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Coconut Wireless

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 31: Yes, we’re going to start off another week talkin’ ‘bout the Superferry. Quit your bitching—the boat will be running soon enough, and then it won’t be in the news anymore.more

LC Watch

Next Up

At the Maui County Department of Liquor Control, when one door closes, another almost invariably opens. Last month the door closed on Paradice Bluz in Lahaina.more
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Rob Report

Getting to the Point

Shoreline preservation is part of East Maui allure

Thank God for Hana...more
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Word for Word

'Park Values'

The following are excerpts from the new 48-page Haleakala National Park Superintendent’s Compendiun—which outlines the rules governing the park—made public on Oct. 31, 2007...more
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Maui County

Paying our Respects

Save the Lipoa Point surfboard cemetery!

“People are just dying to get into that place.” That’s the line my dad would always use as we drove by a cemetery. But I can’t apply the same humor to this cemetery.more

The Maui 10

Who's the county's most powerful player?

TESORO BAD!: You’d think being the owner and operator of the largest oil refinery in the great state of Hawai`i would pretty much set you for life, but apparently that doesn’t seem to be the case.more

News of the Weird

CALL DAVE CHAPPELLE: Retired assistant school principal Nelson Winbush, 78, of Kissimmee, Fla., is an African-American who has become a passionate promoter and historian of the Confederate States of America, even though it was that entity’s secession from the Union that sparked the Civil War.more

Maui TIME

“Japanese companies have invested more than $250 million, mostly in the islands’ booming tourist industry. ‘If the current pace of Japanese investment continues, it could mean foreign control of the state’s leading industry within the next five years...more
Overheard this week
“I’m from Seattle. It’s great there—it’s really cool and the sky is always gray…”
-Guy at Fred’s Mexican Cantina in Kihei, June 10
Maui TIME
“A shell crashed ashore. In the dun-colored houses along Kahului’s waterfront, stevedores and their women heard the gun again, like a door slamming, and again the crash of the shell. The Jap fired ten rounds in all. Then the submarine disappeared in the night. Announcing this attack on an undefended, unimportant cane-&-pineapple port, the U.S. Navy reported: no casualties, negligible damage.”

-From “Dusk in Kahului,” Time Magazine, Dec. 28, 1941
Entertainment and lifestyle news for Maui, Hawaii and the surrounding Islands. Maui Time Weekly is Mauis only independent and locally owned newspaper. Mail this link to a friend
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