LOCAL NEWS
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BEHIND EVERY LAUDED CHEF IS A CREW DOING THE HARD WORK
OF THE HOUSE P.12
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2016 Election endorsements, P.6
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
NOVEMBER 2-8, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 44
This is My Century.
Opinion 5 Election Endorsements 6
Mobile Banking
VOTE OR ELSE
From district attorney to bond questions, here’s how News 8 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 8 LEAFY GREEN SUBSTANCE 9
A city councilor wants more data on how cops are ignoring decrim CLOSING THE CIRCLE 11
Compost pilot project is making magic (and compost) Cover Story 12 BACK OF THE HOUSE
PATTI LEVEY
12
SFR takes a look at the unsung heroes of the restaurant world. We’re nodding to this week’s publication of our new Restaurant Guide—see page 24 for pickup locations
SFR Picks 17 Tintypes, string theory, art for schools and 50 states The Calendar 19 Music 21 AMERICAN IDOLS
As In We guitarist goes black metal Savage Love 22 Cuck-a-doodle-doo A&C 25
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A NEW DAWN AT SUNRISE SPRINGS
Chef Rocky Durham returns to service Movies 31 GIMME DANGER REVIEW: LUST FOR LIFE
Plus the sexual awakening of Being 17 Cover design by Anson Stevens-Bollen artdirector@sfreporter.com
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
LETTERS
Have you had a negative dental experience? Michael Davis,
DDS
New Patients Welcome
COVER, OCTOBER 19: 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, OCTOBER 26: “SETTING THE DATE”
CONSIDER THE FACTS The idea that the primary location for saving the Mexican gray wolf should be in Mexico ignores one of many facts. Years ago I thought I heard an owl in the middle of the afternoon. Turned out it was a dove, which I had never heard or seen in Los Alamos before 2003. They are common here now. The fact I referred to above is, climate change is real and as the environment warms and changes, all species will tend to move to higher elevations and/or further north than their “historic ranges.” Southern New Mexico and Arizona are part of the Mexican wolves’ historic range, but we need to consider that they are not going to stay south of I-40. They will try to migrate to the northern parts of those states and Colorado as well. That’s just one reason why I support the three-region plan for Mexican Wolf recovery.
“THE ADVOCATE AND THE HARDLINER”
GET ‘ER OUT It seems [Yvonne] Chicoine conveniently “mis-remembers” the Jennifer Stephenson case, which she took to trial in 2011. ... Chicoine DID NOT reduce the charges. ... Chicoine, with her “tough on crime” [attitude], would have Stephenson, who lost custody of her children in this unfortunate “witch hunt,” sitting in prison for 18 years. That is her consistent pattern, “throw ‘em in jail,” with no consideration for justice. What a heartless woman. [She] seems mostly wrong-headed, with over charging and convictions overturned on appeal. She is very “creative” in avoiding the complete story, but fact-checking shows up the truth. Chicoine seems not only wrong-headed, seemingly intent on convictions, not justice, she is untruthful about the cases and her involvement. Let’s send her into retirement with her poor record and false memories. CHRIS MICHELS SFREPORTER.COM
SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake, editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
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Man: “We can’t elect Jesus Christ, he’s not an American citizen.” Woman: “I don’t think he’d get that many votes.” —Overheard at Harry’s Roadhouse
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NOVEMBER 2-8, 2016
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2016 ELECTION
Endorsements SECRETARY OF STATE: Maggie Toulouse Oliver
T
he 2016 elections in the United States will no doubt go down in history as a turning point. For two of the three televised presidential debates, SFR held watch parties, gathering to bear witness (and play bingo) with fellow Santa Feans in a local pub. Then, we waited eagerly for the following week’s Saturday Night Live cold open to remind us how we felt when we saw Donald Trump lurk behind Hillary Clinton like a shark, interrupt her and eventually resort to phrases like “such a nasty woman.” We relived practically every memorable moment on social media. We’ve been so inundated with messaging that we really just want to hide in the mountains till it’s all over. But looking away isn’t our style. While we took a break from telling you what to do for the primary elections in June, the SFR endorsements are back by popular demand. We kept it local. Even then, we didn’t weigh in on every ballot choice in great detail. Use your ears and your eyes, your minds and your hearts on Nov. 8, neighbors. Oh ... and we are with her. (Julie Ann Grimm)
Heartbeat? Check. Brainwaves? Totally there. Logic and experience? Roger that. Even if Maggie Toulouse Oliver had no other qualities to bring to the table, she’d get our endorsement for the statewide office that oversees elections, candidate finance reporting and corporate filings. It’s pretty shocking that she’s even here again to begin with. Remember the last general election, when voters narrowly chose Dianna Duran over Toulouse Oliver to serve as secretary of state? Duran resigned and pleaded guilty to embezzlement, so the job that’s technically third in line to the governor is up for grabs. We could make a big deal of the fact that Toulouse Oliver holds a master’s de-
gree in political science from the University of New Mexico and her opponent’s credentials come from New Covenant International University, which appears to be an internet degree mill based in Florida. But what’s really telling is the similarity that Republican Nora Espinoza has with Duran: elective silence. Espi-
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: Marco Serna Admitting that the courts are part of the political system is a stretch for some candidates who’d rather paint themselves as pure upholders of the law. But this view is too narrow for today’s climate, and the stakes are too high to pretend that policy doesn’t influence the local prosecutor’s office. The district attorney serving Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties has to take a strong stance on how we treat people accused of crimes. Marco Serna not only has the necessary chops to oversee a team of lawyers with a big job, but he’s also committed to curbing the way the war on drugs affects our prison populations and the people left on the outside.
You’ve got to hand it to Yvonne Chicoine for putting on an uphill campaign to reflect her values: that ball-busting crime and punishment is the way to a better society. We just disagree. We think she would be a good prosecutor, as she’s demonstrated in her years of service in the district attorney and attorney general’s offices. Our pick for district attorney, however, is Serna. He’s in line with the wave of criminal justice reform that our state and our nation needs.
NM SENATE: Liz Stefanics How many years will pass before we stop calling this Senate job Phil Griego’s seat? After holding the spot for two nearly decades and then resigning amid an ethics investigation early last year, Griego still faces criminal charges. Ted Barela, an engineering project manager appointed to the seat by the governor, has now served through a special Legislative session. But Liz Stefanics is hoping her name gets attached to the seat on a more permanent basis. After all, it was her seat before Griego came on the scene. Not only is she a strong woman with a solid head on her shoulders, Stefanics has served the region in elected offices for the long haul, including two terms on the Santa Fe County Commission. She wants to advocate for an increase to the state minimum wage and give explicit power to counties to regulate oil and gas development. Sounds good to us.
US CONGRESS: Ben Ray Luján As chairman of the Democratic Congressional Central Committee, incumbent Ben Ray Luján has a prominent place in the national political scene, which means people outside of New Mexico are listening to the perspectives of someone from inside. That’s good. (Yet, we’d like him to be a stron-
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noza, a state representative from Roswell, wouldn’t grant an interview about the statewide race that she suddenly got interested in. A writer for SFR only got her to talk by showing up at a fundraiser—and organizers told him earlier in the day that it had been cancelled, we suspect in an attempt to try to keep him from attending. She refused to talk to us regarding our endorsement, too, offering only to answer questions in writing. We refused. Toulouse Oliver has served as Bernalillo County Clerk for eight years. She knows elections from the perspective of her previous life as a candidate campaign consultant and from this most recent experience on the other side of the counter. She is open to ideas that we think could substantially increase voter participation, such as mail ballots and open primary elections. She’s the clear choice. Again.
ger voice for endangered species and to push harder on immigration reform.) The other choice on the ballot, Embudo native Michael Romero, formerly a police officer in Las Vegas, Nevada, who retired to Vadito, tells us that he wants to see the feds take their hands off health care and would work to put federal land in New Mexico in the hands of Spanish colonial land grant heirs—and that’s just scratching the surface. Let’s stick with Ben Ray.
2016Endorsements NM HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES BY DISTRICT 43: Stephanie Garcia Richard Stephanie Garcia Richard gets our endorsement for this district that’s mostly Los Alamos and just a touch of Santa Fe County. Wrestling her way in 2012 into a seat traditionally held by Republicans, the Democrat is articulate, and from what we can tell, hardworking. That she’s worked for more than a decade as a teacher also earns our support. Willing to cast occasional votes reflective of her constituents’ wishes that move her more to the right of center than her party colleagues, she’s not always in an enviable position. Also a point in her favor is that she wants state voters to decide whether to legalize marijuana, and we think that’s the right call. That, and she was once arrested during college for jumping a subway turnstile. We like that independent streak. Another factor in our consideration is that Republican Sharon Stover didn’t respond to multiple emails and phone calls about an interview. What does that say about how she will treat those who live in the district?
47: Brian Egolf Some people might see a touch of arrogance in Brian Egolf. We get that. Other people might just call it being a good lawyer, an adept debater and a strong leader. That adjective—arrogance—was the worst thing his opponent had to say about Egolf during our interview, however. Roger Andrew Gonzales’ meager campaign finance reports show he hasn’t run much of a campaign against the Santa Fean who serves as the House Minority Leader. We’re in Egolf’s corner because in his eight years in the House he’s demonstrated a record of landing on the right of side of history, of listening and growing. He filed the case that led the New Mexico Supreme Court to affirm marriage equality. He took the same fight to the Roundhouse, where he’s also been a supporter of reproductive freedom and a voice of disruption in a chamber that’s been carrying the governor’s water. Keep him.
SUPREME COURT JUSTICE: Michael Vigil New Mexico’s Supreme Court gained a female majority with Justice Judith Nakamura’s appointment by Gov. Susana Martinez last year. The Republican, who is a former Bernalillo County Metro Court judge, has a ton of experience with criminal dockets and serves with energy. But when the court ruled on whether workers’ compensation protections should apply to farmworkers, her dissenting opinion was chilling in its willingness to discriminate
50: Matthew McQueen
against a particular class of laborers whose jobs can be dangerous. No matter how important we think it is to increase the parity among genders in the upper levels of government, we’re tipping our
hat in the direction of Michael Vigil. We met in person with both candidates, and this guy just oozes judicial demeanor. The Democrat has served on the state Court of Appeals for the last 13 years as a level-headed jurist. He says he feels good about serving another 10 years on the state’s high court. He’s knowledgeable about the law and seems to respect people more than corporations. Vigil says the Supreme Court is “the last chance to do the right thing.” In the face of toe shots to civil liberties and compassion, he seems like a good goalie.
COURT OF APPEALS: Julie Vargas The Court of Appeals does some heavy lifting and these judges tend to stay on the job for a long time. The choice here is between two seemingly competent lawyers. One, Steve French, a Republican, has lots of criminal justice work under his belt. The other, Julie Vargas, a Democrat, has a background in real estate, business and corporate law. The 10-member court has two women at present. Give gender balance a chance and give her a shot. Want more judge details? Get reports on the judges who are up for retention by visting the Judicial Performance Evaluation Commission at nmjpec.org. Four local judges got good marks.
Matthew McQueen is not happy with his service in the state House of Representatives so far. He’s frustrated that Republicans in the majority have, in tandem with a hardline rightleaning governor, successfully thwarted most of the initiatives presented by Democrats, including things he says shouldn’t have a bright party line. But McQueen is holding out hope for another day. The attorney who specializes in land conservation and historic preservation issues says he’s learned a lot about the Roundhouse and he wants to stay. We don’t have much to say about Jeremy Ryan Tremco, a Moriarty man running on the Republican ticket to unseat McQueen. He didn’t respond to our inquiries. He also didn’t reply to a League of Women Voters survey. So, good luck with that. We wholeheartedly recommend McQueen. He’s well-spoken and bright and he appears to understand the work involved in doing the job right.
WAIT! THERE’S MORE : ( Constitutional Amendment
yes
no
We don’t believe people should remain jailed on most charges simply because they don’t have money to pay bond. Voting “yes” would bar judges from holding nondangerous people in jail solely because they can’t afford to get out. It also would allow judges to deny bail to defendants who are proven dangerous.
Statewide Bonds
yes
no
Officials estimate that over a 10-year period, these bonds would increase the average annual property tax bill by approximately $9.34 per $100,000 of asset value. A is for senior facilities. B is for schools and libraries, though none in Santa Fe County. C is for higher education, including the local community and New Mexico School for the Deaf. D is for the New Mexico Department of Public Safety Crime Lab.
County Bonds
yes
no
Officials estimated the impact on property taxes, based on projected property values, would be a $10 yearly increase on a home valued at $200,000. Again, it’s five separate questions on the ballot: 1) is for roads, 2) is for water, 3) is for fire and police, 4) is for open space and trails and 5) is for community health facilities.
