Our
WOMAN IN HAVANA FORMER US DIPLOMAT IN CUBA URGES CHANGE ON FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC POLICIES FROM HER RETIREMENT IN SANTA FE BY JULIE ANN GRIMM,
P.12
We’re hiring. Learn about our employment opportunities at an upcoming career fair. Candidates will have the opportunity to speak with recruiters and hiring managers about Presbyterian, the new facility and working in Santa Fe. Please plan to spend up to two hours at the event. Candidates should submit an application online at phs.org/careers before the event or come prepared with a resume. If you cannot attend an event, you are still encouraged to apply online. Light food and beverage will be served.
Clinical Positions: March 26 | 2:30 pm – 6:30 pm All Positions: June 25 | 2:30 pm – 6:30 pm AA/EEO/VET/DISABLED/NMHRA. PHS is committed to ensuring a drug-free workplace.
Career Fair address: Inn at Santa Fe Hotel 8376 Cerrillos Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87507
MARCH 21-27, 2018 | Volume 45, Issue 12
NEWS
I AM
OPINION 5
.
Fred Cisneros, Executive Creative Director of Cisneros Design
NEWS
With Online Banking and Treasury Management, Century Bank is like a silent partner.
7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 SECRET STASH 9 A look at Santa Fe police weapons and our fun time getting the city to follow the records law RISING COST OF RECYCLING 11 As China stiffens buying practices, local program must swallow a price increase
29 SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
COVER STORY 12 OUR WOMAN IN HAVANA Once the top US diplomat in Cuba, now-Santa Fean Vicki Huddleston warns about the danger of current foreign policy on the nearby island THE ENTHUSIAST 17
The cavernous Peters Projects opens not one, not two, not three, not four— but five new shows all at once! Paintings, ceramics, deconstructed-thenreconstructed typewriters, oh my! Cover design by Anson Stevens-Bollen artdirector@sfreporter.com
LET’S NOT KEEP THIS BETWEEN US This dude is excited about getting newbies involved in outdoor sports
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER AND AD DIRECTOR ANNA MAGGIORE
CULTURE
ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
SFR PICKS 19 Ska, draw, goth and metal
CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE STAFF WRITERS AARON CANTÚ MATT GRUBS
THE CALENDAR 20 MUSIC 23
COPY EDITOR AND CALENDAR EDITOR CHARLOTTE JUSINSKI
WORLD MUSIC How do you even pronounce Khruangbin?
17-CENT-40590-Ad-Fred-SFReporter(resize)-FIN
Cisneros Design:
505.471.6699
Client:
Century Bank
Publication:
Santa Fe Reporter
Run Dates:
March 8, 2017
Contact: nicole@cisnerosdesign.com Ad Size: 4.75" w x 5.625” h Due Date: March 1, 2017 Send To: Anna Maggiore: anna@sfreporter.com
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN ALICIA INEZ GUZMÁN IRIS MCLISTER ELIZABETH MILLER TOM RIBE
A&C 27 BACK TO THE BARRIO: ROSARIO BOULEVARD A bridge not-too-far
DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND EDITORIAL INTERN JUAN MENDOZA
A&C 29
PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE Peters Projects has five on it
SENIOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS
FOOD 31 SEOUL FOOD NATION Small farms and the power of kimchi breakfast MOVIES 33
ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JASMIN WILLIAMS CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE OFFICE MANAGER AND CLASSIFIED AD SALES JILL ACKERMAN
TOMB RAIDER REVIEW Plus horsing around in Thoroughbreds
www.SFReporter.com
Filename & version:
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR
SAVAGE LOVE 24 Are you or aren’t you interested, bro?
Phone: (505) 988-5541 Fax: (505) 988-5348 Classifieds: (505) 988-5541 Office: 132 E MARCY ST.
MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200
PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN
EDITORIAL DEPT.: editor@sfreporter.com
CULTURE EVENTS: calendar@sfreporter.com DISPLAY ADVERTISING: advertising@sfreporter.com CLASSIFIEDS: classy@sfreporter.com
THOUGH THE SANTA FE REPORTER IS FREE, PLEASE TAKE JUST ONE COPY. ANYONE REMOVING PAPERS IN BULK FROM OUR DISTRIBUTION POINTS WILL BE PROSECUTED TO THE FULL EXTENT OF THE LAW. SANTA FE REPORTER, ISSN #0744-477X, IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, 52 WEEKS EACH YEAR. DIGITAL EDITIONS ARE FREE AT SFREPORTER.COM. CONTENTS © 2018 SANTA FE REPORTER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MATERIAL MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION.
association of alternative newsmedia
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
3
In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom
READINGS & CONVERSATIONS
is a lecture series on political, economic, environmental, and human rights issues featuring social justice activists, writers, journalists, and scholars.
brings to Santa Fe a wide range of writers from the literary world of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry to read from and discuss their work.
DIANE RAVITCH
RACHEL KUSHNER
with
JESSE HAGOPIAN
WEDNESDAY 11 APRIL AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Anyone who truly cares about children must be repelled by the insistence on ranking them, rating them, and labeling them. Whatever the tests measure is not the sum and substance of any child. The tests do not measure character, spirit, heart, soul, potential. When overused and misused, when attached to high stakes, the tests stifle the very creativity and ingenuity that our society needs most. Creativity and ingenuity stubbornly resist standardization. Tests should be used sparingly to help students and teachers, not to allocate rewards and punishments and not to label children and adults by their scores. — from Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools © 2013
Diane Ravitch is the nation’s leading advocate for public education. She is the founder and president of the Network for Public Education, whose mission is to preserve, promote, improve, and strengthen public schools for both current and future generations of students. She is a historian of education, an educational policy analyst, and a research professor at New York University’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. She is the author of numerous books on American education, including The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education. Her most recent book is Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools.
with
MICHAEL SILVERBLATT
WEDNESDAY 18 APRIL AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Rachel Kushner’s first novel, Telex from Cuba, is set in Oriente, Cuba, in an expat community funded by the United Fruit Company and a nickel mine, during the years leading up to Castro’s revolution. Of the book, the New York Times wrote, “Out of tropical rot, Kushner has fashioned a story that will linger like a whiff of decadent Colony perfume.” Her second novel, The Flamethrowers, is set mostly in the mid-1970s and follows the life of Reno, so named for her place of birth, a young artist who comes to New York intent on marrying her love of motorcycles, speed, and art. The title takes its name from weapons used by the Italian Arditi, a division of elite shock troops that operated during the First World War. Kushner has twice been a finalist for the National Book Award and is a Guggenheim Fellow. Her fiction and essays appear regularly in the New York Times, the Paris Review, The Believer, Artforum, Bookforum, Fence, Bomb, and Grand Street. Michael Silverblatt is the host of KCRW’s Bookworm, a nationally syndicated radio program showcasing writers of fiction and poetry.
T I C K E T S O N S A L E N OW ticketssantafe.org or call 505.988.1234 $8 general/$5 students and seniors with ID Ticket prices include a $3 Lensic Preservation Fund fee. Video and audio recordings of Lannan events are available at:
lannan.org 4
MARCH 7-13, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
LETTERS
Sa
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
m
e
N EW gr A ea ts M ta ff E N
&
lo
ca
tio
n
444 ST. MICHAEL’S DR. STE. B, SANTA FE CITYDIFFERENTDENTISTRY.COM | 505-989-8749
Dr. Gabriel Roybal, DDS
Mail letters to PO Box 2306, Santa Fe, NM 87504, deliver to 132 E Marcy St., or email them to editor@sfreporter.com. Letters (no more than 200 words) should refer to specific articles in the Reporter. Letters will be edited for space and clarity.
NEWS, MARCH 7: “GOING LONG ON SHORT-TERM RENTALS”
GHOST TOWNS Our neighborhoods are ghost towns, which serves no one. There are only a sprinkling of voters left—no one who is invested in our community. Off Hyde Park, there are multiple “developments” with 26 percent occupancy. Multimillionaires like Ernie Romero are still pushing through building more of these ghost houses. Check out his proposal for Estancias del Norte—the planning commission just passed the preliminary plans on a site that in 1995 was deemed unstable by the US Department of Conservation. It would cause inexcusable risk for all the residents who live below it. Mr. Romero will walk away with more millions and zero future responsibility. ENOUGH.
JENNIFER JOHNSON VIA FACEBOOK
WTF, STR? Somewhere around 2005, I began to ask the city of Santa Fe to enforce its ordinance that forbid the renting of residential houses for less than 30 days. Our little dirt dead end street of 11 homes in the historic neighborhood had two or three short term rentals with heavy turnover; I testified to the council that it was like living in a motel parking lot. ... The city refused to enforce its ordinance, but they did hold a series of hearings to hear from the community about this issue. These hearings were heavily weighted by the short-term industry; the
council ended up changing the law to permit this intense commercial use in residential neighborhoods. Even after this change, the city did not enforce the new ordinance either and actually claimed that they’d received only two complaints in 10 years. There are now five STR permits on the little street with 11 homes. ... Are there really not enough hotel/motel rooms in Santa Fe to accommodate our tourists? I attended the council meeting when they ruled to expand the number of permitted STR from 350 to 1,000. … [It] was a glaring example of selling out the city and its young people for short-term profit. Each councilor gave lip service to affordable housing. ... Many other communities around the world struggle with this violation of neighborhoods. There’s nothing to see here about solving this problem. We’ve sold out.
Cosmetic & General Dentistry
Dr. Daniel Pinkston, DDS
Prosthodontics & Cosmetic Dentistry
Ask about our $99 new patient special!
DENA AQUILINA SANTA FE
FOOD, MARCH 7: “NOODLE HOUSE EXPLOSION”
STAHP I enjoy reading your food articles in the Santa Fe Reporter, since I have a Bachelor of Science in Nutrition and have a fondness for cooking and fine dining. However, in your most recent article, I was taken aback with your writing. The first sentence of the second paragraph reads, “Winter in Santa Fe is a rough time for restaurants to open, especially a snowless, dry season like this one that cockblocks any kind of tourist presence...” I wonder why you felt compelled to use the word “cockblocks,” and why the editor felt it was okay to go ahead and print it. A thesaurus is a wonderful tool to have. Please consider elevating your writing which will then elevate the readers’ percep-
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CONTINUED ON PAGE 7 StartLiving-Hiking-4.75x5.625.indd 1
SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018 1/10/18 2:48 PM5
7 DAYS NEW MEXICO CHILE CROP TONNAGE DOWN 12 PERCENT God, no! WHY?!
AMERICAN SPIRIT TO CLOSE SANTA FE OFFICES IN JUNE Employees have the Spirit Blues.
COUNTY PLANNING BOARD RECOMMENDS AGAINST PROPOSED TRUCK STOP We like the stuff, we just don’t like doing the stuff required to get the stuff.
SELF-DRIVING UBER VEHICLE KILLS IN ARIZONA This is basically the precursor to the Terminator movies.
EVERYONE HAS NOW REPORTED THE BOWLING ALLEY PLANNED AT DE VARGAS If you say no to this, it’s going to become a truck stop.
NEW SOUTHSIDE HOSPITAL PLANS JOB FAIRS Attention film crews looking for a backup plan...
ALLSUPS SAYS EMPLOYEES GOT BONUS CHECKS THANKS TO FEDERAL TAX PLAN Too bad it didn’t also result in cheaper chimis.
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LETTERS tions of your articles and the SF Reporter.
JENNIFER FALCONE SANTA FE
COVER, FEBRUARY 28: “STAIRWAY TO NOWHERE”
plan, but what about the incredible creative media of the current college: drama, film-making, music, art and design? We need these—and the people who create them—to be part of the new campus, continuing to contribute much to our community, as they have for so long.
ANNA KATHERINE SANTA FE
JUDGING BY THE COVER I am a former SFUAD student, and … I wanted to write in to express how insensitive and disrespectful I think this cover is. Not the article itself, as the actual content and story were in-depth and very pro-student, but the cover in particular I thought was incredibly unfair to SFUAD’s students. ... That campus is not “nowhere.” I lived there myself for two years and attended classes for three, and it was the first place I ever felt a sense of community or home. I know many students have had the same experience I had, of loving SFUAD’s campus despite its issues. It is not “nowhere” to us. ... As a student who couldn’t finish at SFUAD, I don’t think it’s okay to represent our campus in this way. I think that this title and cover choice were an appeal to pity, an attempt by the Reporter to get attention and be sensational. While the content of the article wasn’t bad at all, this cover is what the people of Santa Fe are going to be seeing first - and we as students don’t want our entire city believing that our campus is nowhere. ... I have encouraged other students to write in, and I think that we deserve an apology. ... If you were really on our side, as the article suggests you are, you would know there is a better way to speak about us and what we’ve lost.
BRIANNA NEUMANN SANTA FE
NEWS, FEBRUARY 28: “YES HE CAN”
Y THO? I could not help writing to you about your very brief and seemingly pointless interview with Steve Pearce. It was brief in every way and I am puzzled why it was written. There is so much to say about Pearce and his very conservative voting and political history on record that goes beyond the couple of issues you asked him about. He comes off as a benign representative of the people who wants to be liked—if only they knew how great he is! What about his extreme stands and votes? What about Sarah Palin’s endorsement? What about his “birther” position regarding Pres. Obama? ... How did you let him explain away climate change with his stupid little tale of landing in the Kiribati Islands, which face rising sea levels, but “haven’t disappeared?” I just can’t believe you summed it all up with, “Pearce is a big-self determination guy. And that’s what gets him out of the door early each morning, in a new town with new people to convince he’s their guy.” I believe you wasted very valuable space that could have given voters a more detailed look at this guy’s record!
BLUE OYSTER CULT
APRIL 12 TH
APRIL 21st 12PM-5PM
Get your tickets at BuffaloThunderResort.com
877-THUNDER MUST BE 21
BARBARA GUSS SANTA FE
MISSED OPPORTUNITY The fate of the SFUAD campus is perhaps the most important issue in this mayoral campaign, but we haven’t heard much about it. Hopefully, economic development and affordable housing will be part of the new
SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake, editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “It’s called Dr. Field Goods. Field. F-E-I-L-D.” —Overheard at the Lensic “If we aren’t having any snow then I’m ready for the hummingbirds.” —Overheard at La Choza
Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
7
2018
Civil War Encampment
at Pecos National Historical Park
Saturday,
March 24th 10:00 a.m.- 3:00 p.m.
Free Living history —
black powder demonstrations, lectures by Civil War historians, kids’ activities, historic games, and horse-drawn wagon rides
For more information: 505-757-7241 or For area information:
www.nps.gov/peco
www.pecosnewmexico.com
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS
Secret Stash How Santa Fe fought to keep its police weapons inventory secret, and why the chief says it’s no big deal
B Y M AT T G R U B S m a t t g r u b s @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
A
cting Santa Fe Police Chief Andrew Padilla doesn’t have an issue with the public knowing how his officers are armed. “It’s no secret what we have,” an affable Padilla tells SFR on a recent afternoon. “We have no top-secret weapons, things that might be in the perception of media or on television shows.” He’s half right. An SFR review of the department’s weapons, ammo and select special equipment didn’t reveal anything jaw-dropping. There aren’t any uber-caliber guns like a .50-cal (the chief can’t envision a need for one) and there are no uranium-tipped bullets. There’s plenty of firepower and some less-lethal force options that raise questions. Padilla was willing to talk about all of it. But the city, through Assistant City Attorney Zach Shandler, has been more willing to apply tortured legal reasoning to the state’s transparency laws than to release information about how it arms the officers whose job it is to keep the peace. Last fall, SFPD spokesman Greg Gurule refused a request for the inventory, citing a public records exemption that protects tactical response plans from publication. Weapons inventories, of course, contain no such plans. They’re lists. Police departments maintain them religiously (or should) because of the need to know who’s shooting those guns and how many times, and because a missing gun that shows up down the road as a weapon used in a crime is a galactic embarrassment. Guns, ammunition and other equipment that the public has paid for to arm its police force is of clear public interest. But the city didn’t see it that way. “Providing the types and quantity of armament used by our police officers would but [sic] our officers and the citizens we protect in a vul-
nerable position by giving anyone who is planning to create a problem information on our capabilities and weaknesses,” Gurule wrote. The problem with that explanation is, to borrow a phrase from the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, it’s “interpretive jiggery-pokery.” And when the Albuquerque Police Department tried the same watery excuse, a state District Court judge didn’t buy it. The city might as well refuse to disclose how many officers it employed or the condition of the cars they drove, Judge Alan Malott wrote in 2015. It just didn’t make sense, and Malott ordered APD to cough up the inventory. When SFR disputed Gurule’s logic with Santa Fe higher-ups, Shandler
SIDEARMS
243
ASSAULT-STYLE RIFLES
produced a list of 34 kinds of weapons owned by the department. It was a spreadsheet with a single column that included a World War II-era rifle and two types of weapons that, according to the list, hadn’t even been issued to officers. The department has more than five times that number of sworn officers, and far more than 34 working at once. Unless officers were sharing guns on duty, the “inventory” Shandler provided was a sham. Through attorney Daniel Yohalem, SFR complained. “When I asked for a document, this was the document that was provided,” came Shandler’s response. The law, he explained, doesn’t require the city to create an inventory “just because your client believes such a document should exist.” Ironically, there’s no good reason the list Shandler initially forked over should exist. Picture the chief of police shouting, “Give me a list of all the types of weapons we have! No, not how many! I just want to see what it is we’re shooting out there. Yes, it should include guns we haven’t issued!” After demanding that SFR make another request (four months after the first
SHOTGUNS
TASERS
127
166
191
SOURCE: SANTA FE POLICE DEPARTMENT (NOT ALL DEPARTMENT WEAPONS SHOWN)
NEWS
one) and suggesting SFR was trying to engage in “shuttle diplomacy” by hiring an attorney to force the city to follow the law, Shandler produced an actual inventory on March 2. And so, Acting Chief Padilla picked up the phone to chat with SFR about how the department arms its officers. “We provide them with the latest and greatest technology which we can afford within our budget,” Padilla explains. Each officer gets a .40-caliber Glock handgun which is with them 24/7. “If they’re using the restroom at a gas station, on a call for service … if they had to defend their lives or someone else’s, that would be the weapon they would use right then and there.” Officers are also assigned an AR-15 or M4 rifle, of which the department has 173 combined, a Remington Model 870 shotgun and a Taser stun gun. It’s enough to keep safe both officers and the public, Padilla says. While the department is transitioning to newer Tasers that deliver less electricity to the people officers target, it still relies on the Taser X26, a model the Arizona-based law enforcement giant no longer sells. Taser has never admitted the X26 shocks people with more electricity than is safe or necessary, but it’s been sued scores of times for deaths related to the weapon’s use. Padilla says concerns about the relative strength of the X26—it delivers double the jolt of the newer models—have never come up at SFPD. The older Tasers are around, in part, because the company sometimes offers buy-back deals that can shave a couple hundred dollars off the price of a newer weapon, the acting chief says. Santa Fe police also have specialized units, including a SWAT team that utilizes five sniper rifles. They were on rooftops during the Entrada last summer as well as during Zozobra. Especially during the burning of Old Man Gloom, the weapons were visible. “The public [who see this] should know that they are safe and secure at this event,” Padilla says. “This is nothing new. For the last 20-plus years we’ve always had our observers at Zozobra.” “We’re training constantly,” he says. And he doesn’t have an issue with the public knowing how his officers are armed, because “these weapons are to protect them, and to protect the officers’ lives.”
SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
9
RAILYARD URGENT CARE
E S T. 2 0 14
5th Annual
We put patients first and deliver excellent care in the heart of Santa Fe.
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the
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Flu Shots Now Available! WHERE TO FIND US
CHOCOLATE CHALLENGE
Saturday, March 24, 2018, 6pm Eldorado Hotel & Spa
Join us for an evening of divine chocolate delights with champagne, hors d’oeuvres, music and a silent auction benefiting the patient programs and services of La Familia Medical Center. La Familia Medical Center’s mission is to foster community well-being in partnership with our patients by providing excellent, accessible, family-centered medical, dental and behavioral health care.
831 South St. Francis Drive, just north of the red caboose.
(505) 501.7791
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DECADENT DESSERTS BY OUR CHALLENGERS
3
www.railyardurgentcare.com
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Over 35 interactive indoor and outdoor
THE JUDGES
3
Chef Carmen Rodriguez, Patty Karlovitz of Local Flavor, Cheryl Alters Jamison 4-time James Beard award-winning cookbook author & YOU!
Support the Health of YOUR Community & Join the Fun!
exhibits, including , our
Tickets: $85 per person, available at www.lafamiliasf.org or email gmmartinez@lfmctr.org
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THANK YOU TO OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS
3
. portable planetarium
COME PLAY WITH US! 1050 Old Pecos Trail
www.santafechildrensmuseum.org
505.989.8359
Partially funded by the County of Santa Fe Lodgers’ Tax
10
MARCH 21-27, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
h LLC
AGUA FRIA NURSERY · BONITA MEDICAL CENTER · COLEEN DEARING/BARKER REALTY JONES, SNEAD, WERTHEIM, & CLIFFORD, PA · KSFR · LAZAR PROPERTIES, LLC · OMEGA FINANCIAL WHOLE BRAIN DESIGN · X-RAY ASSOCIATES AT SANTA FE
Rising Cost of Recycling
JUSTIN HORWATH
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS
NEWS
As China stiffens buying practices, Santa Fe must swallow price increase BY TO M R I B E a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
O
n trash day, you also roll your blue recycle cart out to the curb, having done your best to sort out plastic bottles, cans and paper. This simple act, replicated thousands of times across Santa Fe and millions of times across the country, is our only contact with the vast international recycling industry that has recently been thrown into complete chaos by Chinese President Xi Jinping 6,600 miles from Santa Fe. The change is already costing Santa Fe city and county governments real money, and the future of the recycling system as we now think we know it is up in the air. Following the local decision to close a sorting facility on Santa Fe’s west side, the majority of recyclables in the blue cart here were trucked to Albuquerque, sorted by workers, baled up and shipped to California ports where they were loaded onto container ships bound for China to be processed and made into new products. This was how recycling was done all over the Western US until July, when Xi launched a campaign against what he calls yang laji, or “foreign garbage.” New Mexico and the rest of the Western United States had become almost completely dependent on China to buy our recyclables, and adjustments hit the local market early this year. The bales of material going to China under the near-ban contained about 5
percent contaminants, even after manual sorting by teams of workers in Albuquerque and elsewhere. Once in China, that unusable material— millions of tons, according to Xi’s figures—had to be sent to Chinese landSanta Fe’s recyclables get trucked to Albuquerque for sorting, and officials say now it’s more important that fills to combine with the loads are not contaminated with trash, food, Styrofoam or other no-nos. waste of 1.4 billion Chinese people. China will still buy recyclable plastic, $450,000 cost increase this year because joy curbside pickup provided by the govmetal and some paper from us, but now it of the closing of the Chinese markets, ernment, but instead take recyclables to has to be 99.5 percent pure; without food and will have to pay Friedman recycling drop-off locations. residue, plastic bags, Styrofoam or other $160,000 to process materials just up unCounty Commissioner Anna Hansen contamination. To achieve that level of til June of this year. urged the board to find alternatives, but purity, recycling companies like Fried“Costs are currently exorbitant and we Kippenbrock said there’s likely no better man Recycling, which processes most of can no longer operate under our current financial outlook since Friedman is the New Mexico’s recycling from municipal contract,” David Friedman, who co- only option. “We have to keep in mind we waste streams, has had to slow down its manages the company with his brother are a small city in a rural part of the counsorting lines and add 55 new employees, Morris, told the board, noting some try with great shipping distances,” he said. greatly increasing costs. Materials that limited markets for paper and metal exist “Things are not recyclable if there is no China will no longer accept are fast piling in the Southeast but trucking material is market for it,” said Morris Friedman. “Muup as Friedman searches for new markets. too expensive. nicipalities are going to have to focus on Where Friedman Recycling used to The board agreed the program is the quality of material being produced. We pay Santa Fe for recyclables, it will now a high priority and amended its four- are hopeful that within a couple of years charge for processing and Santa Fe will year contract to allow the business to new recyclable markets will open up to rehave to landfill any rejected materials. recoup processing costs each month. place China; in Latin America, Southeast Friedman warns it might also stop ac- “The recycling program is a loss leader,” Asia, India or in the US.” cepting some materials altogether. “The said City Councilor Michael Harris. “But He emphasized the company is dediold model will no longer work in the a budget increase to Friedman is not a cated to keeping recycling systems in New Western US; it is unsustainable,” Ran- budget-buster for us.” Mexico functioning, but said it needs help. dall Kippenbrock, executive director at Kippenbrock said he would next pro- “We want everyone to keep recycling but the Santa Fe Solid Waste Management pose a rate increase for the an estimated to focus on keeping contaminants out of Agency, told the city/county joint powers 33,000 to help defray the increased cost the recycling bins. … We need to really foboard on March 15. The agency is facing a of recycling. County residents don’t en- cus on the quality of what we recycle.”
SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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FORMER US DIPLOMAT IN CUBA URGES CHANGE ON FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC POLICIES FROM HER RETIREMENT IN SANTA FE
D
BY JULIE ANN GRIMM e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
uring her time as the highest-ranking diplomat in Cuba, Vicki Huddleston faced down Fidel Castro at a party, provided thousands of otherwise isolated people with a way to learn more about the outside world, and won awards with an Afghan hound she named after the city of Havana—all while few women held positions of power within the State Department. She was there in 2000 when Elián González showed up floating in the ocean, and when the first prisoners landed at Guantanamo Bay in 2002. And while she could be relaxing in retirement at her home on the west side of Santa Fe, she’s now on another diplomatic mission: to warn America about the danger of US policy toward Cuba. Huddleston served under Presidents Clinton and George W Bush as chief of the US Interests Section in Havana, and earlier under President George HW Bush, she was in charge of the nation’s Cuba policy at the State Department. She has witnessed the see-saw of US-Cuba relations, with Democrats traditionally pushing for more open channels and Republicans flexing on the prospect that continued
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
embargo and punishment will lead to regime change. Her memoir, rushed to press in response to waning sanity in Washington, serves as a primer on recent history and points to bad omens of the past threatening to repeat themselves—or worse. “It is well past the time that we stop making Cuba a glaring exception to the way we engage with countries around the world whose political systems we oppose,” she writes in Our Woman in Havana. She adds later that by maintaining an economic embargo, “we undermine both countries’ political and economic interests, deprive our country of a potential strategic ally, and create unnecessary division among our allies.” Just 90 miles from the Florida coast, this is the neighbor we should be fixated on, she argues. It’s a fraught scenario playing out on the global stage, and yet the foreign policy under the Trump Administration projects a chilling forecast. Cuba is returning to close relations with Russia and moving into a tighter bond with China. The governments of those nations, Huddleston points out, are no friends to the US. And with the president giving Secretary of State Rex Tillerson the ax and aiming to replace him with CIA Director Mike Pompeo, diplomatic turnover contributes to greater uncertainty.
Cuba is set to undergo elections that could lead to a succession of power away from President Raúl Castro, who rose to power not long before his brother Fidel died. The date of the planned transition has been a moving target, however, and with the United States clenching its fists rather than extending a hand, hardliners in the island nation’s Communist Party leadership aren’t likely to entertain reforms. SFR caught up with Huddleston in between speeches in Miami and Los Angeles, and in advance of a reading and book signing at Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse (6:30 pm Thursday March 22. Free. 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226).
SFR: In the 1990s, when you first got to Cuba, there were very few women diplomats.
Did you do anything to help break the glass ceiling?
Not in Cuba. Cuba is an authoritarian state, so, you know, we were enemy number one. We were listened to, we were watched. No one was tailing my car when I went out in the countryside, but they knew where I was. If the car broke down, someone would be finding it very fast. And there is just not much crime in Cuba. So Cuba is safe. In Mali and Haiti, it was, in fact, dangerous. My car was shot at. It had a bullet hole in it. In Mali, we were in the way north Sahara Desert where the Salafast were operating, and there were land mines and there was a possibility
people in different countries and I liked listening to them and I liked helping them. I really like the idea of making a difference. Explaining the US diplomatic mission in Cuba is tricky. You have the title of ambassador because you served in that post in other countries, but during your time in Cuba as the highest-ranking diplomat, you were only allowed to be chief of the United States interest section, right? The official name was principal officer. But the myth that we had no diplomatic relations with Cuba is—a myth. We were
There were a couple of women who were in the generation before me, the very first ones, that had a class action suit, but I don’t really think I did anything myself, specifically. Hopefully I did a good enough job to make it seem as though it would be reasonable to have women in high positions. … But we have had Hillary [Clinton] and Condoleezza [Rice] as the secretaries of state, and assistant secretaries of state, and far more women ambassadors than there used to be—so this is getting rolled back a bit now. There’s one story in the book where you have to outrun private security guards at a mine, and a whole chapter about your distribution of thousands of transistor radios to the people of Cuba against the wishes of the revolution leaders. You’re kind of a badass and a risk-taker. Why approach it this way? I think it is my personality. If you go back, I was handing out these little AM/ FM radios, and members of my staff who wished to—they were not forced to—were doing the same, and I loved it. At that time [there was] no internet, no cell phones, books were expensive—Castro said that they weren’t censored, but they weren’t available. So most people who had radios didn’t get news from outside because they weren’t strong enough to pick up the signals. So here was this little radio. Everybody loved it and wanted it—from kids to, as you read in the book, a security official. It was, ‘OK, I can have access to news and information.’ … Cuban people really wanted them. I did not want to stop. Fidel did his best to stop me, however.
in the Philippines. But that is the only good thing. I was there in January. The gates of the embassy are locked. There is a chain around them. Nobody is coming in and out except the employees. We usually issued 20,000 immigrant visas a year and we’re now not issuing visas for families to go see each other or for business or for exchanges. … They’re not doing any public diplomacy. We’re very limited on who is available to do reporting, and Cuba is about to go through a transition—or a succession, which is probably a better word—from a Castro for the first time in almost 60 years. And we don’t really have the staff to know what is going on. When you wrote the book, the assumed date of the transition was February. In December, the Cuban government officially postponed the presidential appointment for the successor to Raúl Castro. Now the date has moved to April. Is it out of the question to think the election won’t happen?
ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON
In fact, the State Department discriminated against women until about the ’80s. It was considered really a man’s profession, and it was very East Coast and often seen as elitist—and then they realized this is no way to represent the American people. There has got to be a broader and deeper organization with women and minorities. And so they began to change, and that is when I went in, in ’77, which was the beginning of the change. Women were just coming in to high positions after 20 years. When I was in charge of the Office of Cuban affairs from ’91 to ’93, I was the only woman office director at the time in the Western Hemisphere. There were relatively few [female] ambassadors, too.
Was it dangerous?
The mansion in which Huddleston lived while running the US diplomatic mission in Cuba.
that you might encounter them; although we always had Mali military with us, so I was never particularly worried. But those are much more worrisome and dangerous spots. And foreign service officers who served in Iraq and Iran and Syria, and places like that—that’s really dangerous. More senior foreign service officers have lost their lives than generals in the United States military. So why do it? Why is this work important to you? I have to admit it was great fun, but what was important to me was to represent my country. It was such an honor. To meet people abroad—I liked learning about
in our old embassy building, which is now the embassy; it is a beautiful glass building on the Malecón. But I was the first foreign ambassador to go to Cuba since the 1950s-’60s, when we broke relations. I told my staff they could call me ambassador, and when I did that the Cubans called me ambassador, because they liked the idea of having someone of higher rank. And also their person in Washington was a former ambassador. It’s all reciprocal, so the Cubans are in their former embassy on 16th Street, and people called him ambassador. And now we’ve sent the most senior person we have ever sent to Cuba [Lawrence Gumbiner]; he was our ambassador
The local elections are underway now. But, with the US threatening, it is not out of the question. In fact, that might have been the real reason they pushed it back. They said they pushed it back—and it’s a valid reason—because the elections had to be pushed back from the devastation from Hurricane Irma. And if the elections are pushed back, then there is not a national assembly, which technically chooses the council of ministers and the next president. So that is a legitimate reason to push it back. On the other hand, it gave Raúl Castro time to negotiate a deal that he will soon sign with Russia, in which Russia will take over from Venezuela the operation of the Cienfuegos oil refinery. So that is very important because, with Venezuela becoming bankrupt, Cuba is losing a source of petroleum and a close ally, and it looks as if they’re going to return to Russia and China. And China is Cuba’s largest foreign trade partner, and Russia and China are set to provide Cuba with military training and military equipment. Why is that bad for the United States? Russia and China are not our best friends. They are our competitors. We have different approaches, and China has never been aggressively in our face in the Western Hemisphere, but China is very much expanding in Africa and could very much be a competitor for minerals and influence in Africa. Russia is actually the danger. Russia is not a friendly country to us—they interfered in our elections, and they will try to do it again. They don’t appreciate our kind of democratic system CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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VICKI HUDDLESTON
that we have, and they feel that NATO and the United States are a threat to their hegemony in Eastern Europe. So if Russia can have a foothold in Cuba, then if we do something in Europe that they don’t like and feel is threatening to them, then they have the possibility of countering us in Cuba, ie the missile crisis. Kruschev put the missiles in Cuba, but the deal the committee arranged was that we would not invade and we would take our missiles out of Turkey. That was the real key. So you see the relationship plays out in the strategic balance in Europe.
dia. Why it is important for diplomats to understand the media?
Do you think that people in the United States today really have an understanding of the history with Cuba and this bigger global consequence of our relationship? Yes and no. Yes, in that they are very much aware of Cuba because everybody knows the Bay of Pigs. Everybody knows the missile crisis. Many people remember little Elián found floating in the inner tube in the Florida Straits. Many people remember the shooting down of two civilian planes by Cuba. And many people remember Alan Gross and their five spies—or heroes, as you wish—who were incarcerated in the United States. So since the US is always having this tense, fraught relationship with Cuba, I’d say that people probably know as much about Cuba as you could expect. Although maybe not as much as Mexico. Cuba still is our third-closest neighbor. It’s water that separates us rather than a border. I think what they don’t grasp, and that is not surprising, is the issue of US-Cuban relations is surrounded by myths, lies and misunderstandings. First of all, most Americans, when I say that I was head of our diplomatic mission in Cuba, they go, ‘No, we did not have a diplomatic mission in Cuba.’ They don’t understand that Cuba is a matter of domestic politics. Essentially, Al Gore lost the presidency because of
The only land entrance to Guantanamo Naval Base.
this little kid. … Clinton decided to send back Elián if the courts agreed, but he thought that was a way that he could escape political damage. It turned out to be the worst decision, because it took the courts six months and then it went to the Supreme Court to send back Elián—and so then the Cubans had el voto castigo, the punishment vote, and they were very active against Gore in not providing financing, and then stopping the recount of the hanging chads. Gore lost by 500 votes, and had he had a few Cuban-American votes, he would’ve won Florida and he would have been president. You were also there during the opening of the war detention in Guantanamo Bay. How do you view that? Nobody, no country in the world, including our allies, was interested in holding those combatants who were captured in Afghanistan by our troops. There were some from other places as well, but they were all basically associated or thought to be associated with Al Qaida. … We did not want to bring them to trial right away, because we did not want them back on the battlefield. And in Cuba, in Guantanamo,
according to the treaty, Cuba retained sovereignty, but because the base was run by the US military, Cuba laws did not apply, nor did the United States’—only military laws. So it was the perfect place. And a long ways away from the battlefield in Afghanistan and Pakistan. When Guantanamo operations later became exposed, it became less perfect. Do you agree with that? The unlawful combatants, first of all, remained incarcerated for much longer than anyone might have imagined. The war was over and they were still incarcerated. And part of that, of course, was the fear that they would go back to their old ways, and we didn’t want more Americans killed. So you can see why that happened, but it still makes us look pretty bad. And the second part of that is, in essence, they were mistreated, and that leaves a blot on the United States history and may turn out very badly when US military personnel are captured, because perhaps they won’t be treated like they should be under the Geneva Convention. It seemed like you got fairly adept at tackling both the Cuban and US me-
Some ambassadors—and to me, it is a mistake—will publicly criticize the leader of a government by name. You are sent to a country to have a relationship with them, whether they’re friendly or unfriendly, and if you criticize the government, particularly by saying that Fidel Castro is whatever, then what kind of relationship are going to be able to have? And how can you adequately represent your government? I mention in the book that after I went to this big rally that Fidel Castro held against me, with 20,000 people, for handing out of the radios, I came back to the intersection and one of the human rights activists was waiting for me and he said, ‘Be careful Vicki, because we want you to stay here.’ Do you have any observations about the state of the media today? The media is really standing up. They are exposing fake and false news and they’re not being intimidated when President Trump scorns them or tweets against them. … Unfortunately, it is never pleasant to be in that kind of situation. And I think both the media and the foreign service are in the same situation. Both of them are kind of scorned by the president and this administration. Entré into the foreign service has fallen precipitously; I don’t know whether that has happened in the media, but that is what scares me the most. Because both of those professions are really essential to our democracy. Are there any similarities between the way Fidel Castro treated and talked about the media and the way Donald Trump does? Autocrats generally don’t like the media. And Fidel liked total control of the media because he wanted to ensure total control of Cuba. And in a way, I think that President Trump—who, of course, is working within a democratic system, so he can’t
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have that kind of total control—what he really doesn’t like is criticism. And that is, as the media has said from time to time, sort of the nature of a wouldbe autocrat.
