Karaoke TUE - DJ Nexus; WED Open Mic with Black Powder

DJ Blast 80’s Groove 9:30 $7

HARD ROCK CAFE

900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400

ISANA

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

MON through WED - Karaoke

JAVA JAZZ

Rene Alonzo No Cover, 7pm - Close

Guest Performer No Cover, 7pm - Close

Farzad & Mike Madden No Cover, 7pm - Close

Guest Performer No Cover, 7pm - Close

MON - Tracy Stile, No Cover, 7pm - Close TUE - WED - Rene Alonzo, No Cover, 7pm - Close

KAHALE’S

Vince Esquire

Kenny Roberts

16th Anniversary Party w/Eight Track Players

Kahala

MON, TUE, WED - Da-Ha-Y-Ns

Derick Sebastian & Josh 9:30 pm

Sam Ahia; No Cover, 6:30pm-8:30pm

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

Karaoke & Dancing w/ Aunty Toddy Lilikoi

Ras Benito & Band/DJ Dread & Boomshot

Second Saturdaze

1001 Arabian Nights/80’s Prom Party w/Daniel J

MON-Service Industry Night WED- Karaoke with Toby

Mana Maoli Collective

X-Clusive Saturdays $10, 10pm-2am

Karaoke w/ Joe No Cover, 9pm - 12am

MON - Service Industry Night; TUES- Dolla Balla Night! WED - Sizzling Salsa Nights

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

3350 L. Honoapiilani Rd. 667-0787

1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei 875-7711

KIMOS

845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

KOBE STEAKHOUSE

136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555

LULU’S KIHEI

1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944

Salsa Band/Latin DJ

LULU’S LAHAINA

Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-0808

MAI TAI LOUNGE

DJ Mike Rozak & Dancing

839 Front St., Lahaina - 661-5288

MAUI BREWING CO.

Dj Mike Rozac

Kahana Gateway Center - 669-3474

71 Baldwin Ave., Paia - 579-9999

DJ Pete 90X No Cover, 9pm - 12am

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S 2511 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891-8644

WOW! - Wailea on Wednesdays presents live island music, gallery receptions, artist appearances and more. The Shops at Wailea, 3750 Wailea Alanui, Wailea; 808897-6770 x2; http://www.shopsatwailea.com EXPERIMENTAL MUSIC VIDEO - Students will plan, record and edit a short original music video up to 3 minutes in length using basic video and sound production techniques and processes. Basic stopmotion animation, lighting techniques, copyright issues, and exporting video to DVD are covered as students experiment with Final Cut Express and Garageband for video/sound editing and iStopMotion for stop-animation. A screening to view work will be held at the end of the course. Rock on! $95 ($122 nonmembers) + Supply Fee: $25. 4-6 p.m. Hui No’eau Visual Arts Center, 2841 Baldwin Ave., Makawao; 808-244-5911; www.mauihui.org

p.m.-10 a.m. 811 Front St., Lahaina , 808-661-4855.

SURF PHOTO EXHIBIT WITH SERGIO OLIVEIRA AND MIKE NEAL - Daily. In lieu of commission on art sales both photographers will donate 20% of sales to the Save Honolua Coalition. 7 p.m. South Shore Tiki Lounge, Kihei Kalama Village, 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei; 808-874-6444; www.southshoretikilounge.com

DAVID PAUL’S ISLAND GRILL - Every Fri & Sat, Local artists 9 p.m. 900 Front St. Suite A101, Lahaina, HI, 96761, Lahaina, 808-662-3000. DUKES BEACH HOUSE - Thu, Garrett Probst 6-8 p.m.; Every Fri & Sat, Damon & Jack Oversized Productions 6-8 p.m.; Sat, Henry Kapono 3:30-5 p.m.; Sun, Ernie & Miles 6-8 p.m.; Every Mon, Tue & Wed, Damien & Edee 6-8 p.m. 130 Kai Malina Parkway, Lahaina, 808-662-2900.

“LITTLE BY LITTLE ORIGINAL” ORIGINAL ART SHOW BY LINDA WHITTEMORE - Wed. Linda Whittemore presents, “ Little by Little” a show of original art. No cover. 5-8 p.m. Maui Hands, Paia, 84 Hana Hwy., Paia; 808-579-9245; http://www.mauihands.com

HULA GRILL - Every Wed, Thu & Sat, Ernest Pua’a 3-5 p.m.; Thu, Oversized Production 6:30-9 p.m.; Fri, Ernest Pua’a & Kawika Lum Ho 6:30-9 p.m.; Fri, Ernest Pua’a and Kawika Lum Ho 3-5 p.m.; Sat, “TBA” 6:30-9 p.m.; Sun, Derrick Sebastian Trio 6:309 p.m.; Sun, Kawika 3-5 p.m.; Mon, Kawika Lum Ho 3-5 p.m.; Tue, Ernest Pua’a Hawaiian Trio 6:30-9 p.m. Whaler’s Village, 2435 Ka’anapali Parkway, Bldg P, Lahaina, 808-667-6636.

MAUI HANDS PRESENTS OIL ON ETCHED WOOD PAINTINGS BY CHRISTINE HALTON - Wed. Meet the artist and watch her create these beautiful pieces Wednesday afternoons through February. 12-4 p.m. Maui Hands, Paia, 84 Hana Hwy., Paia; 808579-9245; http://www.mauihands.com ART NIGHT - Fri. Stroll through Lahaina Town’s many art galleries. Special gallery shows, featured artists-in-action and refreshments. Free.661-6284

SUBMIT YOUR

LISTINGS

JAVA JAZZ/SOUP NUTZ Every Fri & Sat, Farzad & Mike Madden 7 p.m.; Fri, Guest Performer 7 p.m.; Sun, Guest Performer 7 p.m.; Mon, Tracy Stile 7 p.m.; Every Tue & Thu, René Alonzo 7 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapiilani Hwy. #203 & 204, Honokowai , 808-667-0787.

BLACK HISTORY MONTH EXHIBIT - Mon-Fri. Black History Month Exhibit featuring artifacts, arts, and photo display. 9am-5pm Mon, Tues, Wed & Fri; 1-8pm Thurs; Closed Sat & Sun; Furlough Days 3 & 10; and President’s Day Feb. 15. Free. Wailuku Public Library, 251 S. High Street, Wailuku; 808283-3578; http://www.aecg.org

ARTIST MORT LUBY PAINTING & ART SHOWINGS - Fri. Mort Luby will be painting on location and discussing his work at Maui Hands in Lahaina, all Februmauitime.com/listing ary and March. The Gallery will feature both his water color and oil paintings. 4:30-7 p.m. KIMO’S RESTAURANT - Every Maui Hands, Lahaina, 612 Front St., Mon, Tue, Wed & Sat, Sam Ahia 6:30-8 Ste. D, Lahaina; 808-667-9898; http:// p.m. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-4811. www.mauihands.com LAHAINA PIZZA COMPANY - Every Wed, Thu & Fri, John Kane 7:30-9 p.m.; Sat, Harry Troupe 7:309 p.m.; Sun, Greg Di Piazza 7:30-9 p.m.; Every Mon & Tue, Martin Tevaga 7:30-9 p.m. 730 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0700. CANOES - Sat, Elvis 5:30-8 p.m.; Sun, Indapkt with LEILANI’S ON THE BEACH - Sat, JD and Harry 2:30John Maritano, Brian Cuomo, Bob Harrison and 5 p.m.; Sat, Kilo Hana 2:30-5 p.m.; Fri, The J.D on Paul Marchetti 3-6 p.m.; Fri, Howard Ahia 5:30-8 the Rocks Band 2:30-5 p.m. Whaler’s Village, 2435 p.m. 1450 Front St., Lahaina, 808-661-0937. Ka’anapali Parkway Bldg J, Ka’anapali, (808) 661-4495.

MEET THE ARTISTS - Daily. Every day the Four Seasons’ resident artist will be on hand to discuss his or her work. Four Seasons Resort, 808-8748000; www.fourseasons.com/maui/

CHEESEBURGER IN PARADISE - Fri, Harry Troupe 4:30 p.m.-10 a.m.; Sat, Scottie Rotten; Sun, Mark Burnett; Every Mon & Tue, Scottie Rotten; Wed, Mark Burnett 4:30-10 p.m.; Thu, Mark Burnett 4:30

FOODIE SEE MAUITIME.COM FOR COMPLETE LISTINGS

ART MAUI PLEIN AIR PAINTING INVITATIONAL ARTISTS PAINT MAUI ON LOCATION - Painters will be seen all over Maui capturing the unique Island landscape and lifestyle.

WED - Open Mic Night No Cover, 9:30pm - 12:30am

Elevate - DJ Boomshot Fundraiser

MOANA CAFE

SEASIDE STORIES - Pacific Whale Foundation’s marine education team will present fanciful and factual stories of whales and the sea, followed by creative story projects. Designed for ages 3-6. Free. 10:30 a.m. Pacific Whale Foundation’s Ocean Front Store, 300 Ma’alaea Rd., Ste. 100, Ma’alaea; 808249-8811; www.pacificwhale.org

Mon, Tues, Wed- Sam Ahia No Cover, 6:30pm-8:30pm

Calendar Listings ■

DINNER MUSIC West Maui

LONGBOARDS KA’ANAPALI - Every Tue, Wed, Thu & Fri, Solo guitarist 5:30-8 p.m. 100 Nohea Kai Drive, Lahaina, 808-667-1200.