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DIVERGING DIAMOND INTERCHANGE AT HWY. 14 AND I-25 IS COMPLETE Even sober New Mexico drivers are still trying to figure out how to navigate it.
NM HAS SMALLEST NUMBER OF GOV’T EMPLOYEES IN 10 YEARS Sounds like bad news for the siblings and cousins of current employees.
REVAMPED COUNTY ANIMAL CONTROL REGS REJECTED BY COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Good news for people who think their dogs are somehow too special to leash.
SURVEY SAYS APARTMENT RENTALS ARE HARD TO $ COME BY IN SANTA FE Probably because we don’t have enough art-related jobs yet.
GAS PRICES HERE ARE CHEAPER THAN LAST YEAR Are you “Standing with Standing Rock” on social media? Maybe stop standing on the gas pedal, too.
WORLD SERIES APPARENTLY HAPPENS We’re word people, so, like, that’s as good as it gets for our sports coverage.
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VOTE ON NOV. 8 You really should!
Read it on SFReporter.com
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DID THAT ROBOT JUST CRUSH THAT DUDE?!
KEEP AN EYE ON YOUR MAILBOX
It sure did, you guys. Find out how developer Respawn Games came so damn close to the perfect sequel in our review of Titanfall 2 and why Call of Duty needs to get it together already. Jeeze.
Santa Fe County absentee voters contacted SFR to let us know their ballots were returned. There could be many more, and the US Postal Service is “aware of an issue.” Yikes, right? Find out more online.
NEWS
Leafy Green Substance A city councilor asked for more “hard data” on marijuana citations BY STEVE N H SI E H steven@ s fre p o r te r.co m
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
A
police officer pulls over a woman for speeding and notices the smell of marijuana coming from a portable vaporizer. A man smokes pot in his car, sitting in a movie theater parking lot. She got a warning. He went to jail. Two years after Santa Fe passed an ordinance declaring small amounts of marijuana “the lowest law enforcement priority,” it’s still unclear when someone caught with pot should get slapped with a $25 ticket or a state charge that carries heavier penalties. In August, SFR published a cover story showing that city police officers largely ignore the policy, not only charging locals for minor marijuana possession in state court, but also repeatedly sending offenders to jail. Our findings dove deeper into earlier reports from the Albuquerque Journal and The Santa Fe New Mexican that city officers prefer to issue tougher penalties for pot users. That’s why we scratched our heads when Councilor Joseph Maestas acted surprised about the news. Maestas asked the city manager about the issue during a City Council meeting on Oct. 26, noting he heard “rumors” that officers don’t cite offenders with the low-consequence tickets that have been available since May 2015. The city already has administrative procedures for how it handles municipal citations when they’re filed in court. But Maestas said that’s not enough. He wants to develop “guidance” for when it’s appropriate to issue a city or state ticket. “I think there should be some emphasis, some desire, by our officers to enforce our city ordinance,” he said to the city manager during the public meeting. “As someone who supported that change in the law, I don’t think it’s enough to give our officers the complete option to enforce the city or state law.” Santa Fe Police Chief Patrick Gallagher says the ordinance put officers in a “difficult position,” repeating a claim he made to SFR in August that the department needs to undergo a culture change. “I cannot make a blanket order for them to do the civil citations,” he says. “What I can do is list circumstances in which it may be appropriate to issue a civil citation.” Maestas tells SFR he decided to push the topic now because he wanted to give police leadership time to acclimate. Gallagher took over the department after his embattled predecessor, Eric Garcia, resigned in July 2015. “Chief Gallagher has been there long enough to put his signature on how he wants the department to run,” Maestas says. Maestas tells SFR he followed up with Gallagher shortly after the council meeting and decided the de-
partment needs to develop better methods for tracking marijuana offenses. “I am trying to validate these rumors with more recent hard data,” he says. “According to the chief, it is difficult to extract that data.” We took the challenge. Again. Just this year alone, city police have issued nearly 60 state citations to people carrying less than an ounce of marijuana. Each of those offenders faced up to 15 days in jail and fines ranging between $100 and $1,000, depending on how many times they’ve been caught with pot. More than half of the cases included additional state charges for possessing pot paraphernalia, like pipes and grinders, which would carry the same $25 penalty as possession under the city ordinance. In
one case, a homeless man got a paraphernalia charge for a tin container holding two joints. Two of the cases were strictly for marijuana-associated paraphernalia. During the same period, officers issued four municipal citations for the same offense, according to police spokesman Greg Gurulé. SFR’s count of 59 marijuana charges this year comes from two sources. From January through August, we relied on city police reports obtained through requests under New Mexico’s public records law. Cases from September and October came from a query of the state’s Administrative Office of the Courts database. We did not count charges concurrent with other state offense, a scenario in which police say they’ll defer to the state law so as not to split cases between two courts. We did, however, count 15 cases where a person cited under the state marijuana statute also received a municipal ticket for infractions like speeding or a broken taillight. Some city officers issue more citations under the state law than others. Anthony Sweeney this year wrote 10 state tickets for marijuana possession, more than any of his colleagues. But this isn’t a practice confined to one or two cops. Twenty-seven different city officers cited people for marijuana possession under New Mexico’s drug statute in 2016. The department also provided records of 25 cases from this year in which police confiscated marijuana, but did not issue any citation for the drug. People carrying marijuana in some cases skirted charges for cooperating with officers. Officers in other cases found pot while responding to more serious calls, like unattended deaths or mental health crises. Yet Maestas is not wrong about gaps in the data. Police provided state uniform incident reports in most instances. Those documents provide a wealth of data, including the race and ethnicity of offenders. For other cases, the department only sent supplemental reports or police narratives, which give bare-bones information, like dates, locations and the names of officers. Before City Council passed the decriminalization ordinance on a 5-4 vote in August 2014, councilors raised concerns that giving officers the choice between penalties could lead to charges of law enforcement bias or discrimination. While a vast majority of the police contact that resulted in citations occurred in the city’s south and west regions, incomplete demographic data means there’s not enough information for conclusions on the racial makeup of Santa Feans charged with state marijuana offenses. City police union president Troy Baker says officers don’t need any more guidance on how to do their jobs. “Politicians need to keep their noses out of the enforcement side,” he tells SFR. The union’s pick for district attorney in the upcoming election, Republican Yvonne Chicoine, declined to comment on Maestas’ statement or whether she supports the ordinance. “This district attorney’s duty is to enforce state law. When cases are filed in the magistrate court, that’s on the basis of state law,” she tells SFR. Her Democratic opponent, Marco Serna, says he hopes officers will adhere to the ordinance. He adds that he would plead down to a fine any low-level marijuana cases filed in state court.
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ELIZABETH MILLER
NEWS
‘Closing the Circle’ Restaurants join in compost efforts to move the needle toward a sustainable food system BY EL IZABE TH M I LLE R el i zab eth @ s fre p o r te r.co m
A
vocado pits and lime rinds from the Mexican restaurants. Bone scraps. Meat trimmings. Coffee grinds. Hot dogs from schools. All the spare pieces and parts of what we eat have to end up somewhere, and Reunity Resources has been campaigning to convert that waste to a positive end. In a landfill, rotting food waste releases methane, a contributor to climate change. At Reunity’s 3-acre facility, food scraps from about 20 Santa Fe restaurants, 14 public schools and four private schools are converted into compost. Those restaurateurs are small heroes, to hear Tejinder Ciano, executive director of Reunity Resources, tell it. At essentially no benefit to themselves and for no reason other than that it’s the right thing to do, they go this extra step to help the planet. Unlike your backyard compost pile, Reunity’s heaps can handle biodegradable plastics and meat products. Even bones quickly break down into dark, rich compost that feeds minerals and nutrients back into soils. That compost can then be used in backyard gardens, on the community farm next door, and in other places where depleted topsoil could use a little boost. Bite-sized packages are even available for those with hungry houseplants. “It’s essentially up-cycling,” says Trevor Ortiz, operations manager for Reunity, who turns the piles with a small backhoe. Restaurants involved say it simply makes sense. “It fits with our mission in every way—we want to be a responsible and sustainable business, and we are so careful in our food sourcing. A lot of our food is organic and it breaks my heart to throw it away,” says Soma Franks, co-owner of Sweetwater Harvest Kitchen. “There’s so much effort from the beginning of that beautiful tomato, with the organic farmer, then our chefs and everybody involved, that to throw it in the landfill at the end just feels wrong. So closing the circle feels really good.”
The Reunity compost pile occupies 3 acres and transforms food scraps from area restaurants and schools.
It takes minimal effort on the part of these restaurants to add another bin for compostable waste. For Verde Juice, which can crank through a thousand pounds of apples at a time to make their freshly squeezed juices, there’s more byproduct than they can creatively come up with ways to handle in-house. But the goal is to run a zero-waste business, says Verde founder Kelly Egolf, and that mandates being able to compost. They ship more than a ton of food waste to Reunity to compost every week, she says. The compost project was an extension of Reunity’s work collecting used cooking oil and converting it to biofuel, and the option to see fryer oil reused was what first drew Fire & Hops to Reunity’s work. But throughout their restaurant, says co-owner and manager Josh Johns, they’ve tried to reduce their footprint, buying from local purveyors, recycling and minimizing waste. Buying from local ranchers and farmers has cut down on packaging—mushrooms, berries and peaches arrive in boxes the farmers just take back with them. Adding composting was a natural extension of that ethos. “It has cut down on our waste significantly, so our trash pickup is substantially less now,” Johns says. Yeah, they’ve saved money, but he hasn’t crunched the numbers on how much. That doesn’t really seem to be the point. What he has taken note of, however, is the perfect circle—that his restaurant sends scraps to Reunity, and then he visits the facility, picks up some compost, and brings it home to his backyard vegetable garden and fruit trees. “There’s no shortage of a need to improve the soils,” Ciano says. “You can’t make enough compost to heal all our soils.” Forty percent of the food produced in the US goes uneaten, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council. The USDA pegs that number at 31 percent, which only counts grocery stores, restaurants and homes. The NRDC looks further up the supply chain at things like the 16 percent of produce that is discarded for cosmetic reasons. That waste takes a toll all the way down the farm supply chain—the water, fertilizer, energy and land used to produce that food and move it to markets and restaurants, says JoAnne Berkenkamp, senior advocate with the NRDC. The movement to curtail that waste similarly takes aim first at excess purchases, reminding consumers not to buy more than they can consume.
“You always start with prevention, and that’s the place you get reductions in cost,” Berkenkamp says. After all, wasted food is wasted money, too. Businesses, nonprofits and government leaders have come together to form the think tank ReFED and create a plan to reduce food waste by 20 percent. It’s not impossible. Americans waste twice as much food now as in the 1970s. “For most of us, it’s really bound up in good intentions,” Berkenkamp says. “Food waste is tied up with aspirations to eat healthy. No one wants to waste food.” And yet, the average family of four spends $1,500 per year on food that goes uneaten. ReFED’s plan has 27 components to deal with preventing waste, redistributing it to those in need and recycling it to better ends. The core components come back to standardized date labeling, consumer education and packaging adjustments. Convincing grocery stores to stock imperfect produce to be sold at a discounted rate also ranks at the top of the list. Of all that unconsumed food, 95 percent of it ends in landfills, where it biodegrades anaerobically and produces methane. Moving the needle toward a more sustainable food system in Santa Fe will take input from the city, which doesn’t allow restaurants to donate uneaten food and has no apparent plans to compost more than lawn trimmings. Restaurant owners call on the city to create a municipal compost system, but city staff say that for now they’re focused on converting the curbside recycling program to rollaway carts. Verde uses compostable to-go containers, but those require an industrial composting operation to break down and not release methane. Egolf works on customer education, encouraging consumers to bring back their garbage, but it’s a tough habit to build. “That’s really difficult. I wish the city made it a little easier to make composting an option. They don’t do anything to make it viable,” she says. Plenty of other cities have and could function as models. “Even if they just started with the food service industry and required all restaurants to compost food waste, that would be a huge reduction in the city’s carbon footprint.”
A National Press Foundation fellowship supported some of the research for this story. It also appears in the new SFR Restaurant Guide. For a list of pickup locations, see page 24.
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BACK OF THE HOUSE BEHIND EVERY LAUDED CHEF IS A CREW DOING
THE HARD WORK
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T
he front-of-house employees who facilitate the actual experience of dining out—and who are usually nice for the tips—get all the attention. But what about the many other restaurant workers who make up the back-of-house at your favorite eateries? You may not always see them or even think about how hard they work to keep things running smoothly, but without their help, the system falls apart. We’ve obviously been thinking about restaurants a lot lately with this week’s publication of our annual Restaurant Guide (see p. 24 for a list of pickup locations), and it occurred to
us that for every chef, server or bartender who is celebrated for working with customers in person, a number of others are doing the grunt work to make them look good. It could be the dishwasher, a prep cook or even the owner. We sought out some of these people to highlight their importance to your meal: the ones who arrive to work before anyone else and continue to toil long after the last table has paid out and left the building. The number of small things that come together to make a restaurant successful are nearly incalculable, but we urge you to take a moment to think of these workers the next time you’re at your favorite spot. Appreciate their hard work and try to be cool.