We wished the men good luck, left our radios and books, and started back to Havana. It wasn’t long before I saw a woman trudging along the side of a dirt road. I stopped and offered her a ride. Once she was settled in the car, I handed her a radio. When I glanced back, tears were running down her cheeks. When I asked why she was crying, she replied, “Now, I have a birthday present for my son.” After dropping her off and finding our way onto a paved road, we picked up two young women to whom I also gave a couple of radios. One asked, “Can I have two more?” The girls explained that they wanted radios for their brothers who were imprisoned in the large gray building we had passed a mile back. They had been sentenced to twenty years for killing a neighbor’s pig. I had now been in Cuba almost three years. The longer I stayed,the more I liked the country and the people, and the sorrier I felt for those who were forced to live under the omnipresent and pervasive control of the Castro regime. There was no doubt in my mind that Cubans were deprived of essential freedoms, but I didn’t think that our policy of isolation was an effective way to bring about change. I believed that the best way to promote change in Cuba was by empowering the Cuban people. Helping to keep them poor and isolated only helped Castro to maintain control. Yet everything we did to enable the Cuban people to seek change depended on the regime’s forbearance. If we were too aggressive, Castro would smash our endeavors by throwing me or my officers out of the country or by jailing the dissidents. But I was finding it increasingly difficult to assess the costs and benefits of my actions, like the radio distribution program. Sometimes I wanted to aggressively confront the oppressive power of the Cuban state, yet I knew that this was dangerous, and I was already treading near the edge of Castro’s patience. Having successfully delivered radios to supporters of Project Varela, I decided to take a six-day tour of the island, which is shaped like a shark jumping out of the sea. I planned that Victor and I would drive from Havana, at the base of the shark’s head, down its spine to the second-largest city, Santiago de Cuba, located on the shark’s tail. During our travels, we met with government officials, average citizens, and dissidents, leaving behind radios and books with everyone but the officials. Our first stop was the large city of Camaguey in central Cuba, where we visited
Is there a way that our citizens can drive a different relationship with Cuba, or do we have to ride this out until something else changes in our country? First of all, people can still go to Cuba, and they should. … If Americans will keep traveling to Cuba, that will help Cubans continue their entrepreneurial activity, which leads to an open society. Secondly, the tragedy of Cuba is that there are five laws that mandate the embargo. So it makes the policy a presidential policy. The American people do need to speak up. This policy is not in our national interest. How can we have a country that is 90 miles off our shore that is our enemy? That is crazy. We need all the Caribbean to be our allies and friends. This is our backyard. We need to see economic and political development, and that helps our own security. Instead we have just neglected it. We have just got this whole issue about the Caribbean and Cuba wrong, and by getting it wrong we jeopardize our national security because we open the door to China and to Russia. But people don’t understand how much it is against our national interest. And certainly, unless they go to Cuba, they don’t understand how much the Cuban people are suffering. The embargo has kept food and medicine from Cuba by cutting off supplies from foreign companies that have US subsidiaries. And it has kept Cuba isolated; because of the communication part of the embargo, it’s been hard for radio and television to hook up with Cuba. We are our own worst enemy in Cuba.
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three Protestant churches. I left several cartons of radios with a young, dynamic pastor of a large Baptist church. He was delighted, until the next morning when he showed up sheepishly at our hotel to ask that we take the radios back. He apologized profusely, but did not explain his decision. It was clear he had been warned not to keep them. The next day we reached the small village of El Cobre where Cuba’s patron saint, the Virgin of Charity, is enshrined in a basilica that overlooks the bay surrounding Santiago de Cuba. She is known as the Mambisa Virgin because she was venerated by Cuba’s independence fighters—called Mambises—who fought alongside Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders. Jewels and small favors left by the humble and the mighty were displayed in a glass container. Ernest Hemingway gave his Nobel Prize for the story of a Cuban fisherman, The Old Man and the Sea, to the virgin. Hemingway loved Cuba, where he lived until shortly before his death in a beautiful home called Finca Vigía (Lookout House) on a hill outside Havana. We didn’t leave any radios with the virgin but we did drop off a few in El Cobre. When we reached Santiago de Cuba, dissidents were waiting for us in a wooden three-story house, likely built in the early twentieth century. We were escorted up a few flights of rickety stairs and ushered into a room that seemed to have been set up solely to receive us. There were a few chairs, but no tables, rugs, or pictures. Before we could exchange pleasantries, one of the dissidents took the carton of radios from Victor, thanked him, and disappeared. The dissidents explained that they knew that state security was watching us and, fearing that the radios would be confiscated, planned to immediately give them to their members. I was troubled because it seemed as if we had inadvertently become involved in subversive activities. I suggested that I might stop the distribution to prevent them from being harassed or jailed. “Oh, no,” they exclaimed, “the radios are well worth the risk. They connect us, so we aren’t alone.” From Our Woman in Havana by Vicki Huddleston, Copyright 2018 © by Vicki Huddleston. On sale March 13 from the Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. www.overlookpress.com
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Let’s Not Just Keep This Between Us ELIZABETH MILLER
Santa Fean organizes more ways for more people to push themselves outdoors BY ELIZABETH MILLER e l i z a b e t h @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
T
he mantra “swing and flick, swing and flick” carries me easily up the first half of a frozen waterfall—the low-angled ice at the bottom where I’d seen Peter Olson scramble up just minutes before to set a top rope on the route. Then the wall steepens, and this foray into ice climbing starts to feel less like a steep walk in weird boots and more like actual climbing. I swing borrowed ice tools, flick my wrist to sink the pick into the ice, kick the toe-spikes of loaner crampons in, and hope all these shiny metal points hold. Olson’s full-time job is at Santa Fe County, but he’s in the business of recruiting more people to the great outdoors however he can. He’s race director for the Endurance Santa Fe (formerly Ultra Santa Fe) races of 1 mile to 50 miles that start and finish at Ski Santa Fe, is coordinating a horses-versushumans race at Caja del Rio on Memorial Day weekend, and organizes PhatAss, casually competitive trail runs that have sent runners on trails on winter nights, and for a 12-mile route that climbed four peaks “depending on how lost you got,” he writes in his email introduction. “I like to provide opportunities for people to experience the same things I’ve experienced as a runner, whether that’s freedom, a clear head, or having fun with a bunch of other people,” he says. “Running is such a good every-person kind of sport. … It’s not like you have to have a certain
Ice climbing is just one of the outdoor sports Peter Olson wants you to get into.
skill or learn a certain technique or come from a certain economic background.” Whether they show up at these starting lines or not, what he hopes to see are more people outdoors trying new sports or testing their limits, which is how I’ve landed on a frozen waterfall. He coaches, organizes group events, and takes the occasional journalist out to climb—in part to offer what wasn’t available when he was an aspiring climber and runner. “I always had to just go out and do things—I didn’t always have somebody to
show me how to do stuff, so I had to learn by myself,” he says. When he first started ice climbing, it required hiking solo up and down the creek running from his college campus in Duluth, Minnesota, to Lake Superior. The creek dropped 600 feet in a couple miles, so he could learn on short, vertical ice in gear borrowed from a friend. He had just one tool (two would be customary), “ancient” crampons and boots two sizes too big and so filled with three pairs of socks.
I called that hardcore. Olson insists it was a good time. “I think people get a little intimidated when they see these sharp tools in your hands and sharp, pointy things on your feet, but I think it’s just so much fun,” he says. “I like to bring people and expose them to new things and see the look on their face and see the happiness and joy they feel—I know that’s kind of corny. But it’s why I coach, and why I put on the runs. I like to give people the opportunity to do more things and get outside their comfort level a little bit.” In September, he waited at the finish line to greet people as they completed the 50-kilometer race at the ski basin. A runner who’d flown from New York City to complete the run for his birthday told him he’d cursed Olson’s name every step of the last 6 miles, but in the end said, “This was the best birthday present ever.” That runner plans to return this fall, Olson says. To prep this summer, he’ll organize trail maintenance work and weekly runs starting in mid-April (details available at endurancesantafe.com). “People ask about, ‘How much money do you make putting these races on?’ And for me, it’s not about the money,” Olson says. “I don’t do it for the income. I do it for the outcome, because I like to see these people cross the finish line and I like to see the sense of accomplishment they’ve achieved for themselves, and I like to have given them the opportunity to spur themselves or to find something deep within themselves. For me that’s what running does; you feel like quitting but you don’t. You keep pushing on, and you feel something that gives you a little boost.”
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OW ORR M O T T! NIGH “Durand Jones and the Indications hearken back to a time when soul was recorded, performed, and heard live.” Will Rivitz, PopMatters
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THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS Goths unite—Los Angeles’ AL1CE is here, and they’ve got a thing or two to teach us all about darkwave. Think of AL1CE like a sorrowful combination of post-punk, electronic rock and—dare we say it—indie and emo. With highly personal and introspective lyrics, AL1CE has a story to tell; one that’s not particularly happy, but cathartic nonetheless. It’s strange and dark and oddly familiar yet not entirely like everything else. The short version? AL1CE is like a non-shitty Evanescence, a skillful blend of rock subgenres for looking inward when the chips are down—but also, ultimately, of hope and new beginnings. (ADV)
COURTESY BUSTER’S GHOST
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MUSIC WED/21
AL1CE with DJ Blackdeath and Audiobuddha: 8 pm Wednesday March 21. $5. VFW, 307 Montezuma Ave., 983-9045.
ERIN CURRIER, “AUTUMN”
ART OPENING FRI/23 IMITATING LIFE “We all draw. No child has ever grown up not drawing,” says Eric Thomson, proprietor of Argos Studio/ Gallery. “It’s pre-verbal. … To some degree, it’s in all of us.” This is a feeling behind the Tuesday evening figure-drawing group at Argos, which has been continually meeting since it formed in artist Eli Levin’s studio in 1969. Thomson, too, has participated in this and other drawing groups since he arrived here in 1976, and he speaks fondly of the concept of drawing from a live model. “Many people who have life-drawing groups in their background maintain contact with the group and maintain the practice, even if it has nothing to do with their actual artwork.” This show, open to anyone who’s participated in the drawing group in the last year, is totally democratic and features many different media, showing the versatility of Santa Fe’s artists and of the art form itself. (Charlotte Jusinski) Full Disclosure Opening Reception: 6 pm Friday March 23. Through April 8. Free. Argos Studio/Gallery, 1211 Luisa St., 988-1814
SFR FILE PHOTO
MUSIC MON/26 FOR THOSE ABOUT TO ROCK We’re not into profiling or anything, but we can definitely admit there’s a certain crowd who likes to hang around The Matador—a certain crowd we like. And when the strong-ass drinks have been poured and the friendly bartenders (they remember their regulars, y’all) have handed you that bottle of water, take further joy in knowing every Monday from here to eternity shall henceforth be known as Metal Monday. DJ Lady Strange takes over the decks with the hardest of the hard, the denim-jacket-with-patches set shows up and pretty much everyone there is gonna be like, “Dude, Necroticism by Carcass slays so hard.” (ADV) Metal Mondays with DJ Lady Strange: 9 pm Monday March 26. Free. The Matador, 116 W San Francisco St., 984-5050.
MUSIC SAT/24
Skank, Ya Skanks OK, so this isn’t 1997 and people have all kinds of weird opinions about ska as a genre, but take off your cool-guy goggles for a minute and admit it—ska is fun. It’s dancey. It’s varied. Just look at the evolution from reggae and rocksteady, up through first wave, two-tone and the punk-rock leanings of third wave, and chances are you’ve got some favorite jams without even realizing. Enter Buster’s Ghost. They’re Durango, Colorado’s answer to ska’s multi-faceted genrefication, and a veritable history lesson in all things guitar-bass-drumshorns. “It’s a little different in Durango because ska is really celebrated,” saxophonist Timmy Esposito tells SFR. “We’ve got Ska Brewing, and the founders of that are so into ska.” Esposito further clarifies, explaining that in his experience, there are plenty of ska bands still operating today. “They say ska is dead, but that’s not true,” trombonist Kelly Emery says. “It’s well alive, and I think ‘ska is dead’ is almost like a marketing slogan like ‘jazz is cool.’” Sound-wise, Buster’s Ghost borrows from the classics, like The Specials, Hot Knives, Fishbone and, of course, Prince
Buster. Influences from relatively newer acts such as Reel Big Fish and Mu330 play a role as well—and yet Buster’s Ghost remains cohesive. This can mean anything from almost doo-wop mid-tempo tunes and songs that might sound just like reggae to the uninitiated, to faster indie-adjacent numbers with catchy horn lines made for dancing. Emery and Esposito also explain there are Latin and zydeco elements at play thanks in part to drummer Cruz Muniz. “I grew up in Santa Fe,” Muniz says, “and all the Afro-Cuban stuff that came around was big for me.” Muniz studied under celebrated local drummer Mark Clark. “I positively wouldn’t be here without him,” Muniz adds. So why embrace Buster’s Ghost and ska? “We’re not just one thing,” Esposito says. “We’ve really learned to love all the things that make ska.” And we should, too, Santa Fe. Ditch what you think you know and maybe just have a good time. Kudos to Boxcar, too, for once again bringing the shows no one else will. (Alex De Vore) BUSTER’S GHOST 10 pm Saturday March 24. Free. Boxcar, 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222
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THE CALENDAR COURTESY TERRA SANTA FE
NAMASTE Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 Get a yoga class and a beer. 6 pm, $15 PUEBLO OF POJOAQUE COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 In the Pueblo Ballroom at the resort and casino, get info about how to take care of yourself best. 10 am-3 pm, free SANTA FE MEGABAND REHEARSAL Odd Fellows Hall 1125 Cerrillos Road, 470-7077 Join an open community band and play acoustic string-band music. 7 pm, free
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Contact Charlotte: 395-2906
MUSIC
WED/21 BOOKS/LECTURES DHARMA TALK BY JOHN PAUL LEDERACH Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Lederach, a senior fellow at Humanity United, a national organization dedicated to solving seemingly unsolvable humanitarian issues, presents a talk entitled "How Weird Friends Change the World." 5:30 pm, free THE FACE OF CHANGE Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 467-9025 The Santa Fe Chapter of the Native Plant Society of New Mexico presents a lecture by Richard Cahal Thompson about planting more native plants in Santa Fe. 6:30 pm, free PEOPLE TO PEOPLE GALLERY CONVERSATIONS: SUSAN YORK New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Join modernist sculptor Susan York, whose graphite columns are featured in Contact: Local to Global. Free with museum admission. 12:30 pm, $7-$12 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 It is what it says it is. 10:45 am, free
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 8 pm, free MEDICINE WATER WHEEL CEREMONY Chi Center 40 Camino Vista Clara, Galisteo, 800-959-2892 Get things cosmically prepared for the Gathering for Humanity, bless the waters and pray for peace. Noon, free
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Some of our favorite gallery shows don’t even happen at galleries. This weekend, Terra Santa Fe Boutique Realty hosts a pop-up exhibition (and they say there’s more where this came from), Symbols of Our Inner Truths, opening Saturday. The art is bonkers (that’s a compliment). This is “The Magic is in the Experience” by Katie O’Sullivan; also included is the work of Mazatl Galindo.
