September 6, 2017 Santa Fe Reporter

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SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017 | Volume 44, Issue 36

NEWS

WE ARE

.

OPINION 5

Buddy and Irene Roybal Director-Century Bank, Owners-Coronado Paint and Decorating

THE ENTHUSIAST 7

Irene and I are proud to serve our community. Century Bank has shared that same commitment for over 130 years. WE ARE Century Bank.

MOUNTAINS CALLING Escape your life—but go easy on yourself, too NEWS 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6

22

HIGH & DRY 9 New Mexico didn’t send our state’s disasterresponse team to Houston—because we don’t have one any more CANNABIS CLASS 11 When the Health Department doesn’t provide enough education on its programs, it leaves room for private interlopers to swoop in COVER STORY 12 BACK-TO-SCHOOL BOOK LIST FOR GROWN-UPS Our annual fall tradition has come around again, heavy on the nonfiction this time, but with dashes of graphic novel and memoir

I said a hip, hop, the hippie, the hippie, to the hip hip-hop, and you don’t stop the rock it to the bang-bang, boogie say “up jump” the boogie to the rhythm of the boogie, the beat.

Cover design by Anson Stevens-Bollen artdirector@sfreporter.com

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM

CULTURE

MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER AND AD DIRECTOR ANNA MAGGIORE

SFR PICKS 19 Puppet apocalypse, tricky tricksters, Gary emmer-effing Cooper and school jam-a-lamz THE CALENDAR 21

ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE STAFF WRITERS AARON CANTÚ MATT GRUBS

MUSIC 22

COPY EDITOR AND CALENDAR EDITOR CHARLOTTE JUSINSKI

GOING DUTCH K.Dutch=A-OK

Filename & version:

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Cisneros Design:

505.471.6699

Client:

Century Bank

Publication:

Santa Fe Reporter

Run Dates:

September 6, 2017

Contact: nicole@cisnerosdesign.com Ad Size: 4.75" w x 5.625” h Due Date: August 30, 2017 Send To: Anna Maggiore, anna@sfreporter.com

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR

A&C 25

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS LIZ BRINDLEY ELIZABETH MILLER R MITCHELL MILLER MICHAEL J WILSON

GIDDY UP! Show Pony brings mobile art to the masses SAVAGE LOVE 26 Burning questions, burning loins ... probably

DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER

ACTING OUT 29 WALK THE WALK Theater Walk shoe-horns it in

SENIOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS

FOOD 31

ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE MICHELLE RIBEIRO

24K COCKTAILS Oh. Do you not put carrots in your mixed drinks? MOVIES 33 IN PURSUIT OF SILENCE REVIEW Something about how it’s golden

www.SFReporter.com

GOING DUTCH

Phone: (505) 988-5541 Fax: (505) 988-5348 Classifieds: (505) 983-1212 Office: 132 E MARCY ST.

CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE OFFICE MANAGER AND CLASSIFIED AD SALES JILL ACKERMAN 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 © 2017 SANTA FE REPORTER ALL RIGHTS association of alternative newsmedia RESERVED. MATERIAL MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION.

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SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER 5, 2017

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SFREPORTER.COM


RIMA KRISST FOR FLY SANTA FE

LETTERS

Have you had a negative dental experience? Michael Davis,

DDS

New Patients Welcome

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, AUG. 30: “THINKIN’ OF A MASTER PLAN”

MAKE IT BETTER Thank God. Our airport is not up to standard.

KERRY J YOUNG VIA FACEBOOK

*AIRPORT* ROAD ... I live off Airport Road and I would say that both the noise and frequency of these planes has increased 20x in the past five years, and it’s making Santa Fe more and more metropolitan every day ... a sad development for our city. So much for our sleepy “City Different”...

BRETT DAVIS VIA FACEBOOK

DRIVE TO DUKE CITY The benefits of keeping [the airport] in Albuquerque are: 1. No noise or roaring booms as they take off over homes or the city. 2. No air pollution from jet engines, and no additional ground traffic from air traffic. 3. We keep our city under control. Residents don’t have to pay for the associated air services so the rich to fly in. 4. We don’t have to increase taxes to support the affluent whose vacation homes cause property taxes to rise, forcing locals out. 5. We don’t have to build newer, bigger roads to service the airport. We don’t have to pay for airport hangars and security and personnel. ...

6. All our local charm slowly goes away when you allow jumbo jets and conveniences for the rich. ... 7. We don’t contribute to the global environmental problem. ... Jet airplanes leave noxious pollution in the sky every mile they fly and a big burst of pollution on take off. And they leave a toxic mess to transport fuel etc to our airport. ... We are a treasure of local and small. Keep the big planes and all the things they bring with them in the larger airports where they belong. Don’t increase my taxes under the pretense of needing a larger airport.

LYNN ALLEN SFREPORTER.COM

UNPLEASANT? This is a fantastic little airport that connects Santa Feans to the rest of the country and avoids having to use the unpleasant airport in Albuquerque. Why not spend the mentioned minimum to upgrade the two runways and then see whether more expenditure is warranted?

Would you like to experience caring, smiling, fun, gentle people who truly enjoy working with you?

SMILES OF SANTA FE Michael W. Davis, DDS 1751 Old Pecos Trail, Suite B (505) 988-4448 www.SmilesofSantaFe.com

P R OV I D E R F O R D E LTA A N D U N I T E D C O N C O R D I A D E N TA L P L A N S • M O S T I N S U R A N C E S A C C E P T E D

Astrology Santa Fe

PRESENTS:

Ayurvedic Astrology Marathon 15 minute Power Readings to analyze your Doshas for betterment of Body, Mind & Spirit. $20

Thursday, September 14 • 9 am until 4 pm 103 Saint Francis Dr., Santa Fe Please call 505 819 7220 for appointment

FRANCES HUNTER VIA FACEBOOK

WELCOME TO THE DUMP I no longer live in Santa Fe, but when I did I used those [flights] regularly, they were wonderful for a frequent business traveler such as myself. The only drawback was that cramped terminal with limited services, this expansion will be great. Especially if the new entrance road no longer passes by that auto junkyard. That was always a bit embarrassing when picking up visitors and their first impression of Santa Fe was a junkyard.

PETER CHORLTON VIA FACEBOOK 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 “Who is that guy with the white hair?” “You are going to have to be more specific.” —Overheard at Santa Fe High School Class of 1977’s 40th Reunion

We pay the most for your gold coins, heirloom jewelry and diamonds! On the Plaza 60 East San Francisco Street, Suite 218 Santa Fe, NM 87501 • 505.983.4562 • SantaFeGoldworks.com

Beauty without rules

Oscar Daniel Hair Design 227 E. Palace Ave. Suite L 989-3264 | Open Tues - Sat

Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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7 DAYS ENROLLMENT DOWN AT NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITIES It’s almost like a lack of decent jobs and affordable places to live around here are bad things.

No

wa y!

RECORD CROWDS REPORTEDLY ATTEND ZOZOBRA And way to not murder anyone, everyone!

SPEAKING OF ZOZO, BBC USES OLD MAN GLOOM PHOTO FOR STORY ABOUT BURNING MAN DEATH Not all flammable puppets are the same, BBC.

SANTA FE PUBLIC SCHOOL STUDENTS CAN CHOOSE TO SKIP FIESTAS ACTIVITIES There. Fixed forever.

UNMANNED SPEED VANS ARE BACK We’re basically living in Minority Report.

JOHN WATERS LOCKED DOWN FOR THIS YEAR’S SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Cooler than the coolest drape—yes, that’s a Cry-Baby joke

DACA RESCINDED FUCK.

6

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

SFREPORTER.COM


The Enthusiast

Mountains Calling Whether it’s a timeless pursuit or an urgent summons is a matter of perspective 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

B

y the time we reached the summit ridge, the persistent cough that had been funny as we hiked uphill had converted to a rattling wheeze accompanying every inhale, and my head was splitting. I’d long since begun to question my “just push through it,” attitude, which had me hiking a pair of 14,000-foot-tall peaks in Colorado despite a lingering cold. We kept ascending toward the peaks first sketched as dark outlines against the star-filled sky when we started hiking at 4:30 am, and then slowly lit by a pink sunrise. After scrambling past a mirrored lake, then uphill on steep ground, I began to question the wisdom of my choices. As I paused for a rest, the hiker I’d seen trailing us most of the morning caught up and asked if we’d mind if he joined us for a break. He remarked on the line we’d chosen, which wandered from the class two route onto more vertical class three and four terrain, but generally seemed to like the excitement and stuck with us the rest of the day. At some point on a descent that saw us once again scrambling through loose scree and down-climbing around boulders, Woody, who is from Pagosa Springs, mentioned this was just his second season hiking Colorado’s highest peaks. He’d been to the top of 16 last year, and 14 already this summer, with hopes to see two more summits before the end of the season. He commented on us “waiting for the geriatric,” but really, I wasn’t moving much faster. We’d reach the car after more than 15 hours of hiking, finishing just as the sun was setting. These were my first two 14ers this year. It has been a summer largely con-

sumed by supporting my family and then leaning on my own support network of friends. While I am trying to revel in the company and enjoy those short hikes I take with family, I’ve found myself missing my own epic quests in the mountains. The result of the deprivation is to turn those few days I do get to head out into massive undertakings that push every line. I hiked a gorgeous trail that traversed an alpine ridge from views of the burnished sandstone canyons to the open plains, and shared the mountaintop only with bighorn sheep and elk. Then, I searched alone for a route that kept fading out in the tundra, then became mired in downed trees. By the time I made it home, I wasn’t walking straight. Another day took me 10 miles in the morning through the peaks at the southern edge of the Sangre de Cristos and then 6 more miles of stand-up paddle boarding on the Rio Grande. I was so tired that night I didn’t eat dinner. I’m binging as though the mountains will not all still be there next summer, or maybe as a byproduct of the grief that has struck my family this year. I’m out there not to chase something, but to shake what’s chasing me. Whatever it is, it has put me in a hurry. And here’s Woody, who has a couple decades on me, just picking up a sport that has shaped my to-do list since my mother carried me up my first 14er when I was 3 years old. He has his tick list and his to-do list, and peace with what may never move from one to the other. In peering uphill, in following two strangers into the unknown on a line that may not go, what I see in him is an open-heartedness to the journey and patience to endure its let-downs. I want so much to own a share of that. Instead, days later, the compulsion for peaks again has me hiking toward a summit while snow pelts my jacket, returning to the car as sundown rims the clouds in gold, and thinking that perhaps the way to go about ticking those last two Collegiate Peaks left on my list will be to ski them this winter.

PAUL RODRIGUEZ SEPTEMBER 15

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SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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Sunday Sept 17th come to Bark in the Park

U on PrEP?

Bark in the Park A Tribute to Smith Veterinary Hospital Presented by SHAP Street Homeless Animal Project

Meet and greet Smith Vet staff, techs and doctors

PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) is recommended for HIV negative people as a strategy to prevent HIV infection.

YOUR COMMUNITY EXPERTS ON HIV + HEP C Welcoming new patients. Accepting most health plans, including Medicaid and Medicare. Testing, Treatment & Research. 649 Harkle Road, Suite E, Santa Fe • 505.989.8200 4710 Jefferson NE, Suite, Albuquerque • 505.780.4040 southwestcare.org Facebook: SouthwestCARECenter

Join

Us!

COME Enjoy with us! Sunday, September 17th, 2017 from 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm at Alto/Bicentennial Park, 1043 Alto Street, SF, NM $25 entry fee at the event Live Jazz by Stella Trois! Food Trucks! Raffle for 3-day stay at lovely vacation homes!

AT SEPT 22- OCT 1 SANTA FE WINE & CHILE Sponsored by Torres Wines

SEPT 22 - OCT 1

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28

WE WILL BE OFFERING AN EXCLUSIVE THREE-COURSE MEAL OF MODERN SPANISH CUISINE INSPIRED BY MASTERWORKS FROM MADRID’S FAMED MUSEO DEL PRADO.

FIVE-COURSE DINNER & COCKTAIL RECEPTION

$60 PER PERSON

*regular menu will not be available* *please call for reservations*

*not available on September 28th*

Bring your lawn chairs and blankets Well-behaved dogs on leashes And your friends and family

Many Thanks to our sponsors

6:00PM $125 PER PERSON

ELOISASANTAFE.COM 505.982.0883

228 E PALACE AVE, INSIDE THE DRURY PLAZA HOTEL

www.nmshap.org (505) 501-4933 At Alto/Bicentennial Park, 1043 Alto Street, SF, NM 8

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

SFREPORTER.COM


COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

High & Dry

NEWS

Why New Mexico isn’t sending an urban search and rescue team to help: Ours is nonexistent

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

S

eeing pictures of the flooding and fallout from Hurricane Harvey is hard for Santa Fe Fire Department Assistant Chief Jan Snyder. He seems to be a rescue guy at heart. While his city job is largely administrative now, Snyder can’t help but think back to when he was one of those people wading into a disaster with a confidence borne from knowing you can help. More than 220 men and women made up New Mexico Task Force One; doctors and nurses, firefighters and paramedics, K9 searchers and even accountants. Split into three teams who were ready to deploy to a disaster like a tornado, a building collapse or massive flooding in just hours, NMTF1 was part of an elite Federal Emergency Management Agency network of less than 30 teams. For the last decade of its existence, the New Mexico task force could not get its act together. There was expertise, no question; hours and days of training. But the team’s last deployment was to Hurricane Rita in 2005. Its recordkeeping and administration under the state Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management was so bad that FEMA suspended New Mexico Task Force One before eventually defunding and removing it from the national response network in late 2015. “It’s frustrating,” Snyder says of sitting on the sidelines now. But it was harder sitting on the sidelines while the task force still existed; scores of team members trained and waiting. “It’s not that we lost the capability to act; we lost the capability to respond. … Sometimes we’d

sit here and watch [the FEMA task force from] Phoenix drive by on their way to Texas. Or watch Colorado drive through.” New Mexico Homeland Security Secretary Jay Mitchell told a TV station last year that he felt his department would have little trouble finding the money to keep the task force together on a state level. But FEMA has taken much of its equipment back from the task force warehouse, and the state has now made leftover detection kits, infrared cameras and other tools available to local governments. At the most recent City Council meeting, Santa Fe approved grants from the state of three chemical and radioactivity detection kits for the fire department and a thermal-imaging camera for the city’s SWAT team. It appears the elite disaster-response team has come to a disastrous end. Ironically, the state Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management said it was too busy assisting with the response to Hurricane Harvey to provide any details about what had become of plans to keep the team around, how much equipment was still in state and where it had gone. SFR requested a five-minute interview with Secretary Mitchell, but was told he was also too busy with the response to Hurricane Harvey. Karen Takai, the department spokeswoman, would not detail for SFR the extent of the state’s emergency response. Last week, however, the department announced on Facebook that it had elevated operations at its Emergency Operations Center to Level 3—the same response it would have to a hail storm, a

Emergency responders help after Hurricane Harvey on Aug. 27, but New Mexico no longer has a FEMA-certified urban rescue team.

small wildfire or minor flooding. State guidelines say that means no extra hours worked and only partial staffing at the operations center. There’s little doubt that whatever New Mexico is doing for Harvey victims now, the state would have been able to provide a much bigger and presumably much more helpful response if the urban search and rescue task force had become more organized in the decade that FEMA gave it to get up to speed. The problems began during the Richardson administration and continued under Gov. Susana Martinez. The state not only flubbed the logistical part of managing the task force, but it also appeared that at least one team member had been forging certifications in an apparent effort to shore up record-

A thermal-imaging camera like this one is a piece of the equipment from state’s urban rescue team that has now been donated.

keeping. Then, in April, the New Mexican reported that agents with US Homeland Security had served a search warrant on the state, suspicious that the task force chief and an administrative assistant had been taking online certification courses on behalf of team members. The agency did not provide any information about that investigation to SFR. No charges have been filed. Much of New Mexico’s task force equipment is now in New Jersey, where the state-funded team that responded to 9/11, Hurricane Irene and Superstorm Sandy had an easy time transitioning into the national response system. “We were greenlighted to be operational on Oct. 4 [2016], and we were deployed to Hurricane Matthew on Oct. 6,” says Laura Connolly of the New Jersey State Police. “And we didn’t have any of that [New Mexico] equipment at that time. So we deployed with our state equipment.” New Jersey Task Force One, as it’s now known, sent a water-rescue team of 19 people last month to assist with disaster response in Texas and Louisiana. “They do this because it’s a passion,” Connolly tells SFR. Jan Snyder knows all about that passion. He says local departments have long had a smaller-scale, local response network. It works well, he says. But sending a team now to respond to a disaster such as Hurricane Harvey without the logistical support that NMTF1 had? “That would be like getting into a truck and driving into the wilderness and saying, ‘Okay, we’re here. Now what?’”

SFREPORTER.COM

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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T H I S I S A PA I D A D V E R T I S E M E N T

THE RAILYARD S

E AN T A F

september at the railyard GREEN CHILE CHEESEBURGER SMACKDOWN September 8 / 5-8pm / Farmers Market Pavilion Vote for the Best!

FALL FIESTA 2017 September 9 / 5:30-10pm / Farmers Market Pavilion Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Institute Annual Fundraiser

AHA FESTIVAL September 18 / 1-8pm / On the Plaza Progressive Music & Arts Fair

RECOVERY SANTA FE September 23 / 12-4pm / In the Park Rally for Recovery!

LAST FRIDAY ART WALK September 29 / 5-7pm / Railyard Art Galleries Presented by Railyard Arts District

WATER TOWER MUSIC Jazz from SWINGSET

WEDNESDAY EVES @ THE RAILYARD 3PM TO CLOSE • FOOD, MUSIC, ART, FARMERS MARKET & MORE!

CONTINUING SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Tuesdays & Saturdays /7am –1pm Railyard Plaza & Shade Structure

SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Saturdays / 8am –1pm Railyard Park

RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Sundays /10am – 4pm Farmers Market Pavilion

BOXCAR Killer Sports, Food, Drinks & Music Mon-Sat till 2am / Sundays till 12

SECOND STREET BREWERY Freshly brewed beer and pub fare Geeks Who Drink: Wednesdays / 8-10:30pm Live Music: Friday / 6-9pm Sunday /1- 4pm

VIOLET CROWN CINEMA Railyard Plaza 11 Screens Restaurant & Bar Your movie experience will never be the same!

ALL OUTDOOR EVENTS FREE! For more information on events and parking, visit:

WWW.RAILYARDSANTAFE.COM And Santa Fe Railyard Facebook Page

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SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

SFREPORTER.COM

How to Spark a Residential Renewable Revolution Community Solar is the key to unlock clean and affordable power

From reduced emissions and lower cost to greater energy independence and local self-reliance, the advantages of solar power are self-evident. With installation costs falling rapidly, Americans are now averaging one new residential solar project every 100 seconds. But America’s transition from fossil fuels to clean and affordable renewables can and should be even faster. Today, the hurdle to growth isn’t technology or cost. The issue is access. State and local governments need to rewrite the rules to allow renters, condominium owners, and homeowners without sunny roof or lawn space the ability to access clean and affordable solar power.

There’s a simple and effective solution: Community Solar. These shared energy projects allow a group of people to own a stake in and purchase power from local solar farms or “solar gardens”. These projects are a win-win: they create jobs, cut costs, boost local economies, and often allow lower-income communities to access the benefits of renewable power. The idea is starting to take hold. There are 26 US states with one or more Community Solar project. In the coming years, America is likely to add as much as 3 gigawatts of Community Solar, compared to only 66 megawatts through the end of 2014. But there’s an obstacle in the way of this renewable revolution: policies that block Community Solar in order to protect investor-owned utility monopolies from healthy competition. In New Mexico, legislators again failed this year to pass legislation to legalize solar gardens and other shared clean generation facilities. As Christopher Ramirez of Juntos, a New Mexico nonprofit, put it: “We are misled to believe that the dirtiest energy is the cheapest option.” In many areas of the country, utilities are actually angling to get in on the Community Solar action—providing their ratepayers with the option of purchasing solar power from a shared facility. While this can be a step in the right direction, we should still aspire for something better: community-owned, community-driven power that boosts local self-reliance and provides everyone access to the cheapest energy available today. Community Solar should be a right. This is a cause that can unite environmentalists, advocates for under-served and low-income communities, and people who believe in free market competition. With an estimated 101 projects and 108 cumulative megawatts of installed capacity as of this year, Community Solar is already ascendant. States and localities should rewrite unfair anti-solar rules and let solar gardens bloom.

To find out how much you can save with solar, visit PositiveEnergySolar.com or call 505.424.1112


NEWS

Cannabis Class The state’s medical cannabis program wants to improve its education outreach to medical providers

BY AARON CANTÚ a a r o n @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

A

s the number of enrolled patients continues to climb, New Mexico’s medical cannabis program officials say they are restructuring to place more emphasis on community outreach and education. The announcement comes after SFR obtained records indicating that the program’s education outreach has mostly been limited to urban areas and select groups. Both patients and doctors have reported hesitancy about discussing the program to the Health Department, which could be alleviated by stronger efforts to educate medical providers about cannabis. In the absence of such outreach, private and for-profit organizations are charging steep prices for cannabis education. The Health Department says it plans to hire additional staff who will help redesign the state’s methods of educating patients about cannabis and is in the process of hiring a second medical director for the program to manage engagement with medical providers and others interested in learning more about how the medicine works. “We want folks to know in the medical community what the program is, what it can do—and also for those who are aware of the program, if we spot issues with incomplete applications, we can try to help them out on this,” program director Kenny Vigil tells SFR. “We hope to be a little more proactive.” Since January 2014, New Mexico’s medical cannabis program has given at least 33 presentations for medical providers in the state, according to records obtained by SFR. Those records—which include personal calendars for health department employees, PowerPoint presentation files, field notes drafted by members of the medical cannabis program and receipts for expenses incurred by presenters—show that the vast majority of presentations took place in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. Dr. Maureen Small, medical director of the cannabis program, and its patient services manager, Kathryn Riter, pre-

sented to practitioner clinics and hospitals, condition-specific support groups for diseases such as ALS and Parkinson’s, and medical conferences. Vigil says that rather than offering education to providers, the state has so far only responded to requests for cannabis teach-ins. “We will have organizations reach out to us saying they want more information about the program,” Vigil tells SFR. “Basically, it’s based on invitations for us to go to them.” According to some of the correspondence obtained by SFR, however, sometimes representatives of the medical cannabis program initiate contact with medical providers. For example, in November of 2015, Small sent an email to the Family Practice Associates of Taos offering “a brief presentation on medical cannabis and an overview of the program.” “We are hearing from many patients that they are afraid to discuss medical cannabis with their doctor and we regularly are confronted with providers hav-

ing misconceptions about the program,” Small wrote at the time. “One of our missions here at the Department of Health is to inform the medical community about the medical legal aspects of the program and the latest scientific research on medical cannabis.” The presentation at Family Practice Associates of Taos eventually took place on March 21, 2016. Records show that there were comparably fewer presentations in rural parts of the state. None took place at health centers on Native land, where federal funding from Indian Health Services could make medical staff more reluctant to recommend cannabis for patients. The Eight Northern Indian Pueblos Council declined to comment for this story. Yet, field notes from a presentation to young doctors at Albuquerque’s First Nations Community HealthSource in March 2015 note that the audience was “very interested and proactive in nature.” Although the doctors weren’t necessarily employed by the clinic where the presentation occurred, its chief executive officer, Linda Son-Stone, says providers at HealthSource are currently “not accessing the program.” Medical centers in other rural communities, including Gallup and Silver City, have coordinated presentations with the medical cannabis program through the University of New Mexico’s Health Extension Rural Offices program, or HEROs. The program, which has become a model for rural health outreach

MEDICAL CANNABIS PROGRAM PRESENTATIONS SINCE 2014 ALBUQUERQUE

12

SANTA FE

7

TAOS

3

FARMINGTON

1

LOS ALAMOS

1

RUIDOSO

2

SILVER CITY

2

ESPAÑOLA

1

CLOVIS

1

GALLUP

1

GRANTS

1

in other states, is housed in UNM’s Office of Community Health and funded with a federal grant. Dr. Robert Rhyne, a professor and vice chairman for family and community medicine at the school, says the school also has contracts with the Health Department to provide training on cannabis to medical providers, noting that trainers from the school recently fanned out to give certified trainings on best practices for opioid prescription, including guidance on medical cannabis to ease pain and other symptoms. The HEROs program does most of its own outreach, leaving rural communities relatively untouched by the cannabis program’s outreach efforts. One solution, suggests community organizer Jason Barker of the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act (LECUA) Patients Coalition of New Mexico, would be that producers begin to take on more educational responsibilities. “It’d be nice to see some of the producers take on some of that aspect,” he says. “They mention in licensure requirements that they [should] put forth some educational duties for patients and programs.” But he cautions that dispensary employees are often undereducated about cannabis’ medical properties, pointing to a 2016 peer reviewed study by Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research that found only 20 percent of dispensary staff in the states it surveyed had received medical or scientific training. And in the absence of free and plentiful resources for learning about cannabis, business people with little medical backing can charge hundreds of dollars for one-time “symposiums” offering a quick hit of cannabis education. The lines are sometimes not so clear. Dr. Steven Rosenberg served as medical director of the state’s medical cannabis program from 2013 until earlier this year and runs a business in Albuquerque that charges new and renewing cannabis patients for medical consultations starting at $50. “You need to treat cannabis patients like any other medicine, and if you’re going to recommend a course of therapy, even if you’re not writing a prescription, you still have to know something about the substance you’re recommending,” Rosenberg tells SFR. Fortunately for Rosenberg, his former tenure with the state has given his for-profit venture a higher profile. “One of the consults I did was because [the patient] didn’t get any instruction from the person who certified them, and that was what they were told to do,” Rosenberg says. “Come see me.”

SFREPORTER.COM

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Back-to-School Reading List At the end of this summer’s hit opera, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, the performers break A theBOOK, fourth wall during his funeral. They AND WE MEAN gaze out into NOT YOUR KINDLE the audience and admonish listeners to look up from their cell phones, to soak in the stars, to be in the moment. This is what the late technopreneur would want, the song says; now that he’s version 2.0, escaping his capitalist scheming. The world premiere of the work at the Santa Fe Opera was another example of why it’s so weird and wonderful to be here—now. We’re surrounded by so much talent and creativity, yet we don’t always take time to enjoy the slow pleasures of detaching from the digital tether. While burying your nose in a book is not exactly tuning in to the present, it’s a way of connecting with life that’s deeper than the scrolling screen. Some human being, somewhere, wrote down these words, crafted and curated them with a message in mind. We advocate mixing fiction and nonfiction into one’s literature diet, and this year’s collection reminds us that even when stories are “made up,” it’s the elements of truth that make them worth reading. Diving into our annual fall book list can also take you back to school. As the kids don their khakis, adults can try on new things of their own with a well-researched narrative, or get to know a public figure in a new way. We chose the following books because of their strong Santa Fe connections, or because we thought they were too interesting or timely to pass by. Press the home button. Or the off button.

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Featured book

Fiction We Were Witches

AUTHOR: ARIEL GORE

A

riel Gore’s We Were Witches is true. Every last word of it. This does, of course, take into account the difference between “truth” and “fact,” what it means to quote someone from memory 23 years after they said something, or the way in which a reader can get sucked so far into a book’s world that when the character named Ariel Gore in a book by Ariel Gore follows a deer into the woods and it leads her down a staircase inside a tree into a golden throne room and the deer begins speaking English, the reader thinks: “Yeah, totally.” The book follows Ariel (for our purposes, the character will be called by her first name, the author by her last), a young, unwed, poor, queer mother who, while navigating ex-boyfriends and ex-girlfriends, alternately oppressive and supportive family, and a system that just doesn’t value women (for lack of a better term: The Man), resolves to become a writer. She enrolls in college and begins reading. Buckle in. We Were Witches can be found in the fiction section, but I suspect this is mostly because the Library of Congress doesn’t have a classification for cross-genre literature. Gore—who lives in Santa Fe but is nationally renowned for her writing, teaching, and as one of the original voices of “alternative parenting”—also points out that to write about events more than two decades later and use quotation marks while doing so is a slippery slope. “Things aren’t exact. It’s like if

you had lived your life and then you painted a series of paintings, rather than took photographs,” Gore tells SFR. “But I also wanted to play with this idea that if you don’t like the story that you’ve been handed, the story that you’ve been told about yourself, that you can reinvent it.” So Ariel’s story is interwoven with fairy tale and history, from Rapunzel facilitating her own rape to the thousands of women in 16th-century Europe who were tortured and burned for witchcraft. There are lists, book analyses, dives into etymology and Wiccan spells. And Gore’s re-telling of her own story is peppered with help that she didn’t necessarily receive. “Sometimes [writing] means going in and reinventing the past—and I don’t mean making the bad things not happen,” Gore says, “but giving your character a witness or a helper that would have really helped them kind of make sense of it at the time, or process it. What would the story look like if you’d had all these kind of magical and human helpers along the way?” As Ariel moves around California, into the jaws of the suburbs, into a closet (no, really) in San Francisco, then to on-campus housing at Mills College, all with her daughter Maia in tow, she meets many figures that guide her. Indeed, the page that I dog-eared as where Ariel truly discovers that women have power (not that she yet knows that she has power) is where she meets an elderly poet named Mary TallMountain. Mary was an ac-

tual person—the only magical helper Googleable and verifiable as real. Mary watches Maia as Ariel works a journalism internship, teaches Ariel a Thanksgiving dinner on a budget, and informs Ariel that she is a writer simply because she writes. If you go home and write a poem, you are a poet. This life is enough. The book could be classified as “intermediate feminism;” if you don’t already believe that female-identifying people have an inherent reason to be angry, We Were Witches might be too much at first. A healthy view of the feminism that has come before, too, is important. “When people talk about feminism, that whole era—the ’90s and coming into the ’90s … it’s still kind of mocked. And I’ve gone along with it, too—I mean, I think there are aspects of it that are really funny,” Gore says. (When Ariel learns the word “womyn,” for example, or when her heavily pregnant neighbor Lola, shaved head and all, requests cunnilingus within moments of meeting Ariel, the reader smiles, and is perhaps nostalgic, but is not shocked.) Gore continues: “But while I was writing this book, I discovered that I took and take that era of my education really seriously, and it was super influential on my life.” So, Ariel’s path is not intimidating, as it might be if we were presented with a female character who really had her shit together and wanted to wake us up. Ariel doesn’t know what she’s doing. She calculates and acts impulsively and makes strange and strong choices. And we are right there with her. (Charlotte Jusinski) WE WERE WITCHES BOOK RELEASE: ARIEL GORE IN CONVERSATION WITH MIRIAM SAGAN 6 pm Saturday, Sept. 9. Free. Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226

Village: A Novel

A U T H O R : S TA N L E Y C R A W F O R D Though it’s one of just two novels on our list this year, Village could be about people and places you know in the real world. Like all good forms of story, Stanley Crawford’s truth in the telling stands on its own. His straightforward, lyric color and comic twists had us devouring this multi-layered tale about a fictional village in Northern New Mexico with residents whose homes, marriages and economic doldrums are open for inspection and introspection. The story’s inhabitants include the couple who run the corner store, a drifting hippie and his drifting wife, and a corrupt postmaster. Its plot curves along the edges of the two-lane blacktop that slices the town, the story wending its way through a junkyard, into the school gym and along the acequia. Without the reader realizing it, Crawford cuts to the essence of what makes each character step from the page. Giggles come easily, right along with sadness. There are lonely people in this tale. Crazy people. Hopeless people. And moments of sidesplitting laughter and soft sighs. The sights and sounds and smells of the setting bring to life walks along gurgling rivers, casserole deliveries, sick calls and trips for car parts under the cover of darkness. This success must get wind from Crawford’s life as a task in fact-finding for this creative work. With seven novels and two memoirs under his belt, he’s also a living, breathing honest-to-goodness farmer in Dixon. And when he’s not writing or farming, lately he’s been litigating as a key player in a yearslong battle with a Chinese garlic megacorporation over import tariffs that create false price expectation for domestic producers. (Julie Ann Grimm) CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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Graphic Novels Alcheringa C R E AT O R S : S T E P H A N I E A L I A , A DA M F R A N K A N D B R A M M E E H A N

Most nights, when Madelyn falls asleep, she is transported to the world of dreams. Here, she serves as a protector of sorts to the sleeping realm, though she often forgets by morning. The project of local writer Stephanie Alia, Washington-based illustrator Adam Frank and local letterer Bram Meehan, Alcheringa delves deep into the Aboriginal concept of dreamtime, blurring the lines between dreams and reality. It draws from fantasy epics, sci-fi weirdness and good old-fashioned monster lore for an intriguing new comic title. Alia’s vision is of one who grew up

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with ’80s movies, but also of originality. There’s a rooted appreciation for the power of dreams on display. Are they merely our minds’ way of working out conflict, or do they serve a deeper purpose? Frank’s illustrations capture the unfamiliarity of the dreamlike from a bizarre market scene to the detailed character design, and involvement from Meehan, a local comics legend, is the icing on the cake. You’ll be immersed in the setup and ache for the follow-up, but one thing’s for sure—this is just the beginning, and the beginning is good. (Alex De Vore)


My Favorite Thing is Monsters AUTHOR: EMIL FERRIS

Chicago, 1968: A young queer girl named Karen navigates the tensions of racial and sexual politics alongside the murder of her upstairs neighbor, a Holocaust survivor, possibly by Karen’s own brother. Artist/writer Emil Ferris deftly interweaves her own fiction style with intricate and finely detailed ballpoint pen illustrations and a deep respect for hard-boiled detective genre as well as horror comics and film. Karen, a girl-turned-werewolf-turned-detective, hides from her own heart-wrenching reality by investigating the mysterious death

while grappling with a dying mother and the trials of Catholic school. Presented as Karen’s sketchbook, Monsters, Ferris’ first stab at graphic novels, represents her return to artistic form after contracting West Nile Virus and becoming paralyzed. She still walks with a cane, but by taping a quill to her good hand, she created her own form of physical therapy. She has crafted a fine story, longform graphic novel or not. Densely layered and patient in its pacing, Karen’s tale recalls all at once the complexities of mythology and the turbulence of 1960s America. (ADV)

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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NonFiction How America Got its Guns:

Inside Story: Everyone’s

A History of the Gun Violence Crisis

guide to reporting and writing creative nonfiction

AUTHOR: WILLIAM BRIGGS

AUTHOR: JULIA GOLDBERG

The statistic is ubiquitous: more than 30,000 US deaths each year. So is the cause: guns. Perhaps it was always going to take a math professor to fuse the politics, history, jurisprudence and humanity of a bedrock American obsession for readers of any level of sophistication to walk away smarter on the thorny issue of guns in this country. UC Denver’s William Briggs does just that as he pushes blood into the debate with How America Got its Guns, elucidating the Second Amendment and its myriad legal progeny through interviews with a surprising cast of gun owners and advocates; some want more guns, others, more restrictions. From an academic, Briggs’ book could easily have come out like a big, unreadable pile of facts. It doesn’t. Instead, there’s a series of easy-to-read narrative

The Lost City of the Monkey God AUTHOR: DOUGLAS P R E STO N

threads sewn among the history and political rhetoric that, in a way, make this gnarly issue more approachable. The book provides a number of thought-provoking surprises. In a chapter on the humans who birthed some of the world’s most widely used guns, Briggs opens with a quote from Mikhail Kalashnikov, who designed the AK-47. “I’m proud of my invention, but I’m sad that it is used by terrorists. … I would prefer to have invented a machine that people could use and that would help farmers with their work—for example a lawnmower.” In the main, Briggs never takes a side. He does, however, drop the gun argument into some of the broader contexts in which it belongs—inequality, liberty, the meaning of citizenship—as he gently offers some suggestions in the book’s later sections for an American future with less violence. (Jeff Proctor)

Douglas Preston is somewhat of a literary hero. It’s not because his books have reached such a status that he’s the next Hemingway or JK Rowling or GRR Whatshisname (though we kind of hope so). Preston, a Santa Fean, is on our hero list because in 2014, he launched Authors United to lead a charge against Amazon’s book-dealing skulduggery. It depends on whom you ask, but most agree the group of nearly 1,000 scribes lost that battle in the publishing war. That’s beside the point. Sometimes, as he expertly reminds us in Lost City of the Monkey God, it’s the losing and the trying that are among the most interesting parts of living.

Let’s face it: It has not been a great year for journalists. Having the president of your country declare that members of your profession are the “enemy of the American people” has a sort of lasting effect. When you look behind the curtain of the Great and Powerful Media, however, you’ll see a bunch of people who are heavily invested in telling stories. They’re trying to carry the truth and meaning in our civilization. [Commences to toot own horn.] If you’re an aspiring writer—or even an experienced one who, like most, needs inspiration and instruction, you’ll find it in Inside Story. If you want to know more about the guts of modern journalism— about writing something that someone somewhere will actually read and reflect upon—it’s here too. SFR will forever lay claim to Julia Goldberg as “our own,” but in reality, it’s

The New York Times says he “proved quite a thorn in Amazon’s side.” Huzzah! Preston’s setup is enviable. He’s a writer who’s no stranger to travel and intrigue, with assignments for publications like National Geographic and the Smithsonian. He already carries a long list of books with his byline, including as co-author of series about an FBI agent. But this book is nonfiction—and, even better, it’s intensely personal for the author. After setting a lure with a source that he couldn’t reel in for years, Preston finally gets his hook into a rare expedition into the jungle of Honduras. Part memoir of creeping, biting, sweat-

been six years since she left the position of editor here after holding it for more than a decade. She went on to become a full-time faculty member at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design and is this very semester teaching some of the final courses at the school set to close next summer. Her book will no doubt land in lots more classrooms. It isn’t just her own brand of wisdom and humor (though there’s a ton of that); it’s nuggets from journalists across the nation. Before you get all down on the inverted pyramid, Goldberg is way into what they used to call “the new journalism,” the kind where reporting and the craft of writing produce nonfiction that reads like a novel. If you wanna do that, each of the 10 chapters give prompts for writing exercises you can try, plus page upon page of other recommended reading. Know your enemy. It might even be you. (JAG)

ing, itching, excruciating excitement, the book is also a great history primer on what is known, and more on what is unknown, about the Indigenous cultures of Central America that weren’t the well-known Mayans or Aztecs. For the deep think, it explores the very notion of exploration and who defines what’s lost and found. Plus, it’s got a super-geeky science angle that involves an exposition on the first commercial application of LIDAR surveying to locate numerous uncharted ruins hidden by dense layers of vegetation. Hike through this at Preston’s brisk pace, and enjoy the tangled vines of plot twists that you just couldn’t make up. (JAG)

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Killers of the Flower Moon:

Word by Word: The

The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI

Secret Life of Dictionaries

A U T H O R : K O R Y S TA M P E R

When the people of the Osage Nation were shuffled off to a corner of Oklahoma to call their own, tribal members working on the papers that declared that rocky corner of the country theirs made sure to also secure rights to the minerals, coal, oil and gas beneath it. It was a deal that would bring them millions—and that would cost the tribe everything. Tribal members had already traced oil seeping into streams on the reservation, and soon wildcatters were gathering to bid on the chance to lease rights to drill and striking wells that sometimes plumed a hundred feet into the air. The royalty checks that rolled in made the Osage the wealthiest people per capita in the world. The embarrassment of riches bred rumors like that they’d buy a new car when a tire on the previous went flat. By the early 1920s, they were sharing their territory with oilmen whose names would go on to read across the biggest oil tankers and gas stations around the country: Frank Phillips and Harry Sinclair. Then, someone started killing off the Osage. David Grann recounts the story in his gripping book, a true-crime account that reads like a murder mystery, centered around one family as its members are lost. The book weaves meticulous and colorfully detailed stories of one Osage tribal member after another found shot, bombed or poisoned, and the inherent flaws their murders revealed in the law enforcement system of the time. In an era in which lawmen were still taming the Wild West and lingering anti-federalism resisted a nationwide police force, local sheriffs were at a loss to solve the murders and track down the killers. Then, J Edgar Hoover and the Bureau of Investigation’s agents stepped in, setting the roots of what would become the Federal Bureau of Investigation. With oil and gas development an ongoing issue of contention for tribes from Chaco Canyon to Standing Rock, Killers of the Flower Moon makes for a thrilling, prescient tour of a history we seem to be looping through, if in less salacious, “reign of terror” headline-earning ways. (Elizabeth Miller)

Definitely not just a textbook for word nerds or copy editors (ahem), lexicographer Kory Stamper’s new work about the writing of Merriam-Webster’s dictionary appeals to a surprisingly wide audience. For Word by Word to be interesting, the reader must be at least a little interested in the history of the English language—but that’s about the only requirement. Stamper starts with her own story and how she got to be an editor at M-W, and then branches out into subjects like parts of speech, Chancery Standard English and slang—and then eventually falls

SEPTEMBER

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ThrowBack

A U T H O R : D AV I D G R A N N

Just Fly the Plane, Stupid!

A U T H O R : S T E VA N P E A R C E

Politicians these days don’t feel like they necessarily need to talk to the media, and by extension, their constituents and/or the people who they want to be their constituents. That means we all learn less about who they are as people, what they really believe in, how their life experiences will or won’t serve them as they serve us. Enter: the memoir. Steve Pearce is the only Republican so far to publicly say he’ll run for governor of New Mexico in the 2018 election. As a sitting congressman for

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southern New Mexico, there’s a long voting history to indicate his political leanings. In 2014, Roll Call reported he was the 50th most wealthy representative in the 435-member House. But the year before that report, Pearce was issuing his own report on wealth in the form of his memoir. He doesn’t mention that his net is worth upward of $7 million in the 479-page book. Nor does he spend more than six pages in total talking about actual governance during his time in the state House or in the nation’s capital. But readers get lots of his view on his own hardscrabble childhood in the dust bowl of sharecropping and the grubby sweat of oil camps, the mantra of “hard work pays off” leading its rhetorical outline. There’s also lots of attention paid what Pearce describes as his shy nature and reluctance to take risks. This, however, he says he emerged from thanks to a religious life that helped him “let out the lion.” Both Pearce’s congressional staff spokesperson and the separate spokesperson for his campaign said he was unavailable to answer questions about the book. And you might have a few of your own if you make it to the end. (JAG)

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down the rabbit hole all the way to contemporary political disputes in which the dictionary was called for comment; specifically, whether or not M-W had redefined “marriage” in 2009, as a conservative news site angrily claimed it had done. (It hadn’t.) Stamper is still getting her sea legs in the first chapter, finally free from the tissue paper pages of the dictionary and able to be flowery. As a result, the reader is either treated to or assaulted by vocabulary acrobatics. But this habit fades, and it’s not long before this reader in particular was actually laughing out loud at descriptions of the slightly spooky-sounding M-W offices and ways in which you can figure out parts of speech. (A tidbit: “I’ma ____ ya ass.” If a word fits there, it’s transitive.) The book quickly becomes an enjoyable read, stuffed with anecdotes from Stamper’s own life and historical references. Each chapter is predicated on the topic of one word (headers like “Irregardless: On Wrong Words” and “Bitch: On Bad Words”), and such a broad brush gives Stamper’s playful and easygoing voice ample rein to have fun. And isn’t fun what we all want when we read the dictionary? (CJ)

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Siler Road/Rufina Street

Stroll from one venue to another in the Siler/Rufina/Parkway district. Watch short performances from fourteen different theatre companies in town, eat at the great food trucks, enjoy the street performers, win prizes, and more. Please join us!

AT TEATRO PARAGUAS

AT RUFINA STREET TAP ROOM

9/28 The Only Way Out Is Through AT FREEFORM ART SPACE

Partially funded by the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers’ Tax

9/30 Fall Cabaret

AT WISE FOOL NEW MEXICO

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2017– 2018 EVENTS

READINGS & CONVERSATIONS 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.

27 SEPTEMBER GLENN GREENWALD WITH TOM ENGELHARDT 11 OCTOBER ROXANNE DUNBAR-ORTIZ WITH NICK ESTES 1 NOVEMBER ÓSCAR MARTÍNEZ WITH ALFREDO CORCHADO

In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom is a lecture series on political, economic, environmental, and human rights issues featuring social justice activists, writers, journalists, and scholars discussing critical topics of our day.

29 NOVEMBER VALERIA LUISELLI WITH SONIA NAZARIO 24 JANUARY NOMI PRINS WITH JULIET SCHOR 31 JANUARY COLUM McCANN WITH GABRIEL BYRNE 28 FEBRUARY ALEKSANDAR HEMON WITH JOHN FREEMAN 14 MARCH ROXANE GAY WITH TRESSIE McMILLAN COTTOM 11 APRIL DIANE RAVITCH WITH JESSE HAGOPIAN 18 APRIL RACHEL KUSHNER WITH MICHAEL SILVERBLATT 2 MAY CLIVE HAMILTON WITH LISA SIDERIS 9 MAY COLSON WHITEHEAD WITH KEVIN YOUNG

Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 West San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM Tel. 505.988.1234 www.lensic.org Tickets for each event go on sale the first SATURDAY of the month prior to the event. General admission $8; students and seniors with ID $5 Ticket prices include a $3 Lensic Preservation Fund fee

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AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER 5, 2017

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BILL LEWIS

COYOTES IN OFFICE “Dirty tricks are as American as apple pie,” says retired university professor Ken Simonsen. “Shenanigans … are part of a very old American tradition, going back to Native Americans.” Simonsen aims to illustrate his point in “The Trickster in American Literature and Politics,” a lecture in which he discusses the shrewd, manipulative character of the Trickster as it has existed from Winnebago tribal traditions to the Navajo Coyote to Huckleberry Finn to modern day—and that, in his estimation, the archetypical Coyote “could go to Washington and survive and get away with it.” In the lecture, presented by the Renesan Institute, Simonsen would even posit that, in America, “the only fair, straightforward election was when George Washington ran against himself.” (Charlotte Jusinski)

COURTESY RADICAL ABACUS

LECTURES THU/7

The Trickster in American Literature and Politics: 1 pm Thursday Sept. 7. $10. St. John’s United Methodist Church, 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274.

BOOKS/FILM SAT/9 STANLEY KRAMER PRODUCTIONS

ART OPENING FRI/8 SHARP One of the most tragic, yet fascinating, chapters in American history has to be the Hollywood Blacklist, an era when film workers of all points above and below the line succumbed to the pressures of McCarthyism, turned on one another and began ruining lives. Meanwhile, the iconic 1952 Western High Noon was being filmed in all of its Gary Cooper/ Grace Kelly glory. Journalist Glenn Frankel explores the parallels in his book, High Noon: The Hollywood Blacklist and the Making of an American Classic. Frankel discusses and signs copies at Gerald Peters Gallery on Saturday afternoon, then introduces a gorgeous new restoration of the film later the same day. (ADV) Book Signing and Lecture: 1 pm Saturday Sept. 9. Free. Gerald Peters Gallery, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700. High Noon Screening: 4 pm Saturday Sept. 9. $8-$9. Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528.

COURTESY TURQUOISE TRAIL CHARTER SCHOOL

MUSIC SUN/10 BACK TO SCHOOL You’ve probably thought, “I want to support arts in schools, but only if I can do so in concert form.” And your very specific ship has come in! Join local musicsmiths like OG Willikers, Joe West, The Banded Geckos and many more as they get down for a good cause—Turquoise Trail Charter School’s music, drama and cooking programs, among others. Also performing is the TTCS Jazz Band, an amalgam of young musicians who may just be learning the ropes, but have talent to spare. And since the whole thing goes down at The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Co., you can probably sneak in a beer or two while you’re out there changing lives without having to radically alter your own. So, like, swish—help kids, see music, sneak beers—it’s a winning combo. (ADV) A Day of Music for the Arts: 2-8 pm Sunday Sept. 10. $5-$20. The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Co., 37 Fire Place, 557-6182.

Stayin’ Alive The art and majesty of zombie puppet musicals Devon Hawkes Ludlow fell in love with puppets some years back, but it wasn’t until a trip to Eastern Europe that he truly fathomed their possibilities as an art form. “Puppeteers are number one on the cultural landscape there,” he says. To be fair, an exhibit on the practical effects of director Julie Taymor (Titus) helped as well, as did Peter Jackson’s Meet the Feebles—but Ludlow’s own creation, The Love that Would Not Die, may just out-weird them all. The musical tale of an apocalypse survivor, his zombie girlfriend and a kid with a powerful secret, Love has won fans and creeped people the eff out since its first 30-minute film/pilot episode debuted last year. Ludlow writes and records all the stories and songs himself, sometimes with guest vocalists like local Andy Kirkpatrick. Having served as managing director of local circus troupe Wise Fool in 2007, Ludlow was already familiar with weirdo arts. He also created a massive albino cave bat with local students for Meow Wolf. But still, he says, puppets are a fairly rare commodity in American arts. “One of the attractions of puppetry in this country is that it’s an unknown for most people,” Ludlow explains. “It’s some-

times oh-so-frustrating but, most of the time, it’s a great way to be a Trojan horse and people aren’t prepared for whatever you give them.” He builds his own puppets and sets, mostly out of recycled or found materials, alongside Flying Wall Studios’ Sabrina and Damon Griffith, who are celebrated puppet builders in their own rights. They say they learned a lot on the first film with Ludlow and are excited to jump into the new project. “There has been more room for collaboration,” Sabrina says. “It’s been very open.” Damon agrees, saying, “The last [film] was more of a commission than a collaboration, now it’s more collaboration.” You can see the creations for The Love that Would Not Die on weekends over the next month at DIY art space Radical Abacus, a venue that will host an exhibit by day and serve as the filming location by night. “There’s room to do a lot new,” Ludlow concludes, “but to keep it unexplained as an authentic, physical experience.” (Alex De Vore) THE LOVE THAT WOULD NOT DIE: A PUPPET EXHIBITION OPENING 6 pm Friday Sept. 8. Free. Radical Abacus, 1226 Calle de Comercio.

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COURTESY PETERS PROJECTS

THE CALENDAR

Fernando Andrade lived in Mexico until he was 7 years old, at which time his family moved to Texas. In La Patria (Homeland), he processes the descent of his hometown into cartel violence. It opens at Peters Projects on Friday. Drawings like “El Chavo” portray children’s play juxtaposed with violence.

WED/6 BOOKS/LECTURES Want to see your event here? Email all the relevant information to calendar@sfreporter.com. You can also enter your events yourself online at calendar.sfreporter.com (submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion). Need help?

Contact Charlotte: 395-2906

BOOK STUDY: THE GOOD AND BEAUTIFUL GOD St. John’s United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 Get ahold of The Good and Beautiful God by James Bryan Smith and talk about it with your contemporaries. The weekly meeting runs through Nov. 8, so dive in if you want. 10 am, free DHARMA TALK BY PETRA HUBBELING Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week’s talk, “A Plunge in Not Knowing,” is offered by Hubbeling, a Zen priest from the Netherlands. 5:30 pm, free

SANTA FE WRITERS LAB: DEBORAH MADISON AND DOUG MERRIAM Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Beloved local cookbook authors Madison and Merriam present their ultimately readable recipe collections. 6 pm, free

EVENTS BREAKFAST WITH O’KEEFFE: CADY WELLS Georgia O’Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Explore the career and community of local painter Wells. 9 am, $15 CONTINUING EDUCATION OPEN HOUSE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Learn more about opportunities for everyone to learn. Check it out in room 131. 4 pm, free

GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 This quiz can earn you alcohol. 8 pm, free NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM FIESTA SYMPOSIUM New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 The history museum invites the community for a day of discussion and learning about the Pueblo Revolt, the Reconquest and Fiestas. 10:30 am-4:30 pm, free

MUSIC FLAMENCO EN VIVO Museum of Int’l Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Listen to flamenco in conjunction with the exhibit Flamenco: From Spain to Mexico for an immersive experience. 1 pm, $7-$12

RAMON BERMUDEZ JR. TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Latin and jazz guitar. 6 pm, free ROBERT MIRABAL El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Native flute over a tapas-style dinner. 6:30 pm, $25 SANTA FE CROONERS Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 The hits of Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennett and others of that ilk. 7 pm, free SKY SMEED Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 His name sounds like it might belong to a little old man, but Smeed is actually a pretty dreamy young dude with a penchant for poignant folk. 8 pm, free

GERRY & CHRIS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Gerry Carthy plays Irish tunes, Chris Abeyta’s got the Latin jams, and together the two friends form a musical meld. 7:30 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocals. 7 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free MARIACHI MATINEE Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Performances from wellknown mariachi and folklorico dance groups. 10 am, $7; 2 pm, $10

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September ENTERTAINMENT LINEUP

PREMIERE

SINDUSTRY

FIRE

THURSDAYS

FRIDAYS

SATURDAYS

DJ DYNAMITE SOL

01 • DJ DMONIC

VDJ DANY

08 • DJ MQ 15 • DJ SOIREE 22 • REBEL FROG 29 • DJ KODER

BUFFALOTHUNDERRESORT.COM

A 100, 50, and 25 mile cycling event covering distinct areas on the Acoma and Laguna Pueblo reservations and local communities. This spectacular event offers both the experienced and recreational cyclist an exciting and rare opportunity to ride through competitive and scenic race courses. Tour de Acoma is a fundraising event, all proceeds go to Haaku Museum Foundation.

acomaskycity.org • 800-747-0181 15 minutes south of I-40, exit 102 Acoma, NM 87034 22

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Going Dutch K.Dutch does it DIY BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

uoth the liner notes from K.Dutch’s debut fulllength, Always Home: “This album has a strong DIY core with most songs produced on my laptop at my dining room table and recorded on a hand-me-down mic in my garage.” Translated, this means it’s a tad rough around the edges, but that doesn’t mean bad—it means raw. And raw is what you want when it comes to hip-hop. MC KC Dutcher is, after all, a father, part of local Afrobeat act Shake Alert and a public schools employee. This all means his time is surely tight, but we like to imagine he stays up late after the kids have gone to bed, notebook in hand, thesaurus nearby, crafting rhymes and flows to go with his ’90s R&B-reminiscent backing beats or subtle nods to reggae and lo-fi East Coast titans of rap like Biggie or Wu Tang. We’ll start there, particularly with the track “Full Fly Zone,” a clever and heavier beat that’s one part Casio beat machine, one part gangster rap mood whistle and one part K.Dutch’s backand-forth between sugary-smooth singing voice and borderline angry flow. “History lies, open your eyes,” he says. “It’s time to get real, it’s time to go to work—go volunteer; go get on a ballot, volunteer, mentor a child.” It

sounds angry, feels positive, made us think about how we could do more—a call to arms, of sorts, and a perfect encapsulation of K.Dutch’s whole deal: Dude wants to enact change. Take “The Future,” a political chiptune-esque callback to 8-bit Nintendo soundtracks that envisions a bleak future where the environment is wrecked, stocks mean nothing and people die—but, ruh-roh, we’re basically there now. Thanks for nothing, Trump. “Human blood, the new fuel for cranes in factories,” he laments. And he’s right, but Home isn’t all heavy bum-out songs. Tracks like “PS” and “I Get Over” not only feel sexy as hell, but pay respect to educators and remind us that we have power if we care to grasp it. Mastering from Hills Audio champ Will Dyar (Storming the Beaches with Logos in Hand, anyone?) cleans things up a bit, and Dutch’s voice is clear and tight, but we’re almost more interested in where he’ll go next. As debuts go, Always Home comes pretty close to excellent, but even with the lack of over-production, it feels not quite there. We’d love to see what K.Dutch would be capable of if he were to hit a studio for a couple days, maybe with a live band, to which we know he has access. Still, there are some serious bangers on Home and his heart’s in the right place—a welcome surprise in a city that seems to embrace hip-hop more and more with each passing year.


ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

THU/7 BOOKS/LECTURES THE TRICKSTER IN AMERICAN LITERATURE AND POLITICS St. John’s United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Ken Simonsen discusses classic tricksters in American literature and politics (see Picks, page 19). 1 pm, $10

EVENTS NEW HOMEBUYER NIGHT Homewise 1301 Siler Road, Bldg. D, 983-9473 Get step-by-step instruction on how to achieve your dream of owning your own home. 5 pm, free PUBLIC MEETING: NEW ART SPACE IN RAILYARD Halpin Building 404 Montezuma Ave., 476-5072 As part of the planning for a new contemporary art space in Santa Fe, get to an architectural meeting at the future site of the Museum of New Mexico’s new contemporary art space. 1 pm, free

MUSIC ALTO STREET Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Local folk rock that perhaps originated down by the river, like its namesake. 6 pm, free BROTHERHOOD SOUND SYSTEM Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Reggae for days. Or at least for a few hours. 10 pm, free DANIELE SPADAVECCHIA L’Olivier Restaurant 229 Galisteo St., 989-1919 Mediterranean gypsy jazz. 6 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Piano standards and Broadway faves. 6 pm, $2 DOS GATOS El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Americana, blues, cumbia, jazz, ranchera, swing, Tex Mex and zydeco for your dancin’ pleasure. 9 pm, free ERIC SCHAFFER Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Folk rock on the deck, straight from the swamps of New Jersey. By the way, have you been to the swamps of New Jersey? Man, are they spooky. 5 pm, free

THE CALENDAR

FREAKS OF THE INDUSTRY WITH DJ POETICS Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Hip-hop, old-school, funk and disco—especially for you industry types. 9 pm, $5-$7 GERRY & CHRIS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Latin jams and Irish music. 7:30 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocals. 7 pm, free JOE MACK Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Orchestral singer-songwritery tunes. Plus, he’s a culture journalist, and we like those. 8 pm, free KARAOKE Camel Rock Casino 17486 Hwy. 84/285, Pojoaque, 984-8414 It’s a contest to see who’s the best at sack racing! Just kidding. 7:30 pm, free LIMELIGHT KARAOKE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 You know the deal. 10 pm, free MIAMI NIGHT WITH VDJ DANY Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Bachata, merengue and reggaeton. 9 pm, $5-$7 OPEN MIC WITH STEPHEN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The mic. It is open. 7 pm, free SUNSET IN THE GARDEN: HALF BROKE HORSES Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Americana and honky-tonk. 5 pm, $3-$10

THEATER THE FIESTA MELODRAMA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 This popular satire is sold out, but who knows, maybe someone will scalp you a ticket. 7:30 pm, $15-$25

FRI/8 ART OPENINGS A GROUP OF FIVE Steve Elmore Indian Art 839 Paseo de Peralta, 995-9677 The artists of this group exhibit (a group of five, as it were) create in various media exploring different subjects, united by shared experiences working in the desert Southwest. 5 pm, free

DONALD AND ERA FARNSWORTH: I FORGET I’M HUMAN Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Fiber, hand-painted and digitally generated elements explore the ways in which science and mythology have shaped human history. 5 pm, free FERNANDO ANDRADE: LA PATRIA (HOMELAND) Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Andrade, of Mexico, has seen his hometown overrun with violence. He creates simple narratives featuring children aspiring to greatness—whether great good or great evil. Through Nov. 4. 5 pm, free GLORIA KLEIN: PATTERN PAINTING 1975-1983 David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Klein developed her own mathematical system for dividing and organizing her canvases, resulting in intelligent abstract geometric works. 5 pm, free GRAND OPENING EXHIBITION McCreery Jordan Fine Art 924 Paseo de Peralta, 577-8339 Celebrate the grand opening of McCreery Jordan Fine Art and its neighbor Weiss Art. 5 pm, free GUSTAVO PEREZ: LINES Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Contemporary ceramics play with shape, texture and tone. 5 pm, free JAMI PORTER LARA: IN SITU Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 While exploring a remote stretch of the US/Mexico border, Albuquerque artist Jami Porter Lara found two-liter bottles. Struck by essential sameness of the plastic bottle and the potsherd, she re-conceptualizes the plastic bottle as vessel. Through Nov. 5. 5 pm, free JENNIFER JOSEPH: BEDROOM PAINTINGS David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Joseph’s self-consciously created, monochromatic and geometric paintings are contemplative, serene and moody—kind of how we feel in the bedroom. Makes sense. 5 pm, free JOAN CONCETTA BIORDI: THE CROWN JEWELS: WESTERN NATIONAL PARKS Vista Grande Public Library 14 Avenida Torreon, 466-7323 Biordi presents stunning photographs from America’s most spectacular national parks, finding unique perspectives of familiar landscapes. 5 pm, free

INGREDIENTS:

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Offer for one “1 for $3” Gift Certificate good for any Natural American Spirit cigarette product (excludes RYO pouches and 150g tins). Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. Offer and website restricted to U.S. smokers 21 years of age and older. Limit one offer per person per 12 month period. Offer void in MA and where prohibited. Other restrictions may apply. Offer expires 12/31/17.

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE Santa Fe Reporter 07-26-17_09-06-17.indd 1

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THE CALENDAR

© Jimmy Chalk

is a lecture series on political, economic, environmental, and human rights issues featuring social justice activists, writers, journalists, and scholars discussing critical topics of our day.

GLENN GREENWALD with

TOM ENGELHARDT

WEDNESDAY 27 SEPTEMBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER The Trump presidency presents massive, new threats to the protection of civil rights and liberties, long under assault—but also entirely new political opportunities. — Glenn Greenwald

Glenn Greenwald is an investigative journalist and author. A former constitutional lawyer, he founded the online global media outlet The Intercept with Laura Poitras and Jeremy Scahill in 2014. He is the author of several best sellers—most recently No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the US Surveillance State. He is the recipient of numerous awards for his investigative journalism and was named one of the Top 100 Global Thinkers for 2013 by Foreign Policy magazine. He is a recipient of the Lannan Cultural Freedom Award. Greenwald will speak about political trends and civil liberties in the Trump era.

TICKETS ON SALE SATU R DAY 5 AUG UST

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:

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TEXT AND IMAGE: PLAYING WITH HAIGA Axle Contemporary 670-5854 Find the mobile gallery parked at the intersection of Delgado Street and Canyon Road for contemporary artists who combine language, poetry and images in their artworks. Students from the New Mexico School for the Arts, who create literary visual art on the spot. 5 pm, free THE LOVE THAT WOULD NOT DIE: A PUPPET EXHIBITION Radical Abacus 1226 Calle de Comercio Depending on how you feel about puppets, this will either be super creepy or super cool (see SFR Picks, page 19). 6 pm, free THE RICH WORLD OF PERCEPTION ViVO Contemporary 725 Canyon Road, 982-1320 Who gives art meaning: the artist or the viewer? Ponder it here. 5 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES DEAN’S LECTURE SERIES: THE DOUBLENESS OF SELFCONSCIOUSNESS St. John’s College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 984-6000 Paul Wilford of Boston College explores the dual character of self-consciousness in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Great Hall, Peterson Student Center. 7:30 pm, free

THE HISTORY OF THE THREE SISTERS: CORN, BEANS, AND SQUASH Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Ethnobotanist Mollie Toll lectures on where corn, beans, and squash came from and how they’ve evolved. 5:30 pm, $10-$15

DANCE ANTONIO GRANJERO AND ENTREFLAMENCO El Nido 1577 Bishops Lodge Road, 954-1272 Enjoy a fine three-course prixe fixe dinner, then get wowed by authentic flamenco at 8 pm. Make reservations soon—’cause everyone knows Fiestas time is the best time for this kind of thing. 6 pm, $100 DISCOVER SQUARE DANCE OPEN HOUSE Eldorado Senior Center Community Room 16 Avenida Torreon The Eldorado Depot Dancers, Santa Fe’s only square dance club, invites you to an open house. This isn’t what you remember from grammar school. 7 pm, free FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Catch a dinner dance performance by the National Institute of Flamenco at Santa Fe’s oldest bar, newly open again after renovations. 6:30 pm, $25

CONTINUED ON PAGE 26 COURTESY KEEP CONTEMPORARY

In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom

JOERAEL ELLIOT: I AM THE HIGHWAY Keep Contemporary 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 102, 307-9824 Elliot’s new solo show is narrative exploration on graffiti writing culture, yoga, activism, water rights, politics, the environment, science, spiritual practices and personal narratives. 5 pm, free KITTY LEAKEN: TEA SCROLLS REVISITED natasha Santa Fe 403 S Guadalupe St., 913-9236 Leaken soaks her etherial photos in tea, and Artful Tea presents a tea ceremony. 5 pm, free MAX ERNST AND YVETTE CAUQUIL-PRINCE: TAPESTRIES Peters Projects 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 The exhibit includes Belgian artist Cauquil-Prince’s tapestry interpretations of several of Ernst’s most renowned Dada/Surrealist works. 5 pm, free MOKHA LAGET: IN SHAPE, IN COLOR David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Laget creates the illusion of 3D space with geometric figures on canvas. 5 pm, free PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW True West Gallery 130 Lincoln Ave., 982-0055 Lyn Pomeranz (equine photographer) and Arland Ben (born on the Navajo Reservation) display new works. 5 pm, free PORTABLE MAGIC: THE ART OF THE BOOK Capitol Rotunda Gallery 490 Old Santa Fe Trail, 986-4614 A juried book arts exhibit. Through Dec. 15. 4 pm, free RICHARD SOBER: AMERICAN STUDIES Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Sober grew up in an urban working-class family and adopted his parents’ work ethic, but approached their expectations from the point of observation rather than participation. Through Nov. 5. 5 pm, free RURAL NARRATIVES Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace Ave., 501-6555 Stephanie Hartshorn’s imagery often features structural themes; Tamara Rymer’s style is influenced by her family history, as well as the bond between horse and rider. 5 pm, free STORY QUILTS Santa Fe Public Library 145 Washington St., 955-6780 Fiber artist Lisbet Okun presents her hand-pieced, meticulously constructed quilts, which aim to express experience through textiles. 5 pm, free

Graffiti. Yoga. Water rights. Politics. Model trains. It’s all in I Am the Highway, opening Friday at Keep Contemporary.


COURTESY NIOMI FAWN

A&C

Giddy Up! Mobile art “go-tique” hits the Santa Fe streets

BY LIZ BRINDLEY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m @lizbrindley_artwork

W

ho doesn’t want a pony?” local curator Niomi Fawn asks. “And who doesn’t want a cute pony with braids in its hair doing fancy tricks?” Fawn refers to how her latest creation, Show Pony, a mobile “go-tique” (gallery/boutique), got its name. Fawn launched Show Pony in July of this year to make an accessible and inclusive public art space. I meet the Pony, a trailer that went through a curated makeover, for the first time in a storage unit parking space (and I can’t help but liken it to a horse stall). I step inside and am transported to an intimate gallery decked out with the work of 16 local artists including Israel Francisco Haros Lopez, Anastasio Wrobel and M Gold. Good things come in small packages, right? As I do a 360-degree spin to take everything in, Fawn says, “This is a clubhouse on wheels.” She’s describing the feel of the tiny yet welcoming environment, where you can stand shoulder-to-shoulder with strangers and feel comfortable talking about the artwork. “The inclusivity of this environment is about removing the idea that you have to be a certain way or have a certain amount of money to enter an art space,” Fawn shares. For the curation process, Fawn focuses on small-scale works to counterbalance the pressure some artists receive from galleries to go big; she seeks out the precious, intricate studies that sometimes only exist behind the scenes. “I want work that people want to live with everyday,” Fawn says, “where they can say, ‘Cool, I’m eating scrambled eggs and drinking coffee. I love this piece so much, and it looks different today.’” Current artwork includes a variety of prints, CDs and books

including Wrobel’s Non-Binary Coloring Book (A&C, “A Non-Binary Experience,” Dec. 21, 2016). Fawn catches my eyes darting from product to product and points out that Show Pony “has all of the people you’d want to find, but would never know how to find them.” Though the go-tique is parked during our chat, its main trick is mobility. Fawn helps people find the featured artists by driving Show Pony to public spaces and hanging the artwork in the trailer to create an open gallery in unconventional settings. In a matter of merely eight weeks—since Show Pony’s July debut at this year’s AHA Progressive Arts Festival’s Art of the Machine event on July 1— it has opened its doors at numerous locations including the Railyard, the Drury Plaza Hotel and the Santa Fe Opera. Obviously, this pony is agile. Just as a horse takes time to learn its tricks, the idea began percolating in Fawn’s mind two years ago. It was around the time she also founded Curate Santa Fe, a business model that led her to design over 30 art shows for spaces like Iconik Coffee Roasters and the Visual Arts Gallery at Santa Fe Community College. The shows helped Fawn create strong relationships with local artists, many of whom are represented in the gotique today. Earlier this year, the vision materialized when Fawn embodied the personality of a workhorse, transforming a trailer from the inside out in only 47 days. The

The art world is changing. It just is. It has to. -Niomi Fawn

With the advent of Show Pony, Santa Fe now has two mobile art galleries (including Axle Contemporary). How lucky is that?

effort that went into creating (and now maintaining) the space is masterfully hidden behind an intense attention to craft and detail; the black exterior stands in stark contrast to the interior’s sleek, white wood paneled walls with carefully selected artworks that are all under $500 and average roughly $150. “There are many people who don’t have the inroad to pay $5,000 for a painting,” Fawn tells SFR. “It might be because they are very educated and have masters degrees in art, but they also have $50,000 of student debt. Or they might be working 40 to 60 hours a week just trying to make ends meet in Santa Fe, and those people deserve a piece of art, too.” The price point means pieces sell regularly, which not only supports the overall Santa Fe arts scene, but creates an ever-changing collection of content.

To keep up with this animal, you’ll have to track it on Instagram (@showponygallery) or through showponygallery.com. Fawn comments that most people are on their phones anyway, so why not tap into that relationship and create an alternative art experience? Meanwhile, you can find Show Pony at Second Street Brewery’s Rufina location this Friday (4-8 pm. 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068) and at Back Road Pizza from noon-6 pm on Saturday and Sunday (1807 Second St., Ste. 1, 955-9055) “The art world is changing,” she states. “It just is. It has to.” Editor’s note: Niomi Fawn takes over the SFR Instagram account this weekend from Friday to Sunday, so follow along: @sfreporter to check it out.

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Get savager at: SFReporter.com/savage

DRIP, don’t obsess on the distressing-to-you details and focus instead on the big picture: You’ve got an adventurous GF. Congrats. If she doesn’t have an equally adventurous BF, here’s hoping she finds one.

I’m a lady considering taking on a foot fetishist as a slave. He would do chores around my house, including cleaning and laundry, and give foot rubs and pedicures in exchange for getting to worship and jack off to my model-perfect feet when I’ve decided he’s earned it. Am I morally obligated to tell my roommates? Technically the guy would be in their common space too. I will fully vet him with references and meet him in a neutral location at least once—and anything else you might suggest I do for security’s sake. Though my roommates are not what you would call conservative, I’m not sure they’d understand this kind of arrangement. I would have my slave come over when no one is around, and then my roommates could come home to a sparkly clean common area! My slave would never have access to their personal spaces, nor would I leave him alone in any area of our home until a strong bond of trust had been established. No harm, no foul? Or am I crossing a line? -Man Into Cleaning A Shared Apartment A friend in Berlin has a similar arrangement. This guy comes over to clean his apartment once a week and—if my friend thinks he’s done a good enough job—my friend rewards him with a knee to the balls. It’s a good deal for both parties: My vanilla-but-kink-adjacent friend gets a sparkly clean apartment (which he loves but doesn’t want to do himself), this guy gets his balls busted on a regular basis (which he loves but can’t do himself). But my friend lives alone, MICASA, and that makes all the difference. Or does it? Time for some playing-games-with-footfetishists theory: If you were having sex with a boyfriend in the common areas of your apartment when your roommates weren’t home— let’s say your boyfriend (or even some rando) wanted to fuck you on the kitchen floor—you wouldn’t be morally obligated to text your roommates and ask their permission. But we’re not talking about a normal guy here or normal sex—we’re talking about a fetishist who wants to be your slave. Does that make a difference? It might to people who regard kinksters as dangerous sex maniacs, MICASA, but a kinky guy isn’t any more or less dangerous than a vanilla guy. And a kinky guy you’ve gone to the trouble to vet—by getting his real name and contact info, by meeting in public at least once, by asking for and following up with references—presents less of a threat to you and your roommates than some presumed-to-be-vanilla rando one of you brought home from a bar at 2 a.m. Strip away the sensational elements— his thing for feet, his desire to be your chore slave, the mental image of him jacking off all over your toes—and what are we left with? A friends-with-benefits arrangement. A sparkly clean apartment benefits you (and your roommates); the opportunity to worship your feet benefits him. This guy would be a semi-regular sex partner of yours, MICASA, and while the sex you’re having may not be conventional, the sex you have in your apartment—including the sex you might have in the common areas when no one is at home—is ultimately none of your roommates’ business. That said, MICASA, unless or until all your roommates know what’s up, I don’t think you should ever allow this guy to be alone in your apartment. My girlfriend drunkenly confessed to me that she used to pee on her ex. I’m not sure what to do with this info. -Dude’s Relationship In Peril

My 7-year-old son started getting really into gauze, splints, and bandages when he was 3, and by the time he was 4, it became clearly sexualized. He gets a boner when he plays “broken bone” or just looks at bandages, and he has expressed how much he loves to touch his penis when he does this. My husband and I (both happily vanilla) have been accepting and casual about this. We’ve provided him with a stash of “supplies,” taught him the concept of privacy and alone time, and frequently remind him to never wrap bandages around his head or neck. Is it normal to be so kinky at such a young age? I know kinks generally develop from childhood associations. When he was 2, he had surgery to correct a common issue on his groin. Might that have sparked this? I want my son to grow up with a healthy and positive sexuality. Are we doing him a favor or a disservice by supplying him with materials, freedom, and privacy to engage in a kink so young? -Boy Always Needing “Doctoring” And Getting Edgier Your son’s behavior isn’t that abnormal, BANDAGE. It’s standard for kids, even very young kids, to touch their genitals—in public, where it can be a problem, or in private, where it should never be a problem. And lord knows kids obsess about the strangest shit. (What is the deal with dinosaurs, anyway?) Right now your son is obsessed with bandages and splints and gauze, his interests aren’t purely intellectual, and it’s easy to see a possible link between his experience with bandages and gauze in his swimsuit area and his obsession. None of this means your son is definitely going to be kinky when he grows up, BANDAGE—not that there’s anything wrong with being kinky when you grow up. There are lots of happy, healthy kinksters out there, and your kid could be one of them when he grows up. But it’s too early to tell, and so long as his interests aren’t complicating his life (he’s not behaving inappropriately with friends or at school), your son’s whatever-this-is will become less of your concern over time and ultimately it will be none of your business. In the meantime, you don’t wanna slap a “so kinky” label on a 7-year-old. (If he were to overhear you using that term to describe him, does he have the computer skills to google it himself?) But you’re doing everything right otherwise. You aren’t shaming your son, you aren’t making bandages and gauze and splints more alluring by denying him access to them, you are teaching him important lessons about privacy and what needs to be reserved for “alone time.” You ask if it’s normal to be “so kinky” (a phrase we shall both retire, at least when referring to your son, after today) at such a young age. Probably not—but so what? According to science, most adults have paraphilias, aka “non-normative sexual desires and interests.” That means kinks are normal—at least for grown-ups—so even if your son isn’t normal now, BANDAGE, he’ll be normal someday. Most happy, healthy, well-adjusted adult kinksters can point to things in their childhood that seemed to foreshadow their adult interests in bandages/bondage/balloons/whatever. Author, journalist, and spanking fetishist Jillian Keenan (Sex with Shakespeare) was fascinated by spanking when she was your son’s age; Keenan likes to say she was conscious of her kink orientation before she knew anything about her sexual orientation. So while your son’s behavior may not be “normal” for a kid who grows up to be vanilla, it would be “normal” for someone who grows up to be kinky.

Did she ask you to do something with this info? Did your girlfriend say, “Hey, I used to pee on my ex—now go make me a dream catcher with that news, would you?” Your GF got a little kinky with an ex, most likely at the ex’s request, and so what? If piss isn’t something you’re into,

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On the Lovecast, Dan and Jesse Bering chat about your father’s penis: savagelovecast.com mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter ITMFA.org

EVENTS SANTA FE FIESTAS Santa Fe Plaza The annual event has rolled around once again—there’s tons to do, from ceremonies to art festivals to eating elote, so visit santafefiesta. org for the full sched. The day officially begins with the Pregón de la Fiesta at 6 am. All day, free SANTA FE KIRTAN FESTIVAL Paradiso 903 Early St., 919-9986 The Manjari Mantra Band opens, then enjoy one of Santa Fe’s favorite kirtan groups, the Bhakti Boogie Band. Sing along, dance, or just sit and let the music take you away. For all the info, visit kirtansantafe.org. 6 pm, free

MUSIC DK AND THE AFFORDABLES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rockabilly with a horn section—that’s what we like. 8:30 pm, free DANIELE SPADAVECCHIA Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Jazz, swing and classics. 7 pm, free DEEP PROGRESSIONS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 BuddhaBass and Dave Smooth spin deep house and other similarly plunging musics. 10 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, yo. 6 pm, free EMILY DAVIS, FOX WHITE AND FULL SPEED VERONICA Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Davis brings intimate, cutting-edge folk to the stage accompanied by a combination of rock ‘n roll and punk-opera from Fox White and Full Speed Veronica. 8 pm, $8 GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocals. 8 pm, free KARAOKE WITH McLAIN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 “Karaoke with McLain” is actually the name of a chamber music quartet. OMG, totes jk, it’s that selfsame karaoke that you know and love. 7 pm, free LITTLE LEROY El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock ‘n’ roll. 9 pm, $5

PAMELA McCLAIN: THE TOYBOX BY CLAUDE DEBUSSY First Presbyterian Church SF 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 McClain, an accomplished musician, performs compositions by Debussy on piano. 5:30 pm, free PAUL CATALDO Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Did you miss Cataldo at Cowgirl on Tuesday? No worries, catch him tonight. Lush vocals and folk music. 5 pm, free RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SIERRA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rock and country. 8 pm, free STELLA TROIS Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Noodley jazz from a few of our favorite local musicians. Hi guys! 6 pm, free SUMMER FLING WITH DJ POETICS Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 This is how we do it, it’s Friday night. So I reach for my 40 and I turn it up. Eeeeee, we made it! 9 pm, $5-$7 THE STRINGMASTERS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Jazzy steel-string guitar. 6 pm, free THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Jazz by this swinging trio, which welcomes a different special guest each Friday night. 7:30 pm, free YACHT ROCK HUSTLE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Rock, pop, funk, R&B and dance musics. Also, this ABQ band says in their bio: “We woo women with our sensuous and godlike trombone playing.” I always was a sucker for an instrument with a slide. Unff. 10 pm, free

THEATER KILLING BUDDHA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Theatre Dojo, presents what might happen if the Buddha encountered a remorseful serial killer. 7:30 pm, $15-$18

THE FIESTA MELODRAMA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 This popular satire is sold out, but who knows, maybe someone will scalp you a ticket. 7:30 pm, $15-$25

SAT/9 ART OPENINGS ALINE AND ELIOT PORTER Scheinbaum and Russek 812 Camino Acoma, 988-5116 In understanding relationships for artistic couples, hints might be found in their work. Both Porters were artists in their own right while also influencing and supporting each other. 4 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES ARIEL GORE: WE WERE WITCHES Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Gore talks with poet Miriam Sagan about feminism, witchery, motherhood, art, politics and everything else that makes the world beautiful. She releases We Were Witches, which we think should be necessary reading for basically everyone everywhere (see Cover, page 12). 6 pm, free HIGH NOON: THE HOLLYWOOD BLACKLIST AND THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN CLASSIC Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Journalist Glenn Frankel dives into the history of Hollywood hit High Noon at this book signing and lecture (see SFR Picks, page 19). 1 pm, free JOHN PITTS: SPLENDORS OF MOROCCO Travel Bug Coffee Shop 839 Paseo de Peralta, 992-0418 Pitts presents a slideshow of travels in safe, tourist-friendly, simply splendid Morocco. 5 pm, free

DANCE ANTONIO GRANJERO AND ENTREFLAMENCO El Nido 1577 Bishops Lodge Road, 954-1272 Enjoy dinner at 6 pm, then get wowed by authentic flamenco at 8 pm. Make reservations soon! 6 pm, $100 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Catch a dinner dance performance by the National Institute of Flamenco at Santa Fe’s oldest bar, newly open again after renovations. 6:30 pm, $25


THE CALENDAR

FILM HIGH NOON Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 The classic Western film gets an introduction from journalist and novelist Glenn Frankel (see SFR Picks, page 19). 4 pm, $8-$9

FOOD FALL FIESTA Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 I scream, you scream, we all scream for a locally-sourced plated dinner prepared by Santa Fe’s best chefs. If you just want to come party at 8 pm, but not have dinner, it’s only $35. 5:30 pm, $35-$150

FREDDY LOPEZ El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock and blues. Have you yet been to El Farol now that it’s open again? Get there! 9 pm, $5 GARY PAUL Upper Crust Pizza (Eldorado) 5 Colina Drive, 471-1111 Beguiling story songs and tall tales. And pizza with weird stuff on it, should you so desire. Pine nuts? Not bad. 6 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocals. 8 pm, free

THE POLISH AMBASSADOR (2 NIGHTS) WILDLIGHT LIVE / AYLA NEREO / AMPLE MAMMAL SAQI / SCOTT NICE / ULTIMATE FANTASTIC ISAAC CHAMBERS / GRANDFATHER GOLD / RYAN HERR

YOGA / PERMACULTURE / WORKSHOPS / ECSTATIC DANCE / LAWN SPORTS LESS THEN 1,000 CAMPING TICKETS AVAILABLE. AN INTIMATE WEEKEND OF MUSIC & CONNECTION. & WORKSHOPS

SPECIAL EVENTS

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

WILD & SCENIC FILM FESTIVAL (2 DAYS)

ACTION DAY: NATURAL BUILDING w/ EARTH BAGS

KID’S VILLAGE by RAINBOW LIGHTNING

‘FINDING VOICE, RECEIVING SONG’ w/ AYLA NEREO

‘ACCESSING THE CREATIVE SPIRIT’ w/ SAQI

BREEMA BODYWORK CLASS w/ SCOTT NICE

AND MUCH MORE

MUSIC BONE ORCHARD Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Original Southwestern Americana from Taos. 8:30 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Piano standards and Broadway tunes. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Gotta get that smooth, smooth piano. 6 pm, free

A T COM TS K E N O W DS. T I C L E ECOR A B ITR A I L SU AV J U M P W.

EVENTS ARTIST TALK David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 Gallery artists Gloria Klein, Vivien Abrams Collens, Rachel Beaudoin and Clark Richert discuss pattern painting. (that’s, like, paintings of lines and shapes. Think deceptively simple.) 4 pm, free DIABETES AWARENESS Santa Fe Public Library (Southside Branch) 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 Diabetes specialist Dr. Martin Ruiz gives attendees the lowdown on the disease. Get some healthy snacks—and there’s childcare too. 11:30 am-1:30 pm, free FALL ACTIVITIES AT THE SANTA FE SKI BASIN Ski Santa Fe 740 Hyde Park Road, 982-4429 Chairlift rides, live music, beer garden! Bob Wilson plays live music. Take a chairlift ride. No disc golf for n00bz this weekend due to a big ol’ tournament (see 3 Questions, this page). 10 am-3 pm, free SANTA FE COMMUNITY FARM STAND Santa Fe Community Farm 1829 San Ysidro Crossing, 983-3033 These local producers produce local produce. Noon-2 pm, free SANTA FE FIESTAS Santa Fe Plaza The centuries-old annual event has rolled around once again. Today at 9 am is the Pet Parade, and you have to be a true monster not to love dogs in costumes. After that, folks party until the wee hours, so get ready. All day, free SANTA FE KIRTAN FESTIVAL Paradiso 903 Early St., 919-9986 Catch the best kirtan music Santa Fe has to offer! Check kirtansantafe.org for more info. 4 pm, free

WW

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

with Marcos Castillo

AT TAOS MESA BREWING AMPHITHEATER // TAOS, NM // SEP. 29-OCT 01

COURTESY MARCOS CASTILLO

On Sept. 9 and 10, 65-ish disc golfers of all levels descend (ascend?) upon the Ski Santa Fe disc golf course for the second annual Ski Bueno Classic disc golf tournament, and tournament director Marcos Castillo can hardly wait. A 10-year vet of the sport and longtime tourney organizer, Castillo plays at the pro level and is constantly bringing together new players of all ages, creeds and skill levels through his company, Elite Brothers Disc Golf (elitebrothersdiscgolf.com, where you can also register for events across the state). And though the Ski Santa Fe course is usually open to the public, this one’s a closed event, kids—but if you keep an eye out for next year, you’ll be slingin’ disc (a term we just invented) before you know it. (Alex De Vore) So, what’s the allure of disc golf? There are many different types of allure. One, it’s afforable to play; two, it’s relatively easy to learn; and three, there are courses almost everywhere. Most are free to play, and the general camaraderie of the community is great. There are are many types of people who play. Why do so many skiing locations have courses? They’re perfect for disc golf. They have all the different types of terrain and challenges we like, like up and downhill, through the trees. They have a lot of infrastructure already, and ski areas are looking for ways to get people on the mountain during the summer. Almost every ski area in the state has a permanent course. Why do you guys hate the word ‘Frisbee’ so much? The best comparison I’ve heard is that if you go up to someone who’s very into table tennis and call it pingpong. ... The way disc golf is growing, we’re trying to legitimize our sport. There are professionals who play. The negative connotation of the sport is the stoner hippie hanging around flinging a Frisbee; that’s not us.

When I was first approached about being a Big Brother, I thought I wasn’t qualified. I don’t know much about kids, and I don’t have any special training or skills to teach them. But when I met Fabian, I realized that going to the dog park and hanging out was enough to make a difference to him. Ali, Big Brother

” Hang out It’s that simple www.BBBSMountainRegion.org • 505-983-8360 SFREPORTER.COM

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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THE CALENDAR

Bach & Brews with Matt Haimovitz Friday, September 15 | 9 pm The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Co. Matt Haimovitz Saturday, September 16 | 7:30 pm Scottish Rite Center Tickets start at $15 PerformanceSantaFe.org | 505 984 8759

RAILYARD URGENT CARE We put patients first and deliver excellent care in the heart of Santa Fe.

+ INJURIES & ILLNESS + X-RAYS + PHYSICALS + LAB TESTS + VACCINATIONS + DRUG TESTING + DOT EXAMS Thank you for voting us Best of Santa Fe for our first two years in business! WHERE TO FIND US 831 South St. Francis Drive, just north of the red caboose.

(505) 501.7791

www.railyardurgentcare.com

HALF BROKE HORSES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Honky-tonk and Americana. 1 pm JAY SOM Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Melina Duerte, aka Jay Som, plays electrified folk and dreamy alt-funk. 9 pm, $12-$14 JULIAN DOSSETT TRIO Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Get to the deck for the tunes of three bluesy dudes from Albuquerque. 3 pm, free LINCOLN COUNTY WAR Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Outlaw country. Much better than in-law country. 10 pm, free LOS NEW MEXICO PLAYBOYS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Rock ‘n’ roll you can dance to. 7 pm, free MINERAL HILL Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 More fun than a pile ‘o’ rocks. 6 pm, free R CARLOS NAKAI QUARTET Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Global fusion with sax, keyboard, bass, percussion and Native American flute. 6 pm, $60-$100 RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish-style classical guitar. 7 pm, free SIERRA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rock and folk. 8 pm, free SMOOTH AND MID LIFE CRISIS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Rock out with covers of all your fave hits (Smooth specializes in Santana, oh yeah) at the Wings for Hope fundraiser to benefit school kids needing new duds. 10 pm, free STELLA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Noodley weirdo jazz. 7:30 pm, free STILETTO SATURDAYS WITH DJ 12 TRIBE Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Dancing in stilettos. How? 9 pm, $5-$7 SWING SOLEIL Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 All-acoustic swinging jazz. 6 pm, free

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

THEATER BEYOND THE BORDER Santa Fe Art Institute 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 424-5050 A youth-created participatory performance and discussion about the state of immigration in our state. 2 pm, free KILLING BUDDHA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Theatre Dojo supposes what might happen if the Buddha encountered a remorseful serial killer. 7:30 pm, $15-$18 THE FIESTA MELODRAMA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 This popular satire is sold out, but who knows, maybe someone will scalp you a ticket. 7:30 pm, $15-$25

SUN/10 BOOKS/LECTURES FINANCING SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC PANELS Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-9674 Learn how to finance solar photovoltaic panels on your own property with the savings from your electric bill. Noon, free FOREST ENTOMOLOGY Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Participate in a hands-on introduction to forest entomology, past and present forest pest management practices, and forest health issues. 2 pm, $5-$7 JOURNEYSANTAFE: TONY ANELLA Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Anella, a conservationist, architect and writer, shares his insights garnered from organizing and implementing programs aimed at promoting a conservation ethic. He founded the Aldo Leopold Writing Program on these principles. 11 am, free ARTIST LECTURE: MICHAEL NAMINGHA Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Namingha creates a compelling mix of imagery and words commenting on modern interpersonal relations and contemporary culture. His pieces are currently on view in the Ojos y Manos sculpture garden. Noon, $5-$10

EVENTS DHARMA DISCUSSION GROUP Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Join a discussion on topics around Buddhist practice. 7 pm, free

MODERN BUDDHISM: OVERCOMING ANXIETY Zoetic 230 St. Francis Drive, 292 5293 Nurture a sense of calm by meditating on Buddha’s timeless wisdom with American Buddhist nun Gen Kelsang Inchug. 10:30 am, $10 SANTA FE BRIDGE CLUB OPEN HOUSE Santa Fe Bridge Club 3827 Thomas Road, 303-3813 Curious about bridge (like, the card game)? Learn how to play—or perfect your already-stellar skills. 1-4 pm, free SANTA FE FIESTAS Santa Fe Plaza The annual event has rolled around once again to celebrate Santa Fe’s history—there’s tons to do, from ceremonies to art festivals to eating elote. santafefiesta.org has the full sched. All day, free SANTA FE KIRTAN FESTIVAL Glorieta Mesa Yoga Pavilion 20 Silent Ridge, 919-9986 The festival closes out in Glorieta with music, yoga and crystal bowl meditation, plus an Indian potluck-style dinner at sunset. For a full sched, check kirtansantafe.org. 11 am, free

MUSIC A DAY OF MUSIC FOR THE ARTS The Bridge @ Santa Fe Brewing Company 37 Fire Place, 557-6182 Come out for a day of great music, great beer and great food all to raise funds for Turquoise Trail Charter School with Joe West, Time4Change, OG Willikers, Right On, Kid!, The Hill Stompers, The Banded Geckos and more (see SFR Picks, page 19). 2-8 pm, free BORIS McCUTCHEON Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Americana. Noon, free CACTUS SLIM AND THE GOATHEADS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Rock, blues and Americana. And beards. So very many beards. 3 pm, free CHRIS ABEYTA El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Easy-listening Latin tunes. 9 pm, free DANA SMITH Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 Country-tinged folk songs. 6 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Gotta get that smooth, smooth piano. 6:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 30

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THEATER

ACTING OUT Walk the Walk BY C H A R LOT T E J U S I N S K I c o p y e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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planning their own events. That’s all well and good, but Theatre Santa Fe wanted to create something that industry folk and audience members could physically attend. When Theatre Santa Fe board members pitched the idea, they started asking around to see who was interested. “Then 13 companies said they wanted to do a

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ne of the most common reactions to SFR’s new theater column (the very one you’re reading) is not necessarily happiness or displeasure, but rather bewilderment. Most folks are peripherally aware that Santa Fe has a theater scene; a few of those people know that shows here are totally on fire; and a fraction of those people regularly attend productions. The remaining population, perhaps, doesn’t even realize Santa Fe’s theatrical options are so vast, and many people have never even seen a show here. To counter this generalized absence, an organization called Theatre Santa Fe has planned the first-ever Theatre Walk in Santa Fe for Saturday Sept. 16: a walk-able collection of venues in the Siler Road/Rufina Street district (get onboard with calling it SiDi already) where more than a dozen companies present scenes, short productions and open classes for attendees to get a taste of what’s happened, what’s coming and what’s possible on Santa Fe’s stages. Even better: It’s all free. Janet Davidson, director and president of Theatre Santa Fe (an alliance of 17 theater companies in town), says the Theatre Walk came out of a desire to get everyone involved in a common goal. Theatre Santa Fe’s website (theatresantafe.org) functions as a virtual meeting place with call boards, audition notices, a weekly e-mail newsletter of productions currently running (in 2017, there has been and will be at least one production up every single weekend) and a common calendar that companies can reference when

show,” Davidson says; she was pleasantly surprised with how many companies wanted to join in. “It became a logistic insanity—how do you do 13 companies, seven venues, between 3 and 6 pm, 10 minutes each [production], but they’d each take a half hour? … So that was how it was born.” So much involvement necessitated enlisting Duel Brewing and Cacao Santa Fe as unconventional venues. The variety of options is also a big draw; there are selections from shows that have already passed that you may have missed. New Mexico Actors Lab is reprising a scene from The Glass Menagerie, with a captivating Suzanne Lederer as Amanda and Geoffrey Pomeroy as her mysterious son Tom (web extra, May 19: “Family Matters”). You can get a look at what’s in rehearsal, too, including Ironweed Productions’ The Crucible, coming to stages in late October, as well as Teatro Paraguas’ Sotto Voce, opening Sept. 28. Making its New Mexico debut is Blue Raven Theatre, the company helmed by Talia Pura. Pura, who moved here from Winnipeg, Manitoba, a year and a half ago, quickly made herself a staple in the

Santa Fe scene, both onstage and in the wings. Pura wrote and directed Collections, an excerpt from a full-length play, “the story of a couple in an antique shop. The husband has an obsession with collecting small antique objects, which his wife does not share,” Pura tells SFR. From these kinds of original pieces to canonical shows elsewhere, there’s something for everyone. For some participatory levity, stop by the Adobe Rose Theatre, where audiences can either watch or participate in ongoing improv games. All of the day’s shows are in the PG-rating area, but Meow Wolf can be your one-stop shop if you want something particularly kid-friendly. Of Meow Wolf, Davidson says, Pandemonium Productions (which specializes in popular musicals for kids) and the Upstart Crows (the Shakespeare troupe for actors age 10 to 18) will hold down the fort both inside and outside. “That, combined with the food trucks that are already at Meow Wolf, makes it almost an event in and of itself,” Davidson says. “You can take your kids to two different shows, and also go have lunch.” Once it became clear that it was going to be easy to drum up participation, sharing actors between productions Santa Fe Playhouse Adobe Rose Workshops Theatre and trimming scenes to fit into 10 minutes were the biggest puzzle Teatro Paraguas & Duel Brewing Rehearsal Space pieces. “I have scheduled big movies that were easier than this,” Davidson, Meow Wolf Cacao Santa Fe who has a hefty background in film, admits. The additional legwork that Theatre Santa Fe has put in, however, is promising that the product will be exceptional. (A note to those unfamiliar with going to plays here: Theater folk do not run on “Santa Fe Time.” SFR has never attended a show that did not start promptly within 2-3 minutes of its scheduled curtain, so don’t dawdle; they’re running a tight ship.) t e re As time marches forward, DavidSt a if n son is encouraged by the cooperation Ru among Santa Fe’s theater companies and hopes that talents, friendships, networks and—ultimately—productions themselves will only get better. The Theatre Walk is the perfect opportunity to see what Santa Fe can do; the price couldn’t be better, and the variety of offerings is sure to appeal to a wide swath of Santa Feans— especially, and hopefully, those who have never set foot in a theater. le c Cir Rufina THEATRE WALK s

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3-6 pm Saturday Sept. 16. Free. Various locations; visit theatresantafe.org for a full schedule

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THE CALENDAR

Congregation

Beit Tikva

High Holy Days 5778~2017

THEATER

Rabbi Martin W. Levy Cantor Ephraim A. Herrera The High Holy Day Choir For High Holy Day tickets call 505.820.2991 or download a ticket order form from our website. EREV ROSH HASHANAH Rabbi Martin Levy—The Shofar’s Question: Where Do We Stand in 5778? Wednesday, September 20, 7:30pm ROSH HASHANAH Rabbi Martin Levy—Returning to Our Higher Self: The Saga of Abraham & Sarah Thursday, September 21, 10:00am Children’s Service 2:00pm Tashlich Service 4:15pm across from the Inn on the Alameda

KOL NIDRE Rabbi Martin Levy—Responsibility & Atonement: What Are Our Communal Responsibilities? Friday, September 29, 7:30pm YOM KIPPUR Rabbi Martin Levy—The Meaning of Selichah-Jonah’s Journey Saturday, September 30, 10:00am Children’s Service 2:30pm Afternoon, Yizkor, and Concluding services begin at 3:00pm, followed by Break-the-Fast of challah, grapes, juice and wine

Adult Education with Rabbi Levy begins Wednesday, October 4th at 6:00pm. Introduction to Judaism classes begin on Wednesday, October 18 at 7:30pm.

2230 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe 30

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

FALL ACTIVITIES AT THE SKI BASIN Ski Santa Fe 740 Hyde Park Road, 982-4429 Chairlift rides, live music, beer garden, general merriment! The Bus Tapes play rock and roll from 11 am-3 pm. Check out the disc golf tournament (there’s no public play this weekend, so step aside and watch the pros—and see 3 Questions, page 27). 10 am-3 pm, free JIM ALMAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Rock and roll and blues and soul. Get it on the deck. 1 pm, free LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Traditional Norteño music from three young dudes looking to meld contemporary sound with really deep roots. 6 pm, free NEAL JOHNSTON Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Country—but, like, the good kind of country. The country we don’t really mind. Though I do kinda like that “Body Like a Back Road” song, but that could be my time in Tennessee talking... God, that’s embarrassing. Forget I said that. Go to Cowgirl. 8 pm, free OMAR VILLANUEVA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Classic Latin guitar. 6 pm, free

www.beittikvasantafe.org

SFREPORTER.COM

KILLING BUDDHA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Theatre Dojo, a company out of Southern New Mexico, presents a two-man play about what might happen if the Buddha encountered a remorseful serial killer. One weekend only, so this is your last chance! 2 pm, $15-$18 THE FIESTA MELODRAMA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 This popular satire is sold out, but who knows, maybe someone will scalp you a ticket. 2 pm, $20-$25

WORKSHOP ZEN MEDITATION INSTRUCTION Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 An opportunity for those new to meditation to receive instruction on Zen meditation and zendo etiquette. Do you have to tiptoe? What if you sneeze? We have so many questions. We do know this, though: Don’t arrive late. 3 pm, free

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

MON/11 BOOKS/LECTURES DUANE ANDERSON: MICACEOUS POTTERY OF NORTHERN NEW MEXICO Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Pottery expert Anderson speaks as part of the Southwest Seminars Native Culture Matters lecture series. Anderson literally wrote the book on glittery pottery. 6 pm, $15 SANTA FE OPERA GUILD BOOK CLUB: THE CASTRATO AND HIS WIFE Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Giusto Ferdinando Tenducci was an 18th-century rock star. He was also a castrato. (Google it.) Helen Berry’s book tells the unconventional love story of him and his wife. 6 pm, $5

EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 This quiz could earn you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free TAI CHI Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Unwind in the garden. 5:30 pm, $5-$7

MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana from the kings of the genre. 7:30 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Santa Fe’s most famous night of karaoke. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free MELLOW MONDAYS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Chill with DJ Sato. 10 pm, free

TUE/12 BOOKS/LECTURES BOTANICAL BOOK CLUB: THE INVENTION OF NATURE Stewart Udall Center 725 Camino Lejo, 983-6155 Get with other hytophilic bibliophiles and discuss The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World by Andrea Wulf. 1 pm, free

JORGE AIGLA AND LUIS LOPEZ Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Aigla releases his sixth book of poetry, A Bird for Buddha, which draws from travels in Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and Japan. Lopez’ collection of poems, More Musings of a Barrio Sack Boy, returns to the barrio in Albuquerque where he grew up. 6 pm, free THE COMPLEXITY OF ECONOMICS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 A panel discussion, co-hosted by the Santa Fe Institute and Thornburg Investment Management, includes financial executives and university professors (ie, people who know their stuff). 7:30 pm, free

DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Show off your best moves. 7:30 pm, $5

EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 It’s a quiz! And it’s hosted by the kindly Kevin A. 8 pm, free INTRODUCTION TO SPIRITUAL PRACTICES St. John’s United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 Get guidance in your spiritual growth and gain deeper self-awareness. No preparation is necessary. 1 pm, free SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET: EL MERCADO DEL SUR Plaza Contenta 6009 Jaguar Drive, 550-3728 A super mega farmers market for Southsiders (and everyone!) 3 pm, free YOGA Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Get bendy in the garden. 8 am, $5-$7

MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 World’s Best Honky-Tonkers. 7:30 pm, free CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 The legendary night of blues and friendship has moved back to the mothership. Bring your best skills if you want to join in. 8:30 pm, $5 CONTINUED ON PAGE 32


24K Cocktails Health is wealth

BY MICHAEL J WILSON t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

BUNNY STORM

he current world of cocktail-making is one of intense experimentation: taking flavors one wouldn’t associate with drinking and putting them in a glass. Think cheeses, mushrooms and even tar. This has grown into a real industry of research and development. Many places, such as Tony Conigliaro’s award-winning Drink Factory in London, literally work in science labs to craft the perfect drink. As a home drink-maker, it may seem like getting in on the fun is out of reach when mixology has moved into beakers and centrifuges. But there is always room to mess around in your own kitchen. The easiest way is to just throw something tasty into a bottle and let it sit awhile and see what happens. For example: Use whiskey in place of water to make coldbrew coffee and you have an amazing start to mixed drink nirvana. Savory drinks have always fascinated me, and I decided to put together a few carrot-based drinks as an experiment in kitchen laboratory-ness. As a bonus, I used a local business’ product in each drink. First up is a variation on the dark and stormy that uses my favorite drink from New Mexico Hard Cider (taproom: 505 Cerrillos Road, 231-0632). The Purple Bunny is an apple and purple carrot cider that is so so so good, and this cocktail only amps up that goodness.

• 2 oz dark rum (not spiced)

T

Ingredients: • 3 oz New Mexico Hard Cider’s Purple Bunny • ½ oz fresh lime juice • Freshly diced ginger Directions: • Drop some freshly diced ginger in the bottom of a Collins glass, then fill with ice. Add the rum, cider and lime

ARY EN M GOLD

juice and stir gently with a spoon or the knife you cut the limes with. Garnish with a lime wedge. I’ll tell you a secret—I have a slight tomato allergy. I know. I love them so much, but a whole drink based around them is not a great idea for me. So this is a carrot variation on the bloody Mary, my go-to brunch drink. It uses the golden milk carrot blend from Verde Juice (851 W San Mateo Road, 780-5151; 105 E Marcy St., 983-8147). A quick note: You can make horseradish vodka by soaking some fresh horseradish in a bottle for a few weeks. It’ll be more mild, but is a fun variation.

GOLDEN MARY Ingredients: • 1 tablespoon salt • 1 lime, cut into four wedges • ½ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce • ¼ teaspoon soy sauce • ½ teaspoon ground black pepper • Dash ground red chile • ¼ teaspoon Cholula hot sauce • ½ teaspoon freshly grated horseradish • 2 oz vodka • 4 oz Verde’s golden milk cold-pressed juice • 1 stick each celery and carrot Directions: • Run one of the lime wedges around the rim of the glass then coat with salt. Fill a 12-oz glass with ice. • In a shaker, add the Worcestershire, soy, black pepper, chile, Cholula and horseradish. Give this all a little muddle then fill the shaker with ice. Add vodka and golden milk juice. Squeeze the remaining three lime wedges into it as well. • Shake like you mean it. Strain into the tumbler and garnish with the celery and carrot stick and that lime wedge you used to rim the glass.

BUNNY STORM

Snuggle a baby, Support a Mom Ready to Volunteer?

MANY MOTHERS THERS 505.983.5984 ~ nancy@manymothers.org ~ www.manymothers.org ymothers.org SFREPORTER.COM

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ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

1050 OLD PECOS TRAIL • 505.982.1338 • CCASANTAFE.ORG

SHOWTIMES SEPTEMBER 6 – 12, 2017

Wed.-Thurs., Sept. 6-7 12:30p Menashe* 1:15p Whose Streets? 2:15p Menahse* 3:15p Whose Streets? 4:15p Step* 5:15p Maudie 6:00p Menashe* 7:30p Menashe 8:00p Whose Streets?*

“GRIPPING...” - THE SEATTLE TIMES

Friday - Saturday, Sept. 8-9 12:45p Menashe 1:15p The Oath* 2:30p Step 3:30p The Oath* 4:30p Maudie 5:45p The Oath* 6:45p Menashe 8:00p The Oath* 8:30p Menashe Sunday, Sept. 10 1:15p The Oath* 1:30p Step 3:15p Menashe 3:30p The Oath* 5:45p The Oath* 7:00p SFJFF: 1945 8:00p The Oath* Monday, Sept. 11 1:45 Step 2:00 The Oath* 3:30 The Oath 4:15 Maudie* 5:45 The Oath 6:30 Menashe* 8:00 The Oath 8:15 Free in Deed*

★★★★★ OUTSTANDING AND INCENDIARY.” – Jordan Hoffman, THE GUARDIAN

IT DARES YOU NOT TO BE MOVED.

When people ask about the Black Lives Matter movement, whether it’s a year or 50 from now, I will tell them to see ‘Whose Streets?’”

Tuesday, Sept. 12 1:45p Step 2:00p The Oath* 3:30p The Oath 4:00p Maudie* 5:45p The Oath 6:15p Menashe* 7:30p May It Last: Avett Brothers 8:00p May It Last: Avett Brothers* *in The Studio

HELD OVER:

MAUDIE

– Nick Allen, ROGEREBERT.COM

IT COULDN’T HAVE COME SOON ENOUGH. A vital tribute to the activists who continue to fight every day.” – Jude Dry, INDIEWIRE

STEP FREE IN DEED “a true Black Lives Matter masterpiece”

–Jonathan Demme

7:30pm, Monday, September 11 W E W I L L N O T G O Q U I E T LY

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SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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VINTAGE VINYL NITE The Matador 116 W San Francisco St. Garage, surf, rockabilly and old-school country. 9 pm, free

WORKSHOP WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM OBJECTS? Georgia O’Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Attendees to explore their personal relationship with objects in this creative storytelling workshop. 6 pm, $5

MUSEUMS

These Mescalero Apache moccasins are definitely fancier than anything we own. They’re on view in Stepping Out at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture.

When the news cameras are gone FINAL the truth SHOWS: will be told.

SAFE AND PROUD COMMUNITY RESOURCE FAIR SFCC West Wing Atrium 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1816 We’re coming up on Santa Fe Pride (which was moved from June to this month), so get resources about staying safe, as well as allying with our LGBTQ+ neighbors. Noon, free THE MITGUARDS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 American roots music from Colorado Springs. 8 pm, free

COURTESY THE MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

C I N E M AT H E Q U E

DAVID WOOD AND DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. Montgomery starts out, then Wood follows at 8 pm. We checked out the Vanessie piano scene, and it was a good time—fancy but not too fancy. Like, one of the most elegant dining rooms in town, but you can still wear jeans and not get dirty looks. Great service, great music, great company. If there’s a better combination of pleasures, we know it not. 6 pm, free

THE CALENDAR

EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 Living history. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 O’Keeffe at the University of Virginia. Through Oct. 28. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Seventy Years of Painting: Cliff Harmon and Barbara Harmon. Through Aug. 27. The Errant Eye: Portraits in a Landscape. Through Sept. 17. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 American Traditional War Songs: The Ethnopoetic Videos of Sky Hopinka. Through Oct. 27. Daniel McCoy: The Ceaseless Quest for Utopia; New Acquisitions; Desert ArtLAB: Ecologies of Resistance; Connective Tissue: New Approaches to Fiber in Contemporary Native Art. All through Jan. 2018. Action Abstraction Redefined. Through July 27, 2018.

MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART 623 Agua Fría St., 989-3283 International wax art. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art. Through Oct. 22. Jody Naranjo: Revealing Joy. Through Dec. 31. Frank Buffalo Hyde: I-Witness Culture. Through Jan. 7, 2018. Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West. Through Sept. 3, 2018. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico. Through Sept. 2017. Sacred Realm; The Morris Miniature Circus; Under Pressure. Through Dec. 2017. Negotiate, Navigate, Innovate: Strategies Folk Artists Use in Today’s Global Marketplace. Through July 16, 2018. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Mirror, Mirror: Photographs of Frida Kahlo. Through Oct. 29. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 Out of the Box: The Art of the Cigar. Through Oct. 14.

Voices of Counterculture in the Southwest. Through Feb. 11, 2018. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Meggan Gould and Andy Mattern: Light Tight; Cady Wells: Ruminations; Imagining New Mexico; Lines of Thought: Drawing from Michelangelo to Now. All through Sept. 17. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave.,476-5100 Syria: Cultural Patrimony Under Threat. Through Dec. 31. Tesoros de Devoción. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 In T’owa Vi Sae’we: Coming Home Project. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Dan Namingha: Conception, Abstraction, Reduction. Through May 18, 2018. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Bridles and Bits: Treasures from the Southwest. Through Sept. 24. Beads: A Universe of Meaning. Through April 15, 2018.