LULU’S LAHAINA SURF CLUB & GRILL - Thu, Gerit Williams 6:30-8 p.m. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 1221 Honoapiilani Hwy. #A1, Lahaina, 808-661-0808. MAX WORLD BISTRO - Every Sun & Fri, Gypsy Guitar of Bo Shores 5-8 p.m.; Sat, Maui Kila Kila 5-8 p.m.; Every Tue & Thu, Goodwin & Hains 5-8 p.m. Ha’iku Town Center, 810 Kokomo Rd., Ha’iku, 808575-2629. MERRIMAN’S - Mon, Phil & Angela Benoit 5:30-8 p.m. 1 Bay Drive, Lahaina, 808-669-6400. MULLIGAN’S AT THE WHARF - Fri, Irish Aloha Fridays 7-9 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, 658 Front Street, Lahaina, 808-661-8881. NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT - Wed, Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Series with Grammy-wnner George Kahumoku Jr. and Hawaii’s top slack key artists $39.99 7:30 p.m. 5900 L. Honoapiilani Rd., Napili, 808-669-6271. PINEAPPLE GRILL - Sat, Jazz on the Green 7-10 p.m.; Fri, Jawaiian Music 7-10 p.m. 200 Kapalua Drive, Kapalua, 808-669-9600. PIONEER INN GRILL & BAR - Wed, Greg DiPiazza 6-8 p.m.; Tue, Captain Billy Bones 6-8 p.m. 658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 808-661-8881. SEA HOUSE RESTAURANT - Mon, Albert Kaina 7-9 p.m.; Tue, Kincaid Basques 7-9 p.m. 5900 Lower Honoapiilani Hwy., Napili, 808-669-1500. THE MELTING POT - Tue, Girls NIght Out 5-9 p.m. 325 Keawe St., Ste. A202, Lahaina, (808) 661-6181.

South Maui CAPISCHE? - Sat, Mark Johnstone 7:30-10 p.m.; Fri, Mark Johnstone 7-10 p.m. 555 Kaukahi St., Kihei, 808-879-2224. DIAMONDS ICE BAR & GRILL - Sat, Ricky G 5-7 p.m.; Fri, Donomick from the Edge 5-7 p.m. 1279 S. Kihei Rd. # 314, Kihei, 808-874-9299. DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB - Sun, Billy & The Bad Dogs 4-7 p.m. 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-8759669. GIAN DON’S - Thu, Jeff New Island Style Music 5-7 p.m.; Sat, Joyce & Gord 5-8 p.m. 1445 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-874-4041.

February 11, 2010 25


1945 S K THURSDAY 2/11 6:30-8:30pm

THursday Salsa class with Raphael.

Willie K Band

Call 344-1308

LIVE Salsa Band

Pub Quiz

Barbra & Neto 8pm - 11pm 8:30 - 11PM

FREE PUPUS & 50% OFF DRAFTS LOTS OF PRIZES W/ DJ CHILI DOG

FRIDAY 2/12 ~ 7:30pm

GAIL SWANSON SATURDAY 2/13 ~ 7-10PM

JAZZ ON THE BLUE SUNDAY 2/14 ~ 6:30 - 9:30pm

The Celtic TiGERS D.U.H 10pm-Close

$29 THREE COURSE DINNER SPECIAL

WEDNESDAY 2/17 ~7pm-9pm

The #1 Place for Entertainment in Central Maui!

THURS

IGHT LATE N HOUR Y HAPP HURS MON-T -12 10PM

FEB. 11

DJ JED OF THE MACC PRESENTS

8-11pm - NO COVER

COUNTRY MUSIC NIGHT

3&% #6-- +"$, %"/*&- 4 %3*/, 41&$*"-4

FEB. 12

FRI

FREE I WI-F

6-9pm - NO COVER

ALOHA FURLOUGH FRIDAY! LOCAL BAND OPEN MYND

FLASHBACK FRIDAYS!

SAT

NEXT LEVEL ENTERTAINMENT DJ’s 10-close - $10 cover

FEB. 13

SPECIAL LUEKEMIA BENEFIT FOR MIKE PULLMAN

THE THROWDOWNS

W/ ERIN SMITH THE RYAN ROBINSON BAND & SOUL PACKAGE

MON

SUN

FEB. 14

TUES

10am-2pm

10pm-CLOSE

WAVETRAIN

Featuring Mark Johnstone & Friends Dirty, Modern, Electro Funk - $3 WELL DRINKS

SPECIAL OPENING ACT BROWN CHICKEN BROWN COW

FRIDAY 12 HAITI RELIEF CONCERT FEATURING: MISHKA, MARTY DREAD, BUBZ, TEOMON, SUNDANCE, NARA BOONE & SPECIAL GUESTS.

ALL PROCEEDS GOING TO DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS 10pm-CLOSE / $10 COVER

SATURDAY 13 MANAO RADIO ORCHESTRA BENEFIT FOR MANAO RADIO 10pm-CLOSE / $7 COVER

HANGOVER VALENTINE’S BREAKFAST! MADE TO ORDER

SUNDAY 14

BOAT NIGHT PRESENTED BY LEVEL 8 DJ’s 10-close NO COVER

VALENTINE’S DAY DINNER FOR 2

WINTER OLYMPICS COVERAGE FEB. 15

8-11pm NO COVER KOA PUNA MOTORCYCLE CLUB PRESENTS

BLACKPOWDER BLUES BAND

$3.50 COORS LIGHT

FEB. 16

WED

5-Close - $5 or Higher Donation

THURSDAY 11

5-7pm NO COVER

RECESSION PROOF TUESDAYS!

PRE-FIXED MENU / $50

INCLUDES SPARKLING WINE, LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 6-8pm W/ INDIO - SPANISH GUITAR

TUESDAY 16 TACO TUESDAYS $3 Mexican Beers - $2.50 Tacos 5pm-10pm

50% Off All Food & FREE Pool All Day! SPECIAL EARLY LADIES PAU HANA w/ The Streetwalker Blues Band INDIE ROCK BY THE JOHNNY RINGO BAND 8-10pm - NO COVER

FEB. 17

7-10pm - No Cover

HAPPY HOUR ALL DAY

Island Rhythms by Jesse Tanoue, Piilani Arias & Danny Sato

ORGANIC WINE & BEER )&"-5) 8*4& 015*0/4 t )"8"**"/ $0''&&

HANGOVER BREAKFAST EVERY SUNDAY 10 - 2

WE WENT GREEN!

COMPREHENSIVE RECYCLING

& ,".&)".&)" "7& t /&95 50 8&/%: 4 ű t ,")6-6*"-&)064& $0.

26 February 11, 2010

CHARLEY’S RESTAURANT 142 HANA HWY. PAIA Reservations & Info

808-579-8085

om smaui.c u l u l Â… 4 IHEI RD Â… 879-994

PAULA FUGA & MIKE LOVE $39 DINNER/SHOW

874.1131100 Kaukahi Street, Wailea Located at the Wailea Blue Course (Across from the Kea Lani) www.MulligansOnTheBlue.com

LATIN DJ 11pm - CLOSE

FRIDAY

Ras BenITo and Band QN QN Â…

DJ LIL DREAD & BOOMSHOT 10PM-CLOSE

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1001 ARABIAN NIGHTS W/ROSALIND MODICA 6:30-8PM

80’S PROMDRINKPARTY W/ DANIEL J SPECIALS NO COVER & PHOTO BOOTH 10pm

SATURDAY 101 -*'& NO COVER SUNDAY *OUFSOBUJPOBM Dance with Fatima "-- %BZ 5VFTEBZ #VE -JHIU $PPST -JHIU

Sunset Specials Daily 3-6pm


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

2/11

2/12

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

2/13

2/14

MONDAY - WEDNESDAY

2/15 - 2/17

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

MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S 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

The Ringo Show 9pm

Dub Fires 9pm

D5 & Dolla Drinks $5, 9pm

Willie K/ Pub Quiz @ 8:30pm & Dj Chili Dog

Gail Swanson 6:30 pm

Jazz On the Blue 7 pm

D.U.H. 10pm

MON- Willie K TUES- Tin Can Comedy w/ Shaggy; WED- Paula Fuga & Mike Love

Sounds of Addiction 10 pm No Cover

Johnny Ringo Nite - 10pm No Cover

Sounds of Addiction 10 pm No Cover

Ryan Palma 10 pm No Cover

MON- Bloodlines 10pm, TUES- Ryan Palma 10 pm WED- Trivia Nite 7-9 & Open Mic 10-close

Entourage Fridays & “Drop it Low” Dance Contest

Natural Vibrations no cover 10 pm

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

TUE - Dolla Drinks

WED - Buck Night & All Access DJs

Smooth Jazz Sounds w/ Brian Cuomo & Friends, 7pm -10m

PINEAPPLE GRILLE

200 Kapalua Drv. Lahaina - 669-9600

SANSEI - KAPALUA

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Damien Awai of An Den 10 pm

SANSEI - KIHEI

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm-1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm - 1am

Free Karaoke No Cover, 10pm-1am

DJ Slackin; 10pm- Close

DJ Sonny No Cover, 10pm

DJ Magnetic No Cover, 10pm

Hawaiian by Nature 9 pm

No Remorse 9 pm

Tag Team: Brown Chicken Brown Cow VS Erin Smith - $10; 9 pm

Supper Club feat. Barry Flanagan & Eric Gilliom

Crunch Pups

Karaoke w/ Pearl Rose No Cover, 9pm-11pm

Karaoke

Karaoke

Karaoke

Paprazzi w/ DJ Kid C 9pm $10

Carnival

Lia Shaw & Jask Live! Infatuation Source Party

Pac 5 Live 9pm, No Cover

Karaoke

Karaoke

115 Bay Dr., Lahaina - 669-6286

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

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

SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR 2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602

STELLA BLUE’S

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

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR 1127 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-1380