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AL1CE, AUDIOBUDDHA AND DJ BLACKDEATH VFW 307 Montezuma Ave., 983-9045 The ambassadors of Los Angeles darkwave/electronica swing thru Santa Fe with support from local DJs (see SFR Picks, page 19). 8 pm, $5 DJ SAGGALIFFIK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 House, acid lounge, half-time and general dance-party tunes. 10 pm, free DANIELE SPADAVECCHIA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Gypsy jazz guitar playing with a lot of European pizazz. 7 pm, free LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Party-time rock 'n' roll. 7:30 pm, free MIKE NICHOLSON Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards, pop and opera on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free RAMON BERMUDEZ TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Latin and smooth jazz guitar. 6 pm, free SANTA FE CROONERS Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Golden Age standards. 6:30-9:30 pm, free SEAN ASHBY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A one-man show with six guitars—zoinks! 8 pm, free SYDNEY WESTAN Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Folk and Americana. 5:30 pm, free VINCENT COPIA Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Americana and solo guitar originals. 6 pm, free
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WORKSHOP LET’S TAKE A LOOK Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Curators from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and the Laboratory of Anthropology hang in the lobby and offer to take a look at your treasures. Noon-2 pm, free
THU/22 BOOKS/LECTURES COMING TO AMERICA: WHO SHOULD WE WELCOME, WHAT SHOULD WE DO? Santa Fe Community Foundation 501 Halona St., 988-9715 Join a structured conversation among participants on immigration, hosted by the Santa Fe Community Foundation, designed as a constructive exchange of ideas among participants from the community. 7 pm, free DEBORAH SAMUEL: THE EXTRAORDINARY BEAUTY OF BIRDS Garcia Street Books 376 Garcia St., 986-0151 Photographer Samuel discusses her book, a display of ornithological beauty, in which readers are presented textures and colors of birds in stunning detail—and are rewarded with a new appreciation of art in nature. 5:30 pm, free PANDEMICS St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 A good-timey lecture from pathologist John Benziger on the nature of infectious disease and the distinguishing features of epidemics and pandemics. 1 pm, $10 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 New books! New friends! A nap while sitting up and with your eyes open! 11 am, free VICKI HUDDLESTON: OUR WOMAN IN HAVANA Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The former ambassador presents her memoir of her time in Cuba (see Cover, page 12). 6:30 pm, free
EVENTS CELEBRATION OF THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF JAMES LUNA Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2351 Honor the legacy of Luna, the legendary Payómkawichum/ Ipi installation and performance artist whose work gave voice to Native American cultural issues. 6:15 pm, free
THE CALENDAR
GEEKS WHO DRINK Santa Fe Brewing Company 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free
MUSIC BIRD THOMPSON The New Baking Company 504 W Cordova Road, 557-6435 Folky songs from the heart. 10 am, free BOOMROOTS COLLECTIVE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Reggae, hip-hop and Jamaican funk and reggae with New Mexican Soul. 10 pm, free DJ INKY The Matador 116 W San Francisco St., 984-5050 Punk, funk, soul, rock 'n' roll, old-school country y más. 9 pm, free DURAND JONES & THE INDICATIONS Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 From a church choir in Louisiana to a rock 'n' roll band in Indiana, Jones has serious soul. 8 pm, $14-$17 GOT SOUL El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Check out the house jazz band, often with guests. 7 pm, free GREG BUTERA AND THE GUNSELS Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Cajun honky-tonk and Americana. 8 pm, free JOHN RANGEL'S DUET SERIES El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Versatile jazz pianist Rangel plays with a special guest. 7 pm, free LIMELIGHT KARAOKE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 You know the drill. 10 pm, free LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Party-time rock 'n' roll. 7:30 pm, free MARC SANDERS Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6 pm, free MIKE NICHOLSON Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards, pop and opera on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free
TOM BENNETT Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A bluesy folk singer with a harmonica! What else could you ask for? 8 pm, free VINCENT COPIA Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Americana and solo guitar originals. 7 pm, free
THEATER CONSTELLATIONS Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 A love story played out in more than one universe (the multiverse, if you will). Folks under 25 are $5 tonight, and high schoolers are always free. 7:30 pm, $15-$25 THE GOOD DOCTOR Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 An evening of humorous and poignant vignettes originally written by Anton Chekhov is, by turns, charming, hilarious and touching. Did you catch our review last week? We freakin’ loved it. For tix, call 917-439-7708. 7:30 pm, $15-$25 NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE IN HD: JULIUS CAESAR Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 A broadcast of a new production of Shakespeare’s political tragedy at The Bridge Theatre in London. 7 pm, $22
WORKSHOP HEALINGS HAPPEN Deep Roots Studio 4195 Agua Fria St., 927-5407 Drop in to receive a spiritual healing, a tune-up for body and mind. Tea and snacks are provided, and proprietress Lisa P guides you through a short energy healing. 6-7 pm, free
CALLING ALL FOOD TRUCKS!
k c u r T d o o F A Event
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PRIME LOCATION
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Downtown Santa Fe PRESENTED BY
FRI/23 ART OPENINGS FULL DISCLOSURE Argos Studio/Gallery 1211 Luisa St., 988-1814 The fifth annual exhibit of drawings created by the members of the Tuesday Night Drawing Group. Through April 8 (see SFR Picks, page 19). 6 pm, free HANK SAXE: UNNATURAL LANDSCAPES Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Saxe has worked in industrial and commercial ceramic production and has always remained connected to the soul of his environment with an appreciation of natural geologic formations. Through May 25 (see AC, page 29). 5-7 pm, free
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THE CALENDAR INNER VISION: SELF PORTRAITS BY NINE ARTISTS Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 The ancestral definition of a "self portrait" plays into contemporary “selfie” life, but there is much more to replicating yourself by hand. The artists herein work in painting, photography, print and mixed media. Through May 25 (see AC, page 29). 5 pm, free KEIKO FUKAZAWA: HELLO MAO Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Japanese-born Fukazawa’s artwork addresses Chinese political history and popular culture; and yes, the show title is a reference to Hello Kitty. Through May 25 (see AC, page 29). 5-7 pm, free MACHINA: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Featuring work by Joel Hobbie, Peter Sarkisian and John Peralta. With technology rapidly exceeding human’s own capabilities, robotic machines have far surpassed the status of tool. The artists included here explore man's relationship with machines, either by dissecting old machines or creating new ones. Through May 25 (see AC, page 29). 5 pm, free MARGE RECTOR: ABSTRACT AND CAPTURED FORMS David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Explore two series of paintings by Rector. Captured Forms consists of bold structures with optical effects that evoked vibration or movement. The Abstraction series is further-reaching, lasting until 2014, and included black and white as well as color-based abstractions, hard-edge forms and optical patterns. Through April 28. 5 pm, free MICHAEL HEDGES: IN BLOOM David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Painter Hedges employs an expressionist approach to explore and resolve color relationships using form and composition. His active and physical application of pigment to the supports keep the surfaces dynamic and colors high energy. Through April 28. 5 pm, free THINGS THAT BITE Touchstone Gallery 127 W San Francisco St, 984-1682 Enjoy refreshments while checking out fossils of prehistoric dinosaurs and Ice Age mammals that bite—each with a unique story of mystery and discovery. 2-6 pm, free
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COURTESY DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
HISTORIC WALKS OF SANTA FE
Painter Marge Rector has dedicated her 50-year career to non-objective abstractions, and this Friday’s David Richard Gallery show of the collections Abstraction and Captured Forms explores her versatility. This is “Abstract 4,” and makes us want to see 1, 2 and 3. TONY MARSH: AMERICAN MOON JARS AND CRUCIBLES Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Long Beach, California-based and Japan-trained Marsh carefully creates and then deconstructs his ceramic vessels, creating a sort of instinctive, ancestral reference to the primordial soup. Through May 25 (see AC, page 29). 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES CASA TOMADA: CURATORS’ DISCUSSION SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 Meet the 2018.SITElines curatorial team and be the first to hear their list of artists and themes for SITE's next biennial exhibition, which opens in August. 6 pm, free CONVERSATIONS IN COLLECTIONS New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Learn how to apply museum practices to personal heirlooms, collections and photography from the museum's collection team. Free with museum admission. 1 pm, $7-$12 DON E CARLETON: THE PRESS AND PHOTOJOURNALISM IN 1968 Monroe Gallery of Photography 112 Don Gaspar Ave., 992-0800 Carleton, executive director of UT Austin’s Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, discusses the tumultuous year of 1968, as well as the importance of news and photojournalism as a whole, in conjunction with the charged show currently hanging at the gallery, It Was 50 Years Ago Today. 5 pm, free
MUSIC 50 WATT WHALE Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 Rock 'n' roll and experimental. 7 pm, free CS ROCKSHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Classic rock. 8:30 pm, $5 DJ RAASHAN AHMAD Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 A soul, R&B, house, hip-hop and Latin flava party mix. 10 pm, free DANIELE SPADAVECCHIA Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Gypsy jazz guitar. 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND MIKE NICHOLSON Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards and Broadway tunes on piano: Doug starts, Mike takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free DUO RASMINKO Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Bohemian pop on the deck. 5 pm, free EMILY HERING AND THE FM BAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Hering floats through Western swing, gypsy jazz and traditional country to create her own signature sound. 7 pm, free GERRY CARTHY Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Traditional and original Irish folk tunes. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
MARY KANG
MUSIC
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ou know in the 2000 movie High Fidelity when John Cusack is picturing his ex-girlfriend with Tim Robbins and he disdainfully assumes that Robbins’ character loves world music? Why the negative connotation? Why that majorly topical intro? It could have something to do with record label Putumayo’s presence in Starbucks and the (ahem) inherent whiteness that goes along with that, but there’s a sad distilling of almost an entire planet’s non-American music that simply must stop—and a new guard of band that’s doing just that. “In America, what else do you call music that’s not in English?” Mark Speer asks SFR jokingly. It’s mid-morning in Texas and Speer has just wrapped breakfast when we speak on the phone. “Americans don’t wanna get specific enough to say ‘Oh, I love music from Cameroon,’ so they just call it ‘world music.’ But if I go into a record store, I’m going to that world music section.” Speer is co-founder and guitarist of Khruangbin, a Houston, Texas-based trio that embraces the music of the world in a non-Starbucks fashion, adding bits of rock and funk to the mix for an almost hip-hop-meets-psych-meetsfunk style. You’ll be shocked at the full sound given the band’s only a threepiece (and doesn’t loop or use laptops onstage), and Speer, a consummate session musician who’s dabbled in projects from gospel to rock, lends a wide-eyed love of practically all musical styles to the project. “When I was a teenager, the world stuff was, like, traditional Trinidadian
Dungen. Surf and R&B elements wind their way in, and Latin beats from drummer Donald “DJ” Johnson make subtle Mark Speer (left), appearances as does that Laura Lee (cenMotown hotness. But ter) and Donald “DJ” Johnson are they won’t be pigeonout to change holed. “We keep a really your mind about playful approach,” Lee world music. explains, “and as soon as you put a level of expectation on what it’s supposed to sound like, it makes me feel trapped.” Thus, Khruangbin is anything it wants to be, and it’s not unusual to hear a transition from an Afro-Caribbean moment to something more Middle Eastern or Indian, or maybe a quieter breakdown leading up to an atmospheric whirlwind of sounds. Still, among the globe-trotting bits and pieces lies a distinct personality, and while Houston’s Khruangbin spans the globe there are certain comparisons to draw, once you know Khruangbin, you surely won’t mistake them for other bands. For best results, start with KhruangBY ALEX DE VORE | a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m bin’s newest release, Con Todo el Mundo, their most focused effort to date and an steel bands or the sound of the Japa- are getting from the world music we’re endlessly listenable achievement. This may be their most accessible work, or at nese flute; these very old-school, tra- presenting: It’s a little bit deeper.” ditional—beautiful—music styles that Khruangbin absolutely is deep, as least a fantastic primer to other Khruwere almost more for the intellectu- well. Often misidentified solely as Thai angbin releases. Once you’re familiar, al,” he says. “Listening to ancient Indig- soul—both Speer and Lee say the band pick up tickets for the band’s Meow enous sounds, that’s cool, but I was is not just that, even if they’re sometimes Wolf performance on Tuesday. “Usually we just say ‘we listen to always looking for more funky stuff; inspired by it. Perhaps music writers jamming music.” just found it easier to assign them the world music and make music in a barn Bassist Laura Lee agrees and label—the band is more like a roving in the countryside,’” Lee quips. “You expands. “The first world music that I music class in what is musically made should check it out.” She ain’t wrong. was exposed to was exactly that Star- outside of America and how it might bucks series. I had those, my mom had influence a band’s entire catalogue. KHRUANGBIN those, they were also in the library,” This can mean anything from Budos Lee recalls. “But if that’s people’s intro Band-esque throwback jams with sexy, 7 pm Tuesday March 27. $14-$16. [to world music]. ... I think that’s also thumping basslines to head-bobbers in Meow Wolf, 152 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 cool about the feeling of what people the vein of Swedish psych bands like
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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Get savager at: SFReporter.com/savage
I’m a 26-year-old cis queer woman. My best friend has identified publicly as asexual for the past two years. She constantly talks about how since she doesn’t “need” sex, this means she is asexual. She does have sex, however, and she enjoys it, which I know isn’t disqualifying. But she also actively seeks out sex partners and sex. But, again, she insists that because she doesn’t “need” sex the way she presumes the rest of us do, she is asexual. I have an issue with this. I’ve never had partnered sex and never really felt the need or desire for it. I’m plenty happy with emotional intimacy from others and masturbation for my sexual needs, and I do not particularly desire a romantic or sexual partner. My friend gets offended if anyone questions her label, which occurs often in our friend group as people try to understand her situation. I usually defend her to others since she’s my friend, but as a person who is starting to identify more and more as asexual, I’ve grown annoyed at her use of “asexual” as her identifier, to the point that this may be starting to affect our friendship. I’ve kept silent because I don’t want to make her feel attacked—but in the privacy of my own head, I’m calling bullshit on her asexuality. I don’t particularly want to come out as asexual to her, given the circumstances. Am I just being a shitty gatekeeping asexual? Do I need to just accept that labels are only as useful as we make them and let this go? Actually Coitus Evading Asexuality—it’s a real thing. “Several population-level studies have now found that about 1 percent of individuals report not feeling sexual attraction to another person—ever,” Dr. Lori Brotto writes in the Globe and Mail. Dr. Brotto has extensively studied asexuality, and the data supports the conclusion that asexuality is a sexual orientation on par with heterosexuality, homosexuality, and bisexuality. “[Asexuality] is not celibacy, which is the conscious choice to not have sex even though sexual desires may endure,” Dr. Brotto writes. “Rather, for these individuals, there is no inherent wish for or desire for sex, and there never has been. They are asexuals, though many prefer to go by the endearing term ‘aces.’” Asexuality—it’s a point on a spectrum and it’s a spectrum unto itself. “There is a spectrum of sexuality, with sexual and asexual as the endpoints and a gray area in between,” says whoever wrote the General FAQ at the Asexual Visibility and Education Network website (asexuality.org). “Many people identify in this gray area under the identity of ‘gray-asexual’ or ‘gray-a.’ Examples of gray-asexuality include an individual who does not normally experience sexual attraction but does experience it sometimes; experiences sexual attraction but has a low sex drive; experiences sexual attraction and drive but not strongly enough to want to act on them; and/or can enjoy and desire sex but only under very limited and specific circumstances. Even more, many gray-asexuals still identify as asexual because they may find it easier to explain, especially if the few instances in which they felt sexual attraction were brief and fleeting. Furthermore, [some] asexual people in relationships might choose or even want to have sex with their partner as a way of showing affection, and they might even enjoy it. Others may want to have sex in order to have children, or to satisfy a curiosity, or for other reasons.” As for your friend, ACE, well, according to the Protocols of the Elders of Tumblr, we’re no longer allowed to express doubt about someone’s professed sexual orientation or gender identity. So if Republican US senator Larry
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Craig of Idaho gets caught trawling for dick in an airport bathroom—which he did in 2007— and insists it was all a misunderstanding because, you know, he’s 200 percent straight, well, then he’s straight. (And if Jeffrey Dahmer says he’s a vegetarian…) So even if your friend pulls the cock from her mouth and/or the pussy off her face only long enough to shout, “I’M ACE,” before slapping her mouth back down into someone’s lap, then she’s ace, ACE. Maybe in the same way Larry Craig is straight, your friend is asexual—or, hey, maybe she’s asexual in the “gray-a” sense, i.e., under certain circumstances (awake, aware, conscious, alert, sentient), she experiences sexual attraction. Or maybe she’s not a gray-a who identifies as ace but an actual asexual who is having sex for “other reasons.” A person doesn’t have to be celibate to be asexual or to identify as asexual, ACE, and until there’s an asexual accreditation agency—which there never will be and never should be—we’ll just have to take your friend’s word for it. But just as asexuality is a thing, ACE, so too is bullshit. Denial is a thing, and sex shame is an incredibly destructive thing. Like the guy who has a lot of gay sex but refuses to identify as gay or bi, it’s possible your friend is just a messy closet case—a closeted sexual, someone who wants sex but doesn’t want to be seen as the kind of person who wants sex since only bad people want sex. Some people twist themselves into the oddest knots so they can have what they want without having to admit they want it. But even if it sounds to you (and me) like your friend’s label is suspect, you should nevertheless hold your tongue and allow her to identify however she likes. Ask questions, sure, but challenging her label will only damage your relationship (or further damage it) and make you feel like a closeted, gatekeeping ace. And if you find yourself getting annoyed when your ace-identified friend starts in on how she doesn’t really “need” all the sex she’s having, ACE, do what I used to do when I had to listen to guys I knew for a fact were having tons of gay sex (because they were having it with me) go on and on about how they didn’t really “need” cock: smile, nod, roll ’em over, and fuck ’em in the ass again. (Feel free to swap “change the subject” for “roll ’em over” and “leave the room” for “fuck ’em in the ass.”) Settle a dispute between friends? I’m a straight man who gets hit on fairly often by women, mostly at the gym. I usually respond with a variation on “I would be interested but I’m married.” Some of my friends argue that by saying, “I’m interested but I’m married,” I’m telegraphing an interest in some sort of affair. That isn’t my intent. I mean it as a compliment. What I’m trying to communicate is “You’re an attractive person who put yourself out there and I don’t want to crush your spirit with a curt ‘No.’” What is your take, Dan? -Mutual Attraction Rarely Results In Erotic Dalliances Which is it, MARRIED: “I would be interested but I’m married” or “I am interested but I’m married”? Because there’s a difference between “I would” and “I am” in this context. When you say, “I would be interested but I’m married,” you’re shutting it down: We could fuck if I wasn’t married, but I am so we can’t. But when you say, “I am interested but I’m married,” that can be read very differently: I’m down to fuck but—full disclosure—I’m married. If that’s okay with you, let’s find a stairwell and do this thing. Would be politely shuts the door, MARRIED, am opens the door a crack and invites the sweaty woman at the gym to push against it to see if it’ll open all the way.
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On the Lovecast, Alana Massey on the misguided Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act: savagelovecast.com mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter ITMFA.org
JESUS BAS La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Spanish and flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free KITTY JO CREEK Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Bluegrass. 6 pm, free LEGENDS OF MOTOWN ALL-STAR TRIBUTE Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 A tribute show nods to all the Motown greats. 8 pm, $29-$59 LINCOLN COUNTY WAR Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Renegade country. 10 pm, $5 LINDA RANEY: BACH’S BIRTHDAY BASH First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 For this week's TGIF Organ Recital, the series' organizer celebrates Johann. Homeboy would have been 333 years old on March 31. Speaking of Raney, she's been putting together these recitals each Friday for almost 10 years, so she deserves a party too. 5:30 pm, free LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Norteño, ranchera and huasteca jams. 6 pm, free MIKE MONTIEL TRIO Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Classic rock stylings. 8:30 pm, free MISSIO Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Austin-based pop-rock duo exalts intimate vulnerabilities to connect with everyone in weird awkward feeling feels (in the best way). Popper Morgan Saint opens. 7:30 pm, $18 PHYLLIS LOVE Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6 pm, free RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Cuban street music. 8 pm, free THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Swinging jazz. 7:30 pm, free
THE TONIC JAZZ SHOWCASE Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 A classy evening of jazz. 9:30 pm, free
THEATER CONSTELLATIONS Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Scott Harrison plays a beekeeper, Alexandra Renzo plays a theoretical cosmologist, and through them the audience explores everything that happened between them somewhere in the cosmos. 7:30 pm, $15-$25 THE GOOD DOCTOR Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 An evening of humorous and poignant vignettes originally written by Anton Chekhov and adapted by Neil Simon is, by turns, charming, hilarious and touching. For tix, call 917-439-7708. 7:30 pm, $15-$25
SAT/24 ART OPENINGS SYMBOLS OF OUR INNER TRUTHS Terra Santa Fe Boutique Realty 1221 Flagman Way, Ste. B6, 780-5668 Artists Katie O'Sullivan and Mazatl Galindo present their work in a show of visual perspectives on interconnectedness among humans and within ourselves. Through April 24. 2-5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SOUTHWEST La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Richard Burleson gives a talk at the Laura Randolph Gallery, a new mineral store in the hotel. Noon, free INTRODUCTION TO CRYSTAL HEALING La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Shane Lesley gives a headsup about what crystals can do for you. It's going down at Gaea, a new rock shop in the hotel. 2 pm, free JOHNNA STUDEBAKER: CAMINO DE SANTIAGO Travel Bug Coffee Shop 839 Paseo de Peralta, 992-0418 Studebaker and her sister walked the Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage, the Way of Saint James— almost a thousand miles. Studebaker presents photos and stories of her experiences, perfect for those who have walked them—plus aspiring pilgrims and the simply curious. 5 pm, free
NEW MEXICO COMICS CREATORS Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 New Mexico-based writers and artists present books for sale and talk about their process. 1 pm, free QUINN FONTAINE: HUNG LIKE A SEAHORSE op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, .428-0321 Fontaine reads and signs his memoir, subtitled A RealLife Transgender Adventure of Tragedy, Comedy, and Recovery (see 3 Questions, page 25). 2 pm, free
DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A performance by the National Institute of Flamenco. 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS BIRD WALK Randall Davey Audubon Center 1800 Upper Canyon Road, 983-4609 Head to the hills for a guided birding hike with experienced bird nerds. 8:30-10 am, free DIANE THE MAGICIENNE Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Magic tricks, sleight-of-hand and illusions captivate audiences of all ages. 1:30 pm, free EVERYTHING IS TERRIBLE!'S THEGREATSATAN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 LA-based video blogging website Everything is Terrible! is back with a psychedelic live narrative that features puppets and real humans in costumes—and if you own any Jerry Maguire VHS tapes, bring them as an offering for the altar. 8 pm, $20-$22 MARCH FOR OUR LIVES: SANTA FE State Capitol Building 490 Old Santa Fe Trail Peacefully protest mass shootings and gun violence and demand that the lives of children, students, parents and teachers be made a priority. Meet at the Roundhouse, march to the Plaza, and end with a rally at the Plaza. Noon, free NEW VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION Stewart Udall Center 725 Camino Lejo, 983-6155 Want to volunteer in one of the nicest natural settings in town? Attend a training for prospective volunteers at the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. 10 am-noon, free
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SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market Street at Alcaldesa Street, 310-8766 Find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, sculpture, furniture, textiles and more from a juried group of local artists. It's in the Railyard, just north of the Water Tower. 8 am-2 pm, free SANTA FE MODEL RAILROAD CLUB SPRING SHOW DeVargas Center 564 N Guadalupe St., 983-4671 Model trains in several scales are on display at the old Hastings location in the mall. The show is dedicated to the memory of emeritus member Dave Hoyt, who died earlier this month in Tennessee. 9 am-5 pm, free ZIRCUS EROTIQUE BURLESQUE: A TRIBUTE TO DARK WAVE & NEW WAVE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Some of Santa Fe's loveliest ladies shake, shimmy, tease and tantalize for an evening of burlesque, sideshow and variety to the tune of classics of Dark Wave and New Wave music from the '80s & '90s. 10 pm, $15-$25
FILM A STROKE OF ENDURANCE Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Check out a screening of a film about friendship, faith and endurance; it follows a college student named Ava with cerebral palsy, as her professor has a stroke that leaves him disabled in the middle of the semester. The showing is next to the theater in the rehearsal hall. 7 pm, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Honky-tonk and Americana. 6 pm, free BUSTER'S GHOST Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Ska! (See SFR Picks, page 19). 10 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND MIKE NICHOLSON Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards: Doug starts, Mike takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free ESCAPE ON A HORSE Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 Alt.country, soul and rock. 7 pm, free HOUSE ROCKIN’ CONCERT Paradiso 903 Early St. Juke-joint roadhouse rock kinda stuffs. 7 pm, $10
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Quinn Alexander Fontaine
Bowl Fo F Forr Kids’ Sake 2018
Register your team and start your fundraising... April 14 & 15, 2018 Strike Gold Lanes, Pojoaque
DANIEL QUAT
Trans author and performer Quinn Alexander Fontaine sat down with us last October to discuss his life and the August 2017 release of his book, Hung Like a Seahorse. It was an honest discussion about Fontaine’s early days growing up queer in the South, grappling with depression, sexual abuse and addiction and, in the end, of transition and becoming who he truly is. Fontaine, who has recently been crowned Pride King for Santa Fe’s upcoming 2018 Pride festivities in June, reads from Seahorse at op.cit. Books this Saturday (2 pm. Free. DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321). (Alex De Vore)
a child’s life in Santa Fe County.
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The book’s been out a while now; how’s the reception been? It’s been phenomenal. It’s been incredibly surprising. All kinds of demographics are responding and saying that it’s a story for everybody, not just for trans people or people who know trans people; or people in recovery or people who know people in recovery. It’s about the human condition. Readings have been great, and kids have been showing up, too. I had an 11-year-old. I’ve had [ages] 11 up to 85. Collected Works [Bookstore and Coffee House] said it was the most full house they ever had. I’m feeling incredibly open and hopeful.
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A FREE PUBLIC LECTURE Nancy Owen Lewis: “They Came to Heal, They Stayed to Paint: The Birth of the Santa Fe Art Colony” Learn how tuberculosis, once the leading cause of death in America, played a key role in the development of Santa Fe’s art colony.
Tuesday, March 27, 6:00 pm St. Francis Auditorium at the New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 West Palace Ave., Santa Fe For more information go to golondrinas.org or call 505-471-2261. presented by
partially funded by the city of santa fe arts commission and the 1% lodgers’ tax, county of santa fe lodgers’ tax, and new mexico arts Above: Sheldon Parsons, 1915. R.E. Twitchell Collection, Palace of the Governors Photo Archives, New Mexico History Museum. Negative number 007822.
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JJ AND THE HOOLIGANS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Rock, blues ‘n’ Americana. 8 pm, free JOHN KURZWEG El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock 'n' roll. 9 pm, $5 JONO MANSON El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Original rock and blues. 7:30 pm, free KITTY JO CREEK Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Bluegrass and honky-tonk. 1 pm, free THE LONG GONE Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Original Americana. 9:30 pm, free MICHAEL UMPHREY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6 pm, free MYSTIC LIZARD Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Bluegrass. 6 pm, free NEW MEXICO PEACE CHOIR: WE ARE ONE James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Contemporary songs of hope and encouragement. The 85-member choir is accompanied by talented professional instrumentalists on piano, flute, fiddle, drums and bass. 3-5 pm, $15-$20 PAT MALONE Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Solo jazz guitar. 7 pm, free LOS PRIMOS MELODICOS Cava Lounge Eldorado Hotel, 309 W San Francisco St., 988-4455 Pan-Latin jams from a few Santa Fe sons. 8 pm, free RAY MATTHEW Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 All kinds of singery-songwritery tunes, from folk to jazz to country. 7 pm, free RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SANGRE JOVEN Camel Rock Casino 17486 Hwy. 84/285, Pojoaque, 984-8414 Rancheras, cumbias, corridos and polkas. 8:30 pm, free THE SANTA FE REVUE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Psychedelic country and Americana. 8:30 pm, free
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SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Cuban street music. 8 pm, free SHOWCASE KARAOKE Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 You know the drill. 8:30 pm, free TY COOPER Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Chicago-based cabaret singer Cooper releases her new CD of jazzy tunes, special for Santa Fe audiences. 6 pm, $2
THEATER CONSTELLATIONS Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 A love story played out in more than one universe (the multiverse, if you will). 7:30 pm, $15-$25 THE GOOD DOCTOR Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 An evening of humorous and poignant vignettes originally written by Anton Chekhov and adapted by Neil Simon. For tix, call 917-439-7708. 7:30 pm, $15-$25
SUN/25 BOOKS/LECTURES JOURNEYSANTAFE: TOMÁS RIVERA AND PAUL GIBSON Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Rivera, director of the Chainbreaker Collective, and Gibson, co-founder of Retake Our Democracy, discuss the prospects for social justice initiatives with a new mayor. 11 am, free THE STORIES OF NEW MEXICO'S MINERALS La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 David Mueller gives a talk at the Laura Randolph Gallery, a new mineral-focused store in the hotel. 2 pm, free TODD LATOURRETTE: CONSUMED op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321 The author reads from his memoir about his personal struggle with self-destructive tendencies and the unending trials of mental illness. Noon, free YOUNG ADULT BOOK CLUB: WINGER Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Teens are invited to discuss the book by Andrew Smith, which tells the story of 14-year-old Ryan Dean West, a troublemaker at a boarding school for rich kids who experiences the unthinkable. 6:30 pm, free
EVENTS MODERN BUDDHISM: THE ART OF HAPPY RELATIONSHIPS Zoetic 230 St. Francis Drive, 292-5293 This class asserts that by meditating on pure love, compassion, patience and giving, we can transform ourselves. 10:30 am-noon, $10 RAIL JAM 2018 Ski Santa Fe 740 Hyde Park Road, 982-4429 Snowboarders and skiers of all ages attempt to impress the judges with skill and style while grinding rails. Compete to win great prizes—entry is free—or just watch from Totemoff's. 10 am-3 pm, free SANTA FE MODEL RAILROAD CLUB SPRING SHOW DeVargas Center 564 N Guadalupe St., 983-4671 Model trains in several scales are on display at the old Hastings location in the mall. 11 am-4 pm, free UPAYA DHARMA DISCUSSION GROUP Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Share thoughts, feelings, and experiences related to Buddhist practice. 7 pm, free WIRE WRAPPING DEMONSTRATION La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Wrap stones in wire, wear 'em. It's pretty. Jeannette Easley shows you how she does it. It's at Gaea, a new rock shop in the hotel. Noon, free
FILM A STROKE OF ENDURANCE Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A screening of a film that follows a college student named Ava with cerebral palsy. The screening will be held next to the theater, in the rehearsal hall. 2 pm, free MONSIEUR MAYONNAISE Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Filmmaker and artist Phillipe Mora retraces his family’s colorful past. Mora beams into Santa Fe via Skype for a post-film interview. Presented by the Santa Fe Jewish Film Festival. 3:30 pm, $8-$12
MUSIC THE KEY FRANCES BAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Soulful blues on the deck. 3 pm, free MANDY ROWDEN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Acoustic Americana. 8 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
ALICIA INEZ GUZMÁN
Puente de los Hidalgos connects the Northside to the Plaza.
Back to the Barrio: Rosario Boulevard An abridged history BY ALICIA INEZ GUZMÁN a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
F
rom the vantage point of Rosario Boulevard, a red mansard roof is visible just above the treetops. The shingles have the look and texture of fish scales, and a facade the color of salmon. “We used to call it the haunted house,” recounts Carmela Romero, who grew up in the barrio that runs beneath the home’s hilltop perch on Paseo de la Cuma. It’s a true architectural oddity, a Victorian mansion in Santa Fe built with hand-molded bricks in the 1880s in a city defined by flat-roofed adobes. Now listed on the National Register of
Historic Places, the Hayt-Wientge, as it is known, was built in the territorial era by Walter V Hayt, who owned a shop on San Francisco Street. It was even more visible back when Romero was growing up, before the area became a hotspot for condominium development. Now condos all but block the view up the hillside. When Romero was a kid, most of the family on her mother’s line lived along Rosario Boulevard, a petite thoroughfare between Paseo de Peralta and Rosario Cemetery. On a city map, the boulevard looks a lot the the crust of a pie, while Griffin Street and Grant Avenue, which crosses over Arroyo Mascaras by way of a concrete bridge built with a bit
of art deco flare, make up the wedge. City Engineer Walter G Turley supervised construction of both the Puente de los Hidalgos, a bridge he championed for its use of old (concrete) and new (steel) materials, and the original Cross of the Martyrs on Rosario Hill in 1920. Each, like the materials he employed to erect the bridge, seemed to bring past and present together as both were erected to memorialize Spanish Colonial history. When it was built, the Puente de los Hidalgos, named after the Spanish conquistadors, connected the northernmost part of the city to the Plaza, and in its first year it became the centerpiece of the Santa Fe Fiestas. With the help of the Knights of Columbus and booster Edgar Lee Hewett, the Fiesta procession made its way from the Palace of the Governors, across the bridge and to the Cross, named after the Franciscan priests who proselytized much of the Americas. Romero says that every day, when walking home from St. Francis Elementary School, where most kids from the neighborhood attended, she crossed the bridge. By then, it had lost most of its pageantry to become a given of the bar-
Constellations • by Nick Payne Just Say It Theatre Company at Adobe Rose Theatre: Parkway Drive
For full details on these and other listings, please see
www.TheatreSantaFe.org
A&C rio, something utilitarian, and a place for kids’ balancing acts. Only the most adventurous would try to walk across the bowstring trusses. But mostly, she remembers that the bridge led to the area around Federal Plaza, where the Post Office is now located. Before that went up, Romero says the area was mostly lawn where she and her primos would practice cartwheels. In true Northern New Mexico style, Romero, whose maiden name is Duran, lived on a family compound with her tíos and tías as her closest neighbors. It was normal, she says, for family members to raise other family members. “I always thought everyone grew up that way,” she muses. Romero’s grandparents’ home was at the center of it all, and like most adobes, built room by room as necessity demanded, which resulted in a house with no hallways. Romero recalls her eldest relatives transferring property with nothing more than a handshake and a trip to the county, a move that later proved vexing for city surveyors. And when her father married her mother, he bought into the neighborhood, too, just to keep the family ties up. When Romero married her husband Leonard, she left the neighborhood, and in time so did much of her family. Property was divided and sold to newcomers, an oft-heard refrain in Santa Fe. There is a tinge of regret for not having held onto family property for Romero, but by the late ’80s, developers had set their sights on the barrio, rapidly adding condos on the hillside and in the process changing the area’s very fabric and, to the chagrin of many, blocking the natural light that streamed downward. A look at real estate now shows new compounds still going up, this time with half-million dollar price tags. Romero recalls an aunt saying, “Let’s see what happens when the hundred-year flood comes,” as if evoking the land’s karma against the forces of modern construction.
A Stroke of Endurance • A screening Teatro Paraguas and Margot Cole at Teatro Paraguas Rehearsal Hall: Calle Marie
March –April • Thurs. Fri. Sat. : p.m. • Sun. p.m.
Sat. March , p.m. & Sun. March , p.m.
The Good Doctor • by Neil Simon Oasis Theatre Company at Teatro Paraguas: Calle Marie
Special thanks to the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission for making these theatre announcements possible.
March – • Thurs. Fri. Sat: : p.m., Sun. p.m.
SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET
AN EVENING WITH PIANIST JOYCE YANG March 31
THE CALENDAR MARIO REYNOLDS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Traditional Norteño tunes and folk songs. 6 pm, free MICHAEL UMPHREY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6 pm, free NACHA MENDEZ La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Creative but rooted takes on Latin music. 7 pm, free OPEN MIC Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Bring your listenin' ears and your playin' fingers. 3-7 pm, free PAT MALONE AND JON GAGAN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A jazz duet with guitarist Malone and bassist Gagan. 7 pm, free SERENATA OF SANTA FE: APPLE HILL SOJOURN First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 New Hampshire’s Apple Hill String Quartet (that's Elise Kuder and Colleen Jennings on violins, Mike Kelley on viola, Rupert Thompson on cello and special guest Pamela Epple on oboe) plays the music of Franz Joseph Haydn, Joan Tower and Celso Garrido Lecca. 3 pm, $20-$40 SUGAR MOUNTAIN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Neil Young is a prolific dude. These other prolific dudes pay tribute. Noon, free
THEATER
w w w.aspensantafeballet.com ASFB BUSINESS PARTNER
ASFB MEDIA SPONSORS
WORKSHOP
ASFB GOVERNMENT / FOUNDATION SPONSORS Melville Hankins
CONSTELLATIONS Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Produced by Just Say It Theater and directed by Lynn Goodwin, this new play by Nick Payne is a love story played out in more than one universe (the multiverse, if you will). 3 pm, $15-$25 THE GOOD DOCTOR Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 An evening of humorous and poignant vignettes originally written by Anton Chekhov and adapted by Neil Simon. For tix, call 917-439-7708. 2 pm, $15-$25
Family Foundation
Partially funded by the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers Tax, and made possible in part by New Mexico Arts, a Division of the Department of Cultural Affairs, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
FOR THE LOVE OF PLAY Railyard Performance Center 1611 Paseo de Peralta, 982-8309 Join a multi-generational class (ages 9 to 99) as part of a graduate thesis project exploring the benefits of play. 1-2:15 pm, free
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PLANT NITE Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Want to create a gorgeous terrarium? Bam, here's your chance. Spots are limited, though, so you better hurry and reserve your seat! 12:30 pm, $45
MON/26 BOOKS/LECTURES SOUTHWEST SEMINARS: PRE-HISPANIC TURKEY DOMESTICATION & HUSBANDRY IN THE ANCIENT SOUTHWEST Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Cyler Norman Conrad speaks as part of Southwest Seminars' Ancient Sites, Ancient Stories lecture series. 6 pm, $15
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Put on your dancin’ shoes. 7:30 pm, $5
EVENTS ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE WELCOME DINNER AND STUDIO TOURS Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2351 Join IAIA’s artists-in-residence for dinner in the academic building followed by studio tours at 5:45 pm. 5-7 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. Isabel is your host. 7 pm, free LAUGHTER YOGA Montezuma Lodge 431 Paseo de Peralta, 670-3068 Presented by The Transition Network, women "50 and forward" are welcomed to create simple transformation through yoga and play. 5:45 pm, $5 THE SANTA FE HARMONIZERS REHEARSAL Zia United Methodist Church 3368 Governor Miles Road, 699-6922 The local choral group invites anyone who can carry a tune as tenor, baritone, bass or lead. 6:30-8 pm, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana. 7:30 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Santa Fe's most famous night of karaoke. 9 pm, free
JAMIE RUSSELL Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Americana, pop and rock. 7 pm, free MELLOW MONDAYS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 DJ Sato spins calming jams. 10 pm, free METAL MONDAY The Matador 116 W San Francisco St., 984-5050 DJ Lady Strange spins hard rock and heavy metal on vinyl (see SFR Picks, page 19). 9 pm, free
TUE/27 BOOKS/LECTURES PRESCHOOL STORY TIME Santa Fe Public Library LaFarge Branch 1730 Llano St., 955-4860 Other humans, new books. Your child will start to love you again. 10:30 am, free THEY CAME TO HEAL, THEY STAYED TO PAINT: THE BIRTH OF THE SANTA FE ART COLONY St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Nancy Owen Lewis tells the story of the thousands of "health seekers" who journeyed to New Mexico from 1880 to 1940 seeking a cure for tuberculosis, and their critical role in New Mexico's early artist colony. 6 pm, free
EVENTS DUEL EXPRESSIONS Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 A monthly mic welcomes all forms of expression from comedy to music to poetry and more. Sign up at 5 pm. 6-9 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 This quiz can win you drink tickets for next time. Hosted by the kindly Kevin A. 8 pm, free METTA REFUGE COUNCIL Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 A gathering for people who are struggling with illness and loss in a variety of its forms. 10:30 am, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana. 7:30 pm, free CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Sign up if you want to join in, but be forewarned: This ain't amateur hour. 8:30 pm, $5
PHOTO: MICHELE CARDAMONE
CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
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Something for Everyone Five simultaneous exhibits: What could be a mishmash is a fun survey of wildly different artists and styles BY IRIS McLISTER a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
I
f you’re a little nervous to check out gallery openings at Peters Projects, you’re not alone. The space, which previously housed Gerald Peters Gallery before it became the edgier, youngerfeeling Peters Projects, has hallowedground vibes. This Friday heralds a sprawling group of openings, some of which contain multiple artists. For director Mark Del Vecchio, who took the reins from Eileen Braziel earlier this year, it’s got obvious appeal. “What’s not to like?” he asks SFR. “The gallery is a massive space; one of the largest privately owned galleries in the country.” Del Vecchio says it’s a cavernous area—about 8,500 square feet—so why not fill it? Explaining the seemingly mixedbag grouping, he adds, “I inherited some partially curated exhibitions that were already in place, combined with the schedule of exhibitions I had been working on.” Along with his partner Garth Clark, Del Vecchio is a major force in the world of contemporary ceramic art, but he doesn’t want to be pigeonholed. “I am also an ‘art person’ who has been around all types of art for most of my life,” he says. “Ceramics have been good to me and I will always champion them.” If you’re like me and even looking at a porcelain vase makes you pretty sure you’ll accidentally knock it over, Del Vecchio says it might not be the best option for you. “But,” he adds, “you’ll be missing out on something special.” Take Tony Marsh’s American Moon Jars, for example. Gray-toned ceramics the texture and color of a section of pale aspen, but covered with shelf-like steps, which serve as platforms for chunks of pyrite, quartz and other natural stones. Other work in his Crucibles series is ceramic, but looks like something dredged up from the ocean, covered in gnarled, calcified bubbles. Hank Saxe’s stoneware sculptures (there are 10 in all) are less, shall we say,
approachable. “Untitled #7” is a hunk of shiny, silver-colored fired clay, with a hole at its center from which molten-looking gold oozes downward. For lack of a more sophisticated description, it’s kinda gross. The group show Inner Vision is the most classically styled exhibition of the five, which makes sense: Del Vecchio tells SFR that it “required some dips into the ‘vaults’ of the Gerald Peters inventory” to retrieve works by Santa Fe Art Colony painters Jozef Bakos and Willard Nash. The show also includes a handful of other artists, some local, some not, and explores how self-portraiture has changed over the years due to increased self-analysis and new possibilities for expression. It’s a fabulous concept which, with the addition of a handful of more artists, could easily be a stand-alone show. Celebrated Canadian artist Kent Monkman, whose huge paintings typically require the work of small teams of painters, contributed five much more intimate self-portraits. Also included are Kukuli Velarde, Angela Fraleigh, Daniel Sprick, Will Wilson and Ian Ingram. Meanwhile, the show Machina includes works from Paul Sarkisian, Joel Hobbie and John Peralta, a trio of genre-busting new media artists who each reconcile their creative hand with technology to explore relationships between humans and machines. Sarkisian, a longtime Santa Fe artist, projects video of his own design onto 3-D objects. Peralta, meanwhile, dissects old or otherwise obsolete 20th-century machines like typewriters, then reconfigures them into entirely “new” sculptural
COURTESY PETERS PROJECTS
A&C
Ian Ingram’s “Breached” from the exhibit Inner Vision, one of five concurrently opening at Peters Projects this week.
works. Gallery-represented local artist Joel Hobbie’s site-specific piece, called “Neurons,” includes interactive elements. For me, the most successful show comes courtesy of Japanese artist Keiko Fukazawa, whose wry humor and politicized style is far-reaching and varied, but always biting. Her show here, called Hello Mao, is largely the result of an artist resi-
dency in China, a country whose political history inspires her; of equal importance are pop culture references, thus the title Hello Mao, a play on Japan’s Hello Kitty. “I’ve known Keiko for over 25 years,” Del Vecchio tells SFR, and over that time, he says, he’s watched her develop a “deliberately subversive take on what a ceramic object means and can project.” “Chinese Landscape III” is immaculately conceived, its mist-obscured blue mountaintops adorning a box-like porcelain piece. The whole thing, though, is covered with Louis Vuitton logos, which don’t hide but gently overlay the imagery beneath. An associate professor and head of the ceramics department at Pasadena City College, this is her first time exhibiting in Santa Fe. “My plan is to always have multiple openings on a quarterly schedule,” Del Vecchio explains, “with surprise shows from time to time.” If fun, provocative shows like these are any indication, it’s a 5 EXHIBITIONS: OPENING RECEPTION
From Machina: Past, Present, Future, find futuristic projections from Peter Sarkisian.
5 pm Friday March 23. Free. Through May 25. Peters Projects, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5800
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CHUSCALES La Boca (Original Location) 72 W Marcy St., 982-3433 Exotic flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND AL ROGERS Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards: Doug starts, Al takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free KHRUANGBIN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 World music y más (see Music, page 23). 7 pm, $14-$16
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THE KING TAYLOR PROJECT Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Soul, funk and blues. 8 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free VINTAGE VINYL NIGHT The Matador 116 W San Francisco St., 984-5050 DJs spin the best in garage, surf, country and rockabilly. 8:30 pm, free
WORKSHOP ENGAGING YOUR INTUITION Zephyr Community Art Studio 1520 Center Drive, Ste. 2 Playful somatic and perceptual explorations for listening to the inner life of all things— and ourselves. Practice hearing stories from our bodies and from other living beings. Wear comfortable clothing, and come as fragrance-free as possible. Questions? Call facilitator Moriah: 577-0479. 7 pm, free
MUSEUMS
Watercolor’s a tough medium. In Journey to Center: New Mexico Watercolors by Sam Scott at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, see how a master does it.
GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Journey to Center: New Mexico Watercolors by Sam Scott. Through Nov. 1. WINNER – Best of Santa Fe HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 , 2017! 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 New Mexico’s #1 Tamale Makers • Work By Women. Erin Since 1955. Currier: La Frontera. Jolene Posa’s Tamales Are Still Made am – 6 pm • Closed Sundays • nailexpertssf.com Nenibah Yazzie: Sisters of The Original Way... By Hand. War. All through May 13. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 IAIA 2018 BFA Exhibition: Breaking Ground. Through l i n m May 12. Art & Activism: War e New r e Selections from The Harjo Mexico Family Collection. Through May 13. The Abundant North: Alaska Native Films of Influence. Through Crisis June 3. Action Abstraction and Access Redefined. Through July 27. Line Without Boundaries: Visual Conversations. Through July 29. Rolande Souliere: Form and Content. Through Jan. Crisis Line 1 (855) 662-7474 27, 2019. Warmline 1 (855) 466-7100 MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART For TTY access call 623 Agua Fría St., 989-3283
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SAM SCOTT, UNTITLED 7, 2016. WATERCOLOR ON PAPER. 7 X 10”. © SAM SCOTT
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American and international encaustic art. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Frank Buffalo Hyde: I-Witness Culture. Through April 30. Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West. Through Sept. 3. Lifeways of the Southern Athabaskans. Through Dec. 31. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Negotiate, Navigate, Innovate. Through July 16. Crafting Memory: The Art of Community in Peru. Through March 10, 2019. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Time Travelers: and the Saints Go Marching On. Through April 20. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 A Mexican Mirror: Prints from the Taller de Gráfica Popular. Through March 25. The Land That Enchants Me So: Picturing Popular Songs of New Mexico. Through Feb. 2019.
NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Contact: Local to Global. Through April 29. Shifting Light: Photographic Perspectives. Through Oct. 8. Horizons: People & Place in New Mexican Art. Through Nov. 25. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Tesoros de Devoción. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 In T’owa Vi Sae’we. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Dan Namingha: Conception, Abstraction, Reduction. Through May 18. SITE SANTA FE 1606 Paseo De Peralta, 989-1199 Luke DuBois: A More Perfect Union. Through April 4. Future Shock. Through May 1. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Beads: A Universe of Meaning. Through April 15.
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Seoul Food Nation Santa Fe’s best breakfast hails from South Korea by way of the Farmers Market BY MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
M
a smart alternative to the large, industrial-sized giants that generate the kinds of produce consumers are accustomed to seeing in grocery stores. And though industrial farming does have numerous benefits—which include yielding affordable, nutritious food available to people who might not otherwise have access to such offerings year-round—it also typically employs methods that are wildly unsustainable, such as dreaded GMOs and the
MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN
i Young’s Farm has quickly become one of my favorites at the Santa Fe Farmers Market, where they’ve been a vendor since 2012. A husband-and-wife outfit producing a variety of greens, their kimchi is particularly (and addictively) good—something I never thought I’d say about fermented cabbage salad. Kimchi is a Korean staple made from napa cabbage, radishes, garlic, chili and spices, usually made according to a mutable recipe passed down through generations. Mi Young’s comes from Seoulborn owner Jenn Yi-Mushen’s family. The stand offers a variety of flavors of kimchi pancakes at the farmers market, all wrapped up with organic mung beans and a thin, flat pancake made from organic brown rice flour. My favorite from Mi Young’s? The breakfast special with fresh greens, a fried egg and plain chevre for $10; although the red mesa, which comes with bulgogi (Korean-style barbecue beef made from local, grass-fed meat) for $12 is also very good. Mi Young’s is a micro farm situated near PojoaSalad greens such as lettuce, arugula, mustard greens que on 5 acres, 2 of which and napa cabbage make up the bulk of Mi Young’s groware arable. Micro farms are ing operation.
accompanying pesticides and fertilizers. That’s not even mentioning industrial use of fossil-fueled farm equipment and transportation of goods. The farmhouse at Mi Young’s is built out of traditional adobe that co-owner Will Mushen crafted out of small bricks of mud and straw. Mushen tells me that since there is a historical precedent and protection for adobe construction in New Mexico, it is easier to build alternative housing out of natural materials here than in other states. Thus he also has constructed three small walipinis out of the same mud. These are underground, earth-based greenhouses which, when aligned properly with the sun, are naturally thermo-regulating, even in winter. In the case of Mi Young’s, it makes for a greenhouse wherein plants can practically be grown out of the walls. In addition to the napa cabbage for kimchi, the farm grows cold-weather salad greens such as kale and mizuna. Mushen embraces a Taoist approach to farming. “Most farmers, if they find a rock in their field they can’t move, they’ll borrow a machine and move the rock,” he says. “But I believe in seeing the positive—what are the different microclimates the rock creates? There’s sun on the south side and shade on the north side, and protection from the wind on the leeward side. It’s an opportunity to grow something you couldn’t before.” As for Mi Young’s kimchi, it’s available in Santa Fe at the Cheesemongers of Santa Fe, Barrio Brinery, Skarsgard CSA and, of course, the farmers market. Two sizes are available: a pint for $10 or a quart for $18. You can get it in mild, traditional, vegan and extra-spicy, and seasonally there are daikon and cucumber varieties. I picked up the vegan entry and found an
FOOD
accurate replica of the real thing. With a fish sauce-free base made out of napa cabbage and daikon radish, I promptly undid the vegan-ness at home by throw throwing the kimchi in a skillet with some macaroni and cheese decadence. This was so satisfyingly creamy and spicy I can’t wait to make it again. KIMCHI MAC AND CHEESE Ingredients • • • • • • • • •
2 tablespoons unsalted butter 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1 ½ cups whole milk ¼ teaspoon salt 2 ¼ cups grated sharp cheddar cheese 10 ounces penne pasta ½ cup drained kimchi ½ cup chiffonade basil and cilantro 1 sliced jalepeño
1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. In a large pot of salted water, cook the pasta for five minutes less than the package instructs. 2. Meanwhile, make the cheese sauce. Melt the butter over medium heat in a separate pot and whisk in the flour. Cook until it starts to brown and bubble. 3. Remove from heat and whisk in the milk, then return to heat and cook until it starts to bubble and has thickened. 4. Remove from heat once more and whisk in the jalepeño and all but a half a cup of the cheese. 5. Drain the pasta and combine it with the cheese sauce until it is nicely coated. 6. Pour half of the mixture into a cast iron skillet. Top with half the kimchi. Then, pour the remaining pasta on top. Sprinkle with kimchi and the cheese you set aside earlier. 7. Bake for 25 minutes or until the top is golden-brown. Garnish with basil and cilantro when ready to serve.
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RATINGS
Tomb Raider Review
BEST MOVIE EVER
Gaming the system
10
BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
9
Surprise! Tomb Raider is exactly what you thought it would be—though, unlike the Angelina Jolie films of yesteryear, slightly better. And we mean slightly. We follow a young Lara Croft (Alicia Vikander of Ex Machina), the heiress of a massive fortune who has turned her back on her trust fund in favor of underground bicycle races and working hard. Whatevs. Her dad (Dominic West, who is crazyhandsome) has been missing for seven years in search of answers about the afterlife, or more specifically, an ancient Japanese queen who was sent to an uncharted island to die because she was evil and stuff. Seven years is just long enough for Lara to quit all the daydreamin’ and take over the family company and fortune. Ruh-roh, though, because she begins uncovering clues to her father’s actual life, that of an amateur archaeology enthusiast who clearly didn’t love her as much as he claimed. Lara takes off looking for answers, is swept up in a whole bunch of tomb raiding and ledge-leaping and secret society nonsense and, all the while, learns a thing or two about what kind of Croft she really is. Those who played either of the recent Tomb Raider reboot games from developer Crystal Dy-
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER
5 + ACTUALLY
CONSIDERS THE SOURCE MATERIAL - NOT A WHOLE LOT ACTUALLY HAPPENS
namics will find a mishmash of their narrative elements wrapped up in a package that’s far more akin to a gaming experience than actual film. That’s not a bad thing per se, but as far as genre movies like these go, a new identity could have been interesting. Director Roar Uthaug (whom you don’t know, we promise) even throws in subtle nods to gaming mechanics, such as how Lara climbs on shit, her love of the bow and arrow and ridiculous ancient puzzles that surely could never have been created by anyone without an advanced engineering degree. Indiana Jones this ain’t, especially in its accelerated pacing, faceless villain Mathias (a reference to the villain from the 2013 video game, though far less dimensional despite actor Walton Goggins’ best attempts) and painful tries at comic
relief, all of which fall flat. Even worse is having to watch master actors like Derek Jacobi (I, Claudius) sit on the sidelines with roles so meaningless they make Denholm Elliott in Last Crusade look like a commanding and vital performance. Whatever. People still get shot, things still get blown up and Vikander still scrambles around coming into her own, right up to the last few moments with Nick Frost (Shaun of the Dead) for some reason—moments that scream “Maybe we’ll try better for a sequel, but you already paid, so …”
TOMB RAIDER Directed by Uthaug With Vikander, Goggins and West Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 118 min.
QUICKY REVIEWS
5
THOROUGHBREDS
THOROUGHBREDS
5
+ COOK, TAYLOR-JOY AND SPARKS ARE SUBLIME
- IF YOU CUT IT, IT MAY NOT BLEED
Life is boring in the upper-crust suburbs of Connecticut. Hating your parents is de rigueur, and sometimes you have to plagiarize an essay at your elite boarding school to get by. Or maybe you have to kill your favorite horse. Either way, your options for advancement in life depend primarily on the wealth of your family and the ease with which you use those around you to your advantage. Witness Lily and Amanda, a pair of childhood friends reunited in late high school by the need for truly quality standardized test scores. Amanda (Olivia Cooke, Me, Earl and the Dying Girl) is the troubled one, having just killed her thoroughbred horse. She’s a sociopath who feels nothing. Or so we’re meant to believe. Lily (Anya Taylor-Joy, The VVitch), on the other hand, appears to be the put-together progeny of a mother who has married a wealthy hedgefund guy, beautifully played by Paul Sparks (House of Cards). Lily hates step-dad Mark, and it’s easy to see why. He’s the adult version of Amanda and Lily, albeit with enough selfawareness to see trouble coming. At least to some degree.
5
A WRINKLE IN TIME
What Cory Finley has written and directed is, at times, a witty commentary on the detachment with which we view our lives. Are we truly interested in finding out who we really are—and does anyone care? It’s an homage to
6
RED SPARROW
7
ANNIHILATION
1988’s Heathers, and may eventually achieve some sort of cult status like its predecessor. It’s no dark comedy, though, instead proving to be a movie that looked funnier in the trailer. It’s just dark.
8
BLACK PANTHER
Cooke, Taylor-Joy and Sparks are terrific together, and truly propel the movie. We get exactly why Mark is a jerk, why Lily hates him and why Amanda’s right when she says Mark isn’t that far off in a scathing assessment of his stepdaughter. And we see why Amanda feels more than she can admit or recognize. Finley and his cast deserve credit for that. In his final role, the late Anton Yelchin (Star Trek) shows why we’ll miss his development as an actor. The film doesn’t truly have a center, though. And perhaps that’s the point. It might make you giggle. It might make you uneasy. But it might not make you think anything more than, “That’s messed up.” (Matt Grubs) Violet Crown, R, 90 min. A WRINKLE IN TIME
5
Thoroughbreds—like Heathers, if Heathers sucked.