BACK OF THE HOUSE MARIA EGOLF-ROMERO
The Fastest in the West KEEPIN’ IT CLEAN AT TECOLOTE Melquides Damian-Hernandez has been scrubbing, rinsing and wringing at Tecolote for 13 years. He met with SFR during one of those unseasonably hot October afternoons that graced this fall and says he wants to be referred to as Mel, because his full name is a little too long. As a fellow sufferer of hyphenated last names, I oblige. Mel sits with me at a table towards the back of the café’s new-ish location on St. Michael’s Drive (that was a scary time without Tecolote, wasn’t it?). He is shy and polite, and asks a coworker to help translate from Spanish to English. “The people here are really good to me,” he says. “I feel happy with the way they treat me and I always feel like I do a really good job. Yeah, it’s like my home.” Tecolote, the local breakfast hub with the motto “Great breakfast, No toast” (though one can get French toast prepared with a rotating list of breads), serves hundreds of people daily, sometimes more, and Mel estimates he washes “approximately a thousand dishes on Fridays, Saturdays and
Margarita “Maggie” Luján arrives at Santacafé every morning at 7 am and gets to work stuffing spring rolls with cactus and mushrooms. She then moves on to the dumplings, which get a dollop of shrimp and spinach. Luján has been a prep cook at this fine dining institution for 28 years, working under at least five different chefs. She’s stayed all this time, she says, because she’s earned the trust of longtime owners Judith Ebbinghaus and Bobby Morean. “The owners are good people. The chef is a good person,” she says. Today’s kitchen boss is Fernando Ruiz, who became executive chef about four years ago. On a recent Friday afternoon, Luján sticks around longer than usual to make fettuccine noodles for dinner patrons. She feeds balls of yolk-yellow and parsley-speckled dough through a hand-cranked pasta machine, over and over. Once the dough mats out to her desired thickness, she cranks the mixture through one more time. Luján lays out the result, strips of ready-to-boil noodles, onto a
tray and sprinkles it with flour. Santacafé’s pasta of the day, as one might imagine, changes depending on what ingredients are in store. Yesterday, it was linguine. “Tomorrow? I don’t know,” Luján says. What she doesn’t mention is, unless Ruiz wants to make something special—like wasabi papardelle—she’ll probably pick whatever pasta winds up the menu herself. Luján grew up in Juarez and moved to Santa Fe in 1986 for better work opportunities. She met her husband here, with whom she has three children. When she’s not prepping food at Santacafé, Luján works her second gig cleaning houses. As something of a celebrity chef, Ruiz, who competed in the Nov. 1 episode of the Food Network challenge show Chopped, usually gets the attention. But as anyone in the restaurant world will tell you, every meal is a team effort. “I can’t do this without Maggie,” Ruiz tells SFR. He swings open the kitchen door, revealing a cramped and busy room full of workers who are prepping for the day in what passes as an afternoon lull. “And I can’t do this without them.” (Steven Hsieh)
TECOLOTE 1616 St. Michael’s Drive 988-1362
Be Prepared STEVEN HSIEH
SANTACAFÉ PREP COOK HAS BEEN GETTING INGREDIENTS READY FOR NEARLY 30 YEARS
Sundays, because there are more people those days.” The hardest dish to wash? “The huge chile pots.” Restaurant kitchens are notorious for their rapid-pace working environment, and Mel’s position is no exception. He demonstrates his vocation towards the end of our interview at the impressively long and rectangular stainless steel basin in the depths of Tecolote’s kitchen. With deft use of the professional pressure-washer, Mel blasts a plate spotlessly clean with skills so quick-draw fast, he’d have the drop on most cowboys. “The washing is easy, and I have so much to do that it keeps me busy and we are always trying to go as fast as we can,” he says. Along with being the dishwasher, Mel handles the mercancia, or storeroom; arriving to work at the literal crack of dawn around 5:30 am to check the restaurant’s orders. “I check the whole order,” he says. “It’s a very important job.” And even after washing all those dishes at work, Mel says he washes them at home too. His wife also works at Tecolote. “With all of my experience, I am very quick.” (Maria Egolf-Romero)
SANTACAFÉ
231 Washington Ave. 984-1788 CONTINUED ON PAGE 15
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
BACK OF THE HOUSE MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN WANTS YOU TO ENJOY YOUR WINE There are so few sommeliers in Santa Fe that it seems a real boon for any restaurant to have one on its staff. These educated wine-lovers can make the difference between navigating the baffling labyrinth of global wines alone (for some of us, they all taste the damn same) and having a seasoned guide to lead the way. La Casa Sena’s Mary Francis Cheeseman is just that person. “I definitely don’t want to be oversentimental about it, but wine is special and unique and with the proper handling and service it can make a night out magical,” Cheeseman says. “Really good wine is supposed to tell you a story, and I think we’re seeing this cultural shift toward these finer products.” Cheeseman is a second-level, or certified, som. There are four levels total, and fewer than five people in all of Santa Fe have achieved their certification. She works in La Casa Sena’s retail wine shop by day, editing the list through addition and subtraction and always aspiring to the best possible experience for oenophiles and diners alike. By night, she works in the restaurant itself, providing tableside service with friendly advice and a slight educational bent. If ever you’ve wanted to pick up a few wine tricks or enhance a meal, this is how to do it, and yet it’s one
SOMETHING NEW FROM THE BREWMASTER AT ROWLEY FARMHOUSE ALES John Rowley’s garage hasn’t had a car parked in it for a decade. That’s how long the space has been dedicated, instead, to brewing beer. But the longtime home-brewer finally turned that itch to go bigger into something even more consuming: the recently opened Rowley Farmhouse Ales. “I don’t want to horde it,” he says. “Beer is a community thing, something everyone comes together around.” The East Coast native came west first to Arizona before landing a job at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he still works as a chemist. His days are spent elbow-deep in a glove box. “There’s some crossover work for me there, for sure,” he says of his chemistry training and his brewer’s skills. “But beer is my passion.” Evenings and weekends are consumed at the brewery. Here, the recipes honed in the years he’s spent with a local brewers club, and through the “Small Batch Saturdays” when the Santa Fe Brewing Company opened their equipment to club members, finally get a public debut. Occasionally, he makes it back to his Eldorado home and his pair of French bulldogs (hence the brewery stepping up to fundraise for the Santa Fe Animal Shelter and
Humane Society). Business has been steady enough that they’re burning through more than their planned allotment of house-brewed beer each week and scaling up production toward four house brews on tap at a time. Though there’s obvious love for hops in New Mexico, that’s not what they’re about, Rowley says during a tour of the kitchen and brew facilities. While they want to be able to pour for the IPA guy, the stout guy and the sour girl, sour beer is where he hopes to shine. “I like brewing it, and I think there’s a niche for that in Santa Fe,” says the consummate beer geek, repeatedly spotted in black t-shirts emblazoned with terms only a brewer would love (“Lupulin-forward,” or a listing of the four varieties of yeast used in beer). A key selling point for the space they purchased, on Maclovia just off Cerrillos, was its cellar. There, beers can take their time brewing, like a lambic sour, which can take over a year to mature. He’s ordering what looks to be the state’s only foeder, a 8-foot-tall oak barrel 5 feet in diameter that’s only ever partially emptied and refilled with new wort—unfermented beer. “It doesn’t have to be the same thing—it can change, and it lives and grows over time,” he says. Truly funky. (Elizabeth Miller)
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
Beer Science
of the few local restaurants that has such a component or even the proper means of storage. La Casa Sena’s wine list is easily the largest in town, and the restaurant’s access to the wine shop puts them squarely above the competition which, in a foodie paradise such as Santa Fe, is serious business. A vast, temperature-controlled cellar ensures the best possible vino whether it comes by the bottle or the glass. Still, for a town with so many high-quality eateries, the wine isn’t as celebrated as it could be, according to Cheeseman. “I’d like the community to be expanded,” she says, “and I’d like to see more intelligent young people on the floors of restaurants talking about and sharing quality wines.” She brings this ethos to special events and tastings in La Casa Sena’s wine shop, to the restaurant’s dining experience and to monthly classes at Cheesemongers of Santa Fe (130 E Marcy St., 795-7878). “My next goal would be to become a wine buyer or manager somewhere while working toward the next sommelier,” Cheeseman says, an actual glint in her eye. Until such a time, however, she’ll be at La Casa Sena, happily sharing her experience and matching customers with the right wine. (Alex De Vore)
LA CASA SENA
125 E Palace Ave. Wine Shop: 982-2121 Restaurant: 988-9232
Sommel-yay!
ROWLEY FARMHOUSE ALES 1405 Maclovia St. 428-0719
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STRUNG OUT Normally we’d steer clear of an artist like Razzvio (her real name is Lauren Palumbi) and her Evanesence-y pop-rock/metal-lite hybrid sound. But her use of a fretted six-string violin known as the Viper leans more toward a band like Apocalyptica than mainstream radio rock, so we’ll give her and her producer/drummer Kevin Proctor a chance. Razz is Suzuki-trained and has built on a strong classical foundation since she was 7 years old but, she says, “I got bored of classical, frankly—I found the concert-going experience of classical music wasn’t as energetic as rock.” Hence, she takes oldschool mechanics and loops ‘em live with Proctor rock-and-effing-roll style. Word to that, Razz. (Alex De Vore)
FAITH LUCILLE
GUSTAVO CASTILLA
MUSIC
Razzvio: 8 pm Wednesday Nov 2. Free. Boxcar, 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222.
COURTESY NMSA
ART OPENING
ART OPENING
Birthday Suit Bold Two artists aim for empowerment
’90s, the companies that produced film starting pulling back and things were out of stock. So I thought, well, if they don’t want to sell it to me, I’ll make my own.” And this particular type of photography is no easy task. The plate is exposed at the moment the shutter opens, and must be developed immediately. “Everywhere you go with this stuff, you have to bring the darkroom with you,” Castilla says. But his craft is a double-sided coin; that which makes it so difficult is also what makes it incomparably special. Tintype photography is a one-shot chance. “Every time you expose a plate in the camera, it is just that one image [and] even if you go back and immediately prepare another plate, the light has changed; the person’s mood has changed,” Castilla tells SFR. “The painter has the great advantage of editing their vision as they are putting it on canvas, whereas a photographer, you really have to pick that right time when everything comes together.” (Maria Egolf-Romero) ANNA OPENING RECEPTION 5-7 pm Friday Nov. 4. Free. El Zaguán, 545 Canyon Road, 982-0016.
Opportunities to purchase original artwork for $99 are few and far between—but at Birch, a one-night art show featuring works by local artists and students from New Mexico School for the Arts, it’s a reality. Every piece is created on a 10-inch square of birch wood. “This is the fourth iteration of the show,” says Karina Hean, visual arts chair and instructor at NMSA. Proceeds from the show go directly to the local high school, benefitting the visual arts department. Hean says the learning environment at NMSA is like no other. “The students are malleable, creative and brave, so what we end up doing always surpasses what you might expect.” (MER) Birch: 5 pm Saturday Nov. 5. Free. The Fine Arts Gallery at Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 473-6011.
ART OPENING STATE OF THE UNION Up-and-coming art space Fresh Santa Fe gets in the political game with its new show, 50 plus (+) or minus (-), a large-scale representation of the US that invites guests to interact by writing out what they believe needs to happen on the states themselves. “I think it’s out of some sense of resistance or outrage at what goes on in the presidential campaigns,” creator/ designer Gregory Waits says. “It’s a way for people to maybe impact change instead of just complaining.” The show is up now, but a special event with live music goes down at 6 pm on election night and Waits envisions a potential book born of the process. (ADV)
COURTESY FRESH SANTA FE
For Anna Yarrow, the upcoming show ANNA—a namesake for the artist, but also a reference to the Arabic word anna, which means “I am”— is about empowerment. The 37-year-old is an artist-in-residence at El Zaguán, and created the exhibition of tintype and ambrotype photographs with Gustavo Castilla as part of her residency. “I feel like it’s a positive statement,” says Yarrow of the exhibit. “It may be shocking for some people, but I think it’s beautiful.” The shock factor is that most of the images feature Yarrow in the nude. She focuses on nudity as a medium of expression because of her past experiences living in the Sultanate of Oman. Yarrow tells SFR that living the covered life required in Muslim culture wasn’t for her. “Even when I would go to the beach, I love to swim in the ocean and I would swim fully clothed,” she recalls. “Moving back to the States has been an exploration of allowing myself to be a body and a woman and allow myself to be seen.” Castilla, on the other hand, says he got into the extremely difficult craft of tintype photography because he didn’t have much of a choice. “Back in the late
THE PRICE IS NICE
50 plus (+) or minus (-): 9 am-9 pm Tuesday Nov. 8. $10. Fresh Santa Fe, 2855 Cooks Road, Studio A, 270-2654.
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COURTESY BEALS & CO.
THE CALENDAR
WED/2 BOOKS/LECTURES ANGELA Y DAVIS AND BARBARA RANSBY: IN PURSUIT OF CULTURAL FREEDOM Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Davis is a political activist, scholar and author, and an outspoken advocate for the oppressed and exploited. Ransby is a historian, author and longtime activist. In this lecture—part of a Lannan Foundation series—the two speak about the constant struggle for freedom. 7 pm, $2-$5 BREAKFAST WITH O'KEEFFE: ANDREW CONNORS Georgia O'Keeffe Education Annex 217 Johnson St., 946-1039 A curator of art for the Albuquerque Museum, Connors speaks about Mabel Dodge Luhan and the artists she helped bring to Taos, forever changing the art game in New Mexico. 9 am, free FREDERIC HOF Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6011 Head to Tipton Hall to listen to Hof, an ambassador and director of Rafiki Hariri Center for the Middle East, present a lecture titled "War and Peace in the Middle East: Challenges and Options for the Next President." 5:30 pm, $20
EVENTS FARMS, FILMS, FOOD: A SANTA FE CELEBRATION Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Food demos, community presentations, free films and gallery tours and low-cost meals provided by local vendors are all available at this foodcentric event. Stop by, learn something and fill your tummy. 4:30-8 pm, free SUPPORT GROUP FOR STROKE SURVIVORS Christus St. Vincent 455 St. Michael's Drive, 820-5202 A group offers support to those who have been affected by a stroke. 11 am, free TAPS AND TABLETOPS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 If you are a board game lover, this is the event for you. 6 pm, free
An image from Petecia Le Fawnhawk’s sketchbook is on view at Beals & Co. Showroom as part of Sketchbook, opening Friday Nov. 4.
MUSIC
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HELLEBORUS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Kronos Creative presents a headbanging concert with three acts. See Helleborus, a black metal band from Denver, Comarrow Monger, a local death/thrash metal group and Twilight of the Idols, an experimental black metal featuring guitarist Haven Willis from As In We (see Music, page 21). 9 pm, $7
IAN McFERON AND ALISA MILNER Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 The touring duo plays fiddle, cello, electric guitar and creates harmony vocals in their indie-rock set inspired by greats like Bob Dylan. 8 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A solo performance of flamenco and classical guitar. 7 pm, free
KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocal classics, pop hits and contemporary jazz. 6:30 pm, free LATIF BOLAT GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St., 989-8442 A performance of ancient Turkish mystic-devotional music by Bolat, who is from a Mediterranean town in Turkey. 6:30 pm, free
RAZZVIO Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Electric violin pop. Say what? Cool (see SFR Picks, page 17). 8 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria d’Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master and dazzles with his classical skills almost every evening at the swanky restaurant. 8 pm, free CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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COURTESYREVIEW SANTA FE PHOTO FESTIVAL
THE CALENDAR
Paid for & approved by Robert Willis This photo by Elena Anosova is on view as part of Review Santa Fe Photo Festival Exhibition at the Farmer’s Market Pavillion on Friday. SIERRA La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Classic country and classic rock tunes plus some oldies, soul and even a bit of funk. 7:30 pm, free
THU/3 ART OPENINGS ALEXANDRA ELDRIDGE: THE ONE WHO IS ALL JUX. 725 Canyon Road, 983-0001 A solo exhibit of mixed media works by Eldridge, featuring animals and pastel hues. 5-7 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES
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INNOVATIVE THINKER LECTURE: ACCESSIBILITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION Armory for the Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 474-8400 Radiah Harper, Joanne Lefrak, Heidi Reitmaier, and others participate in a panel discussion about creating opportunities through the arts. 6 pm, free PAUL WIDICK St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Widick, a retired Minnesota judge, presents a lecture about the criminal justice system in America. 1 pm, $10
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SASCHA SCOTT James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Professor Scott explores representations of Pueblo Indians by Anglo American artists like Georgia O'Keeffe, Ernest L. Blumenschein and John Sloan in her lecture titled "A Strange Mixture: The Art and Politics of Painting Pueblo Indians" as part of the School for Advanced Research lecture series Crossing Global Frontiers. 6:30 pm, $10
DIA DE LOS MUERTOS ART SHOW: POR VIDA Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 The group exhibit features photography, paintings, sculptures and more that explore cultural narratives of death and rebirth including interpretations of la Calavera Catrina. David Vigil plays a live piano set and an Aztec smoke ceremony blesses the departed at the celebratory event. 4 pm, $5 FOOD JAMBO KIDS GALA DINNER Jambo Café 2010 Cerrillos Road, 473-1296 The fundraising dinner benefits Jambo Kids Clinic and a healthy future for Lamu, Kenya. Enjoy a three-course menu prepared by chef Ahmed Obo, plus wine. 5:45 and 7:30 pm, $75 VETERANS AND FAMILY APPRECIATION DAY: RESOURCE AND CAREER FAIR Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Get information on new benefits and programs for vets and learn about veteran-owned business support, and education and scholarship opportunities in the Jemez Rooms on campus. 3 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
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COURTESY HAVEN WILLIS
American As In We guitarist enters the abyss with a new black metal act BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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aven Willis has been busy. Most notably as guitarist/songwriter for indie-math quartet As In We (Willis says they’re not done yet, though we probably won’t hear from them anytime soon) and for a brief period he dabbled as the guitarist for the more straightforward rock of The Velvet O (a band that also featured bass champ Joie Flare). But the whole time he was out there writing and performing in the indie-rock world, he was ruminating and slowly creating material for a new ethereal black metal project he’s since been quietly unleashing on Santa Fe. The time has come for all of us to take note—Twilight of the Idols is here. “I started working on this, like, six or seven years ago, and it was just kind of something I kept under my hat and wanted to really work on both lyrically and conceptually,” Willis says. “As far as solar or lunar black metal goes, it’s somewhere in the middle of the void, though I’ve got this appreciation for both sides of it.” Let’s think about what we know of black metal for a moment. Obviously, the most immediate examples that come to mind are the bands from in and around Scandinavia like Mayhem or Bathory. Like most metal sub-genres, there are the obvious tie-ins to the overarching style—blast beats, sinister tone, heavyass instrumentation—but for those who live or study metal, there is always so much more. Black metal can be spiritual and beautiful; it can contain a deep reverence for nature and a fundamentally lo-fi focus on atmosphere; it is often more about experience and a way of life than simply notes played in sequence. According to Willis, the moody terrain of countries like Norway or Sweden is a basic root cause for the bleak hopelessness of much of the well-known bands’ content. Willis’ material, while not entirely unlike that of his forbears, is informed instead by the wild and
wooly desert. “We obviously live in a solar-soaked area,” he says, “and the open spaces, the starkness, the blood-soaked history here, the people who migrate to the area to try and find their psychomimetic realities … I think of this as equally intense.” So how does this fit in with the Santa Fe metal scene? It’s no secret that metalheads tend to support their scene with more tenacity than others, but when it comes to black metal we’ve had a scant few projects (such as Drought) to latch onto. “I think [this project] is more attractive to the experimental crowd than the metal crowd,” Willis says. “A lot of the metal in this town is great, and it’s not necessarily pop or commercial, but it’s not very raw or thrashy.” Perhaps “raw” is an apt way to put it. As we speak, Willis is concocting demo material at “an undisHaven Willis’ new black metal band, Twilight of the Idols, is so metal, his face just closed location in the lower Siler kind of does this naturally this time of year. district,” and he plans to maintain black metal’s emphasis on lo-fi recordings and cassette releases. Local imprint love this stuff ), but black metal has the power to be Matron Records will handle Twilight of the Idols’ gorgeous and transcendental. Given Willis’ pedigree first release at least. For now, Willis hopes to put and many years of work in the local scene, it should out something soon and hopes to realize interesting be exciting to see him branching out and reaching ways to do so, such as a digital download code embla- the culmination of almost a decade’s worth of effort. zoned on a scroll. Fingers crossed. For now we’ll have to be a little patient and settle for an opening slot at an upcoming show at Skylight TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS, HELLEBORUS with Colorado black metal act Helleborus and Santa AND MARROW MONGER Fe thrash band Marrow Monger. No, this probably 9 pm Wednesday Nov. 2. $7. isn’t the metal that many locals are used to (note I Skylight Santa Fe, 139 W San Francisco St., didn’t say “everyone” because obviously some of you 982-0775
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I’m a 41-year-old male who looks like the tall, strong, professional, alpha-male type on the outside. On the inside, though, I would like to find a strong, confident woman who wants a cuckolding relationship—she sleeps with other men, while I am faithful and submissive to her. There must be women out there who would love to have a loving, doting boyfriend or husband waiting at home while they go out with other men, but I tend to attract women who want the alpha-male type. What can I do to find—or attract—the kind of woman I’m interested in? Or should I go in for vanilla dating and then have a discussion about cuckolding after we’ve started having sex? -Another Lad Pursuing Humiliating Action “Most women, even dominant women, are still looking for guys who look like they ‘kick ass and take names’ in every other aspect of their lives,” said FleeMarket (u/flee_market), one of the moderators of r/cuckold on Reddit. “As for how to find dominant women, I see a lot of submissive guys on various websites—OkCupid, Reddit, Tinder, FetLife—and something they don’t understand is that women looking for sex or love online tend to get buried in unsolicited PMs from thirsty guys. That makes it hard to find that one respectful PM from a guy like our letter writer here. The signal gets lost in the noise.” Before we get to some practical advice for ALPHA, a quick word about the term “cuck.” While it has long been an affectionate/horny term embraced by self-identified cuckold fetishists, the alt-right has attempted to turn “cuck” into a term of abuse, hurling it at any straight white man who gives a shit about racial justice, police brutality, and the plight of undocumented immigrants. In an effort to wrest “cuck” back from the bigots, and to mark the waning days of the Trump campaign, I’m dedicating this week’s column to “cuck” as properly understood: a guy who wants his partner to sleep with other men. So, ALPHA, how can you attract a woman who wants a cuck? “What’s worked for me is using the internet not to find people but to find kinky events where dominant women gather in real life,” said FleeMarket. “I’m on my second openly dominant female partner in four years, both of whom I met at kinky parties. The events are usually listed on FetLife, and you usually have to attend a munch first to demonstrate that you’re not a dingus who can’t follow the rules or a psycho who doesn’t care about them.” You will find a lot of advice for wannabe cucks on r/cuckold, most offered in response to men trying to talk their vanilla wives or girlfriends into cuckolding them. But you’re as likely to read stories of failure (she said no, absolutely not, never) as you are to read success stories (she’s fucking other guys, and here, with her okay, is the video). “As much effort and time as getting into the kinky community takes, it’s still easier than trying to turn a vanilla woman kinky,” said FleeMarket. “He shouldn’t ‘lead with his kink.’ If a woman asks him what his interests are, mention it, but dial down the excitement level. These ladies deal with a lot of creeps, and it’s easy to scare them off. Basically: Be in the right place, treat the women there with respect, and get to know them as people first.” My ex-three-exes-ago was a cuckold. I swore I would never date another cuckold after he blew up at me for not cheating on him juuuuuust right. I was just a prop, and I came to hate him. I also hated you, Dan, because he raised the subject by giving me some of your columns to read. Fast-forward five years, and my brand-new boyfriend tells me being cuck-
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olded is his ultimate fantasy. I literally started to cry. He held me, he apologized on behalf of all cuckolds everywhere, we laughed, and then he dropped it. He didn’t pressure me, and about a year later, we gave it a try on his birthday. It turns out my boyfriend—fiancé now—is much better at this kink than my ex was. He’s open and honest, he communicates constructively, and he was willing to step outside his comfort zone to accommodate my needs. (He wanted the other guys to be strangers, but I need to know someone before letting him in my body.) I have a regular thing with an exFWB, and sex with my cuck is frequent and hot. Things couldn’t be better. So I’m not mad at you anymore, Dan! All is forgiven! -Cheating Happily Ever After, Thanks! Congrats on your upcoming wedding, CHEAT! And ALPHA? It would appear some vanilla women can be turned. I’m a straight woman who’s about to cuck my man. We’re trying to figure out if my first sexual encounter with another guy should be in front of him or not. He says he doesn’t care; he’s excited either way. I am so nervous, but it’s a good nervous. We have been monogamous until now. I know you say to take it slow. But when it comes to cuckolding, does slow mean “Only kiss the other guy in front of him the first time” or “Tell him about the other guy I kissed”? -On Him Watching Or Waiting P.S. It’ll be more than kissing either way! “Everybody’s different,” said FleeMarket. “There are guys who love being left at home while she goes out on a ‘date,’ there are guys who love being in the house/hotel but not in the room, there are guys who want to be in the room watching or participating. But as far as whether you should dip your toe in or jump in with both feet, there is no ‘right way,’ only what’s right for you two.” That said, OHWOW, the reality of a partner sleeping with someone else for the first time—in front of you or not—can be a lot more intense than the fantasy, and you should definitely take things slow the first time. “There’s the ‘baby steps approach,’ i.e., just flirting with or kissing the other guy (whether in front of him or not) and then seeing how he reacts,” said FleeMarket. “Or telling him that you slept with the other guy, when you really didn’t—just to see how he takes it. Then there’s jumping in with both feet and getting a hotel room and a few drinks with this other guy before taking both men up to your room.” Whatever you decide, OHWOW, FleeMarket recommends having a plan in place in case things/feels/dicks go wrong. “Use the traffic-light system,” said FleeMarket. “Things getting too intense? Say ‘yellow’ to slow the play down. Someone getting upset? Say ‘red’ to stop the play and all three of you can talk. It’s always better if everyone understands it’s okay to call a stop to play if you need to.” I just came across the word “wittol.” It means “a man who knows, condones, and even encourages his wife’s enjoyment of coitus with another man or men; a contented cuckold.” Considering the frequency with which cuckolding comes up and your influence on language, I thought you might want to know. -He’s Expanding Lexicon Perpetually Discontent is a big part of the cuckolding kink, HELP, as cuckolds get off on feeling humiliated and jealous. So I’m not sure “wittol” quite works. But if the alt-right white supremacists succeed in making “cuck” synonymous with “race traitor,” maybe cucks will switch to “wittol.” But don’t give up without a fight, cucks! On the Lovecast, when fathers come out to their daughters: savagelovecast.com
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MUSIC DUSKY Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 These big-time European DJs have major passion for the dance floor and play a repertoire of new and old, some from their newest album release Outer. 9 pm, $15 DYLAN WALSHE Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Walshe is a one-man acoustic band and specializes in Celtic ballads and folk tunes. Head south on Hwy. 14, because Thursday is part of the weekend now. 5 pm, free JOHN RANGEL DUET SERIES El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rangel plays jazz piano with a secret surprise guest performer. Stop by if you want to see who it is. 7 pm, free KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocal classics, pop and contemporary jazz originals. 6:30 pm, free LATIN NIGHT WITH DJ DANY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Get your cumbia and salsa moves ready, this is the time to show them off. 9 pm, $7 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Malone plays a jazzy set of solo guitar tunes. 6 pm, free RENE REYES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A solo guitar set of Americana and blues at the venue that serves up a frozen margarita in a beer, for when just one of those isn’t doing it. 8 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria d’Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master who dazzles with classical skills nearly every night as his residential spot. 8 pm, free
THEATER WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Presented by Up & Down Theater Company, this story is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater and it explores America, where we are and where we are headed. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. Theater keeps you sane. 7:30 pm, $20
FRI/4 ART OPENINGS GUSTAVO CASTILLA AND ANNA YARROW: ANNA El Zaguán 545 Canyon Road, 982-0016 This collaborative tintype photo exhibit from Castilla and artist-in-residence Yarrow tells a story of self-acceptance and empowement. Through Nov. 28 (see SFR Picks, page 17). 5-7 pm, free IGOR MELNIKOV AND EDWARD LENTSCH: EXPANSION THEORY Turner Carroll Gallery 725 Canyon Road, 986-9800 Melnikov's works confront the human psyche and often feature children, who he considers to be the vessels of the human spirit. Lentsch focuses more on primal creation in his abstract paintings. Through Nov. 22. 5-7 pm, free MEGAN E DOHERTY AND ELENA ANOSOVA photo-eye Gallery 541 S Guadalupe St., 988-5152 This two-person exhibit features Doherty's photographs documenting urban poverty and violence. Ansova's focus is on the human experience in her series of portraiture photography. Through Nov. 26. 5-7 pm, free O’KEEFFE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA Georgia O’Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 An exhibit of never-beforeseen watercolor works by O’Keeffe, created when she was in college at the University of Virginia, display her early tendency towards modernism and abstraction. Through summer 2017. 5-7 pm, free ONLINE/OFFLINE ViVO Contemporary 725 Canyon Road, 982-1320 This group show explores the concepts of edges, lines and contrast in both the real world and the virtual one. See works by Joy Campbell, Vincent Faust, Ann Laser and others. Through Dec. 31. 5-7 pm, free PLEIN AIR PAINTERS OF NEW MEXICO SHOW Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace Ave., 501-6555 The eighth annual juried group show includes works by locals who paint in the great outdoors. See lots of New Mexico skies, mountains and vistas, in painting form. Through Nov. 6. 5-7 pm, free RENEÉ LAWTER: KARMA’S KREATURES Pop Gallery 125 E Lincoln Ave., 820-0788 Cuddly sepia-toned monsters deliver an important message about the consequences of our consumer-led culture in this solo exhibit of Lawter’s paintings. Through Dec. 31. 5-7 pm, free
REVIEW SANTA FE PHOTO FESTIVAL EXHIBITION Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 Photographers participating in the festival—which includes workshops, artist talks and discussions—present their portfolios. 6 pm, free SKETCHBOOK Beals & Co. Showroom 830 Canyon Road, 357-0441 Artists present their sketchbooks alongside a completed piece, showing their process and the journey a work takes from idea to reality. Participating artists include painter David Santiago, photographer Justin Britt, sculptor Tammy Garcia and others. The variety of mediums makes for a strong juxtaposition between the sketchbooks. 7 pm, free TOM McGEE: MYSTERY OF FAITH 3 Studios Gallery 901 Canyon Road, 919-1103 The painter presents eight original abstract paintings that explore the contemporary reflection on traditional Christianity. Through Nov. 30. 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ARTISTS TALK: ALCOVES 16/17 #5 New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Artists participating in the fifth part of the group exhibition walk through the show and discuss their works with the audience. 5:30 pm, free BARBARA ROCKMAN AND SANDRA HUNTER: FAMILY VOICES Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 During this evening of poetry, Hunter reads from her collection of short fiction, Small Change and Rockman reads from an upcoming collection by Cynthia Fusillo’s To Splinter and Cleave. 6 pm, free CHRISTINA ROSEBERGER New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 This Albuquerque-based author presents a lecture titled "Drawing the Line: The Early Work of Agnes Martin" inside the museum’s exhibit of Martin's work, allowing her to reference pieces while the audience sees them in real time. 5:30 pm, free
EVENTS ART ACTIVITY Georgia O'Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Draw in the company of other artists at this event which invites everyone to grab a pencil and join in. 5 pm, free
THE CALENDAR FIRST FRIDAY OPEN HOUSE Ralph T Coe Foundation for the Arts 1590 B Pacheco St., 983-6372 Behind-the-scenes access to the collection of global indigenous art. 1 pm, free
with Lydia Lunch
ALEX MARYOL Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 The local celebrity plays a set of blues tunes. 7 pm, free ALTO STREET Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Irreverent bluegrass. 6 pm, free BIG K AND BLUE TRAIN Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave, 428-0690 An Albuquerque based R&B and blues band plays originals. 10 pm, $5 CHARLIE MILO TRIO Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Party-time rock. 8:30 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a skilled set of Broadway tunes on the piano and accompanies with his lovely vocals. 6 pm, $2 DONNA COLEMAN First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 Coleman performs a repertoire of Bach, Parker, Joplin and more on the piano. 5:30 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocals with one of our local piano geniuses. 6 pm, free FRANK WALN AND THE SAMPSON BROTHERS Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2300 Waln—a Sicangu hip-hop artist, producer and performer from the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota—is joined by Luhme and Samsoche Sampson, who promote cultural pride and unity through their art and dance. Catch their stunning performance in the IAIA Digital Dome. 7 pm, $20 KINETIC FRIDAYS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Let the beat move you and get kinetic on the dance floor. 10 pm, $7 RYAN CHRYS AND THE ROUGH CUTS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Outlaw country from Colorado. This would probably be good jams for, like, robbing banks and trains and stuff. 10 pm, free
COURTESY THE ARTIST
MUSIC
Lydia Lunch’s transgressive vision, which expresses brutal truths that most would rather ignore, started in the late ’70s No Wave scene in New York. It has filled over three decades’ worth of documented personal-political hysteria in the form of song, writing, performance, photography and installation. Lunch brings her newest multimedia experience, Dust and Shadows, to the Meow Wolf performance space (7 pm Sunday Nov. 6. $15). An extended version of this interview is featured at sfreporter.com. (JC Gonzo) For Dust and Shadows, you feature visuals of abandoned Spanish villages. Countercultures often describe finding solidarity amongst each other, a band of outsiders. Did you find the same kind of solidarity, but with place? I was fascinated by the duplicity and juxtaposition between [Spain’s] wretched history and its amazing present. Belchite, which is where some of the footage was shot, was a civil war town which was the first time a country bombed its own people. It remains as a testament to man’s brutal insanity against the individual and against human life. So yes, place matters a lot to me because when you’re in a country as old as Spain, you look into any window and you know that all of life, death, murder, love, and violence has gone on in there. Now, how do you decode all that? That’s part of what I’m doing in Dust and Shadows—decoding the history of our insanity. How have you evaded being put into a box or commercialized throughout your career? I’ve always been a musical schizophrenic, it’s just the nature of who I am as an artist—more akin to Dadaists, surrealists, or Viennese Actionists, where the concept comes first, and then I find my collaborators. How do you feel about the current censorship rash from young academia based on political correctness, trigger warnings and safe spaces? “I’ll shoot you if you don’t get out of my fucking house.” That’s a trigger warning. Safe spaces? They’re called institutions of higher learning, not this infantilization from the mass-collective of spoiled millennials whose attention span is less than that of a gnat. How did we develop a nation of such pampered little pussies when we are the mass-murderers of the planet? If this were a rebellion against the vulgarity of America, I’d have more respect, but it’s just whining from those who don’t want their emotions hurt.
SANTA FE COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA'S COMPOSITION COMPETITION Santa Fe Opera House 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 The two finalists present their compositions in rehearsal format on the world-renowned stage. The winner receives a $4,000 cash prize and premiers their work at SFCO's finale concert on June 4. 7 pm, free
TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria d’Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master who dazzles with his classical skills almost every single night at this swanky restaurant that serves up a mouth-watering lasagne and has an extensive wine list. Drowning the workweek in carbs and vino? Nothing better. 8 pm, free
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ONE DELICIOUS GUIDE, TWO TEMPTING COVERS
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RESTAURANT GUIDE
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GIRLS LIKE THAT Greer Garson Theatre at Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6439 Teenagers and technology collide with perilous consequences as the play confronts sexuality, body image and cyber-bullying. 7 pm, $15 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater. It explores America, where we are and where we are headed. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. 7:30 pm, $20
SAT/5 E ANT GUID R E S TAU R SFR 2017
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Hungry ?
SFR 2017 R E S TAU R ANT GUID E
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SFR’s Restaurant Guide is back and bigger than ever! Did your favorite local eatery make our Top 10 or 25 Faves lists? Pick up a copy at one of the locations below and find out: * Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino
* Old Santa Fe Inn
* City Shoe Repair
* Las Palomas Hotel
* Collected Works Bookstore
* La Posada de Santa Fe
* Eldorado Hotel & Spa
* Residence Inn
* Eye Associates
* Rosewood Inn of the Anasazi
* Fitness Plus
* Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce
* Fort Marcy Recreation Complex
* Santa Fe Convention Center
* Garrett’s Desert Inn
* Santa Fe Plaza (east side and south side)
* Genoveva Chavez Community Center * Harold Runnels Building
* Santa Fe Public School Administration Building
* Hilton Santa Fe
* Santa Fe Sage Inn
* Hotel St. Francis
* Santa Fe Southside Library
* Hotel Santa Fe
* Santa Fe Spa
* Hyatt Place
* Santa Fe University of Art and Design
* Inn and Spa at Loretto * Inn at Santa Fe * Inn of the Governors * Inn on the Alameda * Kokoman Liquors, Pojoaque * Manhattan Street and Guadalupe Street corner
* Santa Fe Visitor's Center * SFCC (main entrance) * Sports Medicine Center * State Capitol Building * State Education Building * State Employees Credit Union
* Mesa Public Library, Los Alamos
* State History Library
* La Montañita Co-op
* Rancho Viejo Village Market
* Montoya Building
* Vitamin Cottage
* NM State Library
* Water Street (by parking lot)
The Reporter’s annual Restaurant Guide:
Your foodie compass to what’s cooking in Santa Fe.
ART OPENINGS BIRCH Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6011 The university’s Fine Arts Gallery exhibits works by visual art students from New Mexico School for the Arts alongside works by local artists. All the pieces are on 10 inch square of birch wood panels and priced at $99 (see SFR Picks, page 17). 5 pm, free JEFF DELLA PENNA: BIKES FOR SALE Studio Vaillancourt 821 Canyon Road, 231-8961 A solo exhibit of bicycle-related artworks by Della Penna. 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ELIZABETH RABY, MARY McGINNIS AND STEVE SCHROEDER Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Raby celebrates and reads from her full-length poetry collection, A Matter of Time. McGinnis, reads from her recent collection See with Your Whole Body, and Schroeder reads from his collection, the moon not the finger, pointing. 6 pm, free
EVENTS BOOK ARTS GROUP FLEA MARKET Palace of the Governors 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 A market of supplies for mixed media, assemblage and collage as well as books, journals and handmade speciality papers. A room full of paper treasure! 10 am, free EL MUSEO CULTURAL WINTER MARKET El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 250-8969 Peruse the weekly market and see folk and tribal art, antiquities, jewelry and more. 8 am-3 pm, free
Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly. Submissions don’t guarantee inclusion.
For help, call Maria at 395-2910.
RESURRECTING ISIS: CLOSING EVENT Art.i.factory 930 Baca St., 982-5200 Creativity for Peace representatives are present in participation with the exhibit that aims to redefine and reclaim (see A&C, page 25). 4-7 pm, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Railyard Park 1611 Paseo de Peralta, 414-8544 See works in nearly every medium made by local artists. 8 am-1 pm, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Americana country played by a group of guys who love making music. Yee-haw. 6 pm, free CHANGO Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock and pop hits from the past three decades. Get your lip-synch and air-guitar on. 8:30 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a skilled repertoire of Broadway tunes on the piano and accompanies with his lovely vocals. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Enjoy a set of live piano by a guy so good, he could've inspired Billy Joel to write "Piano Man." 6 pm, free GYPSY MOON Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Vaudeville and gypsy folk at the venue that never charges a cover. 10 pm, free JIM AND TIM Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Soulful blues on the deck. Scarily, it’s still warm enough. 3 pm, free
JONATHAN RICHMAN FEATURING TOMMY LARKINS Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 The duo performs their rock, folk-new wave set twice in the House of Eternal Return, once at 7:30 pm and again at 10 pm. Don’t miss it twice because that would be fool on you. 10 pm, $22 LADDER TO THE MOON Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Santa Fe Pro Music Orchestra performs with special guest violinist Ida Kavafian. Conducted by Thomas O’Connor. 4 pm, $20-$75 MOLLIE O'BRIEN & RICH MOORE GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St., 989-8442 Blues, traditional folk, jazz and rock 'n' roll are the genres this husband and wife duo has played for the past 30 years. Catch their dynamic act and charming on-stage banter. 7:30 pm, $28 ORNETC. Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 A bumping live jazz set will get your feet moving. 7 pm, free STEFANIE HATFIELD AND FLAMINGO PINK: FUNDRAISER FOR THE FUTURE Turner Carroll Gallery 725 Canyon Road, 986-9800 An evening to support local theater and performing arts education features two live rock performances and a silent auction. 6 pm, $35 THE JAKES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 A live performance of Southern rock ’n’ roll at the venue that forces you to take a nice drive out of town. 8 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria d’Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master who dazzles with classical skills. 8 pm, free
THEATER PARTED WATERS: A STAGED READING Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Written by Robert F Benjamin and directed by Catherine Donavon, the play is a humorous drama that tells the story of a three-generation Hispanic family living in Northern New Mexico. 2 pm, $10 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire and part musical theater. 7:30 pm, $20 CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
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BY JC GONZO
ndrea Isabel Vargas and Patti Levey’s two-woman show, Resurrecting Isis, grabbed my attention based on the title alone. The word as it refers to the ancient Egyptian goddess, a word recently defamed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), no longer yields the top results in a Google search, and articles about the terrorist organization still come up even when the search terms are specific the deity. The careless use of the term obfuscates a keystone figure in Middle Eastern history, a global icon of feminine power, and furthers bad connotations with the region. Remember that “al-Qaeda,” which translates to “basis,” and “Taliban,” a plural form of “student;” the names of multinational terrorist organizations are also common, everyday words in Arabic. I’ve considered similar semantic issues within the English language, but believe it’s a different story when these terms are politicized as targets and triggers for potential danger; yet another form of control over a culture, language, and history. Perhaps this is a result of an underlying xenophobia, subconscious Islamophobia, and anti-Muslim prejudice? Perhaps it’s mere coincidence. Regardless, we are faced with cultural erasure via ignorance. That is where Resurrecting Isis lays its concept. The show, comprised of two bodies of work in multiple mediums, generates a conversation between two artists on an issue that is both American and global, female and male, historical and contemporary. Levey explicitly examines the concepts through selections from her series, smartly called Taking Liberty, which features the artist adorned in a burqa-American flag hybrid with various props. Levey cradles weapons, anatomical illustrations and an infant; she also exposes her nude body, not as a means of religious offense, she claims, but “to question the liberties we have as Western women, and to show that beneath the garments we are all human.” Controversy is not something new to Levey. Observers have met previous exhibitions of Taking Liberty with challenging inquiry, cultural outrage and fear. While some may find the imagery offensively provocative, the work is a sincere, personal investigation. The images are reminiscent of those of Iranian artist Shirin Neshat, though quite different in their interpretation due to the nationality of the artist. Levey calls attention to privilege by acknowledging her own identity, allowing room for introspection for anyone who views it, and encouraging Americans to think of ourselves as global citizens connected and responsible for actions abroad. Privilege, after all, is the freedom to exist in denial about the world around you and your relation to
COURTESY ARTISTS
How resurrecting an ancient Egyptian goddess reclaims history
it. Selections from Taking Liberty take on a new life with interjections from Vargas, whose vibrant, luscious visual works contrast Levey’s black-and-white renderings. Vargas contributes two-dimensional works that are primarily pastel on paper, as well as a captivating silk installation entitled The 14th Element. Her abstractions exquisitely convey violence and sensuality, and it is easy to get lost in the crimson streaks and soothing teals that suggest human form while obliterating it—a dance of freedom and oppression. The hanging silk tapestries complement the exhibit as a textural extension while representing 13 countries violently impacted by ISIS, creating a tie to the goddess’ mythology of recovering 13 body parts of her dismembered husband, Osiris, in order to resurrect him and conceive a son. If one were to read the exhibit from left to right, Vargas figuratively reconnects the Isis story at its end, alluding to Osiris as a male form rebirthed and thus reminding us of the male counterpart in this gender-charged show. Vargas’ vision of Isis and her prowess as a political analogy present a confrontational but inclusive statement on liberation, female divinity, and human travesty. “In this way, the propagation of peace is not through violence, but through remembering—and power is most present in the womb itself,” she says. Translation further muddies these concepts. ISIL, or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, is the term the Obama administration officially uses. “The Levant” is a much more geographically accurate term, although also problematic for some due to its Western colonial connotations. Perhaps most appropriate would be “Daesh,” an acronym for the Arabic equivalent of ISIL, representing “l-Dawla al-Islamiya al-Iraq al-Sham.” The terms describing and identifying threats from the Middle East are a complex subject. Since the September 11th attacks, many national news outlets have published articles clarifying the difference between the Taliban and Al-Qaeda groups. Either the two were used interchangeably often enough to merit the articles, or the terms too often generalized any Islamist actions or beliefs that might be anti-Western. One would like to think that the American public has become more educated and sensitive concerning this, but with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump recently stating that President Obama uses the term ISIL instead of ISIS for no other reason than to “bother people,” I remain skeptical. Furthermore, “Isis” is the Greek interpretation of the Egyptian goddess’ name with the Egyptian origin most likely being “Aset.” Find the thought-provoking and visually stimulating showexhibit at Art.i.fact’s small but noteworthy gallery space, Art.i.factory, located within the store. Twenty percent of the closing reception’s proceeds benefit for Creativity For Peace (creativityforpeace.com), an organization that prepares young Israeli and Palestinian women to be peacemakers in their communities and across borders. RESSURECTING ISIS CLOSING RECEPTION
Top: “Ground Zero” by Patti Levey; Bottom: “In Dreams” by Andrea Isabel Vargas, from Resurrecting Isis at Art.i.fact
4-7 pm Saturday Nov. 5. Free. Art.i.fact, 930 Baca St., 982-5000
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THE CALENDAR
SUN/6 BOOKS/LECTURES DONALD LEVERING AND RICH BOUCHER Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Two poets meet to commence in dialogue on an array of variegated topics such as money for babies, eating ice cream as the polar ice caps melt and debt turned on its head. 5 pm, free JOURNEYSANTAFE: JOE MONAHAN Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Monahan, a political blogger, presents a lecture titled "The Political Winds in New Mexico Politics." 11 am, free
EVENTS FIBER ARTS GUILD: FIBER ARTS DEMONSTRATIONS Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Learn about types of weaving, loom variety, spinning, knitting and more at the fiber bonanza. 1 pm, free
FILM
The Finest in Art and Craft since 1982
VINCENT PRICE HONOR: THE BARON OF ARIZONA Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 In honor of the horror film legend, see a special screening of his favorite film, followed by a discussion by a panel of experts, including his daughter Victoria Price and leading Price expert Peter Fuller. 7:30 pm, $6-$13
MUSIC
Saturday & Sunday
November 5 & 6 9am - 5pm in Dixon, New Mexico
our
TAOS
DIXON
EMBUDO RINCONADA
518
PEÑASCO
75
OJO CALIENTE
285
35 th year !
68 76
ESPAÑOLA
SANTA FE
for information call 505.579.4360 or visit www.dixonarts.org partial funding by Rio Arriba lodger’s tax
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AUSTIN MILLER Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Miller is known for the mellow beats and tender lyrics in his folk songs. 8 pm, free BROOMDUST CARAVAN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Juke-joint honky-tonk and biker bar rock 'n' roll. Noon, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Enjoy a set of live piano by a guy so good, he could've inspired Billy Joel to write "Piano Man."He plays a selection of Broadway tunes and classic songs that may have you humming along. 6 pm, free LADDER TO THE MOON Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Santa Fe Pro Musica performs with special guest violinist Ida Kavafian. Conducted by Thomas O’Connor. 3 pm, $20-$75
LYDIA LUNCH: DUST AND SHADOWS Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Lunch puts on a multimedia performance that confronts war, violence and survival in its imagery while paying homage to many who have lost their lives as casualties of war (see 3 Questions, page 23). 7 pm, $15
THEATER PARTED WATERS: A STAGED READING Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Written by Robert F Benjamin and directed by Catherine Donavon, the play is a humorous and compassionate drama that tells the story of a three-generation Hispanic family living in Northern New Mexico. The reading includes Jonathan Harrell, Alix Hudson and Argos MacCallum. 2 pm, $10
Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly. Submissions don’t guarantee inclusion.
For help, call Maria at 395-2910.
WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater. It explores America, where we are and where we are headed. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. 3 pm, $20
MON/7 BOOKS/LECTURES DAVID SEDARIS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 The iconic sardonic author is one of the most observant writers addressing the human condition today. See him cut through political correctness and cultural euphemisms as only he can. Tickets are sold out on ticketsantafe.com, so try stubhub or some other sneaky technique. 7:30 pm, $57
SANDY ZANE: ABC'S OF ARTS, BUSINESS AND CREATIVITY Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Head to Health Sciences Center, room 488 and catch Zane's lecture about creating opportunity for creativity and business in the arts. 2 pm, free SYDNEY AND MARIE DAVIS Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 The two soil scientists co-wrote the book Early Agriculture in the Eastern Grand Canyon of Arizona, and they present a lecture about the current state of the Colorado river titled "Rising River: Colorado River, Grand Canyon & Ancient Colorado Plateau Agriculture." 6 pm, $12 WRITTEN WORD ENTHUSIASTS MEETING Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Listen to stories read by local writers and bring your own to read, if you feel inspired. 6 pm, free
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others' while you enjoy your favorite brew in a frosty pint glass. 7 pm, free
FOOD MARIACHI FIESTA La Fogata Grill 112 W San Francisco St. Suite 101, 983-7302 Enjoy your tacos with a live musical mariachi performance every Tuesday at this downtown spot. 7 pm, free
MUSIC COWGIRL KARAOKE WITH MICHÉLE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michéle Leidig, Queen of Santa Fe Karaoke, hosts this night of amateurish fun. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Enjoy a set of live piano by a guy so good, he could've inspired Billy Joel to write "Piano Man." 6 pm, free
THEATER DESERT ACADEMY CABARET Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 The Desert Academy musical theater department and its director Randy Bennett put on a performance including chorus and scenes from films. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
Hello, Yellow IL LUSTRATI O N S AN D STO RY BY A MY DAV I S
Y
ellow is everywhere this lemon dropsplashed autumn, more brilliant than any fall I have ever witnessed in Santa Fe. Blond leaves litter and transform sidewalks into a vision of French’s mustard-coated shag carpeting, dropping onto chamisa like awkward buttercup toupees. From the deep summer sunflowers to this extended amber glow of early November, the canary dust is everywhere in every shade, and baby, it makes you happy. But are you yellow-bellied when it comes to that very color of the sun? Do you own a bright lemon dress? Pants of gold? Creamy citrine culottes? No? Well, that’s just bananas. Not only is this color the number one color of happy, it’s also the polar opposite of basic black. Black. Oy, black. Now what’s more chicken than wearing all black? It’s total vampiric wuss wear. No, not you art kids and “goths.” I get you. Been there, done that. As a recovering death rocker, I was a full-blown blackaholic. I even thought my blacks were colors like … I’m working my blue-black sweater with my brownblack skirt and green-black tights and yes, my blackblack wingtips. But I digress—yellow is power; it’s solar; it’s energizing and uplifting and it is absolutely the most immediate way to shine bright. From a dapper bow tie to a breezy skirt to a frisky bikini to a playful raincoat, it is wonderfully insouciant! And so, with winter coming, let’s dust off some sunshine colored threads and
SMILE. Now that’s hardcore, that’s punk rock. For the norm-core fellas, Carhartt WIP (that stands for Work In Progress) has upped their work wear into a more street style line over the past few years. Being from Detroit, you wouldn’t expect their clothing to be drizzled in so much sunny honey, but yes, kids, yellow took on a major part of their Spring/Summer 2016 casual style. Structured jackets to popyour-eyes-open hoodies, the daisybright color would make a bumblebee blush. But this was ancient history. This was 2016. Since then, yellow has hyperblasted into the fashion world like a tangy yuzu twist in your schmancy martini. No, not entire monochromatic egg yolk collections, but a glimmer here and bubble there to brighten the palettes of cuckoo-crazy Moschino, whose SS 2017 acid-yellow leather dress (complete with “tags” as in you Acid yellow leather dress and gloves by Moschino; lipstick by Giorgio Armani’s Lip Maestro in #302
are a “paper doll” to attach the said frock to your doll frame) is pure insane brilliance. Andreas Kronthaler’s debut prêt-à-porter AW 16/17 line for Vivienne Westwood was entitled Sexercise and showed a warm butter-creamy satin gown of wild architecture. It featured male togas and men’s dresses of which Westwood said, “Unisex is good for the environment; couples would not have to buy so many clothes if they would just share their wardrobe.” Oh, did I mention Andreas is Westwood’s husband? Adorable, boo! Back on home soil you can get your freshly squeezed sunshine smoocher on by popping into the Cos Bar (128 W Water St., 984-2676) and asking radiant assistant store manager Audrey Martinez for Giorgio Armani’s Lip Maestro in #302. When I queried her about everything hello yellow, she grabbed this neon lip gloss and I protested that it was too orange. She instantly applied the kiss paint to her pucker and perfection—hot, marigold perfection! A swirling swoon of a hue that screams I-am-happy-andquite-cute. Audrey worked it like a champ. For your talons and tootsies they have Yves Saint Laurent’s nail polish in Jaune Babouche #62, which translates into yellow Moroccan heelless slippers. The color is totes New Mexico flag-yellow, blindingly bright and bold. Lastly, if all this is too much for your now-jaundiced eyes, treat yourself to a fab turmeric shot at Modern General (637 Cerrillos Road, 930-5462). The interior decor is soothing and deliciously clean urban and gosh darn snazzy. The concoction of fresh turmeric and orange juice rimmed in crunchy black pepper and coconut oil (the pepper apparently enhances the anti-inflammatory effects of the turmeric like a million-billion percent) is wonderfully refreshing and zests you right up. I get these weekly and they boost my pep and add a zing to my step. So get happy, snappy, loud and proud, sunshine-kissed beauties of Santa Fe. ‘Cause you know what? Yellow ain’t so mellow.
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THE CALENDAR
TUE/8 ART OPENINGS 50 PLUS (+) OR MINUS (-) Fresh Santa Fe 2855 Cooks Road, Studio A, 270-2654 The election day interactive installation is by Waits Studio Works. It embraces fashion, art and the informant with written word by inviting participants to write on the installation wall and add a piece of themselves and their thoughts to the artwork. See a concert by AF Jones and Steve Flato at 6:30 pm (see SFR Picks, page 17). 9 am, $10
BOOKS/LECTURES
MUSIC
FRANK MURRAY Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 A writing workshop hosted by Murray. Spiff up your skills in a classroom environment and find yourself novel-writing by the weekend. Well, maybe. 6 pm, free
KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocal classics, pop and contemporary jazz originals. 6:30 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Malone plays a set of solo jazz guitar tunes. 6 pm, free PSYCHIC TWIN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Pop inspired by dreams that employs dark melodies and soaring vocals. 7 pm, $15
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Get your sultry tango on at the dance party that wants you to do just that. 7:30 pm, $5
EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 O’Keeffe at the University of Virginia. Through summer 2017. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Mabel Dodge Luhan & Company: American Moderns and the West. Ken Price, Death Shrine I. Agnes Martin Gallery. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Rick Bartow: Things You Cannot Explain. Through Dec. 31. Lloyd Kiva New: Art. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art. The Life and Art of Innovative Native American Artist and Designer Lloyd Kiva New. MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL 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. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Chimayó: A Pilgrimage Through Two Centuries. The Beltran Kropp Collection. The Delgado Room. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 Agnes Martin and Me. Through Aug. 2017. Lowriders, Hoppers and Hot Rods: Car Culture of Northern New Mexico.
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COURTESY GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM
MUSEUMS
“Untitled (Rotunda -University of Virginia)” by Georgia O’Keeffe is on view as part of O’Keeffe at the University of Virginia, 1912-1914 opening Friday at the Georgia O’Keefe Museum. Through March 2017. Out of the Box: The Art of the Cigar. Through Oct. 2017. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Alcoves 16/17. Small Wonders. Through March 2017. Governor’s Awards for Excellence in the Arts exhibition. Through Dec. 2016. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Fractured Faiths: Spanish Judaism, The Inquisition and New World Identities.
POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 Ashley Browning, Perspective of Perception. The Past of the Govenors. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Bill Barrett: Visual Poetry. Through March 2017. Ojos y Manos. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Eveli, Energy and Significance.
FOOD
You’re coming to executive cheffing after a several-year period of teaching. Is that an adjustment? Absolutely. The first thing I noticed was how much I missed it. I learned a ton in my sojourn into culinary education. If I had known what was involved I never would have done it, but looking back I wouldn’t trade it for anything. Being a great chef is about 30 percent teaching. If you can’t train, lead and inspire your crew, you’re fighting an uphill battle.
BY GWYNETH DOLAND t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
S
unrise Springs Spa Resort in La Cienega (242 Los Pinos Road, 780-8145) has a new chef with a familiar name. Rocky Durham is now overseeing all food at the resort, which includes the fine dining restaurant, Blue Heron; Sages Café, where guests often have breakfast; and the Moon House, where guests have cocktail hour every night (Durham hopes to soon open that to the public). The move comes several weeks after the closing of the Santa Fe Culinary Academy, which Durham cofounded in 2012. Calling out to the resort recently, I caught Durham in a characteristically enthusiastic mood. Here are some lightly edited excerpts from our conversation about his new gig and why the cooking school couldn’t last.
CHRIS CORRIE PHOTOGRAPHY
Rocky Durham moves on after the closure of the Santa Fe Culinary Academy
What’s on the Sunday brunch menu that you’re really excited about? Being a New Mexican, I love me a green chile cheeseburger. If you’re going to put a green chile cheeseburger on your menu is has to be killer. You gotta fuckin’ nail it. And we do. What have I not asked you that you really want people to know? I want them to know I’m so excited to be back as a working chef. I’m a fiercely proud New Mexican and being able to find this culinary home I feel like I’m truly blessed and I have arrived at home.
La Loncherita Salvadoreña
1710 Llano Street
Call 505.988.5541 to schedule a showing.
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Bright, natural light with high ceilings. Built-ins. Shared bathroom & kitchenette. New carpet. Parking.
(BY ST. MICHAEL DRIVE) (505) 316-2228
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Located in the heart of downtown Santa Fe.
Why did it end? There were a couple reasons. One of our founding members was diagnosed with cancer. She’s fine! She made it! She kicked its ass, so good! But she had to pull herself out and we had a small team. Also, the world of for-profit education has been under very strict scrutiny by the federal government, especially trade schools. The federal Department of Education generated a new metric for access to Title IV [federal student aid money], looking at the average worker in an industry and what they earn. But if you look at the average wage of a restaurant worker, you have to include every McDonald’s, every Taco Bell and every dishwasher, so that average annual income is not much. And loan repayment can only be a percentage of disposable income, so that’s why we closed and every single Cordon Bleu has closed [in the US].
What have you changed at Sunrise Springs? One thing we’ve done is now we’re open to the public for Sunday brunch.
PRIME, MAIN FLOOR OFFICE SPACE We are looking for a quality tenant.
What was the best part of it? There were a couple people who went through that program who are going to go on to do incredible things with food. And there some people who took the message that we taught and are going to parlay that into other projects. Some became lifelong friends.
Are you sad about it? No.
SFR: How did you end up at Sunrise Springs? RD: I had, like, two or three of my colleagues let me know they were looking for an executive chef—because we knew for months that the Academy was closing. I had been to the resort a while ago for a memorial service and for a wedding, but … how to put this politely … I thought it was kind of crunchy. There was a lot of incense burning. I thought: That isn’t really my style. But I came out here and as soon as I got to the gate I saw that the grounds were perfectly manicured, all the facilities had been redone and it was gorgeous. They showed me the huge greenhouse, the chicken coop and I met the farmer who’s putting in a 2-acre organic garden here. I’m able to say I’d like a whole bunch of English peas next year and they’ll do it!
FOR RENT
If you knew what was involved you never would have started a cooking school? How was teaching and running a school different from what you expected? Number one, there wasn’t a lot of cooking, it was a whole lot of policies and procedures. I sat in front of a computer for far too long.
3 Pupusas for $5 — with this ad — Expires 11/30/2016
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A New Dawn at Sunrise Springs
What did the owners tell you they wanted you to do? I asked them what direction they wanted to go in and they asked me what direction I wanted to go in! That’s one of the reasons I wanted to come here. I have total artistic license.
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is Th ay! rd atu
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INDIGO GIRLS 11/15 • BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA 12/20 • DAR WILLIAMS 1/7 AFRICAN GUITAR SUMMIT 2/28 • MASTERS OF HAWAIIAN MUSIC 3/4 & 5 • DAKHABRAKHA 3/12 • BELA & ABIGAIL 3/13 • CARLOS NUNEZ 3/21 BRIAN WILSON “PET SOUNDS” 5/18
RAILYARD URGENT CARE We put patients first and deliver excellent care in the heart of Santa Fe. Open 7 days a week, 8am – 7pm
CHERYL ALTERS JAMISON IS HEATING IT UP WITH A BOLD NEW BRAND, WEBSITE, VIDEOS & RADIO SHOW!
+ INJURIES & ILLNESS + X-RAYS + PHYSICALS + LAB TESTS + VACCINATIONS + DRUG TESTING + DOT EXAMS Locally owned and operated by Dr. Victor Sherman and Dr. Troy Watson WHERE TO FIND US 831 South St. Francis Drive, just north of the red caboose.
(505) 501.7791
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Cheryl Alters Jamison FRIDAYS 11AM - 12PM
yay!
Gimme Danger Review: Lust For Life Jim Jarmusch tackles Iggy Pop and The Stooges by alex de vore alex@sfreporter.com
Gimme Danger begins at the end. One ending, anyway, as Jim Osterberg— now much older but still in damn good shape—explains the events of 1973 from what appears to be his laundry
room. You probably know Osterberg better as the inimitable Iggy Pop, the energetic and charismatic front man for the massively influential punk band, The Stooges. By ’73, the band was imploding. Drug use, middling commercial success and zero label support had taken their toll, and without so much as a real conversation, Pop and band mates Dave Alexander and Scott and Ron Asheton called it quits (albeit temporarily) after a disastrous show. It was a mere six years after
SCORE CARD
ok
meh
barf
see it now
it’s ok, ok?!
rainy days only
avoid at all costs
ok
BEING 17
“You’ll sigh from apathy having just
wasted 116 minutes of your life.”
KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES “Thank the entertainment gods that no one took this film too seriously.”
meh
THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN “A voyeuristic hard-R spin on a Lifetime Movie of the Week.”
yay!
“Suspense and problem-solving mixed
yay!
Pete and Pete. Still, we wind up with a more complete idea of Pop’s story than the others. To be fair, original bassist Derek Alexander died in 1975, guitarist Ron Asheton in 2009 and drummer Scott Asheton in 2014, and while we do hear from the likes of Mike Watt and late-’70s Stooges guitarist James Williamson, it may seem they were merely drawn into Pop’s orbit rather than having any impact of their own. This is not the case, and Jarmusch does his best to prove each and every member made important contributions despite fewer onscreen interviews. Regardless, by the time Danger wraps we’ve got a new appreciation for The Stooges’ influence on popular (and underground) music in a way that’s almost like a grittier, more tragic version of the story of The Beatles. For some people, this will reaffirm their own connections to music as an art form. Others will find an arguably lesser-known—though no less essential—chapter in the history of rock ’n’ roll.
GIMME DANGER Directed by Jim Jarmusch With Pop, Asheton, Watt and Williams DeVargas, R, 108 min.
SCREENER
yay!
meh
their formation, and sadly, much of the world hardly noticed they were gone. In retrospect, The Stooges’ impact on pop culture and music is so important, so obvious and so ahead of its time that it’s almost criminal how difficult their journey became. From Ann Arbor basement jam spaces in the late 1960s and a brief collaboration with David Bowie in ’73 to the 2003 Stooges reunion at Coachella (with Mike Watt of The Minutemen on bass) and their 2010 induction into the Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Fame, Danger deftly points out that had it not been for the turmoil, we might never have had The Stooges we know. Pop and company experimented wildly and shirked convention—damning the committee-built flower power façade of the day and taking cues from the likes of MC5 and The Velvet Underground’s Nico (with whom, the film says, Pop had a brief romantic tryst). All the while, the erratic sounds of albums like 1969’s The Stooges and 1973’s Fun House remind us that this is the very definition of proto-punk, and that most punk bands that came after looked to these guys as a sort of waypoint. Iggy Pop becomes the focus of Danger, which is understandable given his continual time in the spotlight in everything from his work with Bowie, his appearance on the Trainspotting soundtrack with “Lust For Life” in 1996 and even a brief acting stint on the wonderfully bizarre Nickelodeon program
THE ACCOUNTANT
with a dash of hopeless romance.”
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK—THE TOURING YEARS “This one might not have major appeal to those who aren’t Beatle-maniacs.”
BEING 17 With a father abroad in the military and a pregnant mother bedridden with a pulmonary infection, what are two 17-year-old boys to do when their lives are compromised and their sexualities begin to manifest? Being 17, directed by André Téchiné (In the Name of My Daughter), follows the lives of two unsure high school students. Damien Delille (Kacey Mottet Klein) lives alone with his mother while his father is on a military mission abroad. His classmate, Thomas Charpoul (Corentin Fila), an adopted child of sheep and cattle farmers, begins to bully Damien at school. His actions are at first perceived as homophobic, but are soon revealed as a cover for his new and uncomfortable feelings of attraction. When Thomas’ mother becomes ill, Damien’s mother urges him to temporarily move in so he can focus on his studies, all the while unaware that the fighting (and sexual tension) is escalating between the boys behind closed doors. After Thomas moves in, he and Damien bounce back and forth from friends to enemies to almost-lovers to enemies again. Although the film is mildly clichéd, it’s impossible to ignore the subtle and unique eroticism employed in Being 17—light touching, tense silence, heavy eye contact, poetry.
The idiosyncrasies of the characters is far more praiseworthy than the overall film itself. Its narrative is anticlimactic for the most part, lingering in filler scenes and delaying the ending of the story. The shockingly accurate sex scene between Damien and Thomas isn’t sugarcoated and there is no no gay-porn hamartia or ignoring of pain. You’ll find yourself sighing from relief that Damien and Thomas have had such a sexual awakening, but the ending is so predictable you’ll sigh from apathy having just wasted 116 minutes of your life waiting for an ending you could have guessed in the first 10. (Kim Jones) Center for Contemporary Arts, NR, 116 min.
KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES Holding up undercover identities was easy for the Joneses in 30 foreign countries. But less than a week in the suburbs in the USA, and they’re blown in a big way—bringing to mind what would happen if the sexy lovers from Mr. and Mrs. Smith moved in next door to the Cleavers. The laughs come easily, if predictably, as Zach Galifianakis (The Hangover) extends what’s turning into a semi-good year on the heels of Masterminds as he slips into his typecast role as Jeff Gaffney, the goofy husband with the boring and insignificant job in HR. Isla Fisher (Now You See Me) is his suburban housewife, Karen,
an interior designer who immediately knows something isn’t right with the new arrivals on their cul-de-sac. They’re just adorable, with great timing and chemistry as a unit. Also good fits for the roles of Natalie and Tim Jones are Gal Gadot and Jon Hamm. (Outstanding ringers for Brangelina. May that terrible portmanteau rest in peace.) Gadot, of the Fast and Furious franchise and part of the upcoming Justice League endeavors, wears every miniscule dress well and conducts a humorous and sexually charged bit with Fisher, which you no doubt saw in the trailer. Meanwhile, Hamm (Mad Men) has better lines, including a killer scene in a backroom “snake restaurant” that’s among the best surprises in this movie’s bag of tricks. The whole thing is just a smidge too long, with one too many foreseeable reunions. Some of the dialog is snappy and hilarious while other exchanges feel pointless. The detective scenes smell at times like Austin Powers throwbacks, and the action sequences are well executed enough for the genre, if not out of place amid the schtick that gives the plot a romcom vibe. Thank the entertainment gods that no one took this film too seriously. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 105 min. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN Rachel Watson is a mess. Two years after her husband left her (for the real estate agent!), she’s unemployed, deeply depressed, and drinking vodka out of 32-ounce water bottles. Every day, she rides the commuter train into Manhattan, pretending to have a job. She looks wistfully out the window at the passing houses of Westchester and the life she used to have. To be clear, Rachel, as played by Emily Blunt, is literally looking at the life she used to have. As it happens, the train route goes right past her old house, where she regularly spies on her ex-husband, Tom (Justin Theroux), and his new wife, Anna (Rebecca Ferguson). Rachel also keeps an eye on another house, a few doors down, where young newlyweds Megan (Haley Bennett) and Scott (Luke Evans) live a seemingly idyllic life. One fateful evening, an extremely drunk Rachel decides to disembark at her old stop. What happens next will be the nexus around which the rest of the movie revolves. The lives of all the principal players intersect, and by the next morning, young newlywed Megan has gone missing. What happened? Rachel doesn’t know. She was in an alcoholic blackout and her memories of the evening only surface in shards and splinters. Based on last summer’s iteration of that perennial pop-culture phenomenon, the mustread beach novel, The Girl on the Train is fundamentally trashy. Alas, it’s not even great trash; It’s OK trash, a story of lurid sex and bloodshed in the upper-class suburbs of New York—a voyeuristic, hard-R spin on a Lifetime Movie of the Week. The best thing in the movie by far is Blunt’s intensely vulnerable lead performance. She’s onscreen virtually the entire time, often in extreme close-ups that reveal the ravages of Rachel’s despair and severe alcoholism. Blunt is fearless, and she provides a core of emotional authenticity that serves as the film’s center of gravity. Director Tate Taylor (The Help), working from a script by Erin Cressida Wilson, employs a nonlinear narrative style, toggling between past and present. Puzzle pieces fall into place as the spiral accelerates and the film’s central mystery is resolved. Taylor employs some suspect visual strategies to evoke Rachel’s alcoholic delirium. The camera stumbles along with her, the focus goes in and out, and stuttering time signatures suggest the weird perceptual glitches of a
drunken blackout. These flourishes are too self-conscious to be effective, but the movie’s real problem lies with the characters. Blunt earns our empathy through the raw force of her performance, but Rachel is a half-drawn figure, and the rest of the characters are barely sketched. They’re like forward-facing cardboard cutouts, arranged along the linear track of the story, carefully placed to serve the murder-mystery plot. (Glenn McDonald) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 112 min.
THE ACCOUNTANT Suspense and problem-solving mixed with a dash of hopeless romance and a pinch of dysfunctional family history are the staples that sustain The Accountant, yet it’s the strength of the main character that makes us grade this cinematic achievement with approval. Far from sad Batman or cocky Daredevil, this Ben Affleck hero has something that’s more real: a spot on the autism spectrum. As Christian Wolff, we see handsome Ben in another light, and through him, we get a brighter spot on men and women diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome. Nothing like Rainman’s Raymond or Jerry Espenson from TV’s Boston Legal, our heretofore examples in entertainment, the Wolff character is complex and worthy of awe. He does not count toothpicks on the ground, but is a master of ledger books who gets recruited by mobsters, cartel kingpins and corporate overlords. The flashbacks to his childhood reveal both a well-meaning and sort of sadistic dad and a groundbreaking (perhaps fictionally effective) treatment approach that ostensibly helped him figure out how to overcome the condition’s characteristic symptoms such as difficulty or inability to express emotions or read social cues from others; repetitive, obsessive compulsion and a need for explicit order. While Affleck can typically rely on turning on the charm, here he’s got to suppress the dimpled, sly grin for an even thinner smile that he hardly ever gets to break out. The flat affect took some work, and it makes for some laugh-worthy moments among otherwise serious scenes. Sure, Affleck has to shoot a couple dudes in the head, but that’s just par for the action genre course. Rounding out the cast in her seemingly endless stream of supporting roles is Anna Kendrick (Pitch Perfect), who this time plays another accountant who breaks through to her fellow math geek just in time to get sucked into an unfolding drama. An intense performance by Cynthia AddaiRobinson (Star Trek Into Darkness), a Treasury
MOVIES
ok Keeping Up with the Joneses exists. Let that sink in. agent tasked with uncovering Wolff’s identity, nonetheless is essential for the plot tension. Wait and see if you can figure it out, too. (JAG) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 128 min.
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS Practically everyone is familiar with the story of The Beatles and their rise from the basement venues of Liverpool and Hamburg to unprecedented crowds of screaming fans. For those who weren’t there, however, what is left is a mere idea of what Beatle-Mania was truly like and an intellectual understanding of the insanity sans experience. Director Ron Howard (In the Heart of the Sea) provides an in-depth look into those early years of the band from 1963 to 1966, as well as their impact on the globe in The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-The Touring Years. Through found footage, hundreds of photographs, television/radio coverage and decades of sound bites and interviews, Howard weaves together one of the most intimate portraits of the Fab Four’s younger days that we’ve ever seen, and it doles out the feels in both jubilant and heartbreaking fashion. It’s a story that outwardly showcases
society’s sick obsession with fame or being famous, but that also examines the psychological toll taken on Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr in a riveting way. Certainly none of them were opposed to their fame at first, but as the years rolled by and the music creation began to play a secondary role to rabid curiosity and borderline psychotic fandom, we begin to understand why The Beatles eventually became studio hermits and ditched the live shows. Much of the real substance—or at least the consequence of fame—is saved for the final half hour, which is unfortunate despite the fun of watching four close friends take on the world. By the time we get to the famous Shea Stadium concert of ’66 (that’s the one that basically made ‘em quit), we can see exactly why they were burnt out, but Eight Days a Week doesn’t spend quite enough time focused on the actual impact their hectic existence had on their personal lives. It’s excellent to see how much they looked out for one another, and the soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold, but this one might not have major appeal to those who aren’t Beatle-maniacs or already know the tale. (Alex De Vore) CCA, 137 min., NR
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MIND BODY SPIRIT
Rob Brezsny
Week of November 2nd
ARIES (March 21-April 19) I am in awe of your headfirst, charge-forward, no-distractions approach. In fact, I aspire to incorporate more of the Aries-style directness into my own repertoire. But I also love it when, on rare occasions, you flirt with a more strategic perspective. It amuses me to see you experimenting with the power of secrets. Your wisdom often grows at an expedited rate when you get caught up in a web of intrigue that exposes you to dark joys and melodramatic lessons. During times like these, you feel fine about not having everything figured out, about not knowing the most straightforward route to your destination. You allow the riddles and enigmas to ferment as you bask in the voluptuous ambiance of the Great Mystery. Now is such a time.
level, but many do specialize in excessive politeness. