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JUNE 10, 2004
CONTENTS
PAI A Fi s h M ar k et
VOLUME 7 • ISSUE 50
Restaurant
Tides & times
COVER STORY 10 The Real Reagan
Tide-times set for Honolulu - adjust as follows: Kahului: 1hr 41min Hana: 1hr 23 min Makena: 0hr 32min Kihei/Ma`alaea: 0hr 22 min Lahaina: 0hr 40 min
LOCAL NEWS 5 TV with a Brain 8 Unfulfilled Promises Akaku passes the hat by Jaime Cherundolo
Will the G8 ever help the world’s people? by Joshua Cooper
DINING 14 Hana Bay Juice Co.
DAY&NIGHT 21 23 24 25
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Sun R 5:49A Fri Sun S 7:14P
L 5:55A -0.1 H 1:04P +1.5
L 6:57P +0.7 H 11:41P +1.2
12 Sun R 5:49A Sat Sun S 7:14P
L 6:21A -0.1
H 1:42P +1.8 L 8:13P +0.6
13 Sun R 5:49A Sun Sun S 7:14P
H 12:26A +1.0 H 2:15P +2.0 L 6:46A -0.1 L 9:13P +0.5
14 Sun R 5:49A Mon Sun S 7:14P
H 1:10A +0.8 L 7:11A -0.1
H 2:47P +2.1 L 10:02P +0.4
15 Sun R 5:49A Tue Sun S 7:15P
H 1:53A +0.7 L 7:38A -0.1
H 3:18P +2.2 L 10:43P +0.3
16 Sun R 5:50A Wed Sun S 7:15P
H 2:35A +0.6 L 8:07A -0.2
H 3:50P +2.3 L 11:21P +0.3
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L 5:25A -0.1 L 5:23P +1.2 H 12:18P +1.2 H 10:54P +1.4
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MAUI FILM FESTIVAL 19 Listings & Schedule 20 Venues A&E 22 Sexy, Scary and Fun
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LETTERSTOTHEEDITOR MORE POWER TO YOU Good job on the Photo Voltaic home article (“A Brighter Future,” Apr. 29). People should know these grid-connected systems are sprouting up everywhere. Good work getting the word out. But there is a problem with KWHRs or Kilo (1000) Watt (volts times amps) Hr. (hour). Most who pay electric bills, when asked something about KWHRs, will give you a kind of goofy eyed look and say I’m clueless as to what a KWHR is. This would be like not knowing what a gallon is, and paying by the gallon for gas. If a PV system in this price range made 10 KWHRs per day, it would be doing good. But the article stated that the PV system will make 1400 Kilowatts of power. This would be the output of a full-sized power plant of 1.4 million watts. Wouldn’t that be nice. That was a big typo, dudes. I would guess that system would make about 3,500 KWHR per year or so at the most. -Franklin Russell, via email The Editor responds: Nice catch, though we are working on a 1,400 Kilowatt system for our upcoming world domination project, but the less said about that the better.
ariously express the central, collective emotions of victory, justice and struggle” left me wondering exactly what “certitude” Barukh Shalev was speaking of. If Ultimate Fighting is a masculine response to an emasculated condition then why not redirect this wealth of energy to effect meaningful change in this world in which you find yourself? The “heroes” you mention are not “heroes” because they can break bones and sweat. I think it’s time for a change in the way we define masculinity and heroism and start to become part of a solution for the societal angst of which you speak. I challenge you to this much more difficult bout. -Paula Brock, Kihei Barukh Shalev responds: The certitude I wrote of is competition and struggle, elements human beings have been identifying with since ancient times. Unapologetic masculinity and power has been, since the 1960’s, seen as something obscene and politically incorrect. Social elites tend to take a view of biology as something that can be controlled, harnessed for as you say “meaningful change.” You are seeking to implement a political ideology through biology. Marx had the same idea, this concept of controlling human strength and potential to create utopia.
MOVIE GUY Wow, did Cole Smithey see the same movie that I did? Everybody I know really enjoyed Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (“Desolation Row,” May 27). It was clever, deep and entertaining. Maybe his dislike of the characters got in the way of his enjoying the film. I thought it was great. -Bill Schoenbart, Santa Cruz, CA/Pahoa, HI
THE ULTIMATE LETTER I’m reflecting on the importance of Ed Searfoss’ dilemma of getting a bout (“The Ultimate Fighter,” May 27). The disappointment at not being able to witness “unsavory carnage” and to be able to “vic-
Maui Time welcomes letters commenting on our coverage, but only if they’re complimentary. If you still wish to complain about something, please have the decency to use plenty of bad punctuation and grammar— that makes it easier for us to make fun of you when we respond. Send your letters to the editor via e-mail (letters@mauitime.com), regular mail (Letters to the Editor, Maui Time Weekly, 658 Front Street, Ste. 126A-7278, Lahaina, HI 96761) or fax (808-661-0446). All correspondence must include your full name, hometown and phone number.
EH BRAH! Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less, changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent to “Eh Brah!” c/o Maui Time Weekly, 658 Front Street, Ste. 126A–7278, Lahaina, HI 96761 or send an e-mail to
ehbrah@mauitime.com To the kayaking fisherman who saved my life: Thank you. I was snorkeling off Makena and I got caught in a total tourist moment—the ocean turned on me and I couldn’t get to shore. But from out of nowhere you appeared and towed me to shore, ending my terror and almost certain death. I don’t know your name, and because I wasn’t wearing my glasses, I don’t know your face. But for some reason you were there. Thank you again. May you catch whatever you fish for and live for a thousand years.
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JUNE 10, 2004
NEWS
LOCALNEWS
BY JAIME CHERUNDOLO
TV with a Brain
PHOTO: COURTESY OF AKAKU
Akaku passes the hat For the first time in its history, the tiny, overcrowded, public access Akaku Maui Community Television is passing the hat. This month, Akaku will send out fundraising letters to local companies asking for donations ranging from $1,000 to $10,000. Development Director Susie Bryne-Wickey said the goal of the fundraiser is to raise an additional $100,000 to support 10 different areas that need funding, including a radio station Akaku plans to be operating this time next year. “We only get a limited amount of funding from the cable company,” said media access technician Alli Waters of the tiny Kahului-based studio created by Oceanic Time Warner Cable as part of state broadcast requirements. “And we haven’t actively been asking for funds, so we’ve really outgrown this place.” Though the cable company is required to provide three percent of its gross revenue each year to Akaku—which adds up to 70 percent of the public access station’s budget—it still needs county grants and training fee revenues. Last year, 567 people visited the nonprofit Akaku to learn some element of television production. The five-channel (5256) public access television network—created to ensure that members of the community weren’t shut out from accessing media offers three types of production certification, access to equipment after certification and free airtime for Hawaii residents who want to express themselves with the rest of the community. “Our name means vision and our mission is to empower the community’s voice through access to media,” said Waters. “We have about 200 certified producers and more and more people are realizing we are a good tool to get the word out.” Like Kevin Baker. He earned his television certification three years ago, and has since produced several television shows,
Akaku staffer Maile Ladera winning Akaku’s Best Producer award in 2003. “I always wanted to do my own show,” he said. “But I thought you had to have money, or know someone, or go to school to do it. Not to mention, before you even got started, you’d have to go buy $30,000 worth of equipment. But with Akaku, I can do it all here.” Baker’s pride and joy is his comedy show Dats’ Nuts which airs on Akaku’s Calabash Channel 52. The series is similar to The Tom Green Show or the popular MTV show Jackass, but with an island twist. One episode documented Baker and his friends skateboarding inside Haleakala Crater while wearing Santa Claus suits. “The best thing about Akaku is that you don’t have to sell out,” he said. ”You can put on what you want.” Will Moore, Akaku programmer and educator, said that unlike other stations, Akaku centers on free speech and airs anyone’s production, regardless of content, message or quality. Nancy Lee Potter, who has been producing television for less than a year, creates her own live political talk show in Akaku’s studio almost every week. Her show, Shine the Light on Maui, airs on Visions Channel 53 and allows viewers to call in and discuss their
political opinions live. “It’s not as much about my voice as it is about the community’s,” Potter said. “The more they know and see their candidates, the better officials they can elect.” Potter spends a lot of free time at the Kahului station. She said there is definitely a demand for new funding. “There is a concerted effort to do good here and it would be really nice if they had more equipment and were able to receive more funding.” Despite limited funding, Akaku is still making waves in the world of public access television. CEO Sean McLaughlin said the station is recognized nationally as being one of the most innovative. “The way Maui is, we tend to be fearlessly innovative and we’ve consistently adopted new technologies appropriate to our work,” McLaughlin said. “For example, in Maui County we have a lot of people who don’t have cable, so we figured ‘hey, since the mandate is to serve the entire community, not just cable subscribers, we better find a way to get the programs to them,’ and so we started to stream video on the internet.” That was in 1997. Today, Akaku is showing all types of programs dealing with local politics, ultimate fighting, UFOs and a host of other topics in real time with Experimental TV Channel 54. With XTV, viewers can log on to the internet and schedule programs they want to see, when they want to see them. “We are the only public access center in the country bold enough to do this,” said Pete Sullivan, another programmer. “The few times the system crashes, you get phone calls. The important thing is that XTV is what the community wants to see. And it’s refreshing that what’s being programmed isn’t all surfing or water sports.” MTW
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I found myself in the Minit Stop over at the corner of Alameha and Dairy in Kahului the other night. I was with a buddy of mine, and we were buying our two female friends some drinks—two 40s of King Cobra and Mickey’s Ice, to be exact. We were doing so because a few minutes earlier they had utterly failed to complete the transaction. One of them—the one not paying, incidentally—had left her drivers’ license at home and the clerk refused the sale because she couldn’t properly card them both. If gas station and convenience mart clerks seem a little more anal about carding people these days, it’s because your Maui County Department of Liquor Control’s been dropping the hammer on them in recent months. Four of the five items on the June 3 Liquor Control Adjudication Board meeting agenda dealt with serving minors, and two of those were on small convenience stores. But the trend goes back a year, with fines slapped on over a dozen small grocery stores and gas stations. As evidenced by the Dairy Road Minit Stop, even the threat of stings can put the fear of God in store clerks. And if the store is part of a larger chain—Minit Stop, Tesoro, etc.—the backlash against whatever hapless employee got caught in the sting can be harsh. During the Apr. 2, 2004 Adjudication Board hearing, Tesoro corporate officials appeared for what was their Kihei operation’s third violation of selling booze to a minor. The penalty was automatic—a suspended license for up to 30 days. But company officials managed to get that cut back to just 10 days by impressing the Board with their response to their latest violation. Within hours of the sting, company officials had fired the “customer service associate,” even though she’d worked at that location loyally for four years. Six days later, they fired the store manager as well. “We have zero tolerance,” an attorney for Tesoro told the Board. When asked why they fired such a loyal clerk so quickly, a company official said simply, “we thought she was a good employee.” MTW
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LOCALNEWS
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MONDAY, MAY 31 It’s Memorial Day, which this country celebrates, like most holidays, with lots of drinking and barbecuing and drinking and going to the beach to drink and barbecue. Yup, just like any other holiday, though you do get to see a lot of Tom Brokaw and Tom Hanks competing to see who can kiss the most Greatest Generation ass. Meanwhile, U.S. forces are fighting and dying in Afghanistan, Iraq and who knows where else because our government won’t say because it no longer trusts us. If so many hundreds of people weren’t dying each month, fearless leader George W. Bush’s little wars in the desert would be hilarious. Especially Iraq, where only someone like Bush could, through stupidity or corruption or perhaps a combination of both, make toppling one of the most evil men of the last 50 years look like fascist imperialism. Even funnier are the increasing numbers of current and former defense officials and intellectuals—like former National Security Agency boss William Odom and retired four-star Marine Corps General Anthony Zinni—lining up with their recommendations to get the hell out of Iraq as fast as humanly possible. Funniest of all is that a year ago—long before photos and Article 15 reports came out that American GI boys and girls were torturing Iraqi prisoners and criminals as part of some damn-fool plan to gather intelligence on terrorism—Bush and his supposedly brilliant political crew actually thought that they could run for reelection on Iraq.
TUESDAY, JUN. 1 Ka’anapali Development Corp. vice president A. James Wriston, III tells a gathering of about 30 Lahaina locals that his company will be sparing the historic old
Pioneer Mill smokestack when it demolishes the rest of the property sometime later this year. “The stack will stay,” he said. Or will it? Wriston also said “We’ve made no promises or commitments on the stack.” Though Wriston said the company would be willing to fork over $280,000 to refurbish the stack’s structure— make it so it won’t, you know, fall down and kill people—he also said the whole plan was contingent on finding a proper caretaker agency. Perhaps the Lahaina Restoration Foundation, which has done such wonders with the old Carthaginian II brig replica? In fact, what about preserving the whole mill, or at least rebuilding part of it into a kind of Pioneer Mill museum? “Whether it’s old or ancient… we’d like to see the preservation of that site,” LRF executive director Keoki Freeland said at the meeting. Ever the politician, Freeland’s comments can be interpreted as meaning the LRF would be content if the entire Mill was kept around, or just the smokestack. In any case, Wriston said that once his company got the necessary permits, it would take about six months to knock down the rusted, scary old mill hulk.
David Sereno, the Wailuku attorney who’s handling the Gregory family’s lawsuit against the county alleging Maui police officers were negligent when Pukalani resident Richard Gregory died while being arrested two years ago, has taken up the defense of Ernest Chavira, Jr. Back on the night of May 12, Chavira allegedly shot at two off-duty Maui police officers having a barbecue at Kalama Park in Kihei. Police fired back, but no one was hit in the exchange. “We expect, at the time of trial, we well be able to give a more complete account than what was revealed through newspaper articles,” Sereno told The Maui News, which was undoubtedly one of the sources of the articles he finds so questionable.
“DID HE JUST CALL US HARLOTS? I CAN’T BELIEVE HE JUST CALLED US HARLOTS. DO I LOOK LIKE A HARLOT? I’M WEARING FULL PANTS!” -One hot blonde to another hot blonde, walking down Front Street in Lahaina, Jun. 3
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aired a special show chronicling a 2002 gig Evans played in some Key West lounge with the one and only William Shatner. And to this day, we don’t know what was more jarring—the sight of Evans belting out old Sinatra tunes or watching Captain Kirk stand on stage for 10 agonizing minutes and “sing” away whatever remained of his once-Shakespearean career. Those Priceline.com commercials were one thing, but that Key West gig… Though I do hear that Shatner’s got a good thing going on The Practice or one of them other legal drama shows the chicks love so much.
THURSDAY, JUN. 3 With great fanfare, The Maui News ran a small blurb in its “On the Campaign Trail” section announcing that Wailea’s own 34-year-old Brian Evans is officially running against 85term Democratic U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye. “What we need is a new, fresh face,” the “actor” who once appeared in such television legends as Full House and Beverly Hills, 90210 told the News in his first truly auspicious campaign soundbite. “[A]nd what we don’t need is to keep re-electing someone because they are memorabilia of a different time, and I don’t mean that disrespectfully in any way.” You know, Evans—a “pro choice, pro same-sex marriage, pro-marijuana” Democrat who bills himself as a “crooner”—actually announced his running for Senate months ago. But we at Maui Time choose the day of May 24, 2004 as the true genesis of what we hope is a long and bruising primary campaign. For on May 24, 2004, Akaku Channel 52
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again—society is coming apart at the seams. Just falling apart faster than a Bush-instigated invasion. The latest evidence: a new Cost of Government Commission report on how county workers keep losing small tools. You know—your hammers, screwdrivers, weedwhackers and such. Basically any tool that costs less than $700. “We do lose Weed Eaters and stuff, but usually police reports are done on that,” Deputy Parks Department Director John Buck told The Maui News. Then reporter Ilima Loomis wrote that Buck used the report to engage a little old-fashioned union bashing, saying pesky government employee unions prohibit the county from forcing employees to pay for things they lose. “The private sector’s a lot easier,” he told her. “Government’s a little different.”
SATURDAY, JUN. 5 A bunch of good-hearted folks who believe having U.S. troops occupy Iraq and shoot and torture people while getting shot and tortured themselves is a bad idea marched from Kamaole Beach Park III to Kamaole Beach Park I in Kihei this afternoon, completely missing the Belmont Stakes. And while guys like George W. pay absolutely no attention to popular uprisings and spontaneous assemblies of democracy—or the popular vote, for that matter—and could give a damn that a bunch of peaceniks on Maui walk up and down a beach yelling that his war is a crooked waste of men and treasure, it’s nice to see that endless sun and surf hasn’t made everyone on his rock soft. MTW
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NEWSOFTHEWEIRD POOR PORN Norwegian activists Tommy Hol Ellingsen and his girlfriend, seeking new funding sources for the environmental movement, created a Web site earlier this year that charges visitors about US $15 a month to view pornographic photos of the couple, with all profits to benefit environmental organizations (some were reportedly reluctant to accept their money). And in January, 33-year-old British woman “Vix,” who has multiple sclerosis, created a Web site featuring topless photos of herself and asking visitors to donate to the UK’s MS Resource Centre. But business is slow on both sites: As of April, Ellingsen reported only 200 visitor-months, and Vix had raised the equivalent of US $6,000 from about 100 of the site’s 125,000 visitors.
SUPER-RECIDIVISTS According to police in Atlanta in January, Nathaniel Lee Stanley, 20, just released from jail, walked out and immediately carjacked a woman in the jail’s parking lot (and was later returned to jail). And Ms. Kelly J. Handy, 37, who posted bond on burglary charges in Wheat Ridge, Colo., in March, picked up the wig and clothing that had been taken from her on her arrest, then went into a restroom, created a new look, and, according to police, immediately began stealing from residential mailboxes near the jail.
MacNet
BY CHUCK SHEPHERD
representing the “Easter District” of Pennsylvania). Further, Puricelli’s work apparently did not improve during the trial despite numerous admonishings; in a key, three-sentence paragraph in his response to Hart’s fee-cutting decision, Puricelli wrote four more typos and addressed his objection to Judge “Jacon” Hart.
OBSESSIONS Among the beach attractions on the Caribbean island of St. Maarten: bracing oneself in the sand at the beach at the end of the runway at Princess Juliana International Airport and trying to remain upright as airliners take off. (Jumbo jets’ blasts have been known to topple vans.) A March Chicago Tribune dispatch described the giddiness of several tourists (who defied posted warnings), one of whom was “tossed in the air like a human shot put.”
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After praising lawyer Brian Puricelli’s courtroom work in winning a case for a client against the city of Philadelphia, federal Judge Jacob Hart cut Puricelli’s loser-paid legal fees by $32,000 because his written work was sloppy, citing missing pages, missing paragraphs, and a huge number of typos (such as repeatedly referring to the court as
And officials of Canada’s Algonquin Nation recently convinced the distributors of a popular, Arab-written, U.S. and Canadian high school student guide to Arab history to drop a passage on how Muslim explorers beat Christopher Columbus to North America and how “Algonquin Muslims” Abdul-Rahim and Abdallah Ibn Malik negotiated with pilgrims.
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LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS Another Cardinal Rule Broken (the one about keeping a low profile): John Parker and Rick Owens were arrested in the parking lot of the Wal-Mart in Athens, Texas, in April, after they were allegedly spotted by several people sitting in their car carefully cutting out individual counterfeit bills from larger sheets they had just printed. And Dennett Colescott, 41, was arrested at a drugstore in Corte Madera, Calif., in April after an employee reported to police that Colescott was standing at the store’s photo printer, calmly copying child pornography.
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Unfulfilled Promises Will the G8 ever help the world’s people?
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Today a small number of nation-states concluded a small meeting on a small island located near the lone, large geopolitical superpower that could have a massive financial impact on the international economic and ecological scene. The meeting will have implications for both the grassroots individual and global institutions. It was the annual Group of Eight (G8) summit, held this year in the U.S. at the exclusive Sea Island in Georgia. To many Americans and world citizens, there is an increasing awareness of the power these few nations hold over impoverished countries and alarm that the nations are doing little to alleviate poverty, protect the planet and promote peace. Since 1975, the Group has included the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, France, the United Kingdom and Italy. Basically, their heads of states represent the world’s most powerful industrial countries in an annual summit to discuss current events and propose possible new directions for world policy. Each year, the site and state hosting rotates between the members. The last time the U.S. hosted the summit was in 1997 in Denver, when Russia got itself added as the Group’s eighth member. From June 8 to 10 of this year, Sea Island hosted the meeting. Historically, the island was promised to African American Georgians as economic reparations in a step toward reconciling the old brutal slavery system. But that didn’t happen. For this summit, the plush property provided a space for leaders to meet with little outside protest—no repeat of the big Seattle World Trade Organization protests from a few years ago. Instead, Sea Island served as an oasis for political leaders wanting quiet time to discuss plans deal with the quagmire otherwise known as the War on Terror and for encouraging the global economy. The location exemplifies the agenda and circumstances facing our world. While the summit is on an elite island, the rest of the county hosts 17 toxic waste sites and four Superfund sites, which are housed in pre-
dominantly poor, minority areas. For the last few years, the summits provided a refuge for the global elite in a world full of poverty, health problems and declining social conditions. In 1999, citizen movements came together to demand a new agenda for these states that would represent the political will of their citizens and the basic needs of the world’s population. The peaceful resistance highlighted the legacy of injustice perpetuated by the G8 members and hinted at possible reforms to protect and promote human rights in member states. It was to be nothing less than the foundation for a future foreign policy. At the Koln summit in 1999, a chain of humanity linked together around the summit site. It effectively altered the agenda for the leadership, which ultimately agreed to cancel the debts of the world’s poorest nations. But those promises haven’t been fulfilled. Because of that, people around the world are coordinating campaigns to lobby their leadership to live up to their own word and begin advocating on behalf of fundamental freedoms for people of the world—not merely for increased financial profits. In the spirit of Seattle WTO protests, citizens of the world believe that economic, ecological and social conditions should be at the heart of the G8 summits. After all, G8 policies have a broad economic impact and strong influence on impoverished states. The protestors believe the bilateral lending and export credit agencies of these governments actually do more harm than good. Specifically, they allow a small number of states to exercise tremendous political power over the daily lives of citizens in poorer countries receiving international loans. As a G8 member, we must ensure that those citizens directly affected by summit decisions have a voice at the table. We must also work for these meetings to be more open to the global public. The meetings should follow the principles of the G8 nations: democracy, equality, transparency and accountability. Before the next summit, we can begin providing local educational forums like film screenings, teachins and political clean-up projects that would assist citizens in getting to the table. MTW
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MARCH 18, 2004
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(Editor’s note: Former President Ronald Reagan died Saturday, June 5. The following story originally ran in the Feb. 1, 2002 issue of Orange County Weekly for Reagan’s 91st birthday. We’re reprinting it here to provide a balance to the current tributes.) As time goes by, it becomes clear that President Reagan was not only a great president but also one of our greatest, right up there with FDR, Lincoln and maybe George Washington. —U.S. Congressman and former Reagan speechwriter Dana Rohrabacher, 2001 Move over, Lincoln—we’d like to blast Ronald Reagan’s features onto Mount Rushmore. Erect a monument to him in every county. Engrave him on the $10 bill. Make a book extolling his character and achievements mandatory reading for school kids. He saved us from the Red Threat and from Jimmy Carter. He brought back morning in America. He is America. With a flick of his mighty pen, he turned ketchup into a vegetable. All hail Ronald Reagan! Jesus, can’t we just send him a “Best Wishes” card and leave it at that? Being president is a tough gig, even for one such as Reagan, who, according to aides, worked two to three hours per day, napped at cabinet and summit meetings, and spent more than a year of his eight years in office kicking back on his California ranch. Living in the White House entails difficult decisions, crises to be dealt with, and the dragging responsibility of being the most powerful person in the world. It ages one unnaturally. Reagan even took a bullet for us on the job. Thank the man for that. But when you talk about canonizing him, you can go suck a sprinkler head. Ronald Reagan may have been a likable guy—even in the White House, he answered his fan mail, sometimes enclosing a check
for that so much as I do the nation that so blindly followed him. And if we don’t now take the hard look that many of us were unwilling to take then, we’ll go sliding right down that phlegmy slope again.
MYTHMAKING Ronald Reagan was born 91 years ago this Tuesday in Tampico, Illinois, and as a teen growing up in Dixon, Illinois, he worked summers as a lifeguard, reputedly saving 77 swimmers from drowning. In college, he became a student leader and even led a protest against his school’s authoritarian president. After college, he landed work as a sportscaster in Davenport, Iowa, and though he’d never actually seen a major-league game, he invented vivid color to tart up the bare stats he read off a Morse code ticker tape. Many years later, he loved telling people about the time the wire went dead for six minutes and he kept going, improvising the action and passing it on as fact to his listeners. (Curiously, Walter Cronkite says that was his story, which he related to then-President Reagan one night and was surprised to later find Reagan telling the story as his own.) In Hollywood, his rugged looks, honed announcer’s voice and perfect memory landed him parts. Among his other roles, he made four films playing a secret agent named Brass Bancroft. For want of other superlatives, you could say his acting was dependable. In 1942, he went into the Army and spent the duration of the war at Hal Roach studios in Culver City making training films. Reagan became active in the Screen Actors Guild (SAG), eventually becoming its president. In 1952, rather than recuse himself because he was signed with the talent agency MCA, he led SAG in granting MCA a special waiver to go into TV production, greasing the way for it to become a media giant. Fortune smiles upon the just, and the following
conservative speaker that when he decided to run for office, he didn’t work his way up the political ranks but aimed right for governor of California. With substantial financial backing from MCA, two oilmen and a car dealer, his campaign presented a near-first in politics: instead of being managed by the party, Reagan hired outside consultants, who in turn employed psychologists at the Behavioral Sciences Corp. to package their candidate and craft position papers that would push the public’s buttons. All this for a man who touted himself as an aw-shucks, commonsense political outsider. Even before Reagan moved into the governor’s mansion, the same team of admen and psychologists went to work on a White House run. Against party wishes, he subsequently ran in presidential primaries against Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. His record as governor is mixed. Despite his taxcutting cant as a candidate, he gave California the biggest tax increase in its history (a necessary one, granted, because exiting Governor Pat Brown, a Democrat, had left a deficit). Though he later claimed he hadn’t understood it, Reagan signed one of the nation’s most liberal abortion laws. On the other hand, when the legislature annually voted to repeal old laws that made felonies of sex acts most couples engage in, Reagan vetoed them each time, true to the Republican hypocrisy of wanting government out of the boardroom but not the bedroom. In actual accomplishment, his two terms in Sacramento were notable for their inertia; little action followed the fiery rhetoric Reagan employed on the stump. On that front, at least, he was a firebrand, with his tough-guy talk against hippies, war protesters and campus activists—“If it’s a bloodbath they want, so be it”—creating the “law and order” message his rival Richard Nixon rode to the White House. Reagan’s growing reputation for ignoring facts when they didn’t conform to his vision—such as his justification of our involvement in Vietnam by claiming it
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connections may also have come in handy in the theft of Carter’s debate notes for Reagan. We will not dwell here on the controversial allegations of the October Surprise, in which the Reagan camp reputedly negotiated with Iran to deny Carter an election boost by delaying the release of 52 American hostages, beyond saying that former Reagan campaign and White House aide Barbara Honegger makes a compelling case against the man she once revered in her book, October Surprise. That treasonous deal, she asserts, explains why the secret arms shipments to Iran didn’t begin in 1985 but in 1981 and continued, she writes, “regardless of whether American captives were released, tortured, killed or seized anew in Lebanon. It explains why U.S. arms shipments to Iran continued even after Iran’s culpability in the bombing of the U.S. barracks and U.S. embassies in Beirut and Kuwait had been clearly demonstrated.” And that raises a good question: Why, unless there was an incriminating debt owed, would a U.S. administration trade arms for any reason to a country that had cold-bloodedly murdered 241 of our Marines, sailors and soldiers in their bunks in a Beirut outpost?
THE WRECKING CREW I may be wrong, but I’m never in doubt. —Ronald Reagan One thing that sets Reagan apart from Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon and other lying presidents is that Reagan believed his own lies. Even in the thick of the Iran-contra scandal—when Reagan was caught in one untruth after another and a Los Angeles Times poll showed that only 14 percent of Americans believed he wasn’t lying—he was never contrite. From his perspective, I suspect, he wasn’t lying: his reality was simply too great to be contained by the truth. Some have argued that Reagan literally couldn’t tell the difference between his role as president and roles he’d played or seen in the make-believe world of movies. When addressing an audience of Medal of Honor winners, Reagan told them the tear-welling story of one medal winner, a B-17 pilot who had gone
Ronald Reagan may not have remembered his ‘accomplishments’ in the years before his death, but we can’t forget them. By Jim Washburn to a citizen going through hard times—but his administration was also flat-out the most anti-democratic, hoodwinking, lying, Constitution-flouting, despot-coddling, rich-enriching, deficit-building, environment-despoiling, health-endangering, paranoid, cynical and fundamentally corrupt one in our nation’s history. Name a strip mine for it if you must, but no monuments, please. Chances are you’re reading this for one of two reasons: you agree with me and enjoy getting pissedoff all over again at the perfidies of the 1980s; or, more likely here in Reagan Country, you disagree and enjoy getting pissed-off reading liberal crap. It’s you latter folk I’d like to talk to here. I’ve enjoyed pissing you off, and I look forward to many more prosperous years of doing so. But even more, I want to convince you I’m right on this one because the nation we allowed ourselves to become in the 1980s was a rank perversion of the freedom and righteousness we all long for. I don’t blame Reagan
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year, MCA rewarded Reagan by landing him a gig hosting the General Electric Theater program for the then-amazing sum of $125,000 per year. His duties also entailed becoming a spokesman for GE, traveling the country on their dime as he toured factories and made speeches touting free enterprise and damning “Marx-inspired” programs like Medicare and Social Security. In 1961, when questioned by a grand jury about the special consideration his union had given MCA, Reagan, known then for his nearphotographic memory, frequently said under oath that he couldn’t remember. Once a Roosevelt liberal, Reagan was by now a solid conservative, which some attribute to the influence of his second wife, Nancy. They married when she was one and a half months pregnant, a fact we note only in light of the moral standards Reagan later tried to impose on others. While his acting career had sputtered by the 1960s, he had become such a popular and well-paid
had historically been two countries—accelerated when he set his sights on the White House. Campaigning against Gerald Ford in 1976, Reagan asserted Ford was weak on defense and had let the U.S. become No. 2 in the world, neither of which was true. He repeated the same charges four years later against Jimmy Carter, who had merely served as an officer on a nuclear sub as opposed to Reagan’s sterling military record as a movie actor. Carter had backed numerous new weapons programs and increased military spending every year he was in office. Running against Carter in 1980, Reagan again campaigned as the quintessential outsider and Everyman, despite having spent his life as a Hollywood movie star, high-paid corporate shill and professional politician with a $3 million home. With ex-CIA director George Bush onboard as his running mate, most Everymen also didn’t have former and active CIA agents providing them with intelligence on the sitting president’s foreign-policy moves. Those
down with his plane rather than abandon a trapped, injured gunner. It was a touching story, but it never happened. Rather than recount the story of one of the genuine heroes seated before him, Reagan’s tale was from the 1944 film A Wing and a Prayer. He once told Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir that he had witnessed the suffering of the concentration camps firsthand, filming their liberation with the Signal Corps in World War II. Not unless there were death camps along Santa Monica Boulevard: Reagan was in California for the entire war. At one point, deep in the mire of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, Beirut dispatched an ambassador to the White House. Reagan was awakened to meet with the man, who told the president and his aides a tale of treachery, terror and the apocalypse. The diplomat later noted that Reagan seemed to listen with real appreciation. Then the diplomat paused, and Reagan asked, “Did anyone ever tell you that you look like Danny Thomas?”
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compelling argument of executive privilege, but simply because they didn’t want the people to know the people’s business. You can draw your own parallels to Dick Cheney’s stonewalling on his secret meetings with Enron officials. One bit of good environmental action emerged from the Reagan years: Congress passed an extension of the Clean Water Act. Reagan vetoed it, of course, but Congress overrode his veto. In other areas, antitrust regulations were ignored, workplace safety was compromised, medical research and services were curtailed, understaffing and underfunding of agencies contributed to everything from lax customs inspections to space shuttle explosions, AIDS was a disease Reagan couldn’t even bring himself to mention, and ketchup was almost reclassified as a vegetable for school lunch programs. Don’t like rap music? Blame Reagan. His administration slashed inner-city programs like Head Start,
and his budget cuts forced schools to drop “nonessential” programs such as the arts. Remove the music education and access to instruments from kids who still have an artistic impetus, and you get rap. As we Californians learned anew in our energyderegulation woes, a bit of government regulation isn’t necessarily a bad thing. In 1982, Reagan signed the law deregulating the savings and loan industry, announcing, “All in all, I think we’ve hit the jackpot,” which many wealthy thieves did—leaving the rest of us to pay the casino for the most expensive boondoggle in U.S. history. Though there were plenty of Democrats involved in that mess, don’t forget to thank Reagan as well for costing us hundreds of billions of dollars in freeing us from those fussy regulations. Nowhere were Reagan’s civic Luddites more cynically effective than at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Programs intended to finance and build low-cost housing for the poor
instead became a cash trough for the administration’s cronies. In eight years of unabated corruption that only came to light during the Bush administration, HUD, Congress found, had lost billions of taxpayer dollars to fraud and mismanagement. As if cutting HUD’s budget 57 percent hadn’t been enough, much of the remaining funding was allocated by ideological appointees with no housing experience, low-cost or otherwise. They awarded contracts to persons with even less experience, such as James Watt, who, after being forced from his Interior job for telling one racist joke too many, was paid $440,000 for making a few phone calls to HUD. One outraged observer wrote, “It now appears that the taxpayers will take a loss of at least $2 billion (it ultimately was more than $8 billion) on the cozy little, sleazy little, greedy little deals that were made. Let it be said up top: the primary responsibility for this debacle lies squarely in the lap of Ronald Reagan.” The source of this quotation? Conservative columnist James J. Kirkpatrick. Like Dubya’s call to let “faith-based” organizations cure society’s ills, Reagan said he believed his budget gouges could be offset by citizens practicing the biblical notion of tithing, as he said, “the giving of a tenth to charity.” Reporters’ perusal of Reagan’s tax records found that he was giving more like a hundredth—1.4 percent—of his own earnings to charity. And the next time someone tries to tell you that Reagan was a fiscal conservative, remind them that he left the country with a financial debt that surpassed the debts accrued under all other U.S. presidents combined and that he never once submitted a balanced budget to Congress. That bit of fiscal restraint was left to a Democrat, Bill Clinton. Speaking of Bubba, the conservative-bias media went apeshit when he pardoned fugitive financier Marc Rich. Imagine the howls if Rich had gone on to kill his ex-wife, dismember her body and burn it. Oregon authorities in December 2000 arrested Robert Wendell Walker Jr. for doing just that to his former bride. Reagan had pardoned the convicted bank robber in 1981. Law-enforcement authorities could not recall another instance in which such a violent criminal had received a presidential pardon. Walker had no political ties, and no one knows to this day why Reagan cut him loose.
YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH Not every government office suffered under Reagan. He bloated the Pentagon with the largest peacetime military buildup in our history, while the National Security Council, which had a staff of 35 at the height of the Vietnam War under LBJ, swelled to 255 employees under Reagan. Spying on American citizens reached new heights, with numerous examples of government infiltration of labor unions and of organizations opposed to our involvement in Central and South America. And we were pretty involved, backing the wrong sides in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Chile, Argentina and other military dictatorships or oligarchies where citizens were living under hideously worse circumstances than our founding fathers had endured. In many cases, they were virtual slaves, with no vote and no rights in dictatorships that routinely tortured and murdered opposition voices. (Guatemala’s three-decade-old military regime, described by Reagan as “totally committed to democracy,” killed more than 200,000 of its own people in the 1980s. In Argentina, it has since been revealed, the babies of murdered political prisoners were given
PHOTO: SUNSHINE / ZUMA PRESS
When he proposed his Strategic Defense Initiative in 1983, the Star Wars technology he spoke of bore less relation to what scientists thought possible than to an “inertia projector” he had guarded in the 1940 Warner Bros. spy movie Murder in the Air. His era of movies didn’t deal in ambiguities but clearly defined good guys and bad guys. There’s no drama if the bad guy is a pushover, so in Reagan’s real-time movie, the Soviet Union became the Evil Empire. He claimed they had superiority over us in submarine and missile technology, when the opposite was true. With our multi-warhead missiles, we had a clear atomic superiority, if such a thing even matters once you’re untold megatons beyond mutually assured destruction. Reagan stated the Soviets were engaged in a massive military buildup, while its growth had been essentially flat since 1975, with most of its new resources supporting its war in Afghanistan, which proved to be the Soviets’ Vietnam. And now, of course, it has become our Afghanistan, with our troops fighting a regime of extremist thugs, some of them “freedom fighters” the Reagan administration trained and armed to fight the Soviets. Osama bin Laden was one of the freedomhating freedom fighters enjoying our none-too-particular largesse back then. In Reagan’s world of absolutes, there were no pollution problems and the homeless were that way because they chose to be. Jobless? Reagan would wave a 30-page want ads section at you, heedless that most of the jobs required a high level of skill. Welfare was to be judged wholly on the evidence of a “Chicago Welfare Queen,” who in Reagan Anecdote Land had used 80 names and 30 addresses to bilk the system of $150,000 but in reality was a woman accused of using four names to accrue $8,000. Recall how Republicans hammered Al Gore as a habitual liar after he uttered a few half-truths? Reagan quite possibly never gave a speech without lying, and it wasn’t dopey stuff about what medications his dog was taking but instead was the material that shaped his administration. Based on a few skewed anecdotes about wasteful, bureaucratic government, Reagan set about dismantling it. The people he brought in to head the various departments were mostly persons with a noted antipathy for those departments, such as Secretary of the Interior James Watt, whose previous job was running anti-environmentalist Joseph Coors’ Mountain States Legal Foundation. Watt proudly didn’t enforce the Endangered Species Act or strip-mining laws, gave billions of dollars of publicly-held coal reserves to private companies, and tried to put another 30 million acres of public land into private hands. Watt said he saw no need to preserve our environment for future generations because he was convinced the Lord was returning soon to scourge the earth clean anyway. That’s good, solid science for you: the world is just a big cheese wheel, and Reagan’s godly men were privileged to know the expiration date, so forget about having respect or wonder for the magnificent and fragile processes that make the planet work, forget future generations or a sense of responsible stewardship. Just shut up and drink your slurry. Watt’s counterpart at the Environmental Protection Agency, Anne Gorsuch, was similarly lax about enforcing existing laws and allowed the agency’s new policies to be shaped by the same corporations accused of violating pollution laws. When Congress questioned these cozy ties, the Reagan administration initially refused to turn over requested documents (Gorsuch was cited for contempt of Congress), not for national security reasons or a
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interested in policy at all,” remarked Henry Kissinger, whose impression was that Reagan knew little of foreign affairs and was uninterested in learning. “He would try to avoid policy discussions. If he couldn’t, he’d resort to his cue cards… He was an actor, the quintessential actor. What he said was what he believed.” When Reagan eventually traveled to Russia, he was reportedly astounded to learn that—contrary to his deepest beliefs about America representing truth, justice and blue Superman-like hair—many Soviet citizens lived in fear of the United States. Jeez, just because he had them ringed with nukes, derided them as the Evil Empire, and at times raised serious doubts as to whether Reagan could tell his lunch from a launch code? Him, the man with his finger on the button, who had once erroneously asserted that Trident missiles could be recalled once launched? The president whose staff members spoke in terms of a “winnable” nuclear war “if there are enough shovels to go around” to dig shelters? The leader who had joked over a live radio microphone, “My fellow Americans, I am pleased to tell you that I just signed legislation which outlaws Russia forever. The bombing begins in five minutes.”
those confines was rejected out of hand. As one of his White House aides put it, “Reagan doesn’t have the knack for weighing alternatives.” He kept to his storehouse of hoary anecdotes and invented scenarios that always arrived at the same conclusions: communism was the only threat to our wellbeing, and big government was too much like communism. You could be a sultan, a generalissimo, a puppet, whatever, just so long as you claimed not to be a communist and let American businessmen do their thing on your soil. At home, you could privatize government functions out to the sleaziest privateers, and that was preferable to effective government programs. If you didn’t see the world as he did, you were being duped. When, on June 11, 1982, nearly a million people rallied in New York’s Central Park to support a nuclear freeze, Reagan dismissed that huge and historic protest as the work of “foreign agents.” It simplifies life when you never test your beliefs or consider the views of others. Reagan took a similarly simple approach to being the chief executive, essentially working the way that he had for GE: he showed up when required, donned makeup, read a speech well and left the details to others. “It’s very unusual to have a president who is not
In his first press conference as president, Reagan said of the Soviets, “They reserve unto themselves the right to commit any crime, to lie, to cheat, in order to attain their ends.” It’s a description that eight years later would sum up the Reagan White House.
PHOTO: RONALD REAGAN LIBRARY / ZUMA PRESS
up for adoption to members of the ruling class.) Yet, by Reagan’s measure, the citizens of these countries and others like them—consider the example of Ferdinand Marcos’ Philippines—were supposed to be proud that the government torturing and murdering them wasn’t communist. Shortly after moving into the White House, Reagan told The Wall Street Journal, “Let us not delude ourselves. The Soviet Union underlies all the unrest that is going on. If they weren’t engaged in this game of dominoes, there wouldn’t be any hot spots in the world.” By that world-view, if it weren’t for Russia, South Africa would have been a nation of happily disenfranchised darkies singing in the mines. If Reagan had his way, there might still be a brisk market in “Free Nelson Mandela” T-shirts. It was only by overriding Reagan’s veto that Congress joined the rest of the civilized world in passing sanctions against the brutal, racist South African government. I know people who met Reagan, and they didn’t think he seemed like the sort of fellow who’d cozy up to murderers or enjoy blighting the environment. Was he evil? I think it was more that he simply didn’t get it. He had his beliefs, and information that didn’t fit
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DARK MATTER Reagan once told a story about agents of Nicaragua’s Sandinista government pulling a freedomloving newspaper editor from his home and executing him in front of his pleading children. He related this tale with unbridled anger and contempt for cowards who would do such a thing. But like many a Reagan tale told with utter conviction, it was an utter fabrication. When the Great Communicator’s press office was asked for the details of this atrocity, they had to admit it hadn’t happened—or anything like it. The Sandinistas were not the world’s most democratic government, but they were infinitely more so than the dictator they deposed, Anastasio Somoza. His family had treated Nicaragua like its own private labor camp since a U.S. intervention brought them to power in the 1930s. Perhaps Reagan had his S’s confused: in the 1970s, a Somoza business partner had an opposition newspaper editor murdered. And it
was members of Somoza’s feared National Guard who executed American ABC newsman Bill Stewart in the streets of Managua. Unlike Reagan’s fiction, that latter event was captured on film. Once the Sandinistas ousted Somoza in 1979, in a few short years, they drastically cut their nation’s malnutrition and infant-mortality rate, raised literacy and embarked on other ambitious public programs, without the benefit of the U.S. aid lavished on Somoza (who had fled the country with a fortune believed to be worth between $100 million and $500 million). They could have been more democratic than they were, but it’s hard to be perfect when the world’s most powerful nation is trying to crush you. More on that soon, but let’s first look at some of the other fronts on which the Reagan administration was staving off the communist menace. Not content with possessing enough nukes to destroy all human life several times over, the Reagan administration attempted to up the ante through a broad “reinterpreting” of the Anti Ballistic Missile treaty. This effort even attracted the ire of hawkish Georgia Senator Sam Nunn, and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee issued a report calling it “the most flagrant abuse of the Constitution’s treaty process in 200 years of American history.” In 1983 Reagan proposed his Strategic Defense Initiative, which he posited as “a shield that could protect us from nuclear missiles just as a roof protects a family from rain.” For the rest of his time in office, Reagan and his camp would routinely claim that, “genuine breakthroughs have been made,” only to have SDI scientists counter that there were no breakthroughs and that they were upset by the White House hype. Sixteen hundred U.S. scientists sent a letter to Congress asserting that the program was wasteful and only spurred the arms race. By 1987, even the top people in the SDI program were admitting it might never be able to protect the population and would, at best, only be able to shield some of our missiles from attack. To counter international fears that SDI could give the U.S. a first-strike advantage, Reagan claimed he would share the technology with the Soviets. Top military officials followed in his wake to say, no, we wouldn’t. The Soviets themselves gave little credence to Reagan’s offer, since, as Mikhail Gorbachev pointed out, the U.S. was unwilling to share even dairyfarming technology with them. The SDI research money was in addition to our military budget, which, coupled with rich-favoring tax cuts, gave us the multi-trillion dollar debt we’ve been saddled with ever since. As if all those resources weren’t enough, the White House also diverted a substantial chunk of Federal Emergency Management Agency monies to build nuke-shielded mobile communications centers, handy only if your emergency happened to be an atomic war. That left the agency shortchanged for the workaday disasters—floods, hurricanes, earthquakes and the like—that didn’t stir Reagan’s fancy the way Armageddon did. Two decades and $100 billion later, we are not one whit safer, which is what happens when you sell wishful thinking as science. After Gorbachev came to power in 1985, the White House never noticed things were changing and didn’t notice until the Bush administration was blindsided by the collapse of the Soviet Union. Reagan always enjoyed recounting his first private meeting with Gorbachev in Geneva, which he made sound like a movie scene: he coaxed the Soviet leader aside to a private room where, he said, the two of them could get to know each other man-to-
man. Unless they did it by kissing, it’s hard to see how, since neither spoke the other’s language. They might as well have done without interpreters at the summits, for all the attention Reagan paid. Members of his administration have since said they went to the Reykjavik summit mainly because they saw it as a meet ‘n’ greet that could give their man a boost in the polls. They arrived unprepared and were caught off-guard by the sweeping arms-reduction proposals the Soviets made, including an offer to reduce even conventional forces. Reagan countered by telling jokes with anti-Soviet punch lines and relating a story he’d read in People magazine about a 1,200-pound man. Even Reagan fan Colin Powell found the president’s lack of preparation offensive. After that first day of meetings, Reagan told an aide, “I’d better go do my homework. Mikhail has all those details.” The sticking point in the summits was always Reagan’s cherished if chimeral Star Wars plans. Gorbachev, whose scientists told him the same things about its feasibility that American scientists were saying, ultimately told Reagan, “Go ahead and deploy it. Who am I to tell you what to do? I think you’re wasting money. I don’t think it will work.” When the two sides did eventually forge an INF treaty, it was signed at precisely 1:45 p.m. on Dec. 8, 1987, because that’s when Nancy Reagan’s astrologer, Joan Quigley, said to sign. Quigley, it transpired, made several decisions for the White House. I know a Christian Republican who told me last year that he could never vote for John McCain because the warhero senator had once been involved with a New Age organization. This same man adores Reagan and is unbothered by the notion of a president who paid more attention to arcane mumbo jumbo than he did to the “details” of waging a nuclear war. While America continued to build guns and missiles, Gorbachev acted unilaterally to reduce Soviet conventional and nuclear forces. The tremendous political and social changes rippling through the USSR, Reagan boosters will tell you, were due to the Gipper standing tall. Bullpucky. What happened is what the grand old Republican Harold Stassen had predicted: the Soviet Union collapsed under its own dead weight. Gorbachev was a realist who recognized the system had failed. He didn’t need a fantasist like Reagan to tell him change was needed. Russians wanted what the West had, and it wasn’t missiles or Reagan’s hair dye. They wanted Levi’s and rock & roll, the very music James Watt had tried to ban from America’s Fourth of July celebration in D.C. While Reagan had little effect on the Soviet Union, he had a devastating one on Central America, where a popular revolution and a subsequent election had brought the Sandinistas to power in Nicaragua, and another revolution was raging in El Salvador. Within two months of taking office, the White House and the CIA covertly created an insurgent force to wage war on Nicaragua. Some who joined Reagan’s fight were patriots who had fought against Somoza but felt betrayed by the new regime’s move to the left. Most, though, and the ones Reagan’s CIA backed, were the same ex-National Guard totalitarian thugs the country had just rid itself of. Their anointed leader, Enrique Bermudez, had headed the National Guard and been Somoza’s military attaché in Washington. Reagan called these goons “the moral equivalent of the founding fathers” struggling at Valley Forge. U.S. support for the contras, as they were dubbed, was originally sold to Congress as a limited operation to staunch the flow of arms to rebels in El Salvador. When it became clear the White House was instead
orchestrating the overthrow of the Nicaraguan government, congressmen weren’t happy. On Dec. 8, 1982, they passed the Boland Amendment prohibiting funding for the contras. The amendment carried in the House 411 to 0. The White House later got Congress to approve limited funding for food and medical supplies. What they didn’t mention was that they were still secretly funding the contras against the wishes—and outside the knowledge—of the American public. In January 1984, Reagan secretly approved the CIA’s covert mining of Nicaraguan harbors, intended to block shipping and destroy the country’s feeble economy. Ships from several nations were subsequently damaged, including a Soviet oil tanker. When the CIA’s role was revealed by The Wall Street Journal that April, there was a new uproar, leading to a second fundsstopping Boland Amendment passed in October.
the efforts closest to Reagan’s heart: our military buildup was matched by gigantic procurement corruption scandals, and—in the only way the contras were similar to the troops at Valley Forge—the mercenaries in the field were often underfed and illequipped because everyone on down the line was grabbing a cut of the action for themselves. In trying to win overt support for the contras, Reagan sank to the lowest level of fearmongering and hucksterism when he made speeches citing the number of miles between Nicaragua and Harlingen, Texas, as if the besieged Sandinistas were going to hop on a Greyhound bus and wage war on us. This while we were mining their harbors, violating their airspace, sabotaging their economy and secretly funding a war of terror against them—burning crops; bombing power stations; and massacring men, women and children. Reagan’s scare tactics were all the more cynical
covert war to kill people who were not our enemy. While the White House paper shredders were working overtime, Reagan addressed the nation on Nov. 13, 1986. Even more emphatically than our dear Bill Clinton later intoned, “I did not have sex with that woman,” Reagan faced the familiar cameras and said, “These charges are utterly false.” He proceeded to lie about trading arms for hostages, about the amount of arms traded, and about having kept U.S. officials in the dark. Six days later, he was back on TV, repeating some of those lies and adding new ones. Though a presidential aide issued corrections within the hour and Reagan’s own diaries showed he was in the arms-for-hostages loop, he could never bring himself to admit what he’d done. Rather, he told conflicting stories to the press and three irreconcilable versions of events to Congress. Others took the fall while staffers raised the shield
If you didn’t see the world as he did, you were being duped. When, on June 11, 1982, nearly a million people rallied in New York’s Central Park to support a nuclear freeze, Reagan dismissed that huge and historic protest as the work of “foreign agents.” By law, the White House was required to inform the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence of the covert operation. It hadn’t, and committee chairman Barry Goldwater (a shining example of what a Republican can stand for) was incensed, writing to CIA director Bill Casey, “I am pissed-off. . . . This is an act violating international law. It is an act of war. For the life of me, I don’t see how we are going to explain it.” The International Court of Justice agreed when Nicaragua brought the case to the Hague. While the U.S. had frequently used the same court to enforce international agreements, Reagan chose to ignore its ruling this time, making us a rogue state in the eyes of much of the world. The covert, illegal funding of the contras continued, with Lt. Colonel Oliver North and others soliciting secret contributions from foreign states, making us beholden to them in ways we were never meant to know about. Among the nations entrusted with this potential blackmail material were Saudi Arabia, Taiwan and the Sultanate of Brunei, who sent millions to numbered Swiss bank accounts administered from the White House. One bit of comic relief: the Sultanate was given the wrong account number and deposited $10 million into some lucky stranger’s account. Other strange bedfellows were enlisted, such as Panamanian leader, CIA employee and No. 1 drug runner Manuel Noriega. Clandestine flights delivered arms to the contras and came back loaded with cocaine destined for the U.S. That several top contras were smuggling coke into the States is established fact. If you have doubts that the CIA or White House knew of this, read the literature and make up your own mind. Such allegations would be harder to believe, though, if known truths weren’t barely more conscionable. These elaborate steps—Swiss accounts, dummy corporations, secret flights, etc.—were taken not to deceive the Nicaraguans, who could pretty well figure out where the bullets were coming from, but to deceive the American Congress and public. It is a grand irony that the White House’s free-market attitude and penchant for secrecy crippled even
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given that the only Americans killed in Nicaragua had been murdered by the contras. It was a similar story across the border in El Salvador, where Reagan wholeheartedly supported the military government, despite the fact that U.S.-supplied soldiers raped and murdered three American nuns, along with killing an archbishop and anyone else they felt like. Confronted with the evidence, Reagan aides argued (until even they were shamed into silence) that the nuns were rebel gunrunners. Our American tax dollars used to kill Americans, even nuns, in the name of defeating godless communism: if I had to live with a contradiction like that rattling around inside my head, I’d pray to get Alzheimer’s. In 1981, Reagan, who had criticized Carter for negotiating with Iran, declared, “America will never make concessions to terrorists” and said, “Let terrorists beware: when the rules of international behavior are violated, our policy will be one of swift and effective retribution.” We could almost imagine the missiles flying toward our avowed foes. What we couldn’t imagine was that those missiles would be flying aboard cargo jets, delivered to those enemies to use at their pleasure. Reagan also sent them a cake and a Bible. The nagging October Surprise question aside, by 1985, the administration was shipping arms to Iran, ostensibly in exchange for American hostages, and arranging for intermediary countries such as Israel to do so as well, in violation of the Arms Control Export Act, an embargo on Iran the U.S. had arranged—and in violation of the president’s own tough talk. The president is required to make a finding to Congress of covert acts, informing select members of the acts and justifying how the nation would be served by them. Reagan didn’t, another violation of the law. In October 1986, CIA recruit Eugene Hasenfus was shot down over Nicaragua while on an arms run to the contras, and the truth came oozing out in the following weeks: the White House had been arming our enemies in secret and using the profits to fund a
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of “plausible deniability” high around Reagan— raised it so high that, if Bill Clinton had taken a similar tack, he might just as reasonably have argued that he didn’t know he had oral sex in the Oval Office. During the congressional hearings on the scandal, Senator John Kerry said of the Reagan White House, “They were willing to literally put the Constitution at risk because they believed there was somehow a higher order of things, that the ends do in fact justify the means. That’s the most Marxist, totalitarian doctrine I’ve ever heard of in my life. You’ve done the very thing that James Madison and others feared when they were struggling to put the Constitution together, which was to create an unaccountable system with runaway power running off against the will of the American people.”
BEDTIME FOR DEMOCRACY At the last Reagan/Gorbachev summit—by which time the changes in the Soviet Union were evident to everyone except Reagan—the Russian leader asked Colin Powell, “What are you going to do now that you’ve lost your best enemy?” A good question because, under Reagan, America had ceased being America. It no longer stood for anything, only against some other thing. While Reagan lectured Russian college students about freedom, he had debased the word beyond meaning by his actions in Central America, where we lay abed with tyrants and murderers, and at home, where his government conspired to act in secret for the selfish advantage of a few. The core values of Reagan’s governance lay not in a representative republic or, as Kerry suggested, a communist state, but instead hearkened all the way back to feudalism. Your feudal lord didn’t have to heed your wishes or act in your interests. For your allegiance, he only had to offer to protect you from the lord on the next hill, who was pointing your way and telling his vassals the same thing: that a dark woods lay between, where dark things must happen so that you might sleep secure, things you had best not ask
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about, children. Who better than a movie star, America’s royalty, to convey the message that God shone his grace on some more than others? These chosen ones, your leaders and captains of industry, were more equal than others, capable of handling the secrets and backroom deals, and if they benefited from that, it’s because they deserved to. It’s no wonder that such men felt a kinship with the despots and satraps of the world, who stood for everything America supposedly didn’t. But what about Reagan’s popularity? Those who have recently been rouging Reagan’s image like to remind us that he won re-election with the largest total vote count in U.S. history. They are less keen on telling how by 1987, polls showed that Gorbachev was more popular with Americans than their own president was. Nor do they note that the candidate with the secondgreatest vote count in our history, Al Gore, wound up teaching college instead of being president. Still, there’s no ignoring that Reagan was—and remains—a very popular American figure. One explanation to me is that when our founding fathers were rebelling against the British monarchy, a lot of Americans didn’t share their fervor but preferred to go on clinging to a monarch’s hem. I doubt the percentages have changed much since then. There are still many folks who would rather have a daddy figure or lord up on the hill to tell them simple lies, rather than to be accountable themselves for the responsibilities of freedom. Oliver North and his ilk were only able to work in the dark because so few Americans were willing to shine a light there. To some, it never occurred that unchecked power might be misused. To entirely too many others, a cynical world-view prevailed that it’s a compromised, dog-eat-dog world where corruption and injustice are the accepted coin of the realm. And a lot of people simply watched TV. Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, so listen to the voices in Washington now: the ones using the fight against “evildoers” instead of the “Evil Empire” as a reason to trample our civil rights; the ones willing to stifle a worker’s right to strike but not a power consortium’s right to imperil our state’s economy and public safety; the ones anxious to risk a new Cold War and higher deficits with their unworkable Star Wars sequel; the ones sacrificing the environment to an ideology that confuses freedom with boundless exploitation; the ones who have named Iran-contra figure John Negroponte—accused of covering up U.S.-sponsored death squad activities in Honduras (including the murder of an American priest; spot a trend here?)—to represent our nation’s ideals and aspirations in the United Nations. All this under the aegis of another fumbling, nice-guy president. Goddamn it! This is not the nation we envisioned when we were kids, proud to see our flag flying, proud of the just, kind, freedom-loving people we believed ourselves to be. This is not the reality we want our own kids to have to wake up to. Everyone says they love their country. But love is action, and the American Dream is nothing more than a dream if people don’t act on it. At a 1985 White House reception at which Elie Wiesel was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, the famed Holocaust expert attempted to dissuade Reagan, unsuccessfully, from participating in a ceremony at Bitburg, a German cemetery where elite SS troops were interred. Having witnessed the Holocaust, Wiesel said, “I have learned the danger of indifference, the crime of indifference. For the opposite of love, I have learned, is not hate, but indifference.” MTW
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
13
ONO KINEGRINDS
Seafood + Pasta = Fuhgeddaboudit!
BY DANIELLE LATMAN
Hana Bay Juice Co. Perfect for lazy Sundays and busy Monday mornings
KIDS EAT
F RE Mon & Sat NigE hts! Italian Restaurant
Kihei Kalama Village 1945 S. Kihei Road • 875–0188 Open Every Day For Lunch & Dinner Noon to 10 PM
“WHO HAS
SAID A GREAT MEAL TO BE EXPENSIVE ”
Chef M a rk E llma n’s
Pastas, Salads, Pizzas, Sandwiches and Nightly Seafood Specials with nothing over $12.95 We now have Brown Rice Pasta! Wheat & Gluten Free! 50¢ extra / Cooked to order so it takes a few minutes longer
661-6633 • 180 Dickenson Street • Lahaina 14
JUNE 10, 2004
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PHOTO: KIRSTEN GUENTHER
Beer & Wine
It was a lazy Sunday morning, perhaps the laziest ever. I wore my housedress from the night before and shuffled around the house, cleaning the fridge, vacuuming the living room and washing some desperately-needed clothes. By noon I strolled into the living room to watch TV with one of my housemates. It was a boring kung-fu movie, so naturally we turned to each other to talk for hours about nothing and everything. Once we’d figured it all out, we went out to get some juice. Hana Bay Juice Company was started by the young couple Christina and Steve Domerego three years ago. “We’re a picnic stop disguised as a juice store,” said Christina, 26, originally from Oahu. They serve box lunches to folks driving to Hana, complete with a choice of sandwich, side salad, chips and dessert for $8.50. Hana Bay also has a selection of juices, smoothies and breakfast bagels. Shots of ginseng, spirulina, bee pollen, protein powder and noni juice can be added to drinks as well for 50 cents to a dollar. But on this particular lazy Sunday my friends and I just wanted smoothies. There’s a range of non-fat and non-dairy drinks for around $4-5 each, not counting the 10 percent kama’aina discount. One of my friends got the “Papaya Passion” flavor, with papaya, banana, strawberries and lilikoi juice. “It’s the freshest puree available,” said Christina of the lilikoi. “We pick the fruit in summer, and some of our friends bring garbage bags full of fruit for us.” Another friend enjoyed the “Black Sand Beach” smoothie with blueberries, raspberries, apple and pineapple juice. “I like the color,” he said. “It’s more like purple sand beach. It’s nice and thick, and very cold. Don’t drink too fast, you’ll get an ice-cream headache.” I asked for a blend of papayas, banana and lilikoi juice, and couldn’t stop drinking it (against the given instruction) long enough to consider why it was so good. But we all agreed that the smoothies were filling and went down fast. The next day, Monday morning, was a little bit more of a busy time, where I had stuff to do and places to go, but Hana Bay Juice Company was the first stop. “This is a place where you can pick up something quick and healthy at the same time,” Christina had said earlier. “Not everyone has time.” A tourist couple from Ft. Worth, Texas, were in there selecting their box lunches for the long drive ahead of them. Bree and Scotty heard of the Juice Company from their hotel in Wailea, where they’d
Anuhea Jenkins drinking the profits purchased the Hana Audio Tour CD. “Steve and I made the CD,” said Christina, back behind the counter. “Without revealing too much it tells you where to stop, and the history of the highway.” Christina and her assistant Anuhea Jenkins quickly made me a “Shaka” sandwich: sliced turkey and provolone with lettuce, tomato, sprouts and basil mayo served, like all their sandwiches, on a panini roll. Other sandwich options include roast beef, ham and cheese, crab salad, sundried tomato and hummus, and smoked salmon with capers, all for about $6-7. A few hours later I unwrapped my sandwich on a picnic table outside work and enjoyed the thick slices of turkey, salty cheese and sweet ripe tomato. The sprouts were pleasantly crunchy and the bread was not too filling. It was the perfect size for a mid-day meal, energizing me enough to go back to work without being heavy. My brain was alert for the rest of day, even without spirulina or ginseng. Thanks, Christina. Hana Bay Juice Company is located at 111A Hana Highway in Paia town. They’re open 7 days a week from 7:30 a.m., until 3:30 on weekdays and until 2 p.m. on Sat. and Sun. Don’t let Sunday be too lazy or you’ll miss them. MTW
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
$$→$20-$40
CENTRAL MAUI Ale House - Wide selection of food with sports and games all around. 355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului, 877–9001. $ Aloha Grill - A large assortment of burgers with veggie styles and all the extras. Dairy Road Marketplace, Kahului, 893–0263. $ Ba-Le - French-Vietnamese sandwiches, noodle dishes, pho, saimin and more. Plus, a large variety of tapioca. 270 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 877-2400. $ Bangkok Cuisine - Casual setting featuring exceptional Thai food with plenty of crisp vegetables and fresh seafood. Lunch, dinner or take-out. 395 Dairy Road, Kahului, 893-0026.$ Biwon Restaurant - Fresh and flavorful, authentic Korean food. Open 10 a.m.-10 p.m., lunch and dinner. 752 Lower Main, Wailuku, 244-7788. $ Cupie’s Drive-In - Local lunch take-out. Open Monday through Saturday. 134 W Kamehameha Ave, Kahului, 877-3055. $ Curry in a Hurry - Curry dishes that are delightful and delicious in alternative vegetarian eating. 333 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 877-3328.$ Da Kitchen - Huge portions of local Hawaiian food. Plate lunches, steak plates and amazing chicken katsu. Very casual; sit and eat or get your food to go. 425 Koloa St., Kahului, 871-7782. $ Denny’s - Open 24 hours Come in for Breakfast, Lunch or dinner. Omelettes, Burgers, Salads. 430 Kele St 873-5550. $ Dragon Dragon Chinese Restaurant Excellent service and fair prices with dishes like Kung Pao Chicken, Crispy Gau Gee Mein and Honey Walnut Prawns. Maui Mall, Kahului, 8931628. $ Dish - The concept is simple. Every month, the owner and manager decide on a different “menu” of 14 entrees, of which you may select 12 to assemble in their kitchen. Sessions available Wed-Sat. 150 Hana Highway, Kahului, 8771414. $$ Dunes Restaurant - Adventuresome revisions of local and American breakfast, lunch and
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
dinner favorites. Maui Lani Golf Course, Kahului, 877–7461. $$ Fiesta Time - Quality Mexican taqueria. Order a la carte or combo special with the freshest ingredients. 1132 Lower Main, Wailuku, 249-8463. $ Ichiban Restaurant and Sushi Bar - Breakfast, lunch and dinner featuring modestly priced Japanese and local cuisine. Kahului Shopping Center, 871–6977. $$ International House of Pancakes - (IHOP)- Open for breakfast, specialty pancakes, sandwiches, along with lunch and dinner entrees. Maui Mall, Kahului, 871-4000. $ Little Ceasar Pizza Station - Specialty pizzas along with salads and sandwiches. Located inside of K-mart. 424 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 871-1566. $ Kozo Sushi - Fast food take out. Open 9 a.m to 7 p.m. Mon through Sat. Sushi platters available. 52 Market Place, Kahului, 243-5696. $ Krispy Kreme - This corporation is known all over the world for its tasty glazed doughnuts. 433 Kele St., Kahului, 893-0883. $ Manaña Garage - Latin American cuisine with unique and colorful decor. Try the Chicken Tortilla Epozote, vegetarian enchilada and paella. Cool, quaint bar. 33 Lono St., Kahului, 873–0220. $$ Marco’s Grill Deli - A lavish and beautiful setting complements the hearty Italian food and excellent wines. 444 Hana Hwy, Kahului, 877-4486. $$ Maui Coffee Roasters - Ono grinds and freshly roasted coffee in a fun and casual atmosphere makes this the place to “take five.” 444 Hana Hwy, Kahului, 877–CUPS. $ Maui Beach Hotel - Buffet-style restaurant featuring different foods each night of the week. Features range from Shabu Shabu (tons of meat) to sushi and Japanese. 170 Ka’ahumanu Ave., Kahului, 877-0051. $$ Maui Mix Plate - Traditional foods of the varied ethnic groups who call Hawaii home. 70 Ka’ahumanu Ave, Kahului, 877-0706. $ Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with chargrilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and island spices. 275 Kaahumanu Ave, Queen Kaahumanu Mall, Kahului, 871-7726. $ Mike’s Restaurant - Authentic Chinese cooking and
Bring this a d!
SOUTH MAUI Alexander’s Fish & Chips - Seafood, Chicken, Ribs, Fried deep tempura style or grilled. Great food great prices 1913 S Kihei Rd., 874-0788. $ Antonio’s - Italian cuisine in a cozy atmosphere, extensive wine list and friendly service. Try their homemade Tiramisu! 1215 S Kihei Rd., 875-8800. $$ Aroma D’Italia Ristorante - Southern Italian cuisine and full wine list at reasonable prices. Open MonSat, 5-9 p.m. 1881 S Kihei Rd., 879-0133. $$ Ashley’s South Shore Cafe - Affordable breakfast, lunch and dinner, burgers, local plates, fresh island fish, comfort foods, deli sandwiches. 362 Hukulii Pl. (behind Tesoro gas station), Kihei, 874-8600. $
Made from Scratch Ravioli Lasagna Meatballs Osso Buco Tiramisu
Nicky Beans Kona Coffee
Open Tuesdays thru Sundays 5pm - 9pm
1215 S. Kihei Rd. (Long’s Ctr.) • 875-8800
100% PURE KONA COFFEE Available at
The Wharf Cinema Center
667-0908
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MAUI SHRIMP MAHI HEALTHY BEER
HOT FREE
SALSA BAR
MARGARITAS
*Not valid with Kama’aina Prices. Not valid with any other offer. Dine in only. Expires 6/30/04
COVER STORY
Takamiya Market - Plate lunches, homemade cornbeef, sashimi, tossed salads. Catering and banquet facility. Happy Valley, Wailuku, 244-3404. $ Tasty Crust - Local style cuisine for breakfast (try their famous hotcakes!), lunch and dinner. Serving Maui since 1944. 1770 Mill, Wailuku, 244-0845. $ Tiffany’s - Featuring 103 items of local and Asian entrees, Bento boxes, noodles and fish. Featuring DJ and Karaoke, open 10:30-2 a.m. 1424 Lower Main St. Wailuku 249-0052. $ Tin Ying Chinese Restaurant - A Hong Kong style Chinese seafood restaurant. They have over 100 menu choices at reasonable prices. Buffet style lunch take-out, as well as sit down dining. 1088 Lower Main St., Wailuku, 242-4371. $ Tokyo Tei - Lunch and dinner featuring teriyaki beef and fish, tempura, katsu, saimin and more. 1063 E. Lower Main St., Wailuku, 242-9630. $ Valley Isle Seafood - Known for their luau stew, along with several choices of seafood. 475 Hukilike St., Kahului, 873-4847. $ Wei Wei BBQ & Noodle House - Very affordable Chinese cuisine, counter-service, delicious noodle dishes. 210 Imikala St., Wailuku, 242-7928. $ Wow-Wee Maui Cafe - Unique candy bars, ice cream shakes, bagels, coffees, sandwiches and soups. Also a Hawaiian menu, kava kava, sushi and oxygen bars. 333 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 871-1414. $
Homemade Italian Cuisine
Serving Lunch & Dinner 7 Days A Week Located on Front Street in Lahaina Overlooking the Banyan Tree, Upstairs in
NEWS
ono local grinds. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Also offer catering. 1900 Main St., Wailuku, 244-7888. $ Ono Resturant - This resturant has some of the best food around. 2102 Vineyard, Wailuku. 244-5117 $$ Piñata’s - Fresh and wholesome Mexican food from the kitchen sink burritos to quesadillas a la carte. Casual dining, various piñatas available too. 395 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 877–8707. $ Pulehu BBQ - Local plate lunch with a Southern smokehouse twist. 1500 Lower Main St., Wailuku, 244-4049 or 244-6159. $ Ruby’s - Walk down memory lane at this fabulous ‘50s cafe. Quintessential American dining morning to night. Queen Ka`ahumanu Center, Kahului, 248-7829. $ Saeng’s Thai Cuisine - Vegetarian, meat and seafood Thai entrees in a casual garden setting. 2119 Vineyard, Wailuku, 244-1567. $$ Saigon Cafe - Wailuku’s hidden secret! Delicious and affordable Vietnamese cuisine with excellent service. 1792 Main, Wailuku, 243-9560. $$ Sam Sushi - Located inside Wow-Wee Cafe with over 20 years of experience in the food industry. Catering and party trays available. 333 Dairy Rd., Kahului, 873-6400. $ Sandalwood Golf Course Restaurant - Lunch with a view, served from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. with daily specials. 2500 Honoapiilani Hwy, Waikapu, 242-6000. $$ Sheik’s Restaurant - Local favorites including Loco Moco and Shoyu Chicken. 97 Wakea Ave, Kahului, 877-0121. $ Siu’s Chinese Kitchen - Fast food Chinese with great specials. All entrees are served with rice or noodles. 70 E Kaaumanu Ave., Maui Mall, 871-0828. $ Squeaky’s Family Restaurant - “A Taste of Philadelphia” with real Philly cheesesteak, pan fried trout, vegetarian meatloaf. Open for breakfast. 197 North Market Street, Wailuku, 244-4100. $ Stillwell’s Bakery & Cafe - Specialty cakes and desserts, breads and pastries, with sandwiches, salads and soups for lunch. Open 6 a.m.-4 p.m. Mon-Sat. 1740 Kaahumanu Ave, Wailuku, 243-2243. $ Sushi Go - Presents a concept unlike anything we’ve seen on Maui, conveyor-belt sushi. Queen Ka'ahumanu Center, Kahului, 877-8744. $
opopopopopopopopop
with purchase of any other burger of equal or greater value
LETTERS
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip.
ROASTERS And All Hawaii Costco Locations
FRESH ONO
OPEN FROM 7AM-6PM M-F, 8AM-5PM SAT., 8AM-2:30PM SUN.
1279 S. Kihei Rd. (Next to Bank of Hawaii) Azeka Mauka
hawaiian.coffee.com
874-TACOS
FILM
COFFEE
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
15
DININGLISTINGS PRICE GUIDE
$→$10-$20
BadaBing! - Homey Italian haven, award-winning thin crust pizzas, veal, calamari or chicken picatta. 1945 S Kihei Rd., 875–0811. $$ Big Wave Cafe - Small cafe serving Pacific Rim cuisine, including lobster and sweet corn fritter with furikake tartar sauce, and coconut shrimp with fruit salsa and ginger lilikoi sauce. Open daily. 1215 S Kihei Rd., 891-8688. $ Bistro Molokini - Blend of California and island cuisine, lunch and dinner. Poolside. Grand Wailea, 875-1234. $$ Bocalino Bistro & Bar - Affordably priced Mediterranean cuisine. Open for dinner, Restaurant served until 1 a.m. 1279 S Kihei Rd., 874-9299.$$ Blue Marlin Harbor Front Grill & Bar - Get amazing seafood, steaks and sandwiches; everything from pizza to sushi. Eat outdoors overlooking the Ma’alaea Fishing Fleet Ma’alaea Harbor Village, 244-8844. $$ Buzz’s Warf - Steaks, seafood and more, including Sweet Paradise Prawns. Reservations recommended. Ma’alaea Harbor Village, 2445426. $$ Cafe Kiowai - Authentic Japanese fare according to centuries-old tradition. Casual dining in a relaxed garden setting. 5400 Makena Alanui, Maui Prince Hotel, 874--1111.$$ Caffe Ciao - Italian cuisine baked in a Kiawe wood oven. Open for lunch and dinner. Dine outdoors poolside. The Fairmont Kea Lani, Wailea, 875-4100. $$ Capische? - Contemporary Italian with a twist and an extensive wine list. Commanding ocean views from every table. Wailea Diamond Resort, 879–2224. $$$ Cafe Del Sol - Open for breakfast and lunch. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sandwiches and fresh fish, daily special. 3620 Baldwin Ave, Makowa 572-4877. $ Cevoli’s Motorcycle Cafe - A bistro with pizza, pasta, ribs, fresh island fish, deli sandwiches, nightly entree. 1280 S Kihei Rd. Azeka Plaza, 874-8377. $
$$→$20-$40
$$$→$40 and up
K→Kama’aina Discount
Cyberbean Internet Cafe - Gourmet coffee, espressos, cappucinos, lattes, sandwiches, smoothies and salads. 1881 S Kihei, 879-4799. $ Da Kitchen - Huge portions of local Hawaiian food. Plate lunches, steak plates and amazing chicken katsu. Very casual; sit and eat or get your food to go. 2439 S Kihei Rd., 875-7782. $ Denny’s - Open 24 hours for breakfast, lunch or dinner with omelets, burgers, salads. 2763 S. Kihei Rd., 879-8600. Dick’s Place - Incredible all-you-can-eat food special, free pool playing with purchase. Eight pool tables. 2463 S Kihei Rd., 874–8869. $ Fernando’s - Authentic Mexican food. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. 41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei, 879-9952. $ Ferraro’s - Gourmet Italian cuisine oceanfront with live violin and guitar, outdoor kiawe-wood-burning oven, all-day lunches and cucina rustica dinners. Four Seasons Resort Wailea, 874-8000. $$$ Five Palms Beach Grill - Local produce and fish featured in Pacific Rim cuisine. 2960 S. Kihei Rd., 879–2607. $$ Harry’s Sushi Bar - Japanese cuisine with fresh and delicious sushi, open 5 p.m.-12 a.m.100 Ike Drive, Wailea, 879-7677. $$ Horhitos Mexican Cantina - Burritos, salads, appetizer and “food for gringos,” too! Located next to Hapa’s Nightclub. Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. Lipoa St., Kihei, 891-MEXI. $ Hula Moon - Enjoy breakfast, lunch, dinner or a champagne Sunday brunch with an open air tropical setting and spectacular ocean views. Featuring fresh Hawaiian fish. 3700 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 874-7831. $$$ Humuhumunukunukuapua’a -Hawaiian and Polynesian cuisine oceanside. Grand Wailea Resort, 875-1234 ext. 4900. $$$ Jawz Tacos - Island-style tacos and burritos, including choice of vegetarian, mahi mahi, ono, shrimp, chicken or steak. Impressive salsa bar and the taco salads are da bomb! 1280 S Kihei Rd., 874-TACO. $ Joy’s Place - “Smart eating” featuring organic foods which are low fat, low salt and wheat free. Open Mon thru Sat, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 1993 S Kihei Rd., 879-9258. $ Kai Ku Ono - A tapas-style menu, where everything
Dollar amounts are based on dinner for two, not including beverages, tax & tip. Royal Thai Cuisine - Thai food with a large selection of vegetarian dishes. Open for lunch (Mon-Fri) and dinner (nightly). 1280 S Kihei Rd., 874-0813. $ Roy’s Bar & Grill - Mouth-watering Hawaiian fusion entrees in a spacious and upbeat atmosphere. Open nightly from 5:30 to 10 p.m. Fine dining, reservations recommended. Piilani Shopping Center, 303 Piikea Ave., Kihei, 891-1120. $$$ Sansei Restaurant - Japanese-based Pacific Rim dining, sushi bar and late night menu. Award-winning cuisine, early bird and late night special. 1881 S Kihei Rd., 879–0004. $$ K Sarento’s on the Beach - Contemporary dining near the water’s edge. Italian cuisine, very romantic. Private VIP table available. 2980 S Kihei Rd., 875–7555. $$$ Sausage Shack - Sausage sandwiches, even chicken or turkey, killer burgers and healthy vegetarian stuff. Sip a beer or margarita outside on the lanai. 1913 S Kihei Rd., 874–6444. $ Spago - Gourmet cuisine as presented by worldfamous chef-owner Wolfgang Puck, oceanfront dining at its finest! Four Seasons Resort Wailea, 874-8000. $$$ Spices - Steak, seafood and more! Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The Maui Coast Hotel, 2259 S Kihei Rd., 891-8860. $$$ Stella Blues Cafe - Healthy, quality food in a casual, homestyle setting. Breakfast, lunch and dinner with daily specials. 1279 S Kihei Rd., 874-3779. $$ Sea Watch - Hawaii regional cuisine utilizing the freshest island fish and produce. Open for breakfast and lunch 8 a.m to 3 p.m, dinner 5:30 p.m. 100 Wailea Golf Club Drive, Wailea, 875-8080. $$ Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe - Relaxed island luxury in ambience and cuisine, with ocean views and live music. The Shops at Wailea, 875-9983. $$ Tony Roma’s - Famous for ribs, barbequed chicken and onion ring loaf, along with daily specials. 1819 S Kihei Road, 875-1104. $$ Vietnamese Cuisine - Hawaiian Opakapaka filet, soft shell crab, New York steak. Open 10:30 a.m-9:30 p.m. Azeka Place I, Kihei, 875-2088. $$
is a la carte, special late night menu and sushi. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner with bar and lounge area. 2511 S Kihei Rd., 875–1007. $$ Kihei Caffe - Affordable breakfast and lunch with lanai seating, hearty portions, tasty sandwiches, huli chicken and fresh fish. 1945 S Kihei Rd., 879-2230. $ Life’s a Beach - Food and drinks in a fun atmosphere. Best Mex, nachos, burritos, prime rib and grilled mahimahi are just some of the specialties. 1913 S Kihei Rd., 891–8010. $ Lobster Cove - Seafood, steak, lobster at its best in a relaxed and casual atmosphere. Open 5 p.m. to midnight daily. 100 Ike Dr., Wailea, 879–7677. $$$ Longhi’s Wailea - Seafood, meat and pasta entrees with many not listed on the menu. Ask the server for details. 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., 891–8883. $$$ LuLu’s - Ribs, burgers, chicken wings and Black ‘n Blue Ahi and more in a fun, upbeat tiki-fied atmosphere with a great bar and huge deck. 1945 S Kihei Rd., 879-9944. $ Ma`alaea Grill - Reasonably priced fine dining overlooking the harbor from the Maui Ocean Center. Ma`alaea Harbor Village, 243–2206. $$ Ma’alaea Waterfront Restaurant - Seafood and Continental cuisine. Open for dinner daily from 5 p.m. Milowai Condominium, 50 Hauoli St., 244-9028. $$ Marco’s South Side Grill - A lavish and beautiful setting complements the hearty Italian food and excellent wines. 1445 S Kihei Rd., 874–4041. $$ Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with chargrilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and spices from the Islands. 2411 S. Kihei Road, Kamaole Beach Center, 879-5005. $ Mulligan’s On the Blue - Maui’s authentic Irish pub, plenty o’Irish food, whiskey and beer. Breakfast is served till 3 p.m 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874–1131. $ Nick’s Fishmarket - Fine dining in open air and elegance with amazing seafood dishes and fresh fish preparations. Fairmont Kea Lani, Wailea, 879–7224. $$$ Pita Paradise - Good food, fast. Serving up a mean Mediterranean-style “gyro,” salads and wraps, with outdoor lanai. Kihei Kalama Village Center, 875–7679. $
Join us nightly for our Early Bird Special Buy one regular dinner entree & receive a second entree of equal or lesser value From 5:00pm to 6:00pm
FREE! DA BEST AUTHENTIC DAILY SPECIALS
Monday - Carnitas Tuesday - Mole Wednesday - Fish Burrito Thursday - Fajitas Friday - Tamales Saturday & Sunday - Menudo
Champagne Sunday Brunch Enjoy $2.00 glasses of champagne or mimosas with any breakfast or lunch entree 1215 S. Kihei Rd . Kihei . Long’s Shopping Center . Ph: 891-8688 email: bigwavecafe@verizon.net
YOUR KITCHEN AWAY FROM HOME HAPPY HOUR EVERY DAY!
•Take-out Available •Freshest Ingredients •Taqueria
FREE CHIPS & SALSA
from 12 to 3pm and 9 to11pm
with this Ad
KIHEI • LIPOA CENTER • 41 E. LIPOA NEXT TO GOLDS GYM
879-9952 16
JUNE 10, 2004
DINING
2.25 Pizza Slices 2 Bud or Coors Lt Draft Beers $ 300 Well Drinks $
$
A TASTE OF LAHAINA WINNER FOR 4 CONSECUTIVE YEARS “BEST VEGETARIAN” “BEST MEAT” “BEST APPETIZER” & “BEST SEAFOOD”
505 FRONT STREET, 661–8112
Mega Touch Games, Pool Table, Jukebox
DININGLISTINGS UPCOUNTRY Anthony’s Coffee Company - A full espresso bar, hot and cold sandwiches, ice cream. Make sure to stop in for a great box lunch to go! 90 Hana Hwy, Paia, 579-8340. $ Café 808 - Local diner style serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Open daily from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. 4566 Lower Kula Rd., Kula, 878-6874. $ Cafe O’Lei - Featuring light and healthy yet hearty gourmet lunch, delicious salads, focaccia sandwiches. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Makawao Paniolo Courtyard, 573-9065. $$ Café Des Amis - Charming cafe with delicious sweet and savory crepes and Mediterranean fare. 42 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 5796323. $ Café Mambo - International bistro featuring Mediterranean and Mexican cuisine with Moorish influences. 30 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 5798021. $ Cakewalk Paia Bakery - High quality baked goods, sandwiches and specialty cakes. 2 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-8770. $ Casanova - First class service, first class food. Fine Italian dining at night and Makawao’s favorite deli by day. 1188 Makawao Ave., 572–0220. $$ Charley’s Restaurant & Saloon Hankering for some grub? Charley’s serves it hearty and healthy from breakfast to dinner and beyond. 142 Hana Hwy., Pa`ia, 579–9453. $ Colleen’s - 1940’s style city bistro atmosphere serving breakfast, lunch and dinner from 6 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily. Haiku Cannery, 575-9211. $$ Fresh Mint - Vietnamese vegetarian cuisine including Summer Rolls, Spicy Lemongrass Soup and Soy Fish in Clay Pot. Open daily 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Catering and take-out available. 115 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9144. $$ Hali`imaile General Store - Gourmet dining in a charming atmosphere. Chef Beverly Gannon’s award-winning menu. 900 Hali`imaile Rd, 572–2666. $ Hana Hou Cafe - Hawaiian homestyle cooking with aloha-filled ambience and local musicians. 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery, 575-2661. $ Island Tacos - Taco stand with fresh, made-toorder fish, beef and chicken tacos. Daily from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery. $ Jacque’s Northshore Bistro - Tropical yet festive atmosphere, with a sushi bar, indoor and lanai dining. 120 Hana Hwy, Pa`ia, 579–8844. $$ Jameson’s Grill & Bar - Featuring fine steaks, fresh local fish and seafood, and of course, baked artichoke. 200 Kapalua Dr., Kapalua, 669-5653. $$$ Kimura Saimin Shop - Casual atmosphere, simple, affordable menu with fresh ingredients done right! 810 Haiku Rd., Haiku Cannery, 5755228. $ Kitada’s - Saimin for breakfast is a standard. Teriyaki beef, hamburger steak, tofu and Teriyaki all available. 3617 Baldwin Ave., Makawao, 572–7241. $ Kula Lodge & Restaurant - Upcountry’s family-style restaurant with sweeping views of the island. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Haleakala Highway, 878-1535. $ La Provence - French-style bistro and patisserie with lanai, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Open Wed thru Sun, 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 3158 Lower Kula Rd., 878-1313. $$
Livewire Cafe - Gourmet desserts, coffee drinks, smoothies. Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sun thru Thu; 6 a.m. to midnight Fri and Sat. 137 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-6009. $ Lynne’s Cafe - Affordable homestyle local food including breakfast, plate lunch, chow fun and more! Catering available. 810 Kokomo Rd., Haiku, 575-9363. $ Makawao Steak House - Classic and comfortable menu with daily fish preparations and salad bar. 3612 Baldwin Ave., Makawao, 572-8711. $$ Mama’s Fish House - Fresh island fish with fresh local ingredients at “Maui’s favorite restaurant.” 799 Poho Pl., Kuau, 579–8448. $$$ Maui’s Best Tamales & Local Food - Authentic, fresh and tasty Mexican cuisine along with local favorites. 81 Makawao Ave/Pukalani Square, 5732998. $ Milagros Food Co. - South American cuisine with an island influence. Best people watching spot in Pa`ia! Extensive tequila menu and delicious daily specials. 3 Baldwin St., Paia, 579–8755. $ Moana Bakery & Cafe - Pacific rim dining for vegetarians and meat eaters. Bakery provides wonderful goodies for the sweet tooth. 71 Baldwin Ave., Pa`ia, 579–9999. $ Pa`ia Fish Market - By serving fresh local Hawaiian fish daily, they are the hot spot for seafood lovers without the upscale pocket. 100 Hana Hwy., Pa`ia, 579–8030. $ Polli’s Mexican Restaurant - Paniolo country’s premier Mexican cantina, with nachos, burritos, ensaladas and more! 1202 Makawao Ave., 572-7808. $ SandBar & Grill - Casual contemporary island cuisine, featuring salads, kiawe grill burgers, sandwiches and lobster tacos. Full bar, happy hour everyday 4-6 p.m. Open daily from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. 89 Hana Hwy., Paia, 579-8742. $ Veg Out - Vegan and vegetarian food, from Mexican, Italian and Far East influences. 810 Kokomo Rd., Haiku, 575-5320. $
WEST MAUI A&J Kitchen, Deli & Bakery - Choose from American, Hawaiian, Korean and Chinese cuisines. Bakery with cakes and cookies. Lahaina Center, 667–0623. $ Alexander’s Fish & Chips - Seafood, chicken, ribs, fried deep tempura style or grilled. Great food great prices. 844 Wainee St., Lahaina Square, 667-9009. $ Aloha Mixed Plate - Experience the traditional foods of the varied ethnic groups who call Hawaii home. 285 Front St., Lahaina, 661-3322. $ Athens Greek Restaurant - Affordable and authentic gyros, shish kebab, falafel and more! Ya’Sou! Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-4300. $ The Bakery - Fresh baked breads and pastries. Soup and sandwiches available. 991 Limahana Pl., Lahaina, 667-9062. $ Ba-Le - French Vietnamese sandwiches, noodle dishes, pho, saimin and more. Wide variety of tapioca. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-5566. $ Bamboo Bar & Grill - Vietnamese, Thai and Japanese sushi. Delivery available, great daily special.
Open late with full bar, pool tables. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 667-4051. $ K Banyan Tree - “Eclectic Pacific cuisine with a Hawaiian twist.” Lodge atmosphere, ocean views. Ritz Carlton Kapalua, 669–6200. $$$ Basil Tomato’s Italian Grill - Specializing in Northern Italian cuisine. Come in for the ambience, stay for the delightful dining experience. 2780 Kekaa Dr., Kaanapali, 662-3210. $$ BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria - Deep-dish specialty pizzas and homemade Pizookies with live music nightly. Overlooking Lahaina Town, with ocean view. 730 Front St., 661-0700. $ K Blue Lagoon - Casual dining with local grinds and bar, surrounded by waterfalls and palm trees. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 661–8141. $ Breakwall Cafe - Serving breakfast, coffee, sandwiches, salads, smoothies. Open everyday 7 a.m.- 2 p.m. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-7220. $ Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. - Fine Southern foods, with “Forrest Gump” movie memorabilia and logo wear in a lively, casual atmosphere. 889 Front St., Lahaina, 661–3111. $$ Cafe O’Lei - Oceanfront dining featuring light and healthy yet hearty gourmet lunch and dinner. Delicious salads and Focaccia sandwiches. 839 Front St., Lahaina, 661–9491. $$ Cafe Sauvage - Gourmet, hearty, satisfying fare in an unpretentious setting. Extensive beer and wine menu, after-dinner cordials, and desserts! 844 Front St., Lahaina, 661–7600. $$ K Canoes - Casual yet elegant dining serving islandinspired contemporary and traditional cuisine. 1450 Front St., Lahaina, 661–0937. $$ Captain Dave Fish & Chips - Classic baskets of fish and chips. Open daily. 126 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina, 667-6700. $ Castaway Cafe - Beachside, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Soups, salads, pastas. Maui Kaanapali Villas & Resort, 661-9091. $ Cilantro - Fresh Mexican Grill island fish, tacos and burritos. Mexican food beyond the border. 170 Papalaua St., Lahaina, 667-5444. $ Chez Paul Restaurant - Fine dining French cuisine, open for dinner only. Romantic setting. Call for reservations. 820 Olowalu Rd., Olowalu, 661-3843. $$$ K China Boat - The best Mandarin Szechwan cuisine on Maui, open for lunch and dinner. 4474 L. Honoapiilani Road, Kahana Gateway Shopping Center, 669-5089. $ CJ’s Deli & Diner - Reasonably priced “comfort foods” such as Reuben sandwiches, pot roast, freshly baked pies and more! Open daily. 2580 Kekaa Dr., Fairway Shops, Kaanapali, 667-0968. $ Compadres Bar & Grill - Western cooking with a Mexican accent. Oceanview dining and Margarita bar. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Lahaina Cannery Mall, 661-7189. $ Cool Cat Cafe - ‘50s-style diner with lanai. Delicious burgers and sandwiches, huge salads and classic fountain desserts. Lahaina Wharf Center, 667-0908. $ K David Paul’s Lahaina Grill - Fine Pacific Rim cuisine in the intimate dining room on the ground floor of the Lahaina Inn. 127 Lahainaluna, Lahaina, 667–5117. $$$ K
ONO KALUA
PIG Plate Thursdays
$10.95 Topped with onions. Accompanied by steamed rice & chopped cabbage.
Authentic Mexican Food Happy Hour 3-6pm
EMPLOYEE OF THE
WEEK B Y A N T H O N Y P I G N ATA R O
Tracy Edelhertz Caterer, Triptop Productions It’s so weird how I got the name of my business. I was having a dream in which I was sitting in a field under a tree contemplating what I wanted to do, when somebody came up to me and said, “The name of your business is Triptop.” I woke up, and that was all I remembered from the dream. I have no idea who that person was and I never dreamed about him again. My very first job was at 14. I worked in an Italian bakery. I worked the counter, but the owner knew I was really interested. He would make special things for me to try like Ricotta Pie. Some people call it cheesecake, but it has a different kind of pastry than pie. It’s more of a bread. The filling also has lemon peel in it or something to add zest. Sometimes they add chocolate chips. I teach at the PACE program of continuing adult education at Maui Community College. I feel I have a lot to teach in regards to cooking and nutrition. Eventually I’d like to work towards writing and TV. I don’t really have a favorite type of cuisine because I’ll try anything. I really like Oriental cuisine, and I say that in the broadest sense of the word. I don’t really have a favorite. I do small party catering. I can do a pupu party for up to 80 or a sit-down dinner for up to 40 people. I also do private cheffing and in-home cooking classes. The nice thing there is we get to eat what we create. I try to do so many different things. I did a traditional Middle Eastern party at my house. We decorated the house so it was like walking into Genie’s bottle. I also did a Middle Eastern belly dance before the meal— I’ve been dancing for four years. It was a very traditional dinner: I made homemade kesra, which is a flatbread, Lamb Tagine with country salad and roasted vegetable and saffron cous cous. For dessert I did a rose-scented crème caramel. MTW
661-4666 • Wharf Cinema Center 658 Front St • Lahaina, HI
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
17
DININGLISTINGS 11:00am - 10:00pm
Live Hawaiian Style Entertainment Nightly 6pm to 9pm
Happy Hour from 4 to 7 pm Drink Specials Until Closing $3.00 Well Drinks Everyday!
Fridays
50 2 . Mai Tais $
Wednesdays
$
1 6.9 5
Prime Rib Nite 2259 S. Kihei Rd (At the Maui Coast Hotel-Behind Spices)
808-891-8860
HAPPY HOUR DAILY FROM 2-5 PM
$2.50 WELL DRINKS $3.50 MARGARITAS $1.50 BUD LIGHTS Watch Your Favorite Sports On Our New Bar T.V.s Contemporary American Steak & Seafood
Sauvage (adj.) (fr) 1.wild. 2. aggressive. 3. not domesticated or under human control. 4. untame Sauvage = wild sauces Sauvage = aggressive flavors Sauvage = chef not under human control
Variety Is Our Specialty 2511 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei • 879-1954
Owner/Chef Dean Louie
Featured Entrees Black Sesame Tempura Prawns with Red Pepper Aioli and Chipotle Vin $19.95 Savage Mixed Grill Lamb, Lobster & Beef $25.95 Shrimp and Scallop Scampi $17.95 Plum Glazed Lamb-Lollichops $24.95 Linguine with Clams and Cream Sauce $16.95 Peppered Ahi $19.95 Everything creative, unique and flavorful, and hand-crafted in our kitchen Kama’aina discounts recognized all night, every night Very limited seating. For reservations call:
661-7600 844 Front St.
18
JUNE 10, 2004
DINING
KAMA’AINA & SEAFOOD
SPECIALS ALL WEEK LONG NIGHTLY SPECIALS MON-1-1/4 LB LIVE MAINE LOBSTER $18.95 TUES-KAMA’AINA 50% OFF DINNER ENTREES WED-1LB. ALASKAN KING CRAB LEGS $19.95 THUR-14OZ PRIME RIB $16.95 FRI-KAMA’AINA 50% OFF DINNER ENTREES Kama’aina valid w/ HI ID & 17% Gratuity prior to Discount
HAPPY HOUR DAILY 3-6 $2.75 TROPICALS / WELLS $1.75 DRAFTS
AR DOLLL ES B U DO DAY ALL
FRESH $1.00 R OYSTTEERS O SHO
Dollie’s Pub & Cafe - Pizza, sandwiches, salads and full bar. Open daily 11 a.m. to midnight. 4310 L. Honoapiilani Hwy., Kahana Manor Shops, 669-0266. $ Erik’s Seafood & Sushi - Fresh seafood and sushi—great steamers! Open nightly with live entertainment. Half off Sushi Sundays. 843 Wainee St., Lahaina, 662-8780. $$ Feast At Lele - A royal tour of the cuisine of Polynesia sharing the spotlight with music and dance from four Pacific islands. 505 Front Street, Lahaina, 667-5353. $$$ Fish & Game Brewing Co. & Rotisserie Maui’s own restaurant brewery, with rotisserie grill, featuring steak, seafood and ambience. Also, late-night menu served until 1:30 a.m.! 4405 Honoapiilani Hwy., Kahana, 669-3474. $$ Gaby’s Pizzeria - Casual Italian dining with pizza and pasta from $6-$25. Open 11 a.m. to 12 a.m. daily. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8112. $ Gazebo Restaurant - Full breakfast and lunch menu, casual atmosphere, beautiful oceanside setting. 5315 Lower Honoapiilani Rd, Napili, 6695621. $ Gerard’s - Fine French dining in downtown Lahaina. Rich, flavorful yet light foods await your taste buds. 174 Lahainaluna, Lahaina, 661–8939. $$$ Giovani’s Tomato Pie Ristorante - Fine Italian dining located. Open for dinner. 2291 Kaanapali Prkwy, 661-3160. $$ Hard Rock Cafe - Good American food at decent prices amongst rock ‘n roll memorabilia. Love All—Serve All. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 667–7400. $ Hecocks - Italian restaurant and cocktail lounge oceanside. Breakfast, lunch and dinner. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8810. $$ K House of Saimin - Ono homemade saimin, chicken sticks, and Haupia pie are just some of the local favorites here. Old Lahaina Center, 667–7572. $ Hula Grill - Barefoot bar and beachside dining, 1940s style. Menu is a seafood lovers delight. Whaler’s Village, Kaanapali, 667–6636. $$ i`o - Pacific Rim cuisine among awesome sunset views, and indoor or outdoor dining. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 661–8422. $$$ Java Jazz/Soup Nutz - Coffee bar and cafe with great food, eclectic atmosphere, lounge ambience. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 3350 Lower Honoapiilani Rd., Honokowai, 6670787. $ Jonny’s Burger Joint - Great burgers, as well as Mexican food, salads and fried items, served until midnight, with bar and pool table! 2395 Honoapiilani Hwy, Kaanapali, 661-4500. $ Kahuna Kabob - Healthy food, low prices! Soups, brown rice, veggies and kabobs, will deliver. Lahaina Marketplace, 661–9999. $ K Kimo’s - Fresh fish, prime rib, and their famous Hula Pie, oceanside dining. Live entertainment daily. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 661–4811. $$ Kobe - Japanese Steak House and Oku’s Sushi Bar, featuring teppanyaki cooking and fabulous sushi. Dinner nightly from 5:30-10 p.m., Sushi 5:30-11:30 p.m. 136 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 667-5555. $$ Lahaina Coolers - Off the beaten path “surf bistro.” Good food, good quality, late night menu. 80 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 661–7082. $ Lahaina Fish Co. - Chef’s signature Pacific Rim specialties prepared with fresh island fish. Dine on the oceanside lanai. 831 Front St., Lahaina, 661–3472. $$ Leilani’s On The Beach - Relaxed beachfront dining, specializing in fresh seafood and Pacific Rim cuisine. 2435 Kaanapali Parkway, 661-4495. $$ Longhi’s - Elegant fine dining, freshest ingredients, pasta, seafood and steaks. Dancing upstairs on Friday nights. 888 Front St., Lahaina, 667–2288. $$$ Mama’s Ribs & Rotisserie - Serving ribs and roasted chicken, BBQ baked beans, coleslaw, and macaroni salad. Napili Plaza, 665–6262. $ Maui Tacos - Featuring tacos and burritos with char-grilled steak, chicken and seafood marinated in pineapple, lime juices and spices from the Islands. 840 Wainee Street 661-8883 Lahaina (and Napili). $ Moose McGillycuddy’s - Great value, large portions, all you can eat special and merry atmosphere, large bar. 844 Front St., Lahaina, 667–7758. $ Mr. Sub Sandwiches - Speciality sandwiches made to order, with salads and homemade soups. 129 Lahainaluna Rd., Lahaina, 667-5683. $ Nachos Grande - Fresh Mexican food, fast. Vegetarian, too! Honokowai Marketplace, 662–0890. $
Nalu Sunset Bar & Sushi - Sushi rolls, sashimi, various Japanese appetizers, sandwiches and more. Maui Marriott, Kaanapali, 667–1200 ext. 51. $$ Okazuya Deli - Quality Japanese plate lunch. The best lemon caper Mahi Mahi and Okinawan potato tempura ever! Open 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 4:30 to 9 p.m. 3600 Lower Honoapiilani Hwy., Honokowai, 665-0512. $ Ono’s Surf Bar & Grill - Family selections of healthy cuisine. Poolside. The Westin Maui, Ka’anapali, 667-2525. $$ Outback Steak House - Quality steaks, shrimp-on-thebarbie, and the Bloomin’ Onion in a casual and lively atmosphere. 4405 Honoapiilani Hwy, Kahana, 665-1822. $$ Pacific’O - Elegant oceanfront award-winning contemporary Pacific cuisine. Live jazz on weekends. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 667-4341. $$$ Pancho & Lefty’s - Delicious and spicy appetizers, traditional and specialty Mexican food with full bar. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 661–4666. $ Penne Pasta - Mark Ellman’s inexpensive Italian bistro with homestyle pasta, pizza and salad. 180 Dickenson St., Lahaina, 661–6633. $ Pho Saigon 808 - Vietnamese cuisine, Saigon steaks, vegetarian delight. Open 7 days a week. 658 Front St., Wharf Cinema Center, 661-6628. $ Pioneer Inn - Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, with live entertainment nightly. 659 Wharf St., Lahaina, 6613636. $ Pita City Falafel - Greek food with kabobs, Shawarma, Gyros, juice bar. Open daily. 658 Front St., Lahaina, 667-7757. $ Pizza Paradiso - Voted “Best Pizza on Maui” since 1998. Award-winning pasta dishes, toss-to-order salads, big fat Greek gyros, homemade tiramisu and panna cotta. Honokowai Marketplace, 667-2929; Whalers Village, 667-0333. $ Plantation House Restaurant - Hawaiian Mediterranean cuisine. Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily. 2000 Plantation Club Dr., Kapalua, 669-6299. $ Reilley’s - Known for their choice award-winning beef. Gourmet steaks and seafood overlooking the Ka`anapali Golf Course’s 18th hole. 2290 Ka`anapali Pkwy, 667–7477. $$ Roy’s Nicolina Restaurant - A quiet ambience suffuses this dining experience, enhanced by the Pacific Rim cuisine. 4405 Honoapi`ilani Hwy, Kahana, 669–5000. $$$ Rusty Harpoon Restaurant and Tavern Quench thirst, satiate hunger and watch sports. Large parties welcome. Whalers Village, Kaanapali, 661–3123. $$ Ruth’s Chris Steak House - USDA prime steak, fine wines. Dinner served nightly. 900 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8815. $$$ Sansei Seafood Restaurant and Sushi Bar D.K. Kodama has combined the highest quality sushi bar infused with Hawai`i’s cultural flavors. 115 Bay Drive, Kapalua, 669–6286. $$ K Sea House Restaurant - Looking out over incredible Napili Bay, dining is an amazing experience here under the direction of Chef Michael Gallagher. 5900 Lwr. Honoapi`ilani Hwy., Napili, 669–1500. $$ Spats Trattoria - Step into old Northern Italy. Tables are private, the Antipasto serves two. Hyatt Regency, Kaanapali, 667–4727. $$$ Sports Club Kahana Grill - Upscale, healthy restaurant inside Sports Club Kahana. Breakfast, lunch and take-out. 4327 Lwr. Honoapi`ilani Rd., Kahana, 669-3538. $$ Sunrise Cafe - Casual and cozy outdoor lanai, serving American food from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. 693 Front St., Lahaina, 661-8558. $ Swan Court - One of the top 10 romantic restaurants in the world, with an extensive list of contemporary fine wines. Hyatt Regency, Kaanapali, 667–4727. $$$ Take Sushi - Open late night for late night sushi lovers. Full menu and daily specials. 505 Front St., Lahaina, 667-4051. $ Terrace Restaurant - Open from 6:30-11 a.m. serving breakfast only. Elegant dining, buffet-style rotating menu ranging from “Breakfast on the Farm” to “Hawaiian Plantation-Style Breakfast.” Ritz Carlton, Kapalua, 669-6200. $$$ Thai Chef - Thai food like you’ve never had it, with curry, Pad Thai, summer rolls and more. Old Lahaina Center, 667–2814. $ Tropica - Enjoy the fire and ice-themed restaurant where the cold food and drink bar is tucked between two “volcanoes.” Westin, Kaanapali, 667–2525. $$$ Vino - Comfort and contemporary cuisine featuring fresh pasta and extensive wine list. Open for dinner nightly from 5:30 p.m. Village Course Clubhouse, Kapalua, 661-8466. $$$ Whale’s Tale - All open-air lanai dining. Casual dining, Maine lobster specials with hamburgers, fish sandwiches, and happy hour specials from 3-6 p.m. 672 Front St., Lahaina, 667–4044. $
FILMFEST The Maui Film Festival at Wailea, and at the Maui Arts & Cultural Center, will take place from June 16-20, 2004. Festival Passes, as well as Single Tickets, are now on sale. A Complete Festival Schedule is currently available on our website www.mauifilmfestival.com There will be five venues, including the under-the-stars Tommy Bahama Celestial Cinema at Wailea, Maui Digital SkyDome, Tommy Bahama SandDance Theater, MACC Castle Theater and McCoy Theater. See page 20. Special Events include the Opening Night Reception at the Faimont Kea Lani Palm Court, Taste of Wailea, Comedy Club at Mulligans on the Blue, a Father’s Day concert and much more. Single Tickets start at $10 for Filmmakers Panels and Castle Theater, McCoy Theater and Maui Digital SkyDome screenings. All Celestial Cinema double features are $20. Kids under 12 half price. Festival Passes ranging from $100 and up are also available.
The following listings and schedule for The Maui Film Festival at Wailea are for June 16th & 17th only. Pick up next week’s Maui Time Weekly for a comprehensive guide to The Maui Film Festival at Wailea. Enjoy! CHARLIE CHAPLIN CELEBRATION Three exemplary short films by the Little Tramp: One A.M., The Rink and The Pawn Shop.
DOOR IN THE FLOOR Jeff Bridges and Kim Basinger star as a couple coming to terms with how a family deals with a virtual sea change of emotion during one turbulent East Hampton summer in this adaptation of James Irving’s A Widow for One Year.
NASA: SHOOTING FOR THE STARS WITH DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY/ CORAL REEF From image capture and manipulation to data compression and projection, this presentation will examine the evolution of digital cinema technologies in the emerging marketplace. Also discussed will be the availability of NASA technologies to feed into this market and how these technologies have the potential to impact the Hawaiian economy. Followed by the award winning film Coral Reef.
JAWS UNDERGROUND Chris Tronolone’s documentary on some of the local heroes of Peahi.
THE ELEPHANT MAN A life-affirming documentary about the unique friendship between biker, Chris Gallucci and Timbo, the oldest, biggest and wildest African bull elephant in the U.S. Both live on Shambala Preserve, an animal farm founded and run by Hollywood diva Tippi Hedren.
OF WIND AND WAVES: THE LIFE OF WOODY BROWN The amazing Woody Brown, now 92 yearsyoung, inventor of the catamaran, former Waikiki beach boy, life-long friend of Rabbit Kekai and protégé of Duke Kahanamoku, shines in this short never before seen documentary about his life and times.
FESTIVAL EXPRESS Maui had Jimi Hendrix’s legendary Rainbow Bridge concert, and Canada had Janis Joplin, The Grateful Dead and The Band performing and living together on a train for five straight days in 1970. Some 35 years after the “Canadian Woodstock,” the never-before seen footage has been rediscovered and edited, along with new interviews, into this rockin’ documentary.
GO FURTHER
For further details: Call 572.3456 or visit www.mauifilmfestival.com
Harrelson as he pilots a hemp-fueled bus on an eco-consciousness-raising tour down the beautiful Pacific Coastline.
Calling his new movie an “Electric Kool-Aid Test on Tofu,” award-winning documentary filmmaker Ron Mann (Grass, Twist) joins Academy Award-nominated actor/activist Woody
OPEN WATER Whether you scuba dive, surf or paddle, this “Jaws for the 21st Century,” a spine–tingling drama about two scuba divers accidentally stranded in shark-infested waters, will have you holding your breath for 90- minutes! No mechanical or computer-generated special effects were used in the making of this film. When you see the sharks in the water, they’re real!
NAPOLEON DYNAMITE
NAPOLEON DYNAMITE In what is sure to be this year’s Maui Film Festival box office surprise, audiences meet Napoleon Dynamite, Preston, Idaho’s reluctant teen hero. The Sundance audience favorite captures the comedy, tragedy and disorientation of high school, complete with piñatas, a school dance and a very funny race for Student Body President.
continued on page 20➤
Celestial Cinema WED
16
Digital SkyDome
SandDance Theater
5:00pm NASA: SHOOTING FOR THE STARS WITH DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY/ CORAL REEF
7:30pm
8:00pm
MACC Castle Theater
MACC McCoy Theater
PEACEABLE KINGDOM
ELEPHANT MAN
THE RIDE OF WIND AND WAVES
TWO BROTHERS JAWS UNDERGROUND POROROCA-SURFING THE AMAZON
9:30pm
10:00pm DOOR IN THE FLOOR
THU
17
2:00pm
PROTEUS
PARALLEL LINES
5:00pm
GO FURTHER
UNTIL THE VIOLENCE STOPS
7:30pm
FESTIVAL EXPRESS
WHAT THE #$*! DO WE KNOW?
8:00pm
OPEN WATER
10:00pm NAPOLEON DYNAMITE
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
CHARLIE CHAPLIN CELEBRATION
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
19
depths of the sea an ecstatic and visionary fusion of science and art, was an inspiration to scientific giants such as Charles Darwin and Thomas Edison.
THE VENUES The Celestial Cinema is an outside theater situated on the training facility of the Gold and Emerald Golf Course. Parking will not be permitted at this venue. Attendees are asked to park at the Wailea special events parking area on the left side of Wailea Ike Drive. There will be a free shuttle that runs continuously from 6 p.m., both to and from the site.
THE RIDE This groundbreaking short documentary, winner at the 2004 X-Dance Festival, is a big-wave reality-adventure surf show starring Laird Hamilton, Dave Kalama, Darrick Doerner, Tom Carroll, Peter Mel and Ross Clarke-Jones. The film also includes never before seen footage from the swell of November 2002 that has been called “the best big-wave session ever.”
SandDance Theater
claims Wailea beach in front of the Four Seasons Resort as its home during the festival. Shuttles will run from the Wailea special events parking area (see T.B. Celestial Cinema description for location) to the Wailea Beach Public Parking Lot sandwiched between the Four Seasons and the Grand Wailea Resort. Those driving to this venue are asked to park in either of these two areas.
TWO BROTHERS A perfect family film, this cinematic fable was shot in and around the temples of Cambodia and Thailand. Two tigers are separated as cubs and taken into captivity, only to be reunited years later as enemies by an explorer (Guy Pearce). Unexpected circumstances lead them back to the freedom and majesty of their ancestral home. Keiki under six free. PEACEABLE KINGDOM
The Digital SkyDome boasts an elevated, outdoor experience on the Pacific Terrace at the Outrigger Wailea Resort (Wailea Marriott). Parking for this venue is at the resort or at the Shops at Wailea. For those staying at the Wailea Resort, the festival shuttle will transport guests between resort properties.
The Castle Theater & McCoy Theater are both in the Maui Arts and Cultural Center located at 1 Cameron Way, off of Papa Avenue between Kahului Beach Road and Ka’ahumanu Avenue in Kahului. No shuttles run to this location and parking is on-site at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center.
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FILM
PARALLEL LINES When filmmaker Nina Davenport hops in her car and heads cross-country after the terrorist attacks of September 11th, she uses her video camera to unlock the personal stories of hope, loss and redemption of the strangers and unexpected soul mates she meets along the way. Much more than a singular portrait of 9/11, this funny, intimately insightful and life-affirming documentary is a spiritual snapshot of rural America.
PEACEABLE KINGDOM This thoughtful documentary explores the interconnected life journeys of farm animals, former farmers and animal rescuers struggling against the overwhelming power of the corporate farmers of America.
POROROCASURFING THE AMAZON This ultimate Amazon jungle surfing adventure profiles the mystic expedition of two worldclass surfers, Ross Clarke-Jones and Carlos Burle, as they wander deep into the heart of the Amazon jungle to ride the muddy, mysterious and seemingly endless monster wave, Pororoca “The Destroyer.”
PROTEUS This award-winning documentary weaves poetry, photo-montage, mind-blowing animation, oceanography, technology, history and myth to tell the story of Ernst Haeckel. The19th century biologist, artist and visionary, who found in the
UNTIL THE VIOLENCE STOPS Eve Ensler’s award-winning play The Vagina Monologues, which played to sold-out audiences on Maui in 2003, inspired this documentary which premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. It is the first film about VDay, the global movement to end violence against women and girls
WHAT THE #$*! DO WE KNOW? Academy Award-winner Marlee Matlin stars as Amanda, a divorced photographer, who finds herself in a fantastic Alice-in-Wonderland experience when her daily, uninspired life sets her on a course that reveals the world of quantum physics which, according to Deepak Chopra, lies beneath the mind and the heart.
SHOWTIMES
MOVIECAPSULES
MAUI FILM FESTIVAL
to his owner Jon, who I think can’t really hear him because cats don’t really talk so well. Anyway, they go see beautiful (of course) veterinarian Liz Wilson (Jennifer Love Hewitt) and get a new friend—an utterly mindless yet thoroughly loveable (of course) dog named Odie. THE STEPFORD WIVES - (PG13) - Comedy - A remake of the 1975 suspense classic about a creepy upper-class suburb—actually, aren’t all suburbs kinda creepy?—where all the wives are seemingly “perfect,” but are actually just the submissive robots their creepy husbands have replaced their real wives with. All-star cast features Nicole Kidman, Matthew Broderick, Christopher Walken and Bette Midler.
Castle Theater, 572-3456 Peaceable Kingdom - Wed 5 The Ride - Wed 7:30
MAUI MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, 249–2222 (Showtimes) = Matinee All My Life - NR - Fr, M-W (11:40, 2, 4:15), 7:15, 9:30, Sa-Su (11:40, 2), 4:15, 7:15, 9:30 Mean Girls - PG13 - Fr, M-W (11:30, 1:45, 4), 7:15, 9:30, Sa-Su (11:30, 1:45), 4, 7:15, 9:30 Shrek 2 - PG - Fr, M-W (12, 12:15, 1, 2:15, 2:30, 3, 3:15, 4:30, 4;45, 5:15, 5:30), 6:45, 7, 7:30, 7:45, 9, 9;15, 9:45, 10, Sa-Su (12, 12:15, 1, 2:15, 2:30, 3, 3:15), 4:30, 4:45, 5:15, 5:30, 6:45, 7, 7:30, 7:45, 9, 9:15, 9:45, 10 Soul Plane - R - Th-Fr, M-W (11:45, 12:15, 2:30, 4:15, 5:30), 7:15, 9:20, Sa-Su (11:45, 12:15, 2:30), 4:45, 5:30, 7:15. 9:20 Stepford Wives - PG13 - Fr, M-W (11:30, 12, 1:45, 2:15, 4, 4:30), 7, 7:30, 9:15, 9:45, Sa-Su (11:30, 12, 1:45, 2:15), 4, 4:30, 7, 7:30, 9:15, 9:45 Troy - R - Th (12, 1, 2, 3:30, 4:30, 5), 7, 8, 9, Fr, MW (12, 2, 3:30), 7, 7:45, Sa-Su (12, 2, 3:30), 7, 7:45 Van Helsing - PG13 - Th (11:30, 1, 2, 3:30,4:30, 5), 7, 9, 10, Fr, M-W (1, 4), 6:50, 9:40, Sa-Su (1), 4, 6:50, 9:40
Now Showing DAY AFTER TOMORROW - (PG13) - Action - So the scientists are telling the politicians, “We’re killing the planet!” and the politicians are like, “Yeah, whatever” and then the Ice Age happens, like, the next day and the scientists are like, “I told you so!” and then hilarity ensues. Hey, anything with a 200-foot tidal wave is worth seeing! Stars Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal. HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN - (PG) - Action/Adventure - Third in the Harry Potter dynasty of children’s books, this storyline evolves around Harry’s inability to tame the beast within him, as he goes on the run, not realizing that he is also being chased by a renegade wizard played by sexy master villain Gary Oldman (hello? Bram Stoker’s Dracula?!). MEAN GIRLS - (PG13) - Comedy - A dark comedy starring America’s hot new multimillionaire under 20, Lindsay Lohan, and written by sardonic SNL maven Tina Fey, that examines the cruel games popular girls play in high school to achieve and maintain their superficial status—skills that can later prove quite valuable in adulthood when auditioning for the latest reality TV shows.
Here kitty kitty...
MAUI FILM FESTIVAL’S CANDLELIGHT CAFÉ & CINEMA Wednesday, June 16 Peaceable Kingdom 5 p.m. Castle Theater This thoughtful documentary explores the interconnected life journeys of farm animals, former farmers and animal rescuers struggling against the overwhelming power of the corporate farmers of America. 77 min.
RAISING HELEN - (PG13) - Romantic/Comedy There might be some plot here about a single, young chick who suddenly has to care for her sister’s three kids after a tragic accident, but what this movie is really all about is how damn cute Kate Hudson is. How cute she is when she laughs and her nose crinkles up, how cute she is when she cries and her nose crinkles up—so cute, in fact, that a local pastor (played by hunky John Corbett) falls madly in love with her. SHREK 2 - (PG) - Animation - This green ogre (Mike Meyers) marries this princess (Cameron Diaz) and live in swamp with their donkey friend (Eddie Murphy). The princess’ parents happen to be the King (John Cleese) and Queen (Julie Andrews) of Far Far Away and they’re pissed so the dad plots to have the ogre, Shrek, killed by Puss ‘n Boots (Antonio Banderas) so that the princess can be freed up to marry the Fairy Godmother’s son Prince Charming (Rupert Everett), who we all know doesn’t exist anyway so what is she thinking?!
KA’AHUMANU 6
Even with weird eyes, he’s still hot SOUL PLANE - (R) - Comedy - Snoop Dogg and Method Man star in this comedy that revolves around the first all-black airline, NWA, replete with sexy stewardesses (not “flight attendants!”), funky music (no Celine Dion!) and a dance club (yeah, now we’re talking!), along with the guffaws that occur when a white family (led by Tom Arnold) is—oops!—booked on their first flight. TROY -- (R) -- Epic Adventure - Brad Pitt and Orlando Bloom put on dresses and act out that classic war epic about the war between Greek city states and Troy. They’ve got the delicious Diane Kruger playing Helen, the original blonde bombshell whose face supposedly launched a thousand ships, but the movie’s main thrust is on Pitt’s golden locks and iron biceps. VAN HELSING - (PG13) - Thriller/Suspense - In what originally looked like a remake of Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein but actually isn’t, “monster hunter” Dr. Van Helsing (Hugh Jackman) tramps around 19th Century Eastern Europe battling vampire bimbos, Frankenstein’s monster, the Wolf Man and quite possibly the Invisible Man, Jekyll and Hide and Ming the Merciless. Also stars hottie Kate Beckinsale.
Queen Ka`ahumanu Shopping Center, 875-4910 Day After Tomorrow - PG13 - Th (12, 1:15, 2:45), 4:30, 5:30, 7, 7:30, 8:15, 9:45, 10:05, Fr-W (1:15), 4:30, 7:30, 10:10 Chronicles of Riddick - PG13 - Fr-W (12, 2:35), 5:10, 7:45, 10:20 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban PG13 - Th (11:30, 1, 2:15, 2:30), 4:05, 5:30, 7:10, 8:30, 10, Fr-W (11:35, 12:15, 1, 3:15), 4:05, 7:10, 7:35, 10:05, 10:30 Garfield - PG - Fr-W (1:05, 3:10), 5:15, 7:25, 9:30 Raising Helen - PG13 - Th (12:45), 4:15, 7:15, 9:55, Fr-W (2:30), 5, 7:30, 10:10
KUKUI MALL 1819 South Kihei Road, 875-4910 Day After Tomorrow - PG13 - Daily (12, 2:45), 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban PG13 - Daily (12:45, 3:45), 7, 9:50 Chronicles of Riddick - PG13 - Fr-W (12:15, 2:45), 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 Shrek 2 - PG - (12:30, 2:45, 3:15), 5, 5:30, 7:15, 7:45, 9:30, 10 Troy - R - Th only (12, 3:30), 7, 10:20
FRONT STREET THEATERS 900 Front Street, 249–2222 Chronicles of Riddick - PG13 - Fr, M-W (1, 4), 7, 9:50, Sa-Su (1), 4, 7, 9:50 Garfield - PG13 - Fr, M-W (1:30, 4:30), 7:30, 9:40, Sa-Su (1:30), 4:30, 7:30, 9:40 Raising Helen - PG13 - Th only (4), 7:15, 9:45 Shrek 2 - PG - Th (4:45), 7, 9:15, Fr, M-W (12:15, 2:30, 4:45), Sa-Su (12:15, 2:30), 4:45, 7, 9:15 Soul Plane - PG13 - Th only (4:15), 7:30, 10 The Stepford Wives - PG13 - Fr, M-W (1:15, 4:15), 7:15, 9:30, Sa-Su (1:15), 4:15, 7:15, 9:30 Troy - R - Th only (3:30), 7
WHARF CINEMA CENTER
The Ride 7:30 p.m. Castle Theater
658 Front Street, 249–2222 Day After Tomorrow - PG13 - Th-Fr, M-W (1:45, 4:30), 7:30, 10:10, Sa-Su (11, 1:45), 4:30, 7:30, 10:10 Harry Potter & The Prisoner Of Azkaban PG13 - Th-Fr, M-W (12:30, 1:30, 3:45), Sa-Su (12:30, 1:30), 3:45, 4:45 7, 10:15 Troy - R - Daily 8
This groundbreaking short documentary, winner at the 2004 X-Dance Festival, is a big-wave realityadventure surf show starring Laird Hamilton, Dave Kalama, Darrick Doerner, Tom Carroll, Peter Mel and Ross Clarke-Jones. The film also includes never-before-seen footage from the swell of November 2002 that has been called "the best bigwave session ever." 45 min. Proceded by Of Wind and Waves, The Life of Wood Brown. 25 min.
8 7**
$$
New This Week
™
THE CHRONICLES OF RIDDICK - (PG13) Science Fiction/Adventure - For those who don’t remember—I had to look it up, so don’t feel bad—Riddick (Vin Diesel, who was actually best when he played that robot killing machine in the animated Iron Giant) was the bad-ass dude who could see in the dark in that film Pitch Black that came out a few years ago. Anyway, now he’s caught in some big 26th Century intergalactic war (small intergalactic wars never rate movies, it seems) and lots of stuff gets blown up. GARFIELD - (PG) - Comedy - Movie version of the comic strip that follows the adventures of a sleepy, orange, fat cat (voice of Bill Murray) that eats a lot of lasagna and cracks wise (of course)
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
G R E AT F I
L
MUSIC MS = LIVE
= DINNER
* with MFF passport (5 films - $35) • $10 - single tickets Phone: 572-3456 • www.mauifilmfestival.com
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
21
ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT
BY SAMANTHA CAMPOS
Sexy, Scary and Fun 14 reasons why you should go see Pepper live It’s been said the best thing to come out of Kona is a three-man, ska-punk band called Pepper. A little bit dancehall, a little bit dub rock, Pepper hit the mainland a couple years ago in the mega-act Vans Warped Tours, gaining recognition and respect for their infectious energy and live performances. They have two albums: Kona Town, released in 2002 and their latest album, In With the Old, which was released this past March. And if you need more inspiration to see them live, here it is: 1. Pepper has stamina. They are a band so manic with energy and their love for music that they just got done playing 48 shows in 54 days on their last tour in the spring and are still fully prepared to “kill it” live on Maui. 2. Pepper loves the element of surprise. You might see bassist/vocalist Bret Bollinger give the security guard a sexy lap dance on his head or torch his armpit hair. You never know what to expect. 3. Pepper likes to play with the big boys. They’ve done the Vans Warped Tours from 2001-2003, which featured such bands as
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JUNE 10, 2004
DAY&NIGHT
Rancid, Pennywise, Face to Face, the Dropkick Murphys and so many others. 4. Pepper is loyal. Drummer Yesod Williams, guitarist/vocalist Kaleo Wassman and Bollinger have been friends since high school, surviving drunken binges and the music industry as one solid unit. 5. Pepper isn’t sexist. They not only play music that girls can get their groove on to but also the kind of music to which guys can mosh and knock into each other. It’s a perfect Mars-Venus union. 6. Pepper’s heart remains in Hawaii. Because even though these rockers live in Southern California, all they want right now is one of those sold-out plate lunches from Kona Mixed Plate on the Big Island. 7. Pepper doesn’t discriminate musically. With a band that is influenced by everyone from the Police to Tool, Slayer to Yellowman, Led Zeppelin to Brother IZ, Kealii Reichel to Rage Against the Machine, what’s not to love? 8. Pepper goes with the flow. They don’t believe in creating set lists before each show. Instead they like to “feed off the crowd and just go into it,” sometimes even taking
Hear no evil, speak no evil.... oh, never mind requests for the occasional Clash or Fiji cover. 9. Pepper might be at Cannes next year! Okay, maybe not. But their new DVD, Searching for the Haj, will be out in July and features the boys acting with a plot and everything, along with their music as the soundtrack. So they could go to Cannes… 10. Pepper is wise. With keys-to-success advice like drummer Williams’ “Persistence is key” and “Follow your heart and just do what makes you happy,” Pepper proves they’re not only fun, but good for the kids, too! 11. Pepper is humble. The band has played something like 600 to 700 shows in their little more than five-year career, but they’re actually shocked by how far they’ve gone and still feel really lucky to be doing what they’re doing. 12. Pepper is going to be big. Really big. And because they’re going on their first headlining national tour this July, you may never have a chance to see them play the more inti-
mate venues, like Hapa’s, ever again! 13. Pepper is scared of electrocution. “Back in the day, we played down on the beach at Makalawena [Big Island] and we were playing in these puddles of mud. You ever seen that movie Almost Famous where that guy gets electrocuted? [We] have nightmares about that kind of stuff. More people die than you think from getting electrocuted at concerts,” said Williams. Awww… maybe Pepper just wants to be held? 14. They’re all pretty cute. Oh wait, I didn’t phrase that in a “Pepper is” sentence. Um, how about Pepper is all pretty cute. Yeah. Pepper will play two shows at Hapa’s Nightclub on Thursday (tonight!). The 6 p.m. show is all ages, 9 p.m. for 21 and over. Tickets are $15 in advance and are available at Borders Books & Music, all Maui Tacos locations, Hapa’s, Request Music in Wailuku and Groove 2 Music in Lahaina. For more info, call 879-9001. MTW
Maui Film Fest Begins Wed., 5 p.m. at the MACC and throughout Wailea Fast becoming one of the biggest and glitziest film festivals in the U.S., the Maui Film Festival will host dozens of great movies, shows and tons of celebrity sightings—many of which will be captured by CNN, which is pulling out the coverage stops this years. There will be premiers of movies like Two Brothers and Door in the Floor. There will be special tributes to Bill Maher, Angela Bassett, Woody Harrelson and independent filmmaker Ted Hope. There’s an opening night comedy show at Mulligans on the Blue. And there are all the usual great films and shorts at the MACC, the Sky Dome on the roof of the Marriott and, of course, on the beach. Get it? They’re showing movies on the beach… There was a movie called On the Beach… Oh, shut up. [ANTHONY PIGNATARO]
Don Carlos! Friday, 10 p.m. Hard Rock Café Don Carlos was one of the original members of reggae greats, Black Uhuru, back in ‘74, and has put out more than 20 solo albums since then. His mellow, silky smooth tenor vocals with passion and strength will be an inspiration. If you want to hear the real roots reggae sound of the ‘70s, this is it. Not a show to miss!
this
week’s picks by Sam Campos
Little Big Man Friday, 9 p.m. at the SandBar; Saturday, 10 p.m. at Casanova Sometimes big things come in Little Big Man packages. That big reggae sound outta Seattle, that is. Little Big Man has been called “One of the best bands I’ve seen in a long time… tons of fun” by the Oregonian and “Catchy reggae with great harmonies” by the Stranger. Their sound is a blend of influences in roots reggae, jazz, funk and Hawaiian and they’ve performed with legends like Alpha Blondie, the Itals and Israel Vibrations.
David Icke: Illuminating the Illuminati Saturday, 9:30 a.m-7 p.m. at The Maui Theater, Lahaina David Icke believes that a secret society called the Illuminati has been orchestrating all world events since the ancient world. He recently told a reporter named Caleb Johns that “Hawaii is controlled financially, politically, judicially and militarily by a government working for the Illuminati agenda.” And he believes that “a secret network that controls the United States government, military and intelligence agencies” is what really destroyed the World Trade Center in 2001. Now some people call Icke an investigative journalist. Other people call the former British soccer player and sportscaster a conspiracy theorist. And still others call him a nut. So which one is he? Go and listen to him and then make up your own mind. At the very least, he’ll be interesting. [ANTHONY PIGNATARO]
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
23
DA KINECALENDAR BIG SHOWS Pepper - Thursday (Tonight!). With a reputation for indecent live performances and explosive percussion coupled with liquid bass lines, island reggae with an edgy guitar, Pepper caught the attention of fans from all corners and particularly Volcom Entertainment. Tickets: $15 advance. 6 & 9 p.m., Hapa’s, 879-9001. Don Carlos - Friday. Original member of the legendary reggae band Black Uhuru performs all the hits, including “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?” and “What is Life?” Tickets: $25. 10 p.m., Hard Rock Cafe, 667-5299. Makaha Sons - Saturday. On stage along with their friends, Maunalua, Ho'okena, Amy Gilliom & Willie K, Na Palapalai, The Lim Family, Three Plus, Kapena. Waikiki’s annual Kamehameha Day Parade and all its festivities. Tickets: $10. 10 a.m., Blaisdell Arena, Oahu, 1-877-750-4400. Kings of Classic Rock - Saturday. Featuring Canned Heat, Vanilla Fudge and Big Brother & The Holding Co. Tickets: $30-40. 7 p.m., Ritz-Carlton Aloha Garden Pavilion, Kapalua, 669-6200.
TICKETS ON SALE
Moonshine Recording Artist “DJ Mea”- June 17-19. Mixing expertise with innovation, and her powerful voice, along with dazzling stage presence. Pionneers a new place for women DJ’s. Tickets: $10, all three $20. 9 p.m., Hapa’s, 879-9001. Atomic Punks - June 18. Local rock fans get their classic Van Halen fix as this Los Angeles based band performs a critically acclaimed tribute to the David Lee Roth era of Van Halen. Opening act: Buddhist Priest. Tickets: $24. 7 p.m, Pipeline Cafe, Oahu, 1877-750-4400. 13th Annual Ki Ho’Alu Slack Key Guitar Festival - June 27. An all day, all star lineup of Hawaii’s finest slack key musicians. Festivities include fresh flower lei, Hawaiian arts and crafts along with delicious local-style food. Free Admission. 2-7 p.m., A&B Amphitheater, MACC, 242-7469. Academy Star Ball - June 26 . An elegant, semiformal dancing affair. Dance performances throughout the evening. No-host bar, dinner and dessert. Mayor Alan Arakawa with be the guest of honor. Tickets: $55. 5:30-11 p.m., Fairmont Kea Lani, 808891-2949.
24
JUNE 10, 2004
DA KINE CALENDAR
DMC Technics Presents “American Battle Ground 2004” - July 3. The world’s best DJs battle for the championship title. The 1st place winner of the 2004 U.S. final represents the United States at the World Finals in England in September at Studio 1. Oahu, 212-777-6676. Kalapana 30th Anniversary Tour 2004 - July 18. Kalapana is celebrating its 30th anniversary with a spectacular tour. Tickets: $37-$19.50. 7 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, 242-SHOW. 11th Annual Hawaii International Jazz Festival - Aug. 6-7. Smooth jazz with internationally popular sax soloist Eric Marienthal, who has played with Chick Corea, among many others. Maui’s own Gyspy Pacific; Hawaii jazz with Keahi Conjugacion and a 17-piece swingtime big band with vocalist Melveen Leed. Tickets on sale June 26th: $45-$20. 7 p.m. Castle Theater, MACC, 242-SHOW. Blink-182 - Aug. 14. New school Expect lots of sonic texture with impassioned post-punk, alternating atmospheric pieces. Tickets $35. Amphitheater, MACC, 242-7469.
punk-pop trio. irreverent and with moodier 7 p.m., A&B
American Idols Live - Sept. 28-30. The top finalists from American Idols, featuring Hawaii’s own Jasmine Trias & Camille Velasco, along with many others. Tickets on sale $48. 7 p.m., Blaisdell Arena, Oahu, 1877-750-4400.
EVENTS Upcountry Fair - Sat-Sun, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at Eddie Tam Complex, Makawao. This year’s weekend event will have livestock auction, farmers market, live entertainment, along with crafts and food booths. For info, 244-3530.
FRidAy, JuNE 11 Liquid Latex & Tofu Sandwiches - 10 p.m.-2 a.m. at Anchor Square, Lahaina. A visual exhibit, featuring Scott Reither photography, Lonnie Live Sax Sational, DJ Fat -T (Funky Love), and DJ Sugah Kane. For info, call 280-5379. Maui Wine Tasting Group - 7-9:30 p.m., Kahana. An outdoor tasting with seven different types of wine and hors d’oeuvres. Donations of $15-$20. For info, call 669-3866.
SATURDAy, JuNE 12
Seabury ‘s Annual Reunion - 5:30 p.m. on the Seabury Hall Campus. Musical entertainment by Stephanie Anderson of Wildrose. Free baby sitting service will be provide, along with a silent action. Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 at door. For info, call 5736863. Barefoot Boogie At The Studio Maui - 7:30 p.m. in Haiku Marketplace, behind True Value. Dance to your delight with DJ Satdeva at Maui's most beautiful new Movement, Healing Arts and Cultural Center. Admission $5 at the door. 1st class is free.For info call 575-9390. World Ocean Day - 5:30 p.m. at Maui Ocean Center. Celebrate the ocean with information booths by conservancy organizations, raffle drawing, keiki art contest, airbrush tattooing, special naturalist presentations and a free Sea Talk by Dr. Peter Nichol. For info call 270-7075.
DINNER MUSIC WEST MAUI BJ’s Chicago Pizzeria – John Kane, Wed, Thu and Fri; Harry Troupe, Sat; Kaleo Phillips, Sun; Benny Uyetake, Mon; Maurice Bega, Tue. All sets from 7:3010:30 p.m. 730 Front St., Lahaina, 661-0700.
Kawika Lum and Da Ukulele Boyz, Sat; Kawika Lum and Ryan Tanaka & Friends, Sun. 2435 Kaanapali Parkway, Building P, Kaanapali, 667-6636. Java Jazz/Soup Nutz – Live music with Tracey and Farzad, Wed and Fri, 6:30-9 p.m. 3350 Lower Honoapiilani Rd., 667-0787. Kahana Terrace Restaurant – Harry Troupe, Tue and Thu; Randy Reno, Sat. All sets from 6-9 p.m. Sands of Kahana Resort, 669-5399. Kimo’s – Sam Ahia, Wed thru Sun, 7-8:30 p.m. 845 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4811. Leilani’s On The Beach – Crazy Fingers, Thu, 4-6 p.m.; JD & Mario, Fri - Sat, 2:30 -5:30 p.m.; Kilohana, Sun, 2:30-5:30 p.m; 2435 Kaanapali Parkway, Building J, Kaanapali, 661-4495. Moose McGillycuddy’s - Greg & Steve, Thu; Llayne & Greg, Fri; Mark & Mike, Sat-Sun; Anastasia, Wed. All sets 6-9 p.m. 844 Front St., Lahaina, 667-7758. Pancho and Lefty’s Cantina & Restaurant Pianist Rene Alonzo & Friends play light rock, country and blues during happy hour on Thursday from 3-6 p.m. and this Saturday from 8-11 p.m. 658 Front St., Lahaina, in the Wharf Cinema Center, 661-4666.
Cafe O’Lei - Steve Argenti, Tue-Fri 5:30-9 p.m. 839 Front St., Lahaina, 661-9491.
Pioneer Inn – Ah-Tim Eleniki (Local-style guitar), Thu; 6-9pm Mon, Wed; Captain Billy Bones 6-8 pm; Tue; Ricardo Dioso 6-9 pm.,658 Wharf St., Lahaina, 661-3636.
Cheeseburger in Paradise – Brooks Maguire, Thu, Sat, Sun and Wed; Harry Troupe, Fri; Gail Swanson, Mon and Tue. All sets from 4:30-7:30 p.m. and 8-11 p.m. 811 Front St., Lahaina, 661-4855.
Reilley’s Steaks & Seafood - Live music (grand piano) 6-9 p.m., Gene Argelle, Mon and Tue; Joel Gold, Wed; Thu, Darrin Lenett, Fri. 2290 Kaanapali Parkway, Kaanapali, 667-7477.
Cool Cat Cafe - Evan Schulman, Thu; Mike “Pelon,” Fri; Zach Schmidt, Sat; Damien Awai, Mon; How Phat, Wed. All sets 6:30 p.m. Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina, 667-0908.
Sea House Restaurant – Sun; Kapule Paoa 7 p.m., Mon, Fri, Sat; Kincade Basques 7-9 p.m. Tue; Polynesian dinner show 5:30 p.m., Wed,-Thu; 7-9 p.m. Hawaiian music with Albert Kaina and Kincades. Napili Kai Beach Resort, 5900 Honoapiilani Road, Napili, 669-1500.
Fish & Game Brewing Co. & Rotisserie - Brian Haia, Mon; Kawika Lum Ho Tu; Damien Awai, open mic night 10:30-1:30pm Wed; Nino Toscan Thu-Fri; Kawika Lum Ho Sat; Damien Awai Sun All sets from 6:30-9:30 p.m. 4405 Honoapiilani Highway, 669-3474. Hula Grill - Kawika Lum and Albert & Billy, Mon; Jarret Roback and Albert & Billy, Tue; Ernest Pua’a and don, Brian & Damien, Wed; Ernest Pua’a and Bradah Brian & Don Th; Ernest Pua’a and & Kawika Lynn; Fr;
Sir Wilfred’s at Whalers Village - Maui West Side Jazz, featuring some Maui’s greatest musicians, 2:30-5 p.m. 2435 Kaanapali Parkway, Lahaina, 6610202. Whale’s Tale Bar & Grill - Eric Pietsch, Thu, Mon, ; Joe Bennett, Fri; Mario & Will, Sat; Anastasia & Niles, Sun. All sets from 6 to 9 p.m. 672 Front St., Lahaina,
thursday6/10
friday6/11
saturday6/12
sunday6/13
Neto Peraza, Latin, No cover, 10pm
Kilohana No cover, 10pm
Closed
DJ Daniel J Birthday Bash $10, 9:45pm
Little Big Man $10, 9:45pm
Wed - Ladies’ Night, $5, 9:45pm
CHARLEY’S RESTAURANT
Lawai’a featuring Kanoa, No cover, 10:30 pm
Mon - Lawai’a featuring Kanoa, No cover, 10:30pm-12:30am
COMPADRES BAR & GRILL
Salsa 10pm, $5
BLUE LAGOON
Wharf Cinema Center, Lahaina - 661-8141
monday6/14 – wednesday6/16
No information available DJ Boomshot No cover, 10pm
BOCALINO
1279 S. Kihei Road, Kihei - 874-9299
CASANOVA
1188 Makawao Ave., Makawao - 572-0220
142 Hana Hwy, Paia - 579-9453
Lahaina Cannery Mall - 661-7189
ERIK’S SEAFOOD & SUSHI
Mon - Mark Esptein & Friends, Tue Jay Molina, & Gilbert Emata W/ Vanessa; Wed - Soul Concepts W/ Curtis Williams; All shows 10pm, No cover
Open Mic Night, with Jim (Deviltown), 10pm
843 Wainee St., Lahaina - 662-8780
NO W
T This Friday, June 11th from 4:00-7:30pm
Early Evening Jazz featuring David Choy & Friends
RESTAURANT
Saturday Night, June 12th from 9:00pm til closing
Also Beginning at 9:00
Zacc Kekona
2102 VINEYARD ST. OLD WAILUKU TOWNE
a n n a W e? Danc
IN
THE
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244-5117
OP ! EN
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Wed - ‘80s night w/ DJ Oral, $5, 9pm
Dezman
O LDE M AKAWAO T OWN
Wild Wahine Wednesday with dj blast
C ASANOVA ’ S F AMOUS L ADIES N IGHT ! T E T E C T A HE
VENING
HAT
ARNED
ASANOVA
HE
“B EST L ATE N IGHT I N M AUI ”
WARD
MUSIC STARTS @ 9:45PM • $5 COVER
TH E 12 N JU Y A D R SATU CKERS
TH
E 11 FRIDAY JUN
E RO LITTLE REGGA
ING GEMINI RIHSD ASH B Y A T R I B DANIEL J’s ANIEL J & JUSTIN R - $10.00 COVE DJ’S MMUSI3C ST-AD RTS @ 9:45PM
N A M G I B LITTLE @ 9:45PM MUSIC STARTS
R - $10.00 COVE
Make it a Memorable Evening • Dine and Dance at Casanova For dinner reservations call 572–0220 • Log on at casanovamaui.com LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
25
thursday6/10 GIOVANI’S
2291 Kaanapali Prkwy, Lahaina 661-3160
HAPA’S NIGHTCLUB
41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei - 879-9001
Pepper, rock/reggae/ska, $15adv, 6 & 9pm
friday6/11
saturday6/12
No information available
No information available
Kekai Boyz 9 pm
Flava Zone 9pm
sunday6/13
Teen Night 9pm
monday6/14 – wednesday6/16
MON - Willie K; Tue - Ultra Fab Tuesday, w/Fat Joe, 10pm; WED - Aloha Wed w/DJ Jammin J
Don Carlos, Reggae, $25, 9pm
HARD ROCK CAFÉ
900 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7400
HENRY’S BAR & GRILL
Evolution No cover, 9pm
Larry Council No cover, 9pm
41 E. Lipoa St., Kihei - 879-2849
JAWZ TACOS
MON - Marty Dread, Reggae, $5, 10pm Lonnie & The Gig Dogs No cover, 9pm
DJ Aloe Vera, Classic House No Cover, 9 pm
1279 S. Kihei Rd. Azeka II - 874-8226
KAHALE’S BEACH CLUB
Kenny Roberts No cover, 9pm
36 Keala Place, Kihei - 875-7711
El Nino, No cover, 7pm
Gina Martinelli, No cover, 6pm
Mon-Wed - Da-Haw-Y-ans, No cover, 6pm
DA KINECALENDAR 667-4044.
SOUTH MAUI Capische? – Mark Johnston; Thu-Sat; Brian Cuomo Su, Tu, Wed; Sal & Estaire Godinez, Mon.; all sets 710 p.m. Diamond Resort, 555 Kaukahi, 879-2224. Maalaea Grill – Benoit Jazz Works, Thu, Fri and Sun, 6:30-9 p.m.; Jimmy C Jazz, Sat, 7-9 p.m. Maalaea Village Shops, 243-2206. Marco’s Southside Grill – Various artists (piano), Mon -Sun. All sets from 7-10 p.m. 1445 S. Kihei Rd., 874-4041. Mulligan’s on the Blue – Fri ,Tue, Wailea Nights, Barry Flanagan & Eric Gilliom, dinner and show. 810p.m.; Celtic Tigers, Sun, 7-10 p.m., 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea, 874-1131. Seawatch Restaurant - Pianist Angela Carr, Fri, 6-
26
JUNE 10, 2004
DA KINE CALENDAR
9 p.m.; guitarist Luis Diaz, Sat, 6-9 p.m. 100 Wailea Golf Club Dr., 875-8080.
Livewire Cafe - Mark Johnston, Tue 7-10 p.m. 137 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-6009.
Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Café – Latin guitar w/ Luis Diaz, Wed-Fri; guitar and vocals w/ Brado, Sat; Brian Wittman Sun-Mon; Patrick Mayor, Tue All sets from 6-10 p.m. The Shops at Wailea, 875-9983.
Moana Cafe - Gypsy guitar w/ Bo Shores, Sun, 6-9 p.m.; vintage Hawaiian music, Wed, 6-9 p.m. 71 Baldwin Ave., Paia, 579-9999.
CENTRAL MAUI Mañana Garage – Neto & Friends, Thu and Fri, 6:30 p.m.; Fortunato’s Magic, Fri, 7 p.m.; Neto & Hot Salsa, Sat; Neto Peraza, Tue; Bobby & Tula, Wed, 6:30 p.m. 33 Lono Ave., Kahului, 873-0220. Ono Resturant – David Choy every Friday 4-7 p.m. 2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku 244-5117.
UPCOUNTRY MAUI Jacque’s - Mon, Mark Johnston w/ Dustin, ambient jazz; 120 Hana Highway, Paia, 579-8844.
RESORT SHOWS WEST MAUI Embassy Vacation Resort – Kaanapali Beach 104 Kaanapali Shores, Lahaina, 661-2000 Ohana Bar & Grill: Live music, Thu & Wed; Patrick Major, Fri; Wayne & Friends, Sat; Scott Baird & Gretchen, Sun; Ernest Pua’a w/ Hawaiian music, Mon & Tue. All sets from 5:30-9:30 p.m. Torch lighting ceremony nightly. Hyatt Regency Maui
200 Nohea Kai Drive, Kaanapali, 661-1234 “Tony ‘n Tina’s Wedding” Tue, Thu, Sat, 6:30 p.m. at Spats Trattoria. Torchlighting ceremony at 6:15 nightly followed by live Hawaiian entertainment 6:309:30 nightly in the Weeping Banyan: Sam Fukuhara, Thu, Sun-Tue; Larry Gollis, Fri and Sat; Stephanie Anderson, Wed; "Drums of the Pacific" luau by Tihati, 5:30-8 nightly. Ka’anapali Beach Hotel 2525 Kaanapali Parkway, 661-0011 Kupanaha: Maui Magic for All Ages Illusions and dinner show Tue-Sat, 4:30 p.m., Kanahele Room; Lanui, live music and dancing, 6-9 nightly. Free hula show, 6:30-7:30 nightly; Sunday Champagne Brunch with Hawaiian music by Polinahe, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Kapalua Bay Hotel 1 Bay Drive, Kapalua, 669-5656 The Bay Club: Jazz trio, Fri and Sat, 6-9 p.m.; solo
DA KINECALENDAR pianist, Sun-Thu, 6-9 p.m.; Gardenia Court: contemporary Hawaiian music, Sun, 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Lehua Lounge: Free hula show nightly 5:30-7 and contemporary Hawaiian music 7-8:30.
E E V I V E L I V L LI SIIC C C S U I U S MU M M
Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa 3850 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 875-1234 Botero Bar entertainment, 5:30-9:30 nightly: Larry Golis, Thu; Brian Mansano, Fri; Ricardo, Sat; Luis Diaz, Sun thru Tue; Mitch Kepa, Wed; Strolling Hawaiian duo in the Humuhumunukunukuapua’a nightly.
Maui Marriott 100 Nohea Kai Drive, Kaanapali, 667-1200 Nalu’s: Kilohana, Wed, 8-10:30 p.m.
The Fairmont Kea Lani Maui 4100 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 875-4100
Napili Kai Beach Resort 5900 Honoapiilani Highway, Napili, 669-1500
Jazz entertainment from 6-9 nightly in the Lobby Bar.
Hawaiian Music: Kincaid & Albert, Thu; Kincaid Basques Fri-Sat, Mon-Tue; Kapule Paoa, Sun; Albert Kaina, Wed; All Hawaiian music shows from 7-9 p.m.
Wailea Marriott 3700 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 879-1922 Hawaiian entertainment w/hula 6-9 nightly in Kumu Bar & Grill. Hawaiian entertainment 9-11 nightly in the Mele Mele Lounge featuring Pam Gamboa Peterson Mon and Sat, Mitch Kepa & Raymond "Mundo" Medeiros. Paradyse & Ka Poe O Hawaii perform at the Luau, Mon, Tue, Thu and Fri.
Ritz-Carlton Kapalua One Ritz-Carlton Drive, Kapalua, 669-6200 Lobby Lounge: Live music, 6-10 nightly. Banyan Tree Restaurant: World fusion duo Ranga Pae, Fri-Tue, 6:15-9:45 p.m.
Renaissance Wailea Beach Resort 3550 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 879-4900
Kapalua Kapalua Indoor Amphitheater Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Concerts. Every Tues 6:30 p.m.- 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $35 visitor and $25 kama`aina.
Sunset Terrace; Live music by Lono, Thu; Brado Mamalias, Fri; Rama Camarillo, Sat-Sun; Bobby Krueger, Mon-Wed; all sets 6-9 p.m. Wailea Sunset Luau, Tue, Thu and Sat, 6-8:30 p.m.
Royal Lahaina Resort 2780 Kekaa Drive, Kaanapali, 661-3611
Maui Prince Hotel 5400 Makena Alanui, 874-1111
"Eddie and Eddie" w/Eddie Lilikoi and Eddie Sebala, 5-9:30 nightly in the Royal Ocean Terrace. Royal Lahaina Luau featuring authentic Hawaiian and Polynesian song and dance at 5 nightly. Sheraton Maui Hotel 2605 Kaanapali Parkway, 661-0031
/10
6
ATE N $3 cover SPINS L
6
SKIRT
Lagoon Bar Entertainment w/hula dancers, 6-8 nightly: Bobby & Ralph, Thu, Mon and Tue; Ralph & Allan, Fri; Fausto & Kawaika, Sat and Sun; Nathan & Ralph, Wed; torchlighting and cliff diving ceremony at sunset, 7-8 nightly.
an M g i B Little
/12
6
Ono Surf Bar & Grill: Live Music Nightly Sat-Mon Mitch Kep, Hawaiian Guitar & Vocal. Tue- Fri Benny Uyetake, guitar vocalist. Tropica: Tue- Sat, Live Music, Duos, 6 pm- 9pm. Table magic nightly.
SOUTH MAUI Four Seasons Resort Wailea 3900 Wailea Alanui, Wailea, 874-8000
Get Y
13 6/
2pm
9pm
HAPPY HOUR DAILY
r $5 cove
Sunday
3pm - 6pm .
enu.. ast M Breakf
New out ourer ving 8am-2pm S
9pm
6
/14
xtet e S e r o h NorthMaSrtini Madwness
505 FRONT STREET LAHAINA / 667-4051
The unique and World Renowned Author and Speaker is coming to Maui! Live at the
Maui Theater June 12th
ho FREE S
/15
6
BOOK NOW
Tuesd’ Raolly& R&B...
ock n Blues, R
tasia s a n A Nils &of Voodoo Suns 9pm
6/
DON’T MISS DAVID ICKE IN HIS ONLY APPEARANCE IN HAWAII IN 2004
oJunst dGoat Beytter... M azz
Live J
SPORTS BAR
DAVID ICKE
16
r $3 cove
ay d s e n d e W ent
urnam Pool To 8pm
ight! er All N e B t f a $2 Dr
NEW MENU!
FOR THE DAY THAT WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE...FOREVER
MON-FRI 11AM-2AM SAT-SUN 8AM-2AM
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
DON CARLOS Presented by: Paradice Bluz and Liquid Visionz Ent. For advance tickets call 667-5299 • 21 & up
MON, JUNE 14TH
REGGAE AT THE ROCK WITH
MARTY DREAD $5 COVER
FILM
TH
FRI, JUNE 18
HAPPY HOUR! 3-6pm & 10pm-12am EXCEPT SPECIAL EVENTS h a r d r o c k . c o m
Maui Theater • 878 Front Street, Lahaina, HI 96761 • 808-661-9913
SURF
This Friday!
WITH DANIEL J & DJ SPUN 70’s Costume Contest
GO TO THE WEB: www.davidicke.com EMAIL US: maximusriver@earthlink.net
COVER STORY
FRI, JUNE 11TH
AIRPORT 76
BORDERS BOOKS 877-6160 • ACTIVITY MART 667-6278 • MAUI THEATER 661-9913 ADVANCE TICKETS: Premium Seats $55 • Standard Seats $45 3% surcharge. Additional $10 per ticket on the day of the event, Saturday June 12th, 2004 DOORS OPEN: 8:30am EVENT STARTS: 9:30am to 7:30pm
NEWS
HRC MAUI 900 Front St., Lahaina Info: 808.667.7400
NOW SERVING BREAKFAST SAT & SUN
‘Infinite Love is the only truth–everything else is illusion’
LETTERS
2411 S. Kihei Rd. 879-0602
HOT OOMS B J D e r $3 cove Regga
Check
Where the Locals “Hang Loose”
Lobby Lounge, Hawaiian music w/Steve Repollo and Alan Villeran, Thu, 5:30-7:30 p.m. followed by jazz w/Sal Godinez and Marcus Johnson, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; contemporary music w/Clay Mortensen and George Tavoularis, Fri, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; island style trio, Sat and Mon, 5:30-7:30 p.m. w/hula dancer 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Pam Peterson and Rudy Baria, Sun, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; Tiffany Lee and Josh Mon and Sat, 8:30-11:30 p.m.; Clay Mortensen and Gilbert Emata, Wed, 8:30-11:30 p.m. Sunset torchlighting nightly.
y SaourtGurorovde a .. On .
Tre
$5 COVER POOL WEAR A TABLES SKIRT & GET LOUNGE IN FREE TV’S $2 DRINKS ALL NITE!
THE HALE & BAND A V 3 A 1 / L Sun 6 HOT NO COVER 9:30 E ECLIPS 5 ER NO COV Tues 6/1 9:30 STICS PTYMY O 6 1 ER / V 6 O NO C Wed
r $5 cove
osse P B s u Sir vor Jones
After 9pm
9:30
9:30
’s Re Seattle
THURS
Colonnade Asian Noodle Cafe Benny Uyetake, Thu-Fri, Tue-Wed; Mitch Kepa, Sun-Mon both 6-9 p.m.; Mitch Kepa, 5:30-8:30 p.m.
FridgagaeyRockers...
/11
9pm
night
The Westin Maui Hotel 2365 Kaanapali Parkway, 667-2525
Thursday L$2FDraft Beer DJIGA HT /
H PUPS CRUNC 0 1 / 6 VER O rs C u NO Th 9:30 TORM ACIFIC S P E H T 1 R E NO COV Fri 6/1 9:30 OBERTS ENNY R K IENRDS & FR Sat 6/12 E NO COV
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
27
thursday6/10
friday6/11
saturday6/12 De Lahoya Vs. Strum $30, 3pm
KAHULUI ALE HOUSE
355 E. Kamehameha, Kahului - 877-9001
KIMO’S
monday6/14 – wednesday6/16
Karaoke, No cover, 9:30pm
Wed - Karaoke, No cover, 9:30pm
The Carol Brothers No cover, 10pm-12am
TBA
845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811
sunday6/13
Karaoke w/Auntie Toddy Lilikoi, Karaoke w/Auntie Toddy Lilikoi, No cover, 9:30pm No cover, 9:30pm
KOBE JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE 136 Dickenson St., Lahaina - 667-5555
LIFE’S A BEACH
Cool Rush No cover, 9pm
Reggae For Real No cover, 9pm
Joel Roper Band No cover, 9pm
Steve Mendoza No cover, 8pm
Mon - Channel Live’s Open Jam, No cover, 9pm; Tue - The John More Project Wed - Steve Mendoza, No cover, 9pm
LOBBY LOUNGE
Jazz w/Sal Godinez & Marcus Johnson, 8:30-11:30pm
Clay Mortensen & George Tavoularis, 8:30-11:30pm
Tiffany Lee & Josh, 8:30-11:30pm
Pam Peterson & Rudy Baria, 8:30-11:30pm
Mon - Tiffany Lee & Josh, 8:30-11:30pm; Wed - Clay Mortensen & Gilbert Emata, 8:30-11:30pm
Crazy Fingers, $5, 9:30pm N/A
N/A Crazy Fingers, $5, 9:30pm
1913 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 891–8010
Four Seasons Resort, Wailea - 874-8000
LONGHI’S 888 Front St., Lahaina - 667-2288 LONGHI’S Shops at Wailea - 891-8883
THURS 6/10
FRI 6/11
SAT 6/12
D 6/16E E W E 6/15 KARAOKAYS SUN 6/13 MON 6/14 TU Tini WEDNESuD’s Star!
MERV MARGARITAVILLE THE MONSTER Tuesdays Be a LuL S.I.N. WILLY’S PROJECT NIGHT MONDAYS cks OANA THEMARGARITAS $3 Be $ $3 $5(ANY FLAVA) $ SPECIALS! $ r SK flavo i 3 TOO MANY Any ff Martin IHE o mirn TO MENTION $3 CORONAS I RD NSTER S O PACIFICOS M • 879ANY HOUR HAPPY HOUR! DRINKS COVER BAND
COORS LT DRAFT
9944
Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar Late Night Specials 10pm to 1am – 21 & over with I.D.
50% OFF SUSHI & APPETIZERS FREE KARAOKE - DRAFT BEER SPECIALS
KIHEI, THURSDAY - SATURDAY
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL 5:30pm to 6:00pm DAILY
Kapalua 669-6286 • Kihei 879-0004 The Shops at Kapalua
28
JUNE 10, 2004
DA KINE CALENDAR
Near Foodland
STEINLAGER DRAFT
$3 LULUTINI • $2 COORS DRAFT
3 3
8-11pm
★
thursday6/10
friday6/11
saturday6/12
sunday6/13
Merv Oana, No cover, 9pm
The Whillys, No cover, 9 pm
The Project, No cover, 9pm
Service Industry Night, No cover, 9pm
Mon - Monster Mondays, No cover; Tue - Tini Tuesdays, No cover; Wed - Karaoke night w/Tyrone, No cover, 8-11pm
MOOSE MCGILLYCUDDY’S
DJ Mackie Mac, No cover, 8:30pm
DJ Mackie Mac No cover, 8:30pm
DJ Big Daddy Steve No cover, 8:30pm
DJ Tark, No cover, 8:30pm
Mon - DJ Mackie Mac, No cover, 8:30pm; Tue - DJ Mackie Mac/Dollar Night, $5, 8:30pm; Wed - DJ Mackie Mac, No cover, 8:30pm
MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE
Kenny Roberts No cover, 9pm
Wailea Nights, Barry Flanagan & Eric Gilliom, 8pm
Murray Thorne No cover, 9pm
Merv Ohana, No cover, 10pm
Mon - Gypsy Pacific, No cover, 7pm; Tue - “Wailea Nights”w/Barry Flanagan & Eric Gilliom, 8-10pm; Wed - Mark Epstein Trio, No cover 7pm
LULU’S
1945-H S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-9944
844 Front St., Lahaina - 667-7758
100 Kaukahi St., Wailea - 874-1131
NEPTUNES
monday6/14 – wednesday6/16
No information available
1913 S. Kihei Rd. Kihei 874-2555
Zacc Kekona No cover, 9pm
Dezman No cover, 9pm
Live Jazz, No cover, 9pm-Midnight
Live Jazz, No cover, 9pm-Midnight
ONO RESTAURANT
2102 Vineyard St., Wailuku - 244-5117
PACIFIC’O
505 Front St., Lahaina - 667-4341
No information available
DA KINECALENDAR Molokini Lounge: Ron Kuala’au, Hawaiian and contemporary guitar and vocals, Sun, 6-10:30 p.m. and Tue, Thu and Sat, 6-8:30 p.m. Mele ‘Ohana duo, Mon, Wed. and Fri, 6-8 p.m., Mon-Sat, 8:30-10:30 p.m. and Mon, Wed and Fri, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
EAST MAUI
The Maui League of Republican Luncheon Tue, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at Dunes Restaurant. In recognition of the end of the 2004 Legislative Session, we will be having a guest speaker panel consisting of the three Maui Republican Representatives Rep. Brian Blundell, Rep. Kika Bukoski, and Rep. Chris Halford. For info, call 573-1646.
SPORTS
Hotel Hana-Maui Hana, 248-8211 Hawaiian music in Paniolo Lounge, Thu thru Sun, 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Hula show, every Thu and Sun, 7:30-8:15 p.m. in the Main Dining Room.
ART Archie Brennan & Susan Martin Maffie - Fri, 5:30 p.m. in the Schaeffer International Gallery of the Maui Arts & Cultural Center. Originally from Maui, these two New York based artists combine that pictorial woven tapestries and works on paper for an exhibit that seeks to establish both technique and concept. For info, call 242-SHOW.
KEIki
Camp Imua 2004 - Sun, at Camp Maluhia, Kahakuloa. This week long overnight camp is for Maui County’s school-age children with challenges and special needs. Camp and activities, volunteers, food contributions, and entertainment providers are needed. For info, call 244-7467 ext #152. Soccer Camp - Thu, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. at Seabury Hall, Makawao. Mark Kane and staff return this summer to provide Maui’s youth quality training in soccer fundamentals. Open to boys and girls ages 6-15 in Regular, Advanced or Goalkeeper camp. For info, call 572-7235.
LECTURES
“Things About Vegetarian Nutrition That Might Surprise you” - Sat, 7 p.m. at Seventh-Day Adventist Church, Kahului. This free lecture is by author and expert Michael Klaper, M.D. will reveal the surprising results of his latest research on Vegetarian Nutrition. And the most updated information on optimizing health and prevention and reversal of life-threating diseases. For info, call 944-8344.
POLITICAL
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
2004 Maui Windsurfing Race Series - Sat, 11 a.m. at Kanaha Beach Park. The beginning portion of the 2004 Maui Windsurfing Race Series. For info, call 877-2111. King’s Trail Triathlon - Sun, 6:45 a.m. at Maui Prince Hotel, Makena. Swim, bike and run a unique course that retraces a path ancient Hawaiians used to circumnavigate the island. For info, call 891-2022.
STAGE
Let Us Entertain You - Sun, 2 p.m. at Maui Arts & Cultural Center. Entertainers from Skipper’s School of Dance and a step in time set out to win your hearts as they bring the joy of dance to the stage. Come and support Maui’s next generation of performers! Tickets: $10 adults, $7 seniors & kids under 12. For info, call 242-7469.
We encourage you to send news of your upcoming events, dances, puppet shows or mannequin wrestling matches. Feel free to fax or email your events two weeks in advance if you would like to see them in this fine publication. calendar@mauitime.com or fax (808) 661-0446.
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
29
thursday6/10
friday6/11
DJ Alf $3, 9pm
Little Big Man, Reggae $5, 9pm
Sirus B Posse $5, 9pm
Karaoke, 10pm-1am Karaoke, 10pm-1am
Karaoke, 10pm-1am Karaoke, 10pm-1am
Karaoke, 10pm-1am Karaoke, 10pm-1am
SANDBAR & GRILL
89 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8742
SANSEI 115 Bay Dr., Kapalua - 669-6286 SANSEI Kihei Town Center - 879-0004
saturday6/12
sunday6/13
monday6/14 – wednesday6/16
DJ Boomshot $3, 9pm
Mon - North Shore Sextet, No cover, 9pm; Tue - Nils & Anastasia, $3, 9pm; Wed - Pool Tournament, No cover, 8pm
Hale & The Hot Lava Band No cover, 9:30pm
Mon-Wed - Open Jukebox Night, No cover
DJ Blast $8, 9:30pm
SPATS TRATTORIA
Hyatt Regency, Kaanapali - 667-4727
Crunch Pups No cover, 9:30pm
SPORTS PAGE GRILL & BAR 2411 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei - 879-0602
STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR 1127 Makawao Ave. - 572-1380
The Pacific Storm No cover, 9:30pm
Kenny Roberts & Friends No cover, 9:30pm
Skillet w/ Dina Burton $3, 9pm
Evolution w/Jerry Caires $3, 9pm
DJ Dancing, $10, 9:30pm-2am
DJ Dancing, $10, 9:30pm-2am
TSUNAMI NIGHTCLUB
3850 Wailea Alanui Dr. - 875-1234
Custom Tattoos
Pain Free 12-9pm Mon-Sat Sun by appointment
193 Lahainaluna, Lahaina • 667-2156
40
$
BAND ADS • EASY • AFFORDABLE • EFFECTIVE
FOR INFO CALL 661-3786
THE BEST GOLF VALUE ON MAUI
T-DAYS ARE BACK Tuesday & Thursday Twilight Rate All Day Long
VISITOR
$50 • RESIDENT $25
VALID HAWAII DRIVERS LICENSE REQUIRED
Specializing in wedding video production & photography
20% Off Clubhouse Meals With Your Day Of Golf 1 Mo. Unlimited Golf Pass $300 (reg. $500)
242-GOLF(4653)
2500 Honoapi`ilani Highway (Hwy. 30) • Waikapu, Maui
TOLL FREE 877_572_1347
www.mauiweddingmedias.com
with special guests
A’O’le Pilikia and much more!
Frid1a1tyh June
4 1 E . L I P O A S T R E E T, L I P O A C E N T E R , K I H E I • 8 7 9 - 9 0 0 1
30
JUNE 10, 2004
DA KINE CALENDAR
AZD & G-MONEY ALIZE TRANCE DAVIN TEVEZ RIGHTEOUS ROGER 2-COOL CRAZY CRAY MAGIC MIKE DJ HEAT
TwâÄà fxÜä|vxá SCULPT-U BODYWORKS A deeply relaxing hour of exquisite bodywork 250-4817 EXOTIC & SENSUOUS In/Out Call 344-1771
Hot Fantasy Girls 264-0391
MEET HOT SINGLES Connect locally. 18+ 808-521-6696. Ad#4288 GET LUCKY TONIGHT! Meet Island Singles! 18+ 808-521-6696. Ad# 4003
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Join me in my Garden Spa... for an intimate experience
808.269.0814
Most Preferred on Maui
874-3831
in/out call
268-8555
Maui Time Weekly accepts credit cards for classified and display ads
WOMEN Seeking Men MAUI CHICK This nice, caring, outgoing 20-year-old chick smoker, with one son, wants a Maui boy, 19-21, who's looking for a long-term relationship. Friendship first. 826791 LOCAL KINE GRINDZ 26-year-old professional SF, likes movies, beach activities, and working with children. Looking fun, sociable, smart, funny man, 28-38, N/S, for friendship, fun times, and hopefully more. 848870
ATHLETIC BEAUTY Attractive, athletic, open-minded SWF, loves swimming, kayak surfing, salsa dancing. Seeking financially secure, sweet, romantic, open-minded, conscious, athletic man, 3545, w/good sense of humor, who loves surfing and travel. 821455
BEAUTIFUL CREATIVE SOUL Looking for successful, secure, upbeat, N/S SWM, 40-55, to enjoy the island beauty, share long walks, inspiring talks, memorable meals and sensational sunsets. 616262
MEN Seeking Women
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MAUI’S ADULT SUPERSTORE Voted #1 by our Cutting Edge Adult Toys & Novelties Customers
OPEN DAILY
New Releases on Videos & DVDs
10am–Midnight 10am–7pm Sundays
MAYBE US? SWM, 39, 6'1", brown hair, N/S, with good sense of humor, enjoys golfing, jogging. Seeking smart, positive woman, 28-45, for possible LTR. 476538
YOU'VE GOT A FRIEND Single Filipino male, 23, 5'8", 150lbs, black/brown, good-natured and easy to talk to. Seeking friendship with a nice single lady for now, possible relationship later. 228964
TAKE A CHANCE SWM, 48, likes yoga, old world singing, kayaking, traveling, hiking. Seeking mature, open-minded, fun SF, 40-55, similar interests, friendship first, possible LTR. 603730
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To pay for our services using a check, call 1-800-252-0920 CHILDREN OF THE LAND Children of the sea. SM, 29, 6'3", 230lbs, masculine, likes surfing, hunting, fishing, diving, kick-boxing, kids, having fun, partying. Seeking fun, attractive, sociable SW/AF, 25-30. 205363
JACK OF ALL TRADES SWM, 37, 5'7", 165lbs, blond/blue, seeks a woman with an adventurous spirit and an open mind. 204234
ARE YOU LOOKING? Can you see me? Can you see what's inside my heart? Look a little deeper. SBM, 45, Leo, N/S, seeks woman, 32-50. 952237
LAID-BACK SWM, 28, in service industry, Pisces, smoker, is looking to share beach walks, romantic dinners, and perhaps a bottle of wine with a woman, 21-31. 949876
ALL FOR YOU Male, 34, short black/dark brown, medium build, works for a delivery warehouse company. Seeking a woman, 5'2"-5'8", medium build. 949288
MAUI ISLAND INVENTOR SWM, 36, likes outdoor activities. Seeking SWF, 18-37, for adventurous, fun times together. Let's rock! 926297
QUALITY TIMES AHEAD SAM, 48, good-looking, tall, educated, stable, government employee, pleasant personality. Looking for a pretty, slim, feminine SF, 30-45, has a good heart, for movies, dinner dates, more. 910486
IN SHORT This Maui man, 5'9", 175lbs, brown/blue, seeks an outgoing, spontaneous woman, with whom to pair up. 877287
ARE YOU OUT THERE? SM, 40, 5'9", 200lbs, long dark hair, hazel eyes, seeks fun-loving, non-judgmental lady, mid-20s to mid-30s, for sharing good times and happiness. 858448
COMPLETE ME SWM, 46, 5'11", average build, Libra, N/S, business owner, single dad, enjoys surfing, seeks woman, 30-45, N/S, for LTR. 822467
LOOKS GOOD, FEELS GOOD SM, 23, 5'8", short hair, easygoing, works in construction, in great shape. Seeking SF, 18-55, for fun times, friendship, possibly more. 967884
MEN Seeking Men MUSIC IN MY BLOOD Open to anything! Laid-back male, 24, smoker, interested in playing/writing music, loves cruising. Open to kicking it with GM, 18-25, with similar interests. 548742
I WANNA HOLD YOUR HAND SWM, 29, 5'10", 170lbs, brown/brown, likes to keep fit and healthy. Seeking a man to hold hands and conversations with. 652064
HOW DO YOU PLACE AN AD??
ALL I WANT SAM, 46, Sagittarius, smoker, seeks WF, 25-49, smoker, who loves to party, for friendship and casual dating. 862808
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visit us online at www.mauitimepersonals.com
Young, Sexy Playful Hottie requests your company. Call me 357-2266
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For customer service call 1-617-450-8773 or email MauiTime@placepersonal.com ABBREVIATIONS: A-Asian; B-Black; C-Christian; D-Divorced; F-Female; G-Gay; H-Hispanic; J-Jewish; M-Male; N/S-Non-Smoker; P-Professional; S-Single; W-White GUIDELINES: Personals are for adults 18 or over seeking monogamous relationships. To ensure your safety, carefully screen all responses and have first meetings occur in a public place. This publication reserves the right to edit, revise, or reject any advertisement at any time at its sole discretion and assumes no responsibility for the content of or replies to any ad. Not a service of all ads have corresponding voice messages. To review our complete guidelines, call (617) 425-2636
LETTERS
NEWS
COVER STORY
SURF
DINING
DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
31
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES MOTORCYCLE & MOPED REPAIR Great Service, Top Quality Work and Competitive Rates. Behind the Train Station in Lahaina. Spencer’s Cycles, 264-2545
PRIZM Auto Detailing WE MAKE S! LL HOUSECA
“ONLY PROFESSIONAL QUALITY PRODUCTS USED” PRICES STARTING AT...
$90
FOR A FULL DETAIL
CALL KELI’I at 276-3738
BUY & SELL
$BUY & SELL$ JEWELRY • DIAMONDS WATCHES • COINS COLORED STONES MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS SURF BOARDS
WEST MAUI GOLD 667-7689 1000 LIMAHANA PL. LAHAINA ISLAND COINS & STAMPS WE BUY & SELL •coins •tokens •medals •paper money •stamps •Hawaiiana •sport collectibles
667- 6155
EARN $3,500 WEEKLY!! Answering Surveys Online! $25.00$75.00 Per Survey! Guaranteed Paychecks! Mystery Shoppers Needed! $57.00/Hour Shopping! FREE Cash Grants! Receive $500,000+ Everyone Qualifies! www.RealCashPrograms.com (AAN CAN)
Interested in Political Careers? Learn from professionals. Gain organizing experience on high profile campaigns to beat Bush through the Democratic Campaign Management Program. www.campaignschool.org. 888-922-1008. (AAN CAN)
FLEXIBLE HOME AS SEEN ON TV $$ Data Entry Work. $427 P-T, $820+ FCash Now - Ten Years offering Best T Guaranteed weekly. No experience Cash For Whole/Part of Structured necessary. Train on PC and start immeSettlements, Annuities, and Lottery diately! 800-488-5793. (AAN CAN) Payments ppicash.com Call Now 800815-3503 (AAN CAN) BARISTAS $9./hr.+ BENEFITS Also need Servers, Line Cooks, Shift ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE! Managers. Apply in-person at Java Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own Jazz or call 667-0787 local candy route. Includes 30 Machines and Candy. All for $9,995. GOVERNMENT JOBS! 1-800-807-6525. (AAN CAN) Wildlife/Postal $16.51 to $58.00 per hour. Full Benefits. Paid Training. Call $$CASH$$ Cash now for structured settlements, for Application and Exam Information. annuities, and insurance payouts. 800- No Experience Necessary. Toll Free 1794-7310. J.G. Wentworth.... JG. 888-269-6090 ext. 325 WENTWORTH MEANS CASH NOW FOR STRUCTURED SETTLEMENTS. (AAN CAN)
MY SECRET GARDEN Is looking for attractive, feminine 3rd floor Wharf Cinema Ctr. applicants who are dependable, confident, friendly & have social etiquette for escort service and/or sensuous ELECTRONICS BARTENDER TRAINEES NEEDED! bodywork. No experience necessary No Experience necessary. Up to but must have an open mind. Work is NEED NEW COMPUTER fun with us and the pay is excellent. Bad Credit - No Problem! Buy a new $300 per shift! Call Now 1-888-327579-6400 computer Now and pay later. New 4842 Dept. B-500. (AAN CAN) Computers and Laptops from JET SKI PHOTOGRAPHER EARN $12-$48.00/HOUR $20/month. Call Now 1-800-311-1542. (AAN CAN) Career Positions available with Full Mid-level photography & sales skills Benefits, Medical, Dental, Paid needed. $6. per roll film sold, averagTraining on Clerical, Admin., Law ing 20-40 rolls per day, Great Money Potential. 281-0998 Enforcement, Homeland Security, Wildlife, and more. 1-800-320-9353 ext. 2001. (AAN CAN) SURFING INSTRUCTOR SALES LEADERS/ Part-Time+, minimum 10 years ENTREPRENEURS $200-$600 PER DAY! surfing experience. Own car necesAble to earn $240,000 in year 1. Have fun as a Movie Extra. All Looks, sary for equipment transport. Maui Awesome opportunity to earn 6 fig- Types & Ages. No experience resident with professional referures from home. Conference sales, required. TV, Music videos, Film, ences. CPR & First-Aid Certified, not MLM. Commercials. Work with the best. 1Call 662-4445 Call Mike 888-297-4182. (AAN CAN) 800-260-3949 Ext. 3001. (AAN CAN)
Bubba Gump Shrimp Company WANNA HAVE FUN? WANT MORE HOURS? See us today for your interview!!
NOW HIRING ALL POSITIONS Apply in person • Aplique ahora 889 Front St., Lahaina
Looking For A Little Experience?
Is Seeking Interns. Entry level positions. High school students okay. We will train. • Must Be Bright & Adaptable • School Credit Possible
Send resume to: Jen Russo 658 Front St. #126A-7278, Lahaina HI 96761 or call 661-3786 x3#
EMPLOYMENT
35
$ WAS
Iinnclu des : wa sh, vac uum ,, wh eels , tire s&
CAR
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wwinin ddoow wss
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CLASSIFIEDS
283-7725
32
Ad Deadline Monday 4pm To Advertise Call 661-3786 Fax Number 808.661-0446 Email classifieds@mauitime.com Website www.mauitime.com Mailing 658 Front Street #126A-7278 • Lahaina, HI Drop off 505 Front St. Ste. 216, Lahaina
JUNE 10, 2004
CLASSIFIED
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FOR SALE
Maui Recycling Service
ICE HOUSE LOFTS “Living in Tucson Just Got Cooler.” ALEXANDER’S FISH & CHIPS Award -winning modern design with Cashiers, line cooks, & prep needed 1920’s authenticity. Beautiful New at NEW Lahaina location. Apply in per- York Style Loft condominiums. son or call 667-9009. Full & part time Studios-3BR’s. Pre-Construction availability $252K-$443K. (520) 623-LOFT. positions available. www.icehouselofts.com Metro $ MODELS WANTED $ Partners Reality. (AAN CAN) For calendar magazine and artistic print work. Ages 18 to 35. 573-3712 COOL TRAVEL JOB. Entry level positions, 18+, no experience necessary, 2 weeks paid training, transportation, lodging provided. $500 signing bonus to start. TOLL FREE 1-877-646-5050. (AAN CAN)
SUMMER WORK
from
CALL 242-8484 www.workforstudents.com
MUSIC & ARTS
W
VIDEO R K S
Weddings Special Events Training Videos, DVDs DVD Menus and Authoring
Transfer Your Old Training Video Into Vibrant DVD Tools
Digital Video Editing Low Run DVD Duplication Lables Printed Directly Onto DVDs Covers, Inserts and Shrinkwraping Located on the West Side
from
Surf the Maui MLS Listings at www.barrybrownmaui.com Barry Lee Brown (R) P.O. Box 11782 • Lahaina
(808) 661-1800
ROOM FOR RENT Lower unit in gated 3 acre property in Haiku. Lots of storage, private entrance. $550/month + deposit. Call 575-2627 ALL AREAS - ROOMMATE.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: www.Roommate.com (AAN CAN)
VACATION RENTALS CLEAN, AFFORDABLE Accommodations in our vacation rental from $49 per day. Call Toll Free Wailuku Guesthouse 877-986-8270 or www.wailukuhouse.com
SERVICES
NOTICES
SERVICES
MAUI RECYCLING SERVICE Picks up all your glass, plastic, aluminum, tin, mixed paper, & cardboard. Home Pickup; a convenience for $16/mo! Bi-monthly pick up. Commercial accounts avail. Call Now! 244-0443 FANTASTIC CLEANING SERVICES We want to clean your office, house, condo units! Please call 205-7036. You’ll see & feel the difference!
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BLUE PAPAYA PRODUCTIONS MURALS Digital Recording Studio, Red Book Experienced Painter/Muralist. Masters(Radio Quality), CD Graphic Trained, Reasonable Prices. Contact Design, Duplication & Packaging, Cody @ 831-588-3350 Reasonable Rates. 250-2240 or 572-7166 HALE O’ HAWAII Traditional Hawaiian Hale’s. Certified Builder. John Thomas 281-0026 ORAL/HIV TESTING/ COUNSELING CLINIC @ Pukalani Community Center Wednesdays 9-11am; Paia Hawaiian Protestant Church Wednesdays 13:30pm; Wailuku Health Center Tuesdays 8-12pm & 1-4pm; Lahaina Comprehensive Health Center Thursdays 9am-12pm: Kihei Keolahou Congregational Church Mondays 11am-2pm. Community Clinic of MauiWailuku office Thursdays 1:30pm3:30pm. Results returned in 2 wks. Sponsored by State Dept. of Health, for more info call Takako 984-2129
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Jason Meyer
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244-0443 • www.mauirecycles.com
“we do all the work . . . so you can enjoy your yard”
$375,000
phone 808-283-4952
ALOHA VALUED READERS We would like to let our readers know that we try to screen most of our ads. We read back the ad copy to ensure that it is the correct information that advertisers want. If you see the acronym (AAN CAN) that ad is a national ad and was not submitted directly to us. If you have a question directly concerning AAN CAN, please check out aancan.org
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ANYONE CAN DO THIS! I am a work from home Mom earning $1500+ Part Time. Call me: 5733203, www.joyfulsuccess.com Customer Sales & Service
If not now, when?
Call 661-3786
HIV COUNSELING AND TESTING If you feel that you have been potentially exposed to HIV and would like Free, Confidential and Anonymous testing call the Maui AIDS Foundation at 242-4900. It is important to know your HIV status so that you do not unknowingly pass the virus to others, also early detection is vital to your health and treatment. The Maui AIDS Foundation now offers Drop-In HIV Counseling and Testing (No appointment necessary) Drop in hours are Mon.-Fri. 8:30am to 4:30pm, Wed. 8:30am to 7pm 1935 Main Street, Wailuku For more information on HIV/AIDS, STD’s including Viral Hepatitis and HIV Counseling and Testing call the Maui AIDS Foundation at 242-4900. In Hana call 248-7801, Lanai 5656722, and Molokai 553-9086. A public health message provided by The Maui AIDS Foundation.
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ARIES: The words of love fall gently off of your lips. You’re attracted to causes that benefit the whole planet. Practice grace. Your social connections are strong. Domestic duties performed now will lead to creative freedom in the future. TAURUS: You need sandcastles and talismans. Material symbols of dreams can work for you in the same way a seed well nurtured yields a bountiful harvest. Don’t carry so much that it makes you weary. Make room for better things. GEMINI: Strut your stuff with dignity. Selfrespect is good but pride comes before the fall. You’ve got our attention, now dazzle us with brilliance. You’ve got what it takes to make a big splash. Get ready for a triumphant celebration. CANCER: As you finish one project you should be planning for the next one. Shortly after sunrise is your power time of the day for this week. Pay off bills and get rid of paperwork. Learn to move with grace even while you’re carrying something heavy. LEO: You love a good party so why not host one? You’re a natural people-pleasing person with a sense of animal magnetism. If you’re going to someone else’s party, be sure not to start your own on the spot. You have a way of getting people’s attention. VIRGO: Don’t take your coveralls off just quite yet. You still have more work to do. Call on others for help when you need to. It’s easy to fall in a relationship with political activists. Keep doing what you can to take advantage of new opportunities. LIBRA: You’re caught up in new frontiers. Vacations and explorations into uncharted territory are encouraged. As long as you’re not at work, risk taking is encouraged. It’s easier to learn and understand other languages than usual. SCORPIO: Like cement in a mixer, a piece of pottery in a kiln or wheat in a thresher, everything is a work in progress. It’s hard to see the peace when you’re in the midst of a battle. Peace is closer than you think. Meditate on calming thoughts. SAGITTARIUS: Barriers can be broken by initiating a discussion. You’ve got the best chance of making peace. Your give and take philosophy is catching on. Relationships are your number one focus. Much is tied in with other people. CAPRICORN: Breaking out into a sweat has never been easier. Hard work is everywhere for you to participate in. You could be headed for even more work. Carefully pace yourself and monitor health issues. By serving others, you welcome deeper relationships. AQUARIUS: Act up. Express yourself. This is your most creative period. It’s a good time to air your grievances. Say it in a song or in poetry. People can handle songs easier than dry truth. It’s time to get into a childlike, playful state of mind. PISCES: Get your facts together. Learn stories from older members of your family. Trust your intuition. Use less caffeine and drink more water. Be open to a positive solution. Honor your personal needs while helping others with their needs. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Lloyd Jefferies 6/10/26, Bun E. Carlos 6/12/51, Leah Remini 6/15/70 kozmickev@sunset.net
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DAY&NIGHT
A&E
FILM
DA KINE CALENDAR
THE GRID
BY KOZMIC KEV
CLASSIFIEDS
✴
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
33
HOLOHOLOGIRL
BY SAMANTHA CAMPOS
‘Don’t put this in your column’ Yes, I really do everything you read about in this column. It’s not made up. And yes, there are things that happen that I don’t write about. Illegal things, or the names of sources who tip me off to illegal or sometimes just legal things that aren’t cool, romantic involvements and sometimes just intimate details of my life. All my sources have to do is ask nicely for me not to put something in the column. For the most part people have been kind and generous to me when I go out. I marvel at their warmth to me and my great luck in having such a fun and rewarding—although more frequently hangover-inducing—job. I am indebted to my supporters and gracious fellow debauchers island-wide. But to those not so warm: get over yourself. This column is intended for entertainment purposes only. The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. No parking, please. Last Wednesday, Sonja wanted us girls to have a “Roommate BBQ” at the Sugar Shack. So I joined Jen on the couch after work and waited for our roomie to emerge from her sleeping den, which she did—at around 6 p.m. She left as she told us that she just needed to get a few things at the store but that we would have our BBQ shortly. Cool, we said, and forgoing the usual movie at the MACC that night, Jen and I continued watching the sappy mom-daughter flick Anywhere But Here at home. When the movie ended, we wanted to ride our bikes down the street into the sunset. My bike suddenly had an extremely flat tire so I borrowed Sonja’s fancy-shmancy new bike, only to have it topple over and the basket break off. Naturally there was nowhere to go but the Sly Mongoose. When we got there around eight o’clock, who should be sitting at the bar but our lovely, barbeque-neglecting roommate, Sonja. “I’ll have food ready in 45 minutes!” she said, as she ordered another Jagermeister. So we had a few cocktails and joined in the Doors marathon that included a rousing singalong of “20th Century Fox.” “That song is so dated!” said Dennis. There was also talk of Alice, an endearing 86-year-old patron of the Goose, who had recently hankered up to the bar, slapped down her money and said, “I want a pack of Marlboro Lights, a shot of Root Beer Schnapps and a man that’s ready!” Talk about a 20th century fox.
Mind Body
Spirit A G U I D E F O R H E A LT H Y L I V I N G MAUI’S HOLISTIC EVENTS Maui’s most complete listing of Mind Body & Spirit events. Visit www.mauivision.net. New Maui Vision magazine June/July issue out Now! Call 669-9091 FREE BODYWORK SESSION Free 90 Minute Bodywork Session by athletic, masculine male, my place or yours, feel great guaranteed! Call Matt at 808-298-6194
SLEEPING DISORDERS Insomnia
Call Gary Bogart
669-2428
Move with purpose Feel your body Express your soul Classes taught by Certified NIA teacher,
Erin Graue
242-4343
www.niamaui.com
LOSE WEIGHT NOW Tired of low carb diets? Lose weight the healthy way. FREE consultation. Call 573-3203. www.totalnutritionnow.com FENG SHUI CONSULTATIONS Personal, Home or Business. Diane Alba-Means 242-1397 www.HawaiiFengShui.com
Mind Body Spiri
Friday had TBB, BJ, Randiggity and myself caravanning—after a couple mango margaritas—down to Hapa’s in Kihei for the DJ Qbert show. Most of my favorite people were there, enjoying the amazing display of turntable scratching antics—albeit only for 45 minutes—while I was happily flirting and downing tequila shot after tequila shot with that one damn cute DJ boy I always seem to get myself into trouble with. It was an evening that ultimately ended with me in my fabulous new shoes at home, clutching the porcelain bowl and begging for purgative relief. Jen sat with me on the cold, hard floor of the bathroom, cocktail in one hand, cigarette in the other, coaxing me into action. “What would Steve McQueen do?” she asked, pointing at the large movie still poster of the Great Escape over the toilet. Jen, Sonja and I went out on Monday night, which means all the juiciest details of our escapades will be left out to protect the guilty. So really, all you need to know is that we went to the Hard Rock Café in Lahaina to say happy birthday to Marty Dread, my sometime schoolgirl crush. After I was told by some dude to “not write about me in your column” for like, the umpteenth time—come on, people, I have more important things to write about, like how laser eye surgery smells like burnt hair—Jen and Sonja downed no less than three Mind Erasers each, which meant I was deemed designated driver for the evening. We went to the Sly Mongoose after that, where Jen berated me for drinking way more than she should and Sonja explained to me in gory, Clockwork Orange-esque detail about the metal clamps, eye flaps and cornea shavings of her Lasik experience. As the daytime soap General Hospital played on the bar TV screen at 1 a.m., we discussed our own soap operas in real life and the possibilities of televising and/or web-camming the goings-on of the Sugar Shack. “Hell, my life is just like one of those reality shows with 20 contestants,” said Sonja. “Only it’s just me!” MTW
34
JUNE 10, 2004
CLASSIFIED
KI
COLON THERAPY With Shelley St John RN., CHT. Other holistic therapies available. 573-0696
BEGINNER YOGA Have fun learning the A-B-C’s of Yoga with Sarah Ann or Reyna. Connect with your Mind, Body & Spirit. Sundays @ 8:30am, Kapalua Art School, $10/class, 205-7707 TAKING THE RIGHT VITAMINS? How about the right dosage? Allow us to show you a cost efficient way to choose the correct and appropriate supplements. Maintain your health through a state-of-the-art wellness consultation. Receive your body defense score(antioxidant level) reading today for $5. Start feeling better today! Visit us at 143 Dickinson St., Lahaina above Pacific Whale Foundation. Mention this ad and receive 2 hrs. massage for the price of 1. Offer expires 5/30/04 662-8799 TIME TO MOVE YOUR BODY! Bring yourself to a Nia class and discover the joy in moving with power, play, expression, creativity and ease. Nia is appropriate for any body. Call Certified Nia Teacher, Erin Graue @ 2424343 or www.niamaui.com for schedule and more information. Sex life on hold? Sex therapist with 20+ years exp. will help you overcome ED, premature ejaculation, lack of desire, shyness, fear of intimacy, communication problems. Discuss your sex & relationship concerns confidentially. Free initial phone consult. Call Dr. Bouchard today at 891-0952.
“GET OUT OF YOUR HEAD AND INTO YOUR BODY” with BEYOND
BARRIERS
A weekend Workshop about BEING HUMAN Sat. and Sun., June 26th & 27th FREE INTRO. CLASS Sun, June 13th • Break Barriers to Intimacy with Oneself and Others. • Be Present and Honest in the Moment. • Allow all the Colors of Your Emotions. • Connect with Your Spontaneous Instincts. • Build Community Through Honest Relationships. • Rediscover the Joy of Self-Expression.
For more information, or to register
Call Andrea at 573-3253
HEI
• 874-05
23
BLISS THERAPY
Bikram Hawaii Yoga College of India
Lose weight Shape your Body Reduce Stress
251 Lalo Street
KAHULUI 871-2402
Only $10 For 10 Classes in 10 days with this coupon Hawaii Residents only
Spiritual Healing & Guidance
Sit with me for an hour to: Feel like yourself again, receive insight from your spirit guides, and find mental clarity & Indigo Ocean, emotional peace. Spiritual Sessions offered by donation so call now Channel blisstherapy.com
808-573-4290
PSYCHIC READINGS • Tells past, present & future • Solves all problems • Reunites loved ones Tarot • Crystal • Aura Palm • Sand • Angel
Call Teresa today for a better tomorrow
205-1667
KUNDALINI YOGA A Comprehensive Source of Stress Release Technology
BIKRAM
YOGA KIHEI SHAPE YOURSELF SUMMER SPECIAL!
75
$
MONTHLY
UNLIMITED YOGA • NEW STUDENTS ONLY • IT WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE
KUKUI MALL 281-9262
• Revitalize the Mind & Body • Balance the Emotions • Rejuvenate the Eyes, Nerves & Spine HAIKU • KAPALUA • Soon in KIHEI
Amarsharan Kaur Trained & Certified by Yogi Bhajan, IKYTA,KRI
269-2895 www.kundaliniyogamaui.com
DIGENOUS INHEALING A synthesis of... Hawaiian Massage Live Didgeridoo Crystal Bowls Chimes•Gongs•Bells
Alika 662-8799
ALOHA SEXUAL HEALTH & HAPPINESS
Counseling For all Sex & Intimacy Concerns Confidential • Free Phone Consultation
Michael Ra Bouchard, M.A., Ph.D. Doctor of Human Sexuality If not now, when? 891.0952 www.sexhappiness.com
TREATMENT FOR
CELLULITE • Lose Inches
Blown MAUI Home Ceremonial PIPES
• FDA Approved • Non-invasive • Increases Circulation • Tones & Contours • Increases Collagen
Toe Rings • Full Circle • Since 1987 Blow Guns • Spears • Unique Jewelry Oceanic Arts • Woods • Spiritual Fetishes
TTOP ROPICAL ARTWARE / U.L.C. FLOOR WHARF CINEMA CENTER
ENDERBODIES Holli Pierce
ACROSS FROM BANYAN TREE
Certified Endermologie Technician
33 Lono Ave. Suite 380, Kahului
877-7525 CLASSES & INSTRUCTION
Intuitive Counseling Sharon Brooks, Clairvoyant
Clarity • Specifics • Guidance
WEST MAUI MASSAGE Enjoy relaxing, therapeutic massage with our professional therapists. Outcall or incall for reasonable rates. MAT#6186 Call 280-2803.
891-9247
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FOR YOUR HEALTH & WELL BEING
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In Kihei
$30 MASSAGE MATINEE!!! Acupuncture & Facials too! Matinee price 9-11am, 7 days a week. Blue Bamboo Chinese Medical Center, 2099 Wells St. Wailuku 244-6778
RESULTS www.psychicreadingsonmaui.com www.lifebydesignonmaui.com
HEALING HANDS
MASSAGE
BARBARA WILLIAMS
875-2081 MAT #7179
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• Professional Therapeutic Massage • Specializing in Deep Tissue • Outcall ONLY • Gift Certificates Available
Brooke 250-4515 MAT# 6120, AMTA 110175
www.thestudiomaui.com - 810 HAIKU RD. - HAIKU MARKETPLACE - 575-9390
LOOKING FOR THE PERFECT HOME SHOULDN’T BE THIS DIFFICULT...
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LETTERS
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THE GRID
CLASSIFIEDS
MAUI TIME WEEKLY
JUNE 10, 2004
35
HIGH VISIBILITY! LOW COSTS! BACK SIDE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
CALL (808) 661-3786 for complete details!
Models Needed
Free Beverage Service $40.68 for 1 or 2 persons. Lahaina to Kahana. For Reservations Call 879-6001
Hiring models for stock projects. $50/hour. Fitness, beauty, lifestyle. All ages. Mail photo: RC Studios, PO Box 1758, Kihei, HI 96753. Just visiting? Call 874-5755. For info: www.ronchapple.com/model
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? FISHING ACTION!
STOP WISHIN’ & GO FISHIN’
We can help! We specialize in matching families with birthmothers nationwide. TOLL FREE 24 hours a day 866-921-0565. ONE TRUE GIFT ADOPTIONS. (AAN CAN)
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Discount Prescription Drugs Phentermine, Soma, Tramadol, Ambien, Viagra. Get FedEx delivery direct to your home from a licensed U.S. Pharmacy. www.BayRx.com or 1800-721-0648. (AAN CAN)
Air Maui Helicopter Tours
RATED #1
2 for 1 Special!
Maui: (808) 667-2774 KONA: (808) 327-1265
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West Maui/Molokai Special. Only Air Maui offers this incredible flight! Call now for your 2 for 1 Kama’aina special or special visitor rate! Expires Dec. 31, 2004. For reservations call 877-7005
TOLL FREE 1-800-590-0133
ARE YOU SITTING ON MAUI’S HIDDEN TREASURE? We Pay Cash for Old Coins & Stamps! Come and See if you have a hidden treasure! Island Coins & Stamps, Wharf Cinema Center, 3rd Floor, Lahaina, 667-6155
BEST OF MAUI BALLOT TOP FISHING BOAT IN LAHAINA SINCE 1974
FINEST KIND 37’ MERRITT REEL HOOKER 35’ BERTRAM EXACT 31’ BERTRAM IKAIKA KAI 31’ BERTRAM
Beach Volleyball 101: Summer Session All skill levels welcome. Aloha Volleyball Association: 298-9623
661-0338
Slip#7
•
Lahaina
Don’t waste your vote. Check out the Ballot on page 11 to put in your two cents. Cha-Ching
MAUI GROMS • SKATE & SURF Billabong, Black Label, Element, Maui Skimmers, Independent, Baker, Venture, Grind King & more... Mention you saw this ad in MauiTime and get 20% OFF! 2395 S. Kihei Road, Dolphin Plaza 874-5788
35
$
Can you recall the last time you were truly pleasantly surprised?
AFFORDABLE HEALTH BENEFITS Medical, Dental, Prescription, Vision. $59.99.month for Entire Family. Call 205-2979
Take a peek; discover the literary treasure of ? The Word of Gord? www.wordofgord.com (AAN CAN)
VIAGRA
Sweet Life Fruit Company
VIAGRA - $2.40/dose - CIALIS available Lowest price refills Guaranteed! Call PBG we can help! Non Profit Organization Toll free: 1-866-887-7283 (AAN CAN)
Gift Baskets, Fruit Baskets & Flowers Delivered on Maui or shipped worldwide. Sweet Life Fruit Co. 808-27SWEET (277-9338) or 662-9338 www.mauifruitbasket.com
THURSDAY 6/10
FRIDAY 6/11
SATURDAY 6/12
KEKAI FLAVA BOYZ ZONE
891-MEXI 4 1
E .
2 SHOWS!
THE SEXIEST DANCE PARTY ON MAUI!
TEEN SHOW at 6pm 21 AND OVER at 9pm
HIP HOP HOUSE R&B OLD SCHOOL IN THE MIX
L I P O A
S T R E E T ,
L I P O A
SUNDAY 6/13
TEENT! NIGH
C E N T E R ,
MONDAY 6/14
Willie K OWNS
Mondays!
-Acupuncture - Massage
Facials
12:00-close
30
$
9-11 am 7 days a week
MASSAGE MATINEE
Massage, Acupuncture & Facials
BLUE BAMBOO Chinese Medical Center & Spa
244-6778
2099 Wells St., Wailuku TUESDAY 6/15
WEDNESDAY 6/16
ULTRA FAB TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
ALOHA
DJ Jammin J ALL Drinks $3 until Midnight!
With DJ FAT JOE
$3 Steinlagers K I H E I
MAT#5293
back side
AIRPORT SHUTTLE
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