+ DIVERSE CASTING; STORM REID - LACK OF NUANCE; POSSIBLY TOO MUCH GLITTER
Madeleine L’Engle’s 1962 children’s novel, A Wrinkle in Time, was rejected by more than 25 publishers before becoming an award-winning classic story about quantum physics, the danger of conformity and the power of love. Though geared at young readers, the story’s nuanced mesh of science, female heroism and, yes, Christian ideology nudged its appeal to CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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• HEARING & SIGHT ASSISTIVE DEVICES NOW AVAILABLE • Wed - Thurs, Mar 21 - 22 1:00p Faces Places 1:15p A Fantastic Woman* 3:00p Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story 3:30p A Fantastic Woman* 5:00p A Fantastic Woman 5:45p Golden Exits* 7:15p A Fantastic Woman 7:45p Golden Exits* Friday - Saturday, Mar 23 - 24 11:00a Loveless* 11:15a Faces Places 1:15p EOS: Cezanne 1:45p Loveless* 3:15p A Fantastic Woman 4:30p Loveless* 5:30p A Fantastic Woman 7:15p Loveless* 7:45p A Fantastic Woman Sunday, Mar 25 11:00a Loveless 11:15a Faces Places* 1:15p EOS: Cezanne 1:45p Loveless* 3:30p Santa Fe Jewish Film Fest: Monsieur Mayonnaise 4:30p A Fantastic Woman* 6:45p Loveless* 7:00p AMP: Afropop Worldwide Monday - Tuesday, Mar 26 - 27 12:15p EOS: Cezanne* 12:30p A Fantastic Woman 2:15p A Fantastic Woman* 2:45p Loveless 4:30p Loveless* 5:15p A Fantastic Woman 7:15p Loveless* 7:30p A Fantastic Woman *in The Studio
A Wrinkle in Time: Once again Disney gets its hands on something and makes it ... lesser. adults as well. The story’s protagonist, 13-year-old Meg Murry (Storm Reid, 12 Years a Slave), is an angry outcast suffering from the loss of her father (Chris Pine of Star Trek fame), a scientist who, along with his fellow scientist wife (Beauty and the Beast’s Gugu Mbatha-Raw), has learned to “wrinkle” time and travel the universe and has been captured by the pervasive evil that seeks to turn all beings away from the light. Meg, her prodigy little brother Charles Wallace (Deric McCabe) and new friend Calvin O’Keefe (Levi Miller, Pan) set out to rescue him. Director Ava DuVernay’s adaptation falls unsurprisingly short in capturing the nuance of L’Engle’s novel, relying frequently on baffling amounts of glitter and eyeshadow to convey magic and angry trees to connote evil. The trio of magical beings, Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which (Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling and Oprah Winfrey, respectively) appear here with particular Disney theme-park camp, although Winfrey’s bone-deep ability to convey empathy makes for some of the film’s most touching moments. That empathy is primarily directed to Meg, played by Reid with hints of the fierceness and nuance that emblematized the original book. The young characters’ rescue mission takes them to Camazotz, a place where evil, fear and conformity have enslaved inhabitants. The film’s greatest adaptive decision was its diverse casting, which reinforces L’Engle’s original message about the importance of individual spirit and experience in the fight between good and evil. (Julia Goldberg) Violet Crown, Regal, PG, 109 minutes RED SPARROW
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+ NOT BORING, PER SE … - … BUT NOT SO GREAT
Setting aside how much we don’t buy Jennifer Lawrence (Mother!) as the Bolshoi’s prima ballerina, it becomes even more absurd when an accident onstage somehow forces her into the spy-packed world of international espionage in Red Sparrow. Lawrence is Dominika, a young woman whose uncle is the minister of, like, shadowy operations or something for Russia. He tricks her into the spycraft game of them vs. America and the search for a mole they believe has infiltrated their government. But why would she just do this? So she can care for her mother, who ails from some nameless sickness, obviously. Apparently in Russia, if you can’t make the big bucks as a ballerina, you have to become a seductive spy. Chyort! What follows is a series of confusing double-crosses, brutal torture scenes and wildly un-sexy sex rendezvous. Pointless characters
pop up regularly and scenes wherein somebody does a sneaky spy thing only for it to be discovered moments later render said spy thing moot. Not to worry, though, because lukewarm performances are everywhere, from Joel Edgerton (from the Netflix original movie Bright, which we still say should have been called Lieutenant Goblin) as the forgettable CIA agent, Matthias Schoenaerts (The Danish Girl) as the cruel uncle, Charlotte Rampling (Assassin’s Creed) as the heartless spy school headmistress, and Jeremy Irons as … well, he really only ever does Jeremy Irons. All the while, Lawrence’s silly stab at a Russian accent undermines what was an already painfully too-serious performance, and Mary-Louise Parker’s brief turn as an unscrupulous chief of staff for a US senator feels like one of the most low-stakes and overblown setups in the history of spy film. Still, Red Sparrow does manage to not overstay its welcome (even with a running time in excess of two hours) so long as one understands that it should by no means be taken seriously or assumed to be anything other than an escapist means of killing a couple hours. If nothing else, scenes of Moscow, Budapest and Vienna remind us that Europe is pretty beautiful, Russia is pretty bleak and that we can always fall back on John le Carré in a pinch. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 139 min. ANNIHILATION
7
+ LOOKS SO COOL; ACTION BITS ARE TRULY THRILLING
- SO WAIT, WHAT JUST HAPPENED?
When one is deciding whether or not a film is any good, a wise rule is to ask if the filmmakers answered the questions they posed. Sure, it might feel interesting when a movie has an open ending, and you’ve almost positively got those people in your life who extoll the virtues of a story that leaves it up to the viewer to suss out a meaning. For us, though, it always feels sort of like a cop-out. Annihilation lands someplace in there, a beautiful movie adapted from the 2014 novel of the same name by Jeff VanderMeer that sadly leaves a few too many questions unanswered and falters despite stunning CGI and interesting ideas. Natalie Portman is Lena, a soldier-turned-scientist whose husband (Oscar Isaac, who really seems to be in just about everything these days), still a soldier, shows up talking nonsense after being MIA for a full year. Portman is thus pulled into the black-op world of government intrigue whereupon she learns a meteor from outer space crash-landed near the coast and has resulted in a bizarre biological phenomenon known as “the shimmer,” which threatens to overtake the globe with … they don’t know what. Turns out her husband went
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MOVIES
YOUR HOMETOWN MOVIE THEATRE WEDNESDAY, MAR. 21ST 5:10 BOB THE GAMBLER (BOB LE 2:00 FILM STARS DON’T FLAMBEUR) DIE IN LIVERPOOL 4:20 TEHRAN TABOO 7:20 CLAIRE’S CAMERA 6:30 SOUVENIR 8:30 JOSIE THURSDAY, MAR. 22ND 1:15 FILM STARS DON’T DIE IN LIVERPOOL In Russia, spy training amounts to picking locks attached to doors attached to nothing. into this thing with a squad of soldiers and that’s why he’s been missing, so, wouldn’t you know it, Lena and some other scientist-types volunteer to get in there and solve the mystery. It’s beyond riveting for the first hour or so, but as we grasp wildly for answers alongside Lena and her crew, we eventually learn they’re not really coming. Oh, we get surface information and potential theories about what’s causing the blight and what it’s doing to the area’s biology, but rather than identifying what’s really going on, we instead struggle through a bunch of weird flora and fauna with some serviceable surface information that might have been OK had the setup not been so juicy. Writer-director Alex Garland (Ex Machina, 28 Days Later) joins forces with VanderMeer to mixed results—do we care about Lena’s guilt or dying husband? Did we get enough of a feel from the others in the crew to care about their fates? We’re hard-pressed to say for sure, even as some seriously spooky shit goes down, but by the time Lena reaches the meteor’s epicenter and we reach the payoff, it’s a pretty big letdown. Still, Jennifer Jason Leigh is a welcome addition as a heartless psychologist who repeatedly sends folks to their deaths, and the overall aesthetic is fantastic, even if the story fizzles out under the weight of the premise. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 115 min.
kia (Lupita Nyong’o) and Okoye (Danai Gurira), and we’re really getting somewhere. From a purely aesthetic standpoint, Black Panther is a complete triumph. The costuming and hair, the production design and, frankly, the hot-as-fire score and soundtrack (thanks for the hit jams, Kendrick Lamar!) are all glorious. Where it falters, however, is in its attempts at a deep story. At the very edges of the action lies surface information about colonization and racism, but we never dive deep enough into these concepts in any meaningful way. Rather, they’re mentioned briefly between kickass fight scenes which, yes, are kickass, but how refreshing and potentially valuable it might be to see a comic book film dissect something real. Still, the requisite explosions and shaky morality plays are there, along with the always-fantastic character actor Andy Serkis. Perhaps director-writer Ryan Coogler (Fruitvale Station) is simply dipping his toes into the concept of a heavier (or more grounded) direction, and we really hope he gets there with a sequel. For now, though, Black Panther is still a gorgeous film and the most culturally significant Marvel outing to date—that’s something all on its own. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 134 min.
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+ CULTURALLY IMPACTFUL; BADASS WOMEN
- HEAVIER STUFF LOST IN THE NOISE
Someplace between the joyous celebration of all things African culture and the tremendous principal cast of all black actors in Black Panther lies a fairly run-of-the-mill comic book movie narrative, but it almost seems at this point that if we’re hitting any Marvel Studios movie in search of the non-formulaic, we’re going to be sorely disappointed. We enter the fictional African nation of Wakanda as its prince, the mighty T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman, 42), is set to take the throne following his father’s murder (which you may have seen in Captain America: Civil War). For hundreds of years Wakanda has thrived thanks to the also-fictional vibranium, a metal so precious and powerful that it can make any far-fetched sci-fi dreams come true; a metal that just so happens to exist only there. Up until now, pretty much no outsiders have entered Wakanda, but when a mysterious former US soldier (Michael B Jordan, Creed) starts poking around and trying to find his way in for nefarious reasons, T’Challa must confront heavy truths about his country, his people and the heartbreaking past of African Americans. Fill things out with utterly badass women like Na-
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REGAL STADIUM 14 3474 Zafarano Drive, 844-462-7342 CODE 1765#
THE SCREEN SFUAD, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 473-6494
VIOLET CROWN 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678
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BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND!
“Surround Sound”—one way to take it all in.
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281
by Matt Jones
City of Santa Fe Permit #18-004
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SANTA FE CATS not only supports the mission of FELINES & FRIENDS from revenue generated by providing premium boarding for cats, pocket pets and birds, but also serves as a mini-shelter for cats awaiting adoption. For more information, please visit www.santafecats.com
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PETCO: 1-4 pm Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Sunday TECA TU at DeVargas Center: 10 am-2 pm First Saturday of each month Please visit our cats at PETCO and TECA TU during regular store hours. FOSTER HOMES URGENTLY NEEDED FOR ADULT CATS OF VARIOUS AGES
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to Felines & Friends after being rescued from a hoarding case. We believe ALICIA and ALEC are siblings. TEMPERAMENT: All the cats are sweet, gentle and developing their individual personalities now that they have good food and a clean environment. ALICIA is a petite orange tabby. Due to her rough start in life, she arrived with terrible stomatitis which resulted in all her teeth having to be removed. However, now that her mouth is no longer painful, she is eating canned food and gaining weight. AGE: born approx. 3/1/17.
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SASHA is in need of a new loving home. She has recently had a senior blood panel and overall is in good health but we have started feeding her a kidney-friendly diet. TEMPERAMENT: SASHA is a sweet and gentle cat who gets along with other cats and gentle dogs, but wouldn’t mind being the only pet in her new home. SASHA is a pretty dilute torbie. AGE: born approx. 8/1/07.
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JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mentalemotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. All are Welcome! The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Drop-ins welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com
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TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD. Get TESOL Certified & Teach English Anywhere. Earn an accredited TESOL Certificate and start teaching English in USA & abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. Take this highly engaging & empowering course. Hundreds have graduated from our Santa Fe program. Next Course: July 9 - Aug 3. Contact John Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. info@tesoltrainers.com www.tesoltrainers.com
MEDITIATION & MODERN BUDDHISM THE ART OF HAPPY RELATIONSHIPS We all want in our heart of hearts to be happy all the time. We simply do not know how to do this all the time. This series will offer new tools to help improve our personal, family, and work relationships. We will learn practical ways of thinking outside the box of ordinary and enter into an amazing world of mental transformation. Gen Kelsang Inchug, an American Buddhist nun has been practicing and teaching for many years with the guidance of Geshe Kelsang Gyatso. Her teachings and guided meditations in Santa Fe are accessible, inspiring and offer profound insight - transmitted with warmth and humor Sundays 10:30am - 12:00pm at ZOETIC 230 S. St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM 87501 (between Alameda & Agua Fria) $10/ Drop-in class Ongoing Classes: March 25 - April 22 More info: (505) 292 5293, www.meditationinnewmexico.org
IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you go on eating binges or fasts without medical approval? Is your weight affecting your life? Contact Overeaters Anonymous! We offer support, no strings attached! No dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, no diets. We meet every day from 8-9 am at The Friendship Club, 1316 Apache Avenue, Santa Fe. www.nnmoa.com UPAYA ZEN CENTER: MEDITATION, TALKS, BUDDHIST RETREATS Come for daily MEDITATION and Wednesday DHARMA TALKS 5:30-6:30PM. Take a retreat: APR 6-8 REDISCOVERING ZEN’S ROOTS IN ANCIENT CHINA - David Hinton explores ancient Chinese Taoism/Ch’an and koans; APR 17-22 SESSHIN: THE SONG OF THE JEWEL MIRROR SAMADHI - examine the interplay of absolute and relative truth at this intensive meditation retreat led by Sensei Genzan Quennell. www.upaya.org/programs. Registrar@upaya.org, 505-986-8518, 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, Santa Fe, NM.
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evalleyshelter.org • petango.com/espanola Bill is going to be a gentle giant as he grows older, full of love and playful affection. He’s extremely sweet and would love a home just as well natured as he is. We anticipate Bill is going to grow into a rather large dog and will weigh over 70 lbs when he’s an adult dog. Bill is about 10 months old and came to the shelter as a stray. He’s going to make an excellent companion for outdoor adventures and snuggling next to his human in the summer.
Bill
Diamond breaks our hearts, she’s got the saddest “puppy face” we’ve seen in a long time. She’s not always this mopey though, when her friend Pearl is around: Diamond is all tail wags! We know she’s been in a home before and isn’t adjusting to the shelter as easily as other dogs do, but we have hope she’ll find a loving home. Diamond has been diagnosed with heartworm disease and we have already begun a pre-heartworm treatment regime. Once she gets adopted we will schedule the complete heartworm treatment.
Diamond
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MIND BODY SPIRIT ACUPUNCTURE Rob Brezsny
Week of March 21st
ARIES (March 21-April 19): The “School of Hard Knocks” is an old-fashioned idiom referring to the unofficial and accidental course of study available via life’s tough experiences. The wisdom one gains through this alternate approach to education may be equal or even superior to the knowledge that comes from a formal university or training program. I mention this, Aries, because in accordance with astrological omens, I want to confer upon you a diploma for your new advanced degree from the School of Hard Knocks. (P.S.: When PhD students get their degrees from Finland’s University of Helsinki, they are given top hats and swords as well as diplomas. I suggest you reward yourself with exotic props, too.)
unions with worthy partners. Do you trust your own perceptions and insights to guide you toward ever-healthier alliances? Do what you must to muster that trust. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If you want people to know who you really are and savor you for your unique beauty, you must be honest with those people. You must also develop enough skill to express your core truths with accuracy. There’s a similar principle at work if you want to know who you really are and savor yourself for your unique beauty: You must be honest with yourself. You must also develop enough skill to express your core truths with accuracy. The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to practice these high arts.
DR. JOANNA CORTI, DOM, Powerful Medicine, Powerful Results. Homeopathy, Acupuncture. Micro-current (Acupuncture without neeTAURUS (April 20-May 20): Europeans used to think dles.). Parasite, Liver/cleanses. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your journey in the comthat all swans were white. It was a reasonable certainty Nitric Oxide. Pain Relief. ing weeks may be as weird as an R-rated telenovela, given the fact that all swans in Europe were that color. Transmedium Energy Healing. but with more class. Outlandish, unpredictable, and But in 1697, Dutch explorer Willem de Vlamingh and Worker’s Compensation and even surreal events could occur, but in such a way as his sailors made a pioneering foray to the southwestto uplift and educate your soul. Labyrinthine plot twists Auto Accidents Insurance ern coast of the land we now call Australia. As they will be medicinal as well as entertaining. As the drama accepted 505-501-0439 sailed up a river the indigenous tribe called Derbarl Yerrigan, they spied black swans. They were shocked. The anomalous creatures invalidated an assumption based on centuries of observations. Today, a “black swan” is a metaphor referring to an unexpected event that contravenes prevailing theories about the way the world works. I suspect you’ll soon experience such an incongruity yourself. It might be a good thing! Especially if you welcome it instead of resisting it.
gets curioser and curioser, my dear Scorpio, I expect you will learn how to capitalize on the odd opportunities it brings. In the end, you will be grateful for this ennobling respite from mundane reality!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Love is the only sane and satisfactory answer to the problem of human existence,” wrote philosopher Erich Fromm. I would add a corollary for your rigorous use during the last nine months of 2018: “Love is the only effective and practical GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Crayola is one of the way to graduate from your ragged, long-running dilemworld’s foremost crayon manufacturers. The geniuses in mas and start gathering a new crop of fresh, rousing charge of naming its crayon colors are playful and imagchallenges.” By the way, Fromm said love is more than a inative. Among the company’s standard offerings, for warm and fuzzy feeling in our hearts. It’s a creative force example, are Pink Sherbet, Carnation Pink, Tickle Me that fuels our willpower and unlocks hidden resources. Pink, Piggy Pink, Pink Flamingo, and Shocking Pink. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): My goal here is to conOddly, however, there is no color that’s simply called vince you to embark on an orgy of self-care—to be as “Pink.” I find that a bit disturbing. As much as I love sweet and tender and nurturing to yourself as you dare to extravagant creativity and poetic whimsy, I think it’s be. If that influences you to go too far in providing youralso important to cherish and nurture the basics. In self with luxurious necessities, I’m OK with it. And if your accordance with the astrological omens, that’s my solicitous efforts to focus on your own health and welladvice for you in the coming weeks. Experiment with fanciful fun, but not at the expense of the fundamentals. being make you appear a bit self-indulgent ornarcissistic, I think it’s an acceptable price to pay. Here are more key CANCER (June 21-July 22): According to Vice magathemes for you in the coming weeks: basking in the glow zine, Russian scientist Anatoli Brouchkov is pleased of self-love; exulting in the perks of your sanctuary; honwith the experiment he tried. He injected himself with oring the vulnerabilities that make you interesting. 3.5-million-year-old bacteria that his colleagues had AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): One day, Beatles’ guitardug out of the permafrost in Siberia. The infusion of this ancient life form, he says, enhanced his energy and ist George Harrison decided to compose his next song’s strengthened his immune system. I can’t vouch for the lyrics “based on the first thing I saw upon opening any veracity of his claim, but I do know this: It’s an apt book.” He viewed this as a divinatory experiment, as a metaphor for possibilities you could take advantage of quest to incorporate the flow of coincidence into his in the near future: drawing on an old resource to boost creative process. The words he found in the first book your power, for example, or calling on a well-preserved were “gently weeps.” They became the seed for his tune part of the past to supercharge the present. “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” Rolling Stone magazine ultimately named it one of “The Greatest Songs of LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Booze has played a crucial role All Time” and the tenth best Beatle song. In accordance in the development of civilization, says biomolecular with the astrological omens, I recommend you try some archaeologist Patrick McGovern. The process of creating divinatory experiments of your own in the coming this mind-altering staple was independently discovered weeks. Use life’s fun little synchronicities to generate by many different cultures, usually before they invented playful clues and unexpected guidance. writing. The buzz it provides has “fired our creativity and fostered the development of language, the arts, and reli- PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Millions of you Pisceans gion.” On the downside, excessive consumption of alco- live in a fairy tale world. But I suspect that very few of hol has led to millions of bad decisions and has wrecked you will be able to read this horoscope and remain countless lives. Everything I just said is a preface to my completely ensconced in your fairy tale world. That’s main message, Leo: The coming weeks will be a favorbecause I have embedded subliminal codes in these able time to transform your habitual perspective, but words that will at least temporarily transform even the only if you do so safely and constructively. Whether you dreamiest among you into passionate pragmatists in choose to try intoxicants, wild adventures, exhilarating service to your feistiest ideals. If you’ve read this far, travel, or edgy experiments, know your limits. you are already feeling more disciplined and organized. Soon you’ll be coming up with new schemes VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The astrological omens sugabout how to actually materialize a favorite fairy tale gest that the coming weeks will be favorable for making in the form of real-life experiences. agreements, pondering mergers, and strengthening bonds. You’ll be wise to deepen at least one of your commitments. Homework: Imagine a bedtime story you’d like to You’ll stir up interesting challenges if you consider the pos- hear and the person you’d like to hear it from. sibility of entering into more disciplined and dynamic Testify at Freewillastrology.com.
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 8 R O B B R E Z S N Y at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. 38
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE No. PB-2018-0020 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CHRISTOPHER OLSON, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this Notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either by delivery or mail to the undersigned in care of Tracy E. Conner, P.C., Post Office Box 23434, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502, or by filing with the Probate Court for the county of Santa Fe, personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe, 102 Grant Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501, with a copy to the undersigned. Dated: March 1, 2018. Patricia Steindler Personal Representative c/o Tracy E. Conner Post Office Box 23434 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502 Phone: (505) 982-8201 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR THE CHANGE OF NAME OF Nicanora Armijo. Case No.: D-101-CV-2018-00457 AMENDED NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Nicanora Armijo will apply to the Honorable Francis J. Mathew, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 11:15 a.m. on the 30th day of March 2018 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Nicanora Armijo to Nikki A. Boone. Stephen T. Pacheco, District Court Clerk By: Monica Chavez Crespin Submitted by: /s/ Nicanora Armijo Petitioner, Pro Se STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Ruby Ronquillo Case No.: D-101-CV-2018-00696 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Ruby Ronquillo will apply to the Honorable RAYMOND Z. ORTIZ, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa
Fe, New Mexico, at 10:00 a.m. on the 23rd day of March, 2018 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Ruby Ronquillo to Katherine Ruby Ronquillo. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Corinne Onate Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Ruby Ronquillo Petitioner, Pro Se
with the provisions of Sec. 40-81 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Wilda Beth Rexford will apply to the Honorable RAYMOND Z. ORTIZ, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 10:00 a.m. on the 20th day of April, 2018 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Wilda FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRCIT Beth Rexford to Beth Rose. COUNTY OF SANTA FE STEPHEN T. PACHECO, STATE OF NEW MEXICO District Court Clerk Case No. D-101-PB-2018-00039 By: Monica Chavez Crespin IN THE MATTER OF THE Deputy Court Clerk ESTATE OF JOANNE L. ELLIS Submitted by: Wilda Beth Rexford (a/k/a Jody Ellis), DECEASED. Petitioner, Pro Se NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that STATE OF NEW MEXICO Peter Wirth, whose address is IN THE PROBATE COURT c/o Sawtell, Wirth & Biedscheid, SANTA FE COUNTY P.C., 708 Paseo de Peralta, Santa IN THE MATTER OF THE Fe, New Mexico 87501, has been ESTATE OF Maria Elena Larsen, appointed personal representative DECEASED. of the Estate of Joanne L. Ellis, Case No.: 2018-0022 deceased. Creditors of the estate NOTICE TO CREDITORS must present their claims within NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN four (4) months after the date of that the undersigned has been the first publication of this notice, appointed personal representaor within (60) days after mailing tive of this estate. All persons or other delivery, whichever is having claims against this estate later, or the claims will be forever are required to present their barred. Claims must be presented claims within two (2) months to the Personal Representative, after the date of first publicaPeter Wirth, in care of Sawtell, tion of this notice, or the claims Wirth & Biedscheid, P.C., 708 will be forever barred. Claims Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM must be presented either to the 87501, or filed with the First undersigned personal repreJudicial District Court of Santa Fe sentative at the address listed County, New Mexico. below, or filed with the Probate Dated: March 12, 2018. Court of Santa Fe, County, New Respectfully submitted, Mexico, located at the following SAWTELL, WIRTH & address: 102 Grant Ave, Santa BIEDSCHEID, P.C. Fe, NM 87501. Dated: 3/15/18 Attorneys for the Estate of Byrne Lauritz Larsen Joanne L. Ellis 138 Elena St. 708 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, NM 87501 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 505-577-2508 (505) 988-1668 STATE OF NEW MEXICO By: Peter Wirth COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN THE PROBATE COURT COURT IN THE MATTER OF SANTA FE COUNTY A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF No. 2018-0010 NAME OF Clyde Edgar Rose IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE Case No.: D-101-CV-2018-00827 OF Billy Spillers, DECEASED. NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME NOTICE TO CREDITORS TAKE NOTICE that in accorNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN dance with the provisions that the undersigned has been of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. appointed personal representa40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the tive of this estate. All persons Petitioner Clyde Edgar Rose will having claims against this estate apply to the Honorable DAVID are required to present their K. THOMSON, District Judge of claims within four (4) months the First Judicial District at the after the date of the first publica- Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 tion of this notice, or the claims Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, will be forever barred. Claims New Mexico, at 10:00 a.m. on must be presented either to the the 23rd day of May, 2018 for undersigned personal represen- an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF tative at the address listed below, NAME from Clyde Edgar Rose or filed with the Probate Court of to Clyde Edward Rose. Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, STEPHEN T. PACHECO, located at the following address: District Court Clerk 102 Grant Ave., By: Jasmin Lopez Santa Fe, NM 87501. Deputy Court Clerk Dated: March 13, 2018. Submitted by: Clyde Edgar Rose Jeffrey Spillers Petitioner, Pro Se 2300 Antonio Lane NEED TO PLACE A Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-690-7619
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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Wilda Beth Rexford Case No.: D-101-CV-2018-00822 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance
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LEGAL NOTICES ALL OTHERS
SFPSWCD shall ordinarily be held each month at 9:00 a.m. on the second Wednesday of each month at the USDA Service Center Resolution #18-03 Conference Room, 4001 Office SANTA FE-POJOAQUE SOIL Court Drive # 1001, Santa Fe, New AND WATER CONSERVATION Mexico 87507-4929. An annual DISTRICT Schedule and Proposed Agenda will OPEN MEETINGS RESOLUTION be available from the District office, WHEREAS, Section 10-15- 1 (B) of 4001 Office Court Drive # 1001, the Open Meetings Act (Section Santa Fe, New Mexico 87507-4929. 10-15- 1 through 10-15- 4 NMSA Notice of regular meetings will be 1978) states that, except as may given seven days before the meeting be otherwise provided in the to parties who request it in writing. Constitution or the provisions of the 2. Special meetings of the Open Meetings Act, all meetings of SFPSWCD may be called by the a quorum of members of any board, Chairman or a majority of the commission, other policy making members upon a three day notice. body of any state agency held for Parties who have requested notice the purpose of formulating public of meetings in writing will be notified policy, discussing public business or by telephone. for the purpose of taking any action 3. Special meetings of the within the authority of such board, SFPSWCD are meetings called commission or other policy making under the circumstances, which body are declared to be published demand immediate action, by the meetings open to the public at all Board of Supervisors. Although the times; and WHEREAS, any meeting Board of Supervisors would avoid subject to the Open Meetings Act at emergency meetings whenever which the discussion or adoption of possible, such circumstances may any proposed resolution, rule, regula- occasionally arise. Emergency meettion or formal action occurs shall be ings may be called by the Chairman held only after reasonable notice to or a majority of the members upon the public, and WHEREAS, Section 24 hour notice. Parties who have 10-15- 1 (B) of the Open Meetings requested a notice of meetings in Act requires the Santa Fe-Pojoaque writing will be notified by telephone. Soil and Water Conservation District 4. Pursuant to Section 10-15- 1 (E) (SFPSWCD) to determine annuNMSA 1978, the SFPSWCD may ally what constitutes reasonable close a meeting to the public if the notice of its public meetings; NOW subject matter of such discussion or THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by action is included in Subsection E of the SFPSWCD, on this 13 th day of the Opening Meetings Act, Section December 2017 that: 10-15- 1 NMSA 1978. If any Board of 1. Regular meetings of the
Supervisors meeting is closed pursuant to Section 10-15- 1 (E) NMSA, such closure: A. If made in an open meeting, shall be provided by a majority vote of a quorum of the Board of Supervisors and authority for the closure shall be stated in the motion calling for the vote on a closed meeting. The vote on a closed meeting shall be taken in an open meeting and the vote of each individual member is to be recorded in the minutes. Only those subjects announced or voted upon prior to closure by the Board of Supervisors may be discussed in a closed meeting; and B. If called for when the Board of Supervisors is not in an open meeting, the closed meeting shall not be held until public notice, appropriate under the circumstances, stating the specific provision of law authorizing the closed meeting is given to the members and to the general public. 5. If you or an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact Clara DuBois, District Clerk at 505-471- 0410 extension 107. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes can be provided in various accessible forms from Clara DuBois, District Clerk at 505-471- 0410. Alfredo J. Roybal, Chairman, Board of Supervisors SANTA FE-POJOAQUE SWCD Date: 12/13/17
Are you looking for a
CAREER CHANGE or a
CHANCE TO BREAK AWAY to sell something you believe in?
SANTA FE REPORTER IS GROWING OUR ADVERTISING TEAM
to increase our market share by building relationships and providing diverse, new sales strategies for our current clients.
Responsibilities for our new advertising executive include initiating and developing relationships with local businesses as well as prospecting to generate new advertisers in our digital and print products. In addition to our weekly flagship newspaper product, we publish five glossy magazines each year, four digital newsletters each week and daily web content. Compensation includes a base salary for the first month and aggressive commission on new clients for the first three months. This is a full-time position with benefits, including health and dental insurance, a 401(K) retirement plan. Successful entry level executives in this market can earn $45,000 or more per year. Candidate must possess own vehicle and valid driver’s license and insurance. Send letters of interest to advertising@sfreporter.com. No phone calls.
132 E. Marcy St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 SFREPORTER.COM
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MARCH 21-27, 2018
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WE BUY DIAMONDS GOLD & SILVER GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST THINGS FINER Inside La Fonda Hotel 983-5552
JEEP MAINTENANCE & REPAIR. ALL ISSUES RESOLVED. MODERN AUTOWORKS. 1900 B CHAMISA ST.
COLONICS BY A RN 699-9443 Tennis Lessons W/ A PRO WHO HAS 25 YRS. EXPERIENCE Kids of all ages & adults welcome! Racquets Included! Call Coach Jim 505.795.0543
INTUITIVE PAINTING New group startingWednesdays-901.1367 Workshop April 28, paintbiglivebig.com
SFR BACK PAGE BASE PRICE: $25 (Includes 1 LARGE line & 2 lines of NORMAL text) CUSTOMIZE YOUR TEXT WITH THE FOLLOWING UPGRADES: COLOR: $12/Line (Choose RED ORANGE GREEN BLUE orVIOLET) ADDITIONAL LINES: $10/Line | CENTERED TEXT: $5/AD HIGHLIGHT $10
DEADLINE 12 NOON TUESDAY
CLASSY@SFREPORTER.COM 505-988-5541
BEGINNERS GUITAR PRAJNA YOGA 200 HOUR TEACHER LESSONS. TRAINING MICROSOFT ACCESS i LOVE TO ORGANIZE BEST RATES IN TOWN! $30 HR. 6/7-7/5 | PRAJNA YOGA Experienced References PREPAY 4 LESSONS - $100 DATABASES TEMPLE santafeguitarlessons.com Sue 231-6878 505-989-4242.
BODY OF SANTA FE ONE WEEK FREE CLASSES YOGA * NIA * CORE STRENGTH new students only SPRING SALE! 30% OFF Favorite Brands MASSAGE & FACIALS 9am-7pm daily B-ZEN VEGAN POP-UP DINNER with Childcare Fri 3/23 * 5-8pm SPA | BOUTIQUE | KIDS CAFE | STUDIO bodyofsantafe.com 505-986-0362 333 W. Cordova
Design - Training Troubleshooting Destin / 505-450-9300 richter@kewa.com
BEING HELD For 1 hr • sliding scale • www.duijaros.com
JERRY COURVOISIER PHOTOGRAPHY • PHOTOSHOP • LIGHTROOM PROFESSIONAL 1 ON 1 505-670-1495
1 HR. MASSAGE $15
4250 Cerrillos Rd. #1264 (Santa Fe Place Mall) Divorce, workplace, community 626-675-6123 cpmediation.org 505 690 1928 Thur 3/29 5:45 90 mins @ Unitarian Church Free, Donations accepted MAINTENANCE & REPAIR. ALL 5056709961 ISSUES RESOLVED. MODERN AUTOWORKS. 1900 B CHAMISA ST.
Mediation Services
SILVER • COINS JEWELRY • GEMS TOP PRICES • CASH 3 GEMOLOGISTS ON STAFF Earthfire Gems 121 Galisteo • 982-8750
W/ EDWINA 3/22-4/12 SPRING EQUINOX YIN & RESTORATIVE W/ MELISSA & NICOLLE 3/23 YOGA FOR THE UPPER BACK, NECK AND SHOULDERS W/ PATTI 3/24 YOGA MEDICINE SERIES W/ WENDELIN 4/8-4/29 982-0990 YOGASOURCE-SANTAFE.COM
REIKI I & II COURSES with PASHA HOGAN, 20 years teaching experience REIKI I 4/13-15 REIKI II 5/18-20 PRIVATE SESSIONS ALSO AVAILABLE (808) 633-1387 PASHAHOGAN.COM
WOMEN’S SUPPORT GROUPS
For Women in their 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s Video/Counseling in Office and Home Visits CLSiwula MFT magamam.com
A new organization offering a music learning program for youth in Las Vegas,NM, needs PRAJNAYOGA.COM | 988-5248 Instruments, new or used. We are happy to come to you and pick it up or you can drop it off at our satalitte location. 20+yrs professional, Apple certified. Please call Music-OPS Satellite in SF at 505 252-9648 xcellentmacsupport.com • new online newspaper Randy • 670-0585 or email info@musicops.org.
XCELLENT MACINTOSH SUPPORT
CHECK OUT WEIRDNEWS.INFO
SF Healing Circle
NISSAN
505-989-4242
Soils Testing COACHING YOUR BLISS Workshop Manifest Your Vision Donna Karaba, MA, Naropa U. Professional Coaching & Consulting since 2003 505-954-1011
505.428.0164
YOGASOURCE Diamonds and GOLD BEST YOGA STUDIO WE BUY AND SELL VOTED VEDIC CHANT BASICS
FOLLOW UP Sun., March 25, 1:00-4:00 p.m. New Mexico Wildlife Center, Espanola. Return to learn how to interpret the results from the CSU Soil Lab, including amendments recommended to add to soils for certain conditions. This is a follow up to the Soils Testing Workshop held on Feb. 25.
Antique Kachina Dolls Wanted CALL OR EMAIL: BRANT@BMGART.COM 505-670-2447
Much Love Monday w/ Chad Wilkins
w/ our new kava cocktails fresh from Hawaii Rootsy folk, mystical singersongwriter Relax, open your heart, and dance! At the SF Oxygen Bar Apothecary 7-10pm, 133 San Francisco St *Come try our amazing new fusion menu! Vegetarian, vegan, and paleo - gluten free kitchen*
INTRO TO RADICAL ALIVENESS Cultivate Your Courageous Self-Knowing APRIL 21-22, 2018 Synergia Ranch radicalaliveness.org/calendar
TEXTILE REPAIR 505.629.7007
INNER FOR TWO 106 N. Guadalupe Street (505) 820-2075
“YOU ARE WHAT YOU INK”
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happy hour!
WEDNesday – Sunday from 4 pm to 6:30 pm Enjoy treats like: • grilled patagonia pink shrimp • Garlic truffle fries • mesquite smoked prime rib sliders • salmon fish n’ chips • mussels in heirloom tomato broth • grilled tenderloin beef tips • wine • local brews... and lively conversation. See you there!
NOW OPEN
227 DON GASPAR | SUITE 11A
Inside the Santa Fe Village
505-920-2903
happy hour everyday from 4 pm to 6:30 pm
Check us out on