TIFFANY’S

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

TIMBA

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

WATERCRESS

Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku-243-9350

Kanoa of Gomega No Cover, 10pm

MON - DJ Blast; TUE - Tequila Tuesday w/ DJ LX; WED- the ADD Twins

MON- Tom Cherry & Mike Finkiwicz TUES Tom Coway WED - Randall Rospond

Karaoke

MON-WED- Karaoke MON- TUES-CLOSED WED -Platinum Party w Boss Lady Entertainment

Karaoke & $3 Becks

MON- Karaoke TUES- Karaoke WEDKaraoke

WOW-WEE MAUI’S

333 Dairy Rd. #101, Kahului - 871-1414

HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH - Wed, Junior Lacuesta 3:30-7 p.m.; Thu, Jordan Cudworth 4-8 p.m.; Thu, Uncle Nicki 3-7 p.m.; Fri, Rick Glencross 4-8 p.m.; Sat, Ryan & Wolf 4-7 p.m.; Sun, Dan & Ann 5-9 p.m.; Mon, Junior Lacuesta 4-8 p.m.; Mon, STEVE 4-8 p.m.; Tue, Rick Glencross 4-8 p.m. 1913 S. Kihei Rd. #E, Kihei, 808-891-8010. LONGHI’S WAILEA - Sat, Longhi’s. The Shops at Wailea, 3750 Wailea Ala Nui , Wailea, 808-891-8883. LULU’S KIHEI - Sat, Live Hawaiian Music and hula Dancing 6-8 p.m.; Mon, S.I.N. (Service Industry Night for Maui Professionals) 3 p.m.; Wed, Kamaaina Wednesday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 1945 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-879-9944. MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE - Fri, Willie K and His Band 6:30-8 p.m.; Sun, The Celtic Tigers 6:30 p.m.; Mon, Willie K 6:30-8 p.m.; Fri, Gail Swanson 6:30-8 p.m. 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 808-874-1131. SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE - Fri, Mango Pickers 4-6 p.m.; Sat, Tom Conway 4-6 a.m.; Sun, Viva La Rumba 4 a.m.-6 p.m.; Mon, Kanoa of Gomega 4-6 a.m.; Thu, Erin Smith 4-6 p.m. Kihei Kalama Village, 1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-874-6444. SPICES - Sun, The Crunch Pups 6-9 p.m. 2259 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-891-8860. STELLA BLUES - Tue, Tom Conway 4-6 p.m.; Wed, Cyrus Clarke 4-6 p.m.; Thu, Ah Tim 4-6 p.m.; Fri, Ahumanu 4-6 p.m.; Every Fri & Sat, Stella’s Supper Club presents Barry Flanagan & Eric Gilliom 6-9 p.m.; Mon, Tom Cherry and Mike Finkiewicz 4-6 p.m.; Sun, Valentines Day Specials With Gail Swanson 5 p.m. 1279 South Kihei Rd., # 201, Kihei, 808874-3779. TAQUERIA CRUZ - Live Music Every Tue & Sat, Taqueria Cruz. 2395 S. Kihei Rd. #112, Kihei, 808875-2910. TOMMY BAHAMA’S TROPICAL CAFE - Every Thu & Fri, Margie Heart 5:30-9 p.m.; Every Sun & Sat, Howard Ahia 5:30-9 p.m.; Mon, Greg Di Piazza 5:309 p.m.; Every Sun & Wed, Merv Oana 5:30-9 p.m. 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., Kihei, 808-875-9983.

TRADEWINDS POOLSIDE CAFE - Daily, Tradewinds Poolside Cafe. 2259 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 808-891-8860.

Central Maui

Hana Hwy., Paia, 808-579-8989.

Pkwy., 808-661-0011.

GREEN BANANA CAFE - Every Tue, Thu & Sat, Polynesian Dance Coffee Luau 6 p.m. 137 Hana Hwy., Paia, 808-579-9130.

Tiki Bar & Grill - Every Tue & Wed, Leo Kane 6-9 p.m.; Daily, Music by Lanui 6-9 p.m.; Thu, Daniel Palakiko 6-9 p.m.; Every Sun & Mon, Kealaoka’ (Jason Fundang) 6-9 p.m.; Daily, Hula Show 6:30-7 p.m.

BEACH BUM’S BAR & GRILL - Tue, Randall Respond 5-8 p.m. Wed, Tom & Randall Rospond @ Beach Bums, 5:30- 8:30 pm ; Every Mon, Thu & Sat, Kenny Roberts 5 p.m.; Fri, Tom Cherry/Mike F 5-9 p.m.; Sun, Kaleo 5-9 p.m.; Wed, Blue Brew BBQ 5-9 p.m. 300 Maalaea Rd. # 1M, Wailuku, 808-243-2286.

HANA HOU CAFE - Mon-Fri, Hana Hou Cafe. 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku, 808-575-2661.

CAFE MARC AUREL - Mon, Open Mic Night 7 p.m.; Wed, Romantic French Wines 7:30 p.m. 28 N. Market St., Wailuku, 808-244-0852.

RESORT SHOWS

CAFE O’LEI AT THE DUNES AT MAUI LANI - Fri, Phil & Angela Benoit 5:30-8 p.m. 1333 Mauilani Pkwy., Kahului, 808-8770073.

MOANA BAKERY & CAFE - Thu, Tony Ray Band “Swing Show” 6:30-8 p.m.; Wed, Phil & Angela Benoit 6:30-8 p.m. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 808-579-9999.

LOOKING FOR

NAPILI KAI BEACH RESORT - Sat, Coelho Morrison 7-9 p.m.; Sun, Andrew Kaina 7-9 p.m.; Thu, Kincaid Basques and Albert Kaiana 6:30-9 p.m.

More Listings are on mauitime.com

KAHULUI ALE HOUSE - Tue, The Street-Walker Band & Special Ladies Pau Hana Drink Discounts! 5-7 p.m.; Fri, Open Mynd 6-9 p.m. 355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului, 808-877-9001. MAIN STREET BISTRO - Every Thu & Fri, Rythm & Blues with Freedom 5 p.m.-7 a.m. 2051 Main St., Wailuku, 808-244-6816.

UpCountry Maui CAFE DES AMIS - Wed, Cafe Des Amis. 42 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 808-579-6323. FLATBREAD CO. - Fri, Electric Haiku Hillbillys. 89

MARRIOT MAUI OCEAN CLUB - 100 Nohea Kai Drive, 808-667-1200. Longboards Ka’anapali - Wed, Desmond Yap 5:309 p.m.; Sun, Miles Ahead Duo 8-11 a.m.; Daily, Solo guitarists and sunset hula dancers 5:30-8 p.m.

West Maui

SOMETHING?

CARY & EDDIE’S HIDEAWAY RESTAURANT Every Thu, Fri & Sat, Menehune Music and Bryan and Friends 8-11 p.m.; Every Tue & Sat, Francois’ Piano 11:30 a.m.; Sun, Fausto’s Guitar 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Every Thu, Fri & Sat, Friends of Bryan 5:30 p.m. 500 N. Puunene Ave., Kahului, 808-873-6555.

Tiki Terrace Restaurant - Sun, Ka’anapali Champagne Brunch 9 a.m.-1 p.m.

HYATT REGENCY MAUI RESORT & SPA - 200 Nohea Kai Dr., 808-661-1234. HYATT REGENCY MAUI RESORT & SPA - Daily, Cirque Polynesia 6 p.m.

Umalu - Daily (except Wed), Live Music 7-9 p.m.; Daily, Torch Lighting Ceremony 5:30-6 p.m.; Thu, Off Tomorrow 6-9 p.m.; Daily (except Wed), Live Music 4-6 p.m. KA’ANAPALI BEACH HOTEL - 2525 Kaanapali Parkway, (808) 661-0011. Kanaehele Room - Daily (except Sun & Mon), “Kupanaha: Maui Magic for All Ages” Kanehele Room 4:30-7 p.m. KAANAPALI BEACH CLUB- 104 Kaanapali Shores, 808-661-2000. Ohana Bar & Grill - Every Sun, Thu & Sat, Torch Lighting Ceremony 5:30-9 p.m.; Every Wed & Thu, Live Music 5:30-9 p.m.

LIST YOUR EVENT!

Post your free online listing (up to 15 months early), and our editors will consider your submission for the printed calendar as well. Print listings are also free, but subject to space limitations. Online, you can include a full description of your event, a photo and a link to your Web site. Go to mauitime.com/ listing and start posting events. Deadline for print listings is 10 days prior to the issue in which you wish the listing to appear.

WAIT, THERE’S MORE! Looking for something to do? Use MauiTime’s free calendar to browse hundreds of events online. Art galleries, family events, education classes, film and literary events, church groups, music, sports, volunteer opportunities—all this and more on our free events calendar at mauitime.com/calendar. Start planning your week!

KAANAPALI BEACH HOTEL - 2525 Kaanapali

February 11, 2010 27


GIVING LIFE » Continued from page 13 and another woman who is there serving refreshments. She’s a century donor (meaning she’s given blood more than 100 times), and insists I take a bowl of soup myself, before I ask her how she first became involved with the blood bank. “My baby needed blood,” she says, of a hospital experience in December 1972. “When was all pau, they neva like money, just wanted da blood back. So I gave blood, and that’s how it started.” She continued giving—109 times—plus began volunteering by placing friendly reminder calls to donors about upcoming appointments, and taking up shifts attending the food and beverage canteen. “I was [deferred] for a little while because of my eight-pound tumor,” she says, tapping her chest. My eyes widen, but she shakes her head. “No, no, no. It’s OK now. But it looked like a clamshell, in my chest. Eight pounds,” she taps again, grinning. “I’m just happy I can give something—volunteer, give blood—you know, whatever I can.” I’m overwhelmed, feeling both unendingly grateful and a little embarrassed. I fight the urge to shout and hug each of them, to lift and kiss their punctured forearms, and thank them for their selflessness. All of them, my personal heroes and those two captivating words, embodied.

HOW CAN I DONATE?

E

WIN ETS TICK to the

Matisyahu Concert February 28 @ Lahaina Civic Center

Click on Matisyahu Ticket Contest at MauiTime.com to enter. 2 Winners will be picked every week.

28 February 11, 2010

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

very two months, Blood Bank of Hawaii conducts a blood drive on Maui. Call 800-372-9966 to make an appointment. Though not mandatory, appointments are highly recommended to reduce your wait time and keep things flowing smoothly. The entire process takes about an hour, including paperwork, a mini physical and confidential consultation. The blood draw itself takes only five to eight minutes. Relatively simple as the process may be, there are some important preparatory and follow-up care considerations that need be made by donors—particularly during the 24 hours surrounding donation. Fortunately, the three major recommendations are commonsense practices: hydration, proper diet and plenty of rest.

BLOOD BANK OF HAWAII Upcoming Maui drives: Feb. 16, 8:30am-5:30pm, Baldwin High auditorium, Kahului; Feb. 17 (7:30am5:30pm) & Feb. 18 (7am-5pm) at the Cameron Center, Kahului Info: 800-372-9966 or bbh.org

Hydrating with that other essential liquid is key. The Blood Bank of Hawaii sticks by the ol’ “8 by 8” rule—you know, eight, 8-ounce glasses of water per day. Doing that—plus staying away from caffeine, alcohol and

cigarettes, which are dehydrating—will replenish fluid volume loss within 24 hours, with proteins and plasma replenishing in 72 hours and red blood cells regenerating in six weeks. If chuggalugin’ that much wai—though you know you need to—seems daunting, no feel shame in dressing up the occasion with lemon or lime wedges, fruit cubes, cucumber slices or mint. As part of the pre-examination, donors undergo a simple finger-prick test that instantaneously assesses iron levels in the donor’s blood. Too low a level, and donation may be deferred. So, first fueling with ironrich food is also fundamental. The blood bank, in a pamphlet promoting healthy hemoglobin, provides a table of about four dozen foods that help build iron, listing grinds like red meat, fish steaks, berries, watermelon, beets and brown rice. And, according to the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Nutrient Database, nothing tops mollusks for iron-packing abilities (and I know opihi are limpets, but I’m tossing them in the same category…with shoyu and Tabasco). With an average of 23.77mg in a three-ounce serving, it far outstretches turkey (11.18mg per cup), chicken (10.21mg per cup), duck (5.97mg per half-duck), beef (0.69 - 5.24mg per cup) or fish (2.48mg per three-ounce serving). To aid in the absorption of iron— especially “non-heme” iron, or iron that does not come from the hemoglobin and myoglobin in meat—pair iron-rich foods with foods high in Vitamin C like citrus juices and papaya. Non-heme iron accounts for the majority of regular intake, and undergoes a chemical reaction when paired with Vitamin C, as well as with other heme iron foods, that allow for absorption. Rest, too, is imperative. After blood is drawn, it’s important to rest for a few minutes and to avoid strenuous physical activity for at least 24 hours. As for vices, apply the poolrule: if you must return to bad habits, wait at least 30 minutes after your donation. Beyond bodily care, it’s imperative for a donor to know thyself. Stringent quality control rules are in place by the FDA and enacted by the exhaustive efforts of blood banks. International travel, for example, can defer donation. Travel to South America or Africa will require a possible12-month wait from your return to the United States, and after travel to Europe (new FDA regulations introduced in 2002), deferment may be indefinite. Questions about medical conditions and medications taken are addressed in the questionnaire and during the confidential consultation, but many general cans and no-cans are outlined between the Blood Bank of Hawaii, America’s Blood Centers and the FDA (see sidebar). If you are deferred for any reason, there are many more ways to become involved and save lives. The most important is advocacy—encourage family and friends to donate the gift of life. ■ To share or save this article, type: mt.hy.pr/feature31


by Caeriel Crestin

Horoscopes

sign.language.astrology@gmail.com AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) When approaching a situation that’s similar to one you’ve experienced before, use what you learned, but be careful how you apply it. That means you shouldn’t be trying to recreate the same scenarios—doing so would feel false and artiďŹ cial for all concerned. However, using what worked isn’t a bad idea. Build on that. There’s a way to call upon your history to help create something totally new. The more you can let go of what’s gone before, without forgetting it, the better chance you’ll have of making the present moment richer and more thrilling than the past ever was.

SIGN

T BUF UJGJD FTFOUT S F S $ (JGU SFBU 1 F ( L B .

.BVJ T -BTFS )BJS 3FNPWBM 4QFDJBMJTU

t #PUPY 5BLJOH "QQPJOUNFOUT /PX "ENJOJTUFSFE CZ %S #FOOFUU UP t &MJNJOBUF TIBWJOH GPSFWFS t 4BGF GPS 5BO BOE %BSLFS TLJO t (VBSBOUFFE SFTVMUT t "GGPSEBCMF t 1BDLBHFT JODMVEF VOMJNJUFE TFTTJPOT

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PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) What a tease. You love to irt or even put yourself in semi-compromising situations just to see what’ll happen. While this is endlessly entertaining for you, it can be frustrating and confounding both for the objects of your attentions and for those who you’re already close to. Keep yourself in check this week. What’s good fun for you just isn’t all that amusing for some people you care about. You can ďŹ nd other venues and ways to be playful, right? Since this particular one mostly confuses and upsets people at the moment, I suggest you do so.

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ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) Frequently when people are insecure about something, they overcompensate. The cockiest ones are often those with the most intense self-doubts. (Similarly, the most homophobic are usually gays who can’t admit it.) Is this what’s happening here? We can usually see through the façades people put up (especially from lameass closeted gay-bashers), and would respect authenticity a lot more than some false front. Be real— even if that means letting some of your less attering facets show. They’ll still shine more than any fakery. Trust me on this one. We’ll like the real you a lot better than anything else you could show us.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)

Mahalo to our over 1,500 Facebook friends and counting...

Don’t assume you know where anyone else is coming from. You know how you’d react to a given situation, but it’s all too easy for you to assume that others would (or should) take similar action. After all, it’s the best and most sensible thing to do, right? That may be so, but one of the beauties and failings of our existence is just how differently people can view and react to the same scenario. Demanding behavior that exactly conforms to your standards would be foolish and somewhat tyrannical. Don’t do it. You may discover that someone else’s seemingly preposterous approach actually works better than yours. Wouldn’t that be something?

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) Sometimes it seems like the pool of available potential partners is only knee-deep and you’ve caught and thrown back every ďŹ sh in there. That can be disheartening, I know, but don’t freak out about it. Things are always changing, and if it’s really important to you, you can change yourself, thereby making whole new worlds available to you. The easiest thing to alter is simply your location, but there are other things you can do, too. Sometimes all it takes is a minor gym habit or a new haircut. Feeling bored and frustrated? Keep transforming your scenario until it becomes one that’ll keep you challenged and interested instead.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) Vengeance may taste good on the tip of your tongue, but it has a bitter, burning aftertaste that’ll linger for a long time. It’s almost never worth it. Letting things go and moving on may be less satisfying in the heat of the moment, but it feels better in the long run, and gives you the best chance of actually progressing and making something new happen. Opting for revenge has the opposite effect, unfortunately: nothing is more likely to make you repeat the same basic scenario, all over again. Don’t trap yourself in some stupid cycle, especially when breaking free is as simple as three words: forgive and forget.

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LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) Whatever you want to do is ďŹ ne, of course (as if you’d let anyone else dictate what you can or can’t do). However, your stubborn refusal to let anyone even appear to tell you what to do can sometimes make you ignore very good advice. Try to be more open-minded. You don’t have a week, a month, or a year, to ďŹ nally come around to what others had been saying all along. You need to be humble enough to realize when someone’s telling you something purely for your own good, and take it on board. This week, when someone criticizes you, don’t snap. Consider where they’re coming from, and see if you can go there too.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) You suck at wasting time. Ask a Pisces what she did with her afternoon and she’ll respond, “Oh, is it evening already? I really have no idea where the time’s gone!â€? Most Virgos, on the other hand, will have squeezed more into every minute than most people could squeeze into ten, and still be frustrated they didn’t get more done. However, that’s not always a good thing. This week is a good week for slowing down; efďŹ ciency isn’t everything, you know. I know you haven’t had much practice at taking things slow. Perhaps call upon a Pisces for some help.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) You can’t please everybody. You know this, and yet you still have this natural tendency to try (and frequently drive yourself nuts or to misery in the process). Consciously resist that impulse this week, when it may be very powerful indeed. Rationally, you know that you can’t make everyone happy and yet you’ll probably be able to convince yourself that you can come close—and consequently expend a lot of effort trying. That’s just not the way to go this week. Make carefully-considered decisions, and then stick by them, knowing ahead of time that no matter what they are, they’ll probably upset someone—and that’s just the way it is.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) Your Libran neighbors like to try to make everyone happy—something you know better than to even attempt, of course. However, you’re guilty of the opposite extreme: not even trying to make anyone happy— even yourself! It’s probably not conscious, but sometimes you seem to hit upon the exact choice that will make the fewest people happy. I hope that you can avoid such a scenario here. Perhaps there’s no avoiding some misery, given the current situation, but your decisions could still make circumstances happier for at least a few of the people concerned, including yourself. That, in fact, seems like a worthy goal for this week.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) You hate game-playing more than most, but unfortunately, the human psyche seems to require a little bit of it sometimes. Being too available, ironically, makes most people less interested. The tiniest bit of playing hard to get, however, is like a spice to entice someone’s attention. You can play that game, can’t you? After all, it’s almost not much of a game—you are pretty hard to pin down. Just a sprinkle of unavailability is all you need to attract that attention you want. Don’t go overboard, though. A dash of cologne can be hot—a splash is kind of disgusting.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) Instead of focusing on what you don’t like, focus on what you do enjoy. What turns you off may be a shorter list than what turns you on, but still there are things that are especially good at pushing your buttons (in a good way). Mention those. We want to know precisely what makes you happy—saying, “everything but x, y, and zâ€? makes it awfully hard to ďŹ gure out how to please you, even though you think you’re making it easy for us. Be speciďŹ c and focus on the positives—and we’ll do our part and deliver pretty much exactly what you ask for.

February 11, 2010 29


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ORGANIC CERTIFICATION Sat, March 6th, 1-3:00pm Lisa Hotchkiss, farm manager at Hale Akua Garden Farm, and an organic crop inspector for Hawaii Farmer’s Association.This class will provide detailed, step by step outline of paperwork, recordkeeping & fees associated with organic certification,review approved fertility and pest materials and utilize the information relayed by OMRI. Instructor: Lisa Hotchkiss, $10 donation. 873.6229

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

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HOME COMPOSTING Classes sponsored by County of Maui and Sharing Aloha, taught by Wilma of Joy of Worms, held monthly. Registration required. 573-3911. www.joyofworms.com PROPANE TANKS 20 lb. and under can be recycled for FREE at Airgas/Gaspro in Kahului, 877-0056. Sponsored by County of Maui, SOS Metals Island Recycling & Airgas/Gaspro

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February 11, 2010 31


The Backpage

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REAL ESTATE DEALS Locations island wide. Prices from $129k and up. Contact Josh Jerman, Realtor 808-283-2222 The Wailea Group LLC 808 BISTRO IS NOW OPEN! 2511 South Kihei Road, across from Kam 2 Beach. 879-8008 FRESH MINT VIETNAMESE VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Celebrate The Year of the Tiger and Valentine’s Day with a Surprise Gift for all customers on February 14th while supplies last. Located at 115 Baldwin Ave. in Paia, call 579-9144

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