Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 12, Number 10, 1 October 1995 — He mau hanana [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

He mau hanana

A calendar ot events

'Okakopa (October) through Oct- 14 ^ , Art exhibit by faculty and students of the

Expanded Arts Program at the University of Hawai'i-Mānoa and Kapi'olani Community College, concentrating on creative processes whieh explore time and space, cultural factors whieh shape a person's identity, and aspects of mythmaking as a personal search. Tuesdays, through Saturdays, 1-5 p.m. Call 235-7346. through Dec. 31 "Hawai'i and its People," exhibit of paintings, works on paper and decorative arts from 1779 to about 1950, including examples of "documentary" art created during the late 18th and 19th centuries by artists who stopped in Hawai'i while on sailing voyages. Honolulu Academy of Arts. Call 532-8712. 2, 3, 10, 12, 16, 23, 26, 30 "Family Laundry," play written by Tremaine Tamayose under contract with the Kamehameha Schools Bishop Estate's Native Hawaiian Drug Free Schools and Communities Program. It's a one-hour comedy/drama exploring the impact of drug and aleohol use on various family roles. and it was written especially for Hawaiian and loeal audiences.

Performances statewide - eall 842-8508. 6 "The Queen's Garden," one-woman "urban guerilla storytelling" tour de force about first love, Hawaiian royalty and the

pressures of street gangs featuring Latin jazz, blues and Polynesian percussion. Written and performed by San Francisco actress Brenda Wong Aoki. Leeward Community College Theatre. Tickets are $14 and $12. Call 455-0385.

6-22 Hawaiian quilts exhibit at the Honolulu Academy of Arts. Tuesday - Saturday 10 - 4:30, Sundays 1-5. General admission is $5; students, seniors and military are $3; children under 12 are free. Call 532-8712. 9 "Hawai'i in Transition: Vision for a Sustainable Future," halfhour television documentary looking at the adverse impacts of over-development and the eollapse of the sugar industry in

Hawai'i. Featuring chant by Keola Hanoa. Produced by ECO Productions and Institute for a Sustainable Future. KHETTV Channel 11, 10:30 p.m. Call 988-5450. 17

"HUGO: Hawai'i Undersea GeoObservatory," discussion on the University of Hawai'i's plan to install a cable from Honuapo to the Lō'ihi undersea volcano and monitor Lō'ihi's growth. Part of Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park's "After Dark in the Park" lecture series. 7 p.m., Kīlauea Visitor Center Auditorium. 17-19 The 1995 Hawai'i Symposium on Healing Alternatives, an interdisciplinary orientation to healing from native Hawaiian, Native American and Asian perspectives, co-sponsored by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. Call 922-661 1.

Chanter Keola Hanoa, above, is featured in "Hawai'i in Transition: Vision for a Sustainable Future," airing on KHET-TV Channel 1 1 on Oct. 9. Photo by S. Laffey