MOVIES

RATINGS BEST MOVIE EVER

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER

In the Pursuit of Silence Review Crashing waves, falling rain, gentle breezes

9

BY JULIE ANN GRIMM e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

Two years after its UK debut, audiences in the United States are invited to chase something elusive. Isn’t that what we want? To incessantly seek? Here, we can find. In the Pursuit of Silence is a ponderous, beautiful work that reminds us silence isn’t possible to comprehend as the absence of sound, but the disruption of life’s cacophony. And it’s a disruption humankind needs to hold dear. Director Patrick Shen’s documentary chops include being the celebrated director and producer of Flight from Death in 2003, about how the fear of mortality drives our social behavior. He’s also the brain behind The Philosopher Kings, the story of janitors in big-name universities, in 2009. His newest movie combines voices of those who have, in some cases, devoted their lives to study of quietude, and of the effects that a lack of it has on our bodies and minds—most segments

+ QUIET HOPE

MIGHT BE THE ONLY THING YOU CAN REALLY CONTROL - OF COURSE MONKS AND BIRDWATCHERS CAN FIND PEACE IN SILENCE, BUT WHAT ABOUT KIDS?

feature their faces for several moments of silence. As much as it decries the noise pollution of urban life, it reclaims its own time to hold moments of precious minimum noise, sometimes marked with a tagline and a decibel measurement. In places like Denali National Park in Alaska, it’s possible to hear fewer than 30 decibels in the ambient sound captured among the snowy crust. At an elementary school near the train tracks in New York City, the level jumps to 98. (The US Occupational Health and Safety Administration says decibel levels above about 85 require ear protection for workers).

Recently, I’ve taken to wearing earplugs for the big screen, and sorely regretted foregoing this new habit during this summer’s viewings of Dunkirk and Atomic Blonde. The Pursuit of Silence comes with no regrets, however, as the soundscape Shen offers is the polar opposite: crashing waves, falling rain and gentle breeze through the corn. Delicate sound; sound you hear if you’re quiet yourself. It’s even better if you hear it in real life. IN THE PURSUIT OF SILENCE Directed by Shen Violet Crown, R, 121 min.

QUICKY REVIEWS

9

MENASHE

8

PATTI CAKE$

7

STEP

3

MENASHE

9

DUNKIRK

love for his son. He’s far from perfect, and his penchant for cracking jokes damages his credibility in the eyes of his brethren. But observing constant humiliation driven by his boss, his brother, his rabbi or at arranged dates makes us root for him, even as he struggles to pay rent, feed his son and get to work on time. Menashe is presented primarily in Yiddish, and Weinsten goes so far as to cast ultra-orthodox New Yorkers, most of whom perform without a film credit. Not only does this add unprecedented authenticity to the film, it surprises with each natural performance; this is as real as it gets. Add fantastic examples of traditional Jewish music and just enough humor and heart, and we’ve got one of the most fascinating and engrossing films of the year. (Alex De Vore) Center for Contemporary Arts, PG, 82 min.

+ PAINSTAKINGLY AUTHENTIC - A LITTLE SHORT

Director Joshua Weinstein presents an intimately heartbreaking and painstakingly accurate depiction of the Hasidim living in Brooklyn in Menashe, a tale loosely based on the life of its star, Menashe Lustig. Menashe lost his wife a year prior to the events of the film, and Hasidic law dictates his son Rieven must be raised with a complete family (we even learn that should Menashe remarry, the stepmother wouldn’t be allowed to touch his son). Thus, Rieven is sent to live with Menashe’s brother, a decidedly humorless stickler for rules who affords Menashe little respect and imposes the strictest of upbringings on his nephew. Thematically, the film could have played out in any sort of community—love, loss and the underdog are universal—but by delving deep into the laws, customs and everyday lives of Hasidic Jews in New York, we are given a rarely-seen glimpse into a sect that operates in plain view but whose inner-workings remain unknown to most. Lustig is phenomenal as the downtrodden father figure caught between his religion and

10

THE DARK TOWER

PATTI CAKE$

8 Menashe Lustig revives his own story in Menashe, an intimate and unprecedented look into the lives of Brooklyn Hasidim.

+ DANIELLE MACDONALD IS A MUCH BETTER ACTOR THAN EMINEM

- HAVE I SEEN THIS BEFORE?

Patricia Dombrowski, aka Killa P, aka Patti Cake$, is an aspiring rapper. She’s undeniably talented, but she doesn’t fit the template of what the music industry expected a rapper to CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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MOVIES

FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM

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look like—she’s a fat white girl. The “chasing your dreams” picture is not a new idea. It usually goes something like this: The main character has a talent and a dream. They usually live in a shitty place and have a shitty job, which is only extra motivation for their ultimate goal. Obstacles and rivals rise and fall in front of them, and then there’s a final test which shows off their skills, heart, dedication. It probably doesn’t matter if they win or lose. Within that framework, director Geramy Jasper’s first feature film is pretty entertaining. Patti is charming and relatable. She’s filled simultaneously with self-confidence and selfdoubt. Australian actress Danielle Macdonald gives one of those performances where it would be difficult to imagine anyone else playing the role: like Tony Soprano or Napoleon Dynamite. The story takes place in a fully developed world of suburban New Jersey’s hell of highways, parking lots and gas stations. Jasper, who also wrote the script, imbues the world with subtle attention to detail and tough love for his characters that reminds me a bit of Mike Leigh. But ultimately, Patti Cake$ is a simple story done well, with lively performances and positive energy. (R Mitchell Miller) Violet Crown, R, 108 min.

STEP

7

+ FEELS GREAT - REALLY ONLY SCRATCHES THE SURFACE

Director Amanda Lipitz has come a long way from her days as producer for the Legally Blonde musical. Now she presents Step, a documentary examining the lives of young women juggling their step dance team and the pursuit of college acceptance during their final year at a Baltimore school for girls. Lipitz zeroes in on three disparate and distinct voices: Cori, the over-achiever hoping for a full ride to Johns Hopkins University; Tayla, a relatively average student with an intense mother; and Blessin, the founder of the step team with a fiery personality that hides great sadness. Lipitz sets the stage against the backdrop of the 2015 police murder of Freddie Grey, but other than some peripheral mentions of the tragedy and an emotionally flat field trip to Grey’s memorial with the step coach leading the way, the underlying theme is lost in the shuffle. We do, however, understand that as young black women living at or below the poverty line, the doc’s main subjects are at a disadvantage—but we’re left to simply know that, as Lipitz never digs much deeper into the matter than “They’ve got it hard; step dance is the escape, college the light at the end of the

tunnel.” It’s a bleak picture and an often-heavy experience as we come to know the young girls and root for both their step team during competitions and their potential successes as students. When 100 percent of their senior class graduated from the Baltimore Leadership School for Young Women, the reaction feels exaggerated, but the college counselor and principal of the school care so much and try so hard that we can’t help but get swept up in their ethics and efforts. It would have been nice to find out where the girls are today or even to have gotten a clearer idea of their home lives or trials and tribulations, and Step does come perilously close to emotionally manipulative. Still, there is an ultimate message of positivity and hard work that’s impossible to deny, and ample sentimental satisfaction that comes from knowing even those who struggle with intense adversity and systematic oppression can make their way and make their mark. (ADV) Center for Contemporary Arts, PG, 83 min.

THE DARK TOWER

3

+ SUPER-COOL IDEA - SUPER-UNCOOL EXECUTION

A moment comes towards the end of The Dark Tower—Stephen King’s eight-novel series come to life on the big screen—when a thought occurs: “Are they really ending this already? What the hell?” Indeed, the long-percolating project from director Nikolaj Arcel (better known as writer for the original Swedish production of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) crams so very much into so very little time that practically everything suffers, not least of which is the pacing. We follow a young boy named Jake (Tom Taylor) who, in the wake of his father’s death, has started having dream visions of a man in another world who’s hell-bent on destroying this mysterious dark tower that, like, stops demons from breaking into the multiverse somehow … or something. Of course, everyone from his mom to his therapist to his shit-heel stepdad (or mom’s boyfriend or whatever) doesn’t believe that the visions are real. Jake sure is persistent, though, and when he busts into that other world through some sci-fi portal machine, it turns out he was right the whole time and he’s got psychic superpowers that amount to some sort of telepathic communication ability. An ancient battle was fought and lost here between the Man in Black (a seemingly bored Matthew McConaughey) and the Gunslingers, an ancient order of knights. It is eluded to that they might be related to Arthurian legend somehow … or something. Roland (aka the Gunslinger;


FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM

MOVIES

Step your ass to the CCA for Step. Now THAT’S how you write a caption. Idris Elba, who makes a sincere go of it) is the last of the order, and having also lost his father (plus his buddies), he identifies with and joins Jake to stop the destruction of the tower and kill the Man in Black. If it sounds cool, that’s because it could have been. But with so much source material and a relatively short running time, we don’t have a chance to care for anyone before the Man in Black’s cartoonish super-villainy gets out of hand. McConaughey plays this in a too-calm-and-collected sort of way, which could say something about how he’s so evil he doesn’t even bother with emotions, but mostly it feels lacking in drama. Oh, there are neat little visual tricks that show how the Gunslinger is super-good at reloading his guns in various ways, but the threats never seem particularly perilous and the Man in Black’s motives boil down to “he’s just evil” … or something. The Dark Tower could have easily been twoplus hours and far more awesome; hell, it could have been two or three movies. In fact, it should have been. But if we had to guess, it’ll probably do pretty poorly and wind up on the cinematic ash heap forgotten to time ... or something. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 95 min.

stream film that deviates from the cinematic formula, but Nolan doesn’t let up for an instant. From the terrifying desperation of those stranded on the beach to a shell-shocked soldier (Cillian Murphy of Netflix series Peaky Blinders as well as Nolan’s Batman films) too broken to return to battle and a selfless dogfighter (Tom Hardy) barely hobbling along in the sky, dialogue becomes sparse compared to the frantic reality of sinking ships, dropped shells and the cruelty of the human survival instinct. Of course, there are only so many times you can see a bunch of soldiers abandon a ship, and the jarring nature of the heaving seas becomes nearly as difficult to watch as the violence. Still, moving performances from Mark Rylance and Kenneth Branagh—not to mention a surprisingly natural turn from Harry Styles (yeah, from One Direction)—remain a joy to watch, and the utter unfairness and brutality of war hang heavy over every last scene. This isn’t just one of the best war movies in recent memory, it’s one that will no doubt be shown in schools and referred to forever as an artful depiction of one of the ugliest chapters in human history. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 106 min.

DUNKIRK

10

+ RELENTLESS YET BEAUTIFUL - LOTS OF PEOPLE JUMPING OFF SHIPS

In 1940, near the start of World War II, the Allied forces suffered a tremendous defeat against German troops in the town of Dunkirk in France. Subsequently, 300,000 soldiers would be evacuated by military and civilian watercraft, but not before immeasurable losses. It’s a harrowing tale not known to many who aren’t WWII buffs before now, but in Christopher Nolan’s sprawling yet concisely told Dunkirk, we see the tragic events play out with a relentless pace and attention to detail. We follow three main narratives; that of soldiers stranded on a beach waiting for rescue over the period of a week, an hour in the lives of British fighter pilots, and a single day for a civilian pleasure yacht captain who helps retrieve said soldiers alongside his son and his son’s friend. Nolan presents an off-kilter look at each timeline, weaving in and out of the stories, though Dunkirk never feels disjointed. Rather, as bits and pieces from each angle are revealed, we begin to understand the incredible scope of the evacuation and just how lucky the survivors really were, though we’re faced with some hard truths before the credits roll. It is, in fact, somewhat rare to see a main-

CCA CINEMATHEQUE 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338

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50 2000s Chinese premier ___ Jiabao 1 Iowa State University locale 51 Get the point 5 “Baywatch” actress Bingham 52 Play scenery 10 Figure in some unlimited 54 Creepy pencil-and-paper phone plans “game” popularized in 2015 14 “I ___ Food” (Food via YouTube and Twitter (and Network show with title basis of the theme answers) YouTube celeb Hannah) 62 Dull impact sound 15 Second-largest Great Lake 63 Well-drawn game? 16 Ride-share company that 64 Plays to the audience? changed CEOs in 2017 65 ___ Linda, Calif. 17 Fourth-largest Great Lake 66 Between, en français 18 Block legally 67 Airplane blade 19 Quahog, for one 68 Forge, as a painting 20 Valet for Red Scare propo- 69 Bargain hunters’ finds nent Eugene? 70 He sometimes talks over 23 Downed Russian space station Teller 24 Turn 25 “Lord of the Rings” actress DOWN Tyler 28 The amount of electricity 1 “I’m right here” needed to power a fried 2 “Double Dare” host Summers chicken container? 3 Actor Bana 35 Without any guarantees 4 Popular distribution plat37 Fifth column abbr.? form for PC gaming 38 Hit the sack 5 What “you can’t handle,” in a 39 ‘60s Secretary of State Dean line from “A Few Good Men” 40 Alien’s foe, in B-movies 6 Heady feeling 42 Iberian Peninsula river 7 Highbrow 43 Geologic age meaning 8 Backyard home for suburban “without life” chickens 45 Hold back, as breath 9 Somewhat 46 “Meh” 47 Candice Bergen TV comedy 10 Animated Disney series with a 2017 reboot with ... hey, wait, that’s an 11 Cut out for it actual thing!

BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND! CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281

Come meet HOOFIE at Teca Tu @ DeVargas during regular store hours.

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ALEXIE

ANATOL

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

SFREPORTER.COM

HOOFIE

ANNA and her boys ALEXIE and ANATOL were rescued from a situation where the owners had too many cats and could not take care of them. TEMPERAMENT: All three kitties are very sweet and social. ALEXIE has lovely black and white tuxedo markings. ANATOL is a handsome boy with a sleek black coat. AGE: born approximately 4/15/17.

Come meet these and other beautiful kittens at our Adoption Center inside Petco during regular store hours.

www.FandFnm.org ADOPTION HOURS:

PETCO: 1-4 pm Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun. TECA TU at DeVargas Center.

FOSTER HOMES NEEDED FOR KITTENS 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 CROSSWORD PUZZLE SPONSORED BY:

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HOOFIE starts off a little shy, but quickly settles into a new environment. While in a foster home, we discovered that she enjoys the company of gentle dogs. She is a beautiful girl with a short coat and brown tabby markings with large white areas. AGE: born approximately 10/1/10.

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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS MINDFULNESS-BASED STRESS REDUCTION (MBSR) returns in September for it’s 20th year. This is the original 8-week model created by Jon KabatZinn at the UMASS Medical Center and facilitated by Daniel Bruce. Learn techniques to help manage pain, anxiety, insomnia and depression. This science and researched based model has been shown to increase brain neurogenesis and function in specific areas related to learning and memory, selfawareness, empathy and compassion. Dates: Tuesday Mornings, Sept. 19 - Nov 7, 2017 (10 -12:30pm) For workshop information and or registration go to www. danieljbruce.com or email: danielbruce1219@gmail.com or call 470-8893 VALLECITOS MOUNTAIN RETREAT CENTER - Applied Mindfulness: Learning how to bring the benefits of mindfulness into everyday life and the work place. October 5-8. Always wanted to go on retreat or learn more about meditation? Find your way to the stunning wilderness landscape of Vallecitos deep in the majestic Tusas Mountains outside of Taos NM. Register Today at www.vallecitos.org HELP SOMEONE LEARN TO READ AND WRITE. Literacy Volunteers of Santa Fe provides free tutoring to adults who need to improve their ability to read and write. The 2010 U.S. Census indicated that 34% of adults in the Santa Fe area are functionally illiterate. You can help by becoming a volunteer tutor. A workshop will be held September 14 and 15. For more information visit our website, www.lvsf.org, or call 428-1353. SANTA FE KIRTAN FESTIVAL— FREE! Friday thru Sunday, September 8, 9 and 10. Friday, 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm at Paradiso, 903 Early St., behind Fruit of the Earth Organics. Saturday 4:00 pm to 9:00 pm at Paradiso. Sunday, Mesa Yoga Pavilion, 11:00 am to 8:00 pm. Manjari, Bhakti Boogie Band, Forrest Evans, Heart of the Lotus, Jai Om, Ganga Jala and more. Sunday, Gong Yoga, Qi-Gong, Kirtan Jam. Shiva Mandir Temple Fest. Info: kirtansantafe.org.

LAST MINUTE 2017 CEU’S THE ETHICS OF WELLNESS AND SELF CARE EXPLORED THROUGH SOMATIC AWARENESS workshop is SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 16 at 930am-430pm $120 non-ceu $160 - 6 Ethics CEU’S. We will explore the ethics of self care as professionals, especially psychotherapists. For more info see: www.sacredtransitionsguide.com To register email: katedowphd@gmail.com

UPAYA ZEN CENTER: MEDITATION, SOCIAL ACTION Upaya is a community resource for developing greater mindfulness and compassionate social action. Come for daily MEDITATION; Wednesday DHARMA TALKS 5:30-6:30pm; September 8-10 FUNDRAISING FROM THE HEART: A workshop offering innovative fundraising strategies with author/ activist Lynne Twist; Saturday, October 7 ZAZENKAI: DayADOPTION SUPPORT GROUP long Meditation Retreat led by For those touched by adoption, Senseis Byrnes and Quennell you know we live in a world (Instruction offered); October of questions, loss, grief and 6-8 ZAZENKAI WEEKEND trust every day. The Zory’s Place Adoption Support Group overnight stay enhances experience. Learn more: provides a safe space where www.upaya.org, 505-986-8518, we can explore our feelings 1404 Cerro Gordo, Santa Fe. with others who understand and share similar experiences. ONE BREATH AT A TIME 1st Wednesday of every THURSDAYS 6:15PM-7:30PM month, 6-8pm Led by Judith Bailie 1600 C Lena St, Conference The purpose of this group is to Room, Santa Fe Amy Winn, MA LMHC, strengthen recovery to addic505-967- 9286 tions and lessen attachment to substances, events, processes CHANGING THE WORLD and people, with discussion - ONE WALL AT A TIME, focused on Buddhist teacha movie documenting the ings in the context of recovery. international street art campaign in support of Baha’i Thubten Norbu Ling, 1807 Second Street #35. For more human rights in Iran. Prerelease, free showing in Santa information email info@tnlsf.org Fe on September 9, 7:00 pm or call 505-660-7056. in a private home at 2235 Paseo de los Chamisos. Iranian JOIN US FOR A WORLD Baha’is endure much including CHANGING CONVERSATION “The global economy is no access higher education. View the trailer at http:// the root cause of our most www.notacrime.me/thefilm/. pressing crises. A strong, Visit us on Facebook: vibrant local economy that Santa Fe Baha’i Faith, or call supports everyone is key.” 505 982-3788. #NOTACRIME. -Helena Norberg-Hodge JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. THE ECONOMICS OF HAPPINESS, RECONNECTING JOHREI IS BASED ON THE TO OUR LOCAL FUTURE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE A conference supporting our UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. local community Oct 12-14, 2017 When clouds in the spiritual James A. Little Theater at the body and in consciousness New Mexico School for the Deaf. are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This International speakers convene is according to the Divine along with local experts to dissect Law of Order; after spiritual and discuss issues about: local clearing, physical and mental- food and water, local governance, emotional healing follow. Democratic systems, law and You are invited to experience policy making, local businesses, the Divine Healing Energy local finance and banking, of Johrei. All are Welcome! environmental and climate justice, The Johrei Center of Santa health and wellness, cultural Fe is located at Calle Cinco diversity and equality, biodiversity Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, and connecting to nature, The 87505. Please call 820-0451 Commons and the New Economy with any questions. DropMovement, the impact of the ins welcome! There is no economy on our psychological fee for receiving Johrei. and spiritual wellbeing. Donations are gratefully Tickets on sale now accepted. Please check FOr full agenda and tickets: us out at our new website www.reconnect4today.org santafejohreifellowship.com

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MIND BODY SPIRIT

Rob Brezsny

Week of September 6th

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You’re half-intoxicated by your puzzling adventures—and half-bewildered, as well. Sometimes you’re spinning out fancy moves, sweet tricks, and surprising gambits. On other occasions you’re stumbling and bumbling and mumbling. Are you really going to keep up this rhythm? I hope so, because your persistence in navigating through the challenging fun could generate big rewards. Like what, for example? Like the redemptive transformation of a mess into an asset.

the songs that electrified our emotions all those years ago when we first fell in love with our lives. Starlight will glow on our ancient faces. The fragrance of loam will seep into our voices like rainwater feeding the trees’ roots. We’ll feel the earth turning on its axis, and sense the rumble of future memories coming to greet us. We’ll join hands, gaze into the dreams in each other’s eyes, and dive as deep as we need to go to find hidden treasures.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “Free your mind and your ass will follow,” sings funk pioneer George Clinton in his song “Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts.” And what’s the best way to free your mind? Clinton advises you to “Be careful of the thought-seeds you plant in the garden of your mind.” That’s because the ideas you obsess on will eventually grow into the experiences you attract into your life. “Good thoughts bring forth good fruit,” he croons, while “Bullshit thoughts rot your meat.” Any questions, Taurus? According to my astrological analysis, this is the best possible counsel for you to receive right now. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): James Loewen wrote a book called Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. He said, for instance, that during the Europeans’ invasion and conquest of the continent, it wasn’t true that Native Americans scalped white settlers. In fact, it was mostly the other way around: whites scalped Indians. Here’s another example: The famous blind and deaf person, Helen Keller, was not a sentimental spokesperson for sweetness and light, but rather a radical feminist and socialist who advocated revolution. I invite you to apply Loewen’s investigative approach to your personal past, Gemini. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to uncover hidden, incomplete, and distorted versions of your history, and correct them. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Roger Hodge writes books now, but when he worked for Harper’s magazine, he had an unusual specialty. He gathered heaps of quirky facts, and assembled several at a time into long sentences that had a nutty poetic grace. Here’s an example: “British cattle have regional accents, elephants mourn their dead, nicotine sobers drunk rats, scientists have concluded that teenagers are physically incapable of being considerate, and clinical trials of an ‘orgasmatron’ are underway in North Carolina.” I’m offering Hodge as a worthy role model for you in the coming weeks, Cancerian. Be curious, miscellaneous, and free-flowing. Let your mind wander luxuriantly as you make unexpected connections. Capitalize on the potential blessings that appear through zesty twists and tangy turns.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I don’t usually recommend giving gifts with strings attached. On the contrary, I advise you to offer your blessings without having any expectations at all. Generosity often works best when the recipients are free to use it any way they see fit. In the coming weeks, however, I’m making an exception to my rule. According to my reading of the omens, now is a time to be specific and forceful about the way you’d like your gifts to be used. As an example of how not to proceed, consider the venture capitalist who donated $25,000 to the University of Colorado. All he got in return was a rest room in a campus building named after him. If you give away $25,000, Scorpio, make sure you at least get a whole building named after you. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Now that you’re getting a taste of what life would be like if you ruled the world, I’ll recommend a manual. It’s called How To Start Your Own Country, by Erwin Strauss. (Get a free peek here: tinyurl.com/YouSovereign.) You could study it for tips on how to obtain national sovereignty, how to recruit new citizens, and how to avoid paying taxes to yourself. (P.S.: You can make dramatic strides toward being the boss of yourself and your destiny even without forming your own nation.) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): There was a time when not even the most ambitious explorers climbed mountains. In the western world, the first time it happened was in 1492, when a Frenchman named Antoine de Ville ascended to the top of Mont Aiguille, using ladders, ropes, and other props. I see you as having a kinship with de Ville in the coming weeks, Capricorn. I’d love to see you embark on a big adventure that would involve you trying on the role of a pioneer. This feat wouldn’t necessarily require strenuous training and physical courage. It might be more about daring creativity and moral courage.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Science fiction proposes that there are alternate worlds alongside the visible one— hidden, yes, but perhaps accessible with the right knowledge or luck. In recent years, maverick physicists have given the idea more credibility, theorizing that parallel LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In Japan you can buy a brand universes exist right next to ours. Even if these hypothetiof candy that’s called The Great Buddha’s Nose Snot. cal places aren’t literally real, they serve as an excellent Each piece consists of a rice puff that resembles the metaphor. Most of us are so thoroughly embedded in our Buddha’s nose filled with bits of brown sugar that symown chosen niche that we are oblivious to the realities bolize the snot. The candy-making company assures that other people inhabit. I bring these thoughts to your customers that eating this treat brings them good luck. attention, Aquarius, because it’s a favorable time to tap I invite you to be equally earthy and irreverent about into those alternate, parallel, secret, unknown, or unoffiyour own spiritual values in the coming days. You’re in cial realms. Wake up to the rich sources that have been prime position to humanize your relationship with so close to you, but so far away. divine influences… to develop a more visceral passion for your holiest ideals… to translate your noblest aspi- PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I’m always in favor of you rations into practical, enjoyable actions. cultivating a robust relationship with your primal longVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Will a routine trip to carry out ings. But I’ll be rooting extra hard for you to do that during the next eleven months. I hope you will dig deep to an errand take you on a detour to the suburbs of the promised land? Will you worry you’re turning into a mon- identify your primal longings, and I hope you will revere ster, only to find the freakishness is just a phase that you them as the wellspring of your life energy, and I hope you will figure out all the tricks and strategies you will had to pass through on your way to unveiling some of your dormant beauty? Will a provocative figure from the need to fulfill them. Here’s a hint about how to achieve the best results as you do this noble work: Define your past lead you on a productive wild-goose chase into the primal longings with as much precision as you can, so future? These are some of the possible storylines I’ll be monitoring as I follow your progress in the coming weeks. that you will never pursue passing fancies that bear just a superficial resemblance to the real things. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Let’s meet in the woods after Homework: Why is this a perfect moment? To hear my reamidnight and tell each other stories about our origins, revealing the secrets we almost forgot we had. Let’s sing sons why, tune in to my podcast: http://bit.ly/PerfectionNow.

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 7 R O B B R E Z S N Y at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. 38

SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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COUNSELING & THERAPY

MASSAGE THERAPY

PSYCHICS

EXPERIENTIAL THERAPY Body-based Experiential Therapy for couples, individuals, and groups. Connect more deeply to yourself, life, and others through movement, art and touch. Amina Re: Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Licensed Massage Therapist, and Cranial Sacral therapist. Aminareexperientialtherapy. com.

TANTRA MASSAGE & TEACHING Call Julianne Parkinson, 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional Massage Therapist, & Life Coach LIC #2788

REFLEXOLOGY

LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information call 505-982-8327 or go to www.alexofavalon.com. Also serving the LGBT community.

REIKI

DREAMS

UNIQUE TO YOU Our health is reflected through the feet as an array of patterned and flexible aspects also UNDERSTANDING conveyed in the body and overall YOUR DREAMS being. Discomfort is a call for Free Webinar, September 12th reorganization. Reflexology can 7:00 - 8:30 PM • Register at: www.willsharon.com/freewebinars stimulate your nervous system to relax and make the needed 6 Session Class Starts on changes so you can feel better. September 26th SFReflexology.com, Will Sharon Anam Cara (505) 414-8140 MSW, CPC Julie Glassmoyer, CR

ICRT (International Center for Reiki Training) Licensed Reiki Master Teacher, Teresa Jantz, from Durango, CO will be offering an Usui/Holy Fire II Reiki I & II class in Santa Fe, September 15 & 16 and an Usui/Holy Fire II ART/Master class September 22-24. Please call 970-903-2547 or visit TouchpointTherapy.com to register today!

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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF STATE OF NEW MEXICO Juniper Kempthorne, A CHILD IN THE PROBATE COURT Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-02043 SANTA FE COUNTY No. 2017-0160 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME IN THE MATTER OF TAKE NOTICE that in THE ESTATE OF Daniel accordance with the provisions Berrigan, DECEASED. of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. NOTICE TO CREDITORS 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Petitioner Jennifer Belsey will that the undersigned has apply to the Honorable DAVID been appointed personal K. THOMSON, District Judge representative of this estate. of the First Judicial District at All persons having claims the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, against this estate are required 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa to present their claims within Fe, New Mexico, at 2:30 p.m. four (4) months after the on the 25th day of September, date of the first publication 2017 for an ORDER FOR of this notice, or the claims CHANGE OF NAME of the will be forever barred. Claims child from Juniper Ocean Love must be presented either to Storm Kempthorne to Juniper the undersigned personal Ocean Love Storm Mountain. representative at the address STEPHEN T. PACHECO, listed below, or filed with the District Court Clerk Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located at By: Jorge Montes the following address: Deputy Court Clerk 102 Grant Ave., Submitted by: Jennifer Belsey Santa Fe, NM 87501. Petitioner, Pro Se Dated: August 23, 2017. STATE OF NEW MEXICO James J. Berrigan IN THE PROBATE COURT 2300 Constitution Ave. SANTA FE COUNTY Fort Collins, CO 80526 (970) 689-3637 No. 2017-0150 IN THE MATTER OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO ESTATE OF Brigida Marquez COUNTY OF SANTA FE Rico AKA Brigida Rico FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Marquez AKA Vickie Montoya, COURT IN THE MATTER OF DECEASED. A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Jennifer Renee Belsey NOTICE TO CREDITORS Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-02044 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has NOTICE OF CHANGE OF been appointed personal NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions representative of this estate. All persons having claims of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the against this estate are required Petitioner Jennifer Renee Belsey to present their claims within will apply to the Honorable four (4) months after the DAVID K. THOMSON, District date of the first publication Judge of the First Judicial of this notice, or the claims District at the Santa Fe Judicial will be forever barred. Claims Complex, 225 Montezuma must be presented either to Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, the undersigned personal at 2:30 p.m. on the 25th day representative at the address of September, 2017 for an listed below, or filed with the ORDER FOR CHANGE OF Probate Court of Santa Fe, NAME from Jennifer Renee County, New Mexico, located at Belsey to Jenaveev Violet the following address: Butterfly Mountain. STEPHEN 102 Grant Ave., T. PACHECO, Santa Fe, NM 87501. District Court Clerk Dated: August 11, 2017. By: Jorge Montes Manuela Marquez Deputy Court Clerk 1020 Ave. de las Companas Submitted by: Santa Fe, NM 87507 Jennifer Renee Belsey (505) 204-5423 Petitioner, Pro Se

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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case No.: D101CV2017-02141 IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF MARIA JUANITA VALDEZ aka Marie Juanita Valdez 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 Maria Juanita Valdez will apply to the Honorable David K. Thomson, District Judge of the the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 2:45 p.m. on the 25 day of September, 2017 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Maria Juanita Valdez to Marie Juanita Valdez. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Maxine Morales, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Maria Juanita Valdez Petitioner, Pro Se

LEGAL NOTICES ALL OTHERS

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Case No. D-101-CV-2015-00547 JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. Plaintiff, v. JYL DEHAVEN, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS ANCILLARY PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES WAYLAND ROBERTS, DECEASED; JYL DEHAVEN, AS ANCILLARY PERSONAL REPRESENTIVE OF THE ESTATE OF ARCHIE LEE ROBERTS, DECEASED; THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF PUEBLO ENCANTADO CONDOMINIUM UNIT OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., A New Mexico nonprofit corporation. Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master, in accordance with the terms of the Order Granting Summary Judgment (“Order”) entered on June 20, 2017 in favor of the Board of Directors of Pueblo Encantado FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Condominium Association (the “Association”), will on COUNTY OF SANTA FE Wednesday, October 11, 2017, STATE OF NEW MEXICO at the hour of 9:45 a.m. MT, CASE NO. D-101-PB-2017-00143 at the entrance of the First IN THE MATTER OF THE Judicial District Court, located ESTATE OF EVANGELINE at 225 Montezuma Ave, Santa WELLS, Deceased. Fe, New Mexico 87501, offer NOTICE TO CREDITORS for sale and sell at public NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN auction to the highest bidder that the undersigned has for cash the following described been appointed personal property located in Santa Fe representative of this estate. County, New Mexico: The All persons having claims property to be sold is located against this estate are required in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is a condominium to present their claims within unit within the Pueblo four months after the date Encantado Condominiums, of the first publication of this generally described as Pueblo Notice or the claims will be Encantado Condominium, forever barred. Claims must be presented either to counsel Unit K-2, 15 Mesa Encantado #227 and more particularly for the undersigned personal described as: Unit K-2, Pueblo representative at 2205 Miguel Encantado Condominium Chavez Rd., Suite B, Santa Fe, (“Condominium”), created by New Mexico, 87505, or filed the “Declaration of Covenants, with the above Court. Conditions and Restrictions Dated: 8/29/17 for Pueblo Encantado /s/ Katheryn Wells-Trujillo Condominiums”, recorded on KATHERYN WELLS-TRUJILLO December 30, 1980, in Book 412, pages 824-841 in the Personal Representative of office of the Santa Fe County The Estate Evangeline Wells, Clerk (“Declaration”). Deceased (the “Property”). KRISTI A. WAREHAM, P.C. The Sale of this Property Attorney for Personal includes ANY AND ALL Representative IMPROVEMENTS, FIXTURES, 2205 Miguel Chavez Rd., AND ATTACHMENTS, AND Suite B ANY AND ALL ABANDONED Santa Fe, NM 87505 PERSONAL PROPERTY (505) 820-0698 AS DESCRIBED IN THIS email: kristiwareham@icloud.com COURT’S JUDGMENT,

together with all and singular tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereto belonging or any wise appertaining thereto. If personal property of Ms. DeHaven, her agents, or representatives, or of any other person or entity separately ordered to vacate and quit possession of the Property on or before the date of the sale, remains on the real property after the date of the sale, such personal property is deemed abandoned and the purchaser may dispose of the property in any manner pursuant to applicable law. The property will be sold subject to a nine month right of redemption; easements, reservations and restrictions of record; taxes and governmental assessments including unpaid utility bills; any liens or encumbrances not foreclosed in this proceeding; the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property; affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land; deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property; environmental contamination, if any; any homeowners’ association or condominium dues, assessments, declarations, rules, requirements and restrictions and the Association’s continuing assessments and recorded rights as set forth in the Declaration and other matters of record; any requirements imposed by city or county ordinance or by state law affecting the property; and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. No representation is made as to the validity of the rights of ingress and egress. Transfer of title to the highest bidder shall be without warranty or representation of any kind. ALL PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT THE SALE ARE ADVISED TO REVIEW THE DISTRICT COURT FILE, TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. This sale is subject to a motion hearing scheduled for September 27, 2017 on Plaintiff’s Motion for Reconsideration. The sale will be made to satisfy an indebtedness awarded and owed to the Association secured by the Real Property as set forth in the Order. In the Order the Association’s judgment as secured by the Real Property as of April SFREPORTER.COM

5, 2017 was $34,053.16 (“Association’s April 5, 2017 Judgment”). The Association’s April 5, 2017 Judgement has and will continue to accrue interest, and additional costs and expenses and reasonable attorney’s fees arising from collection of it until satisfied plus any remaining attorney fees and costs accruing prior to the date of sale. The Association and/or its assignee may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The Association and/or its assignee has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. Proceeds of the sale shall first apply to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fee, for any costs incurred for the maintenance and protection of the property, including those not included in the Association’s judgment, and then to the Association for its judgment, which will include additional amounts from the Association’s April 5, 2017 Judgment. If the sale results in a winning bid that exceeds the Association’s judgement, then those amounts will be put into the Court’s registry and paid to all remaining parties as their respective interests may appear. The Plaintiff or other lien holders at the time of the sale may have obtained judgments against the Property which may authorize them to bid in judgment amounts in lieu of cash but to date no such judgments have been entered. The sale will or may be affected by the Court’s Order after hearing on September 27, 2017 and may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the undersigned Special Master. The sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. The purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to Defendant Jyl DeHaven’s nine month right of redemption. /s/ Jonathan Morse Jonathan Morse, Special Master P.O. Box 8387 Santa Fe, NM 87504-8387 (505) 982-3305 Address inquiries to the Attorneys for the Association: Walcott, Henry & Winston, P.C. Charles V. Henry 200 West Marcy St., Suite 203 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 (505) 982-9559 (505) 982-1199 fax charlie@walcottlaw.com SEPTEMBER 6-12, 2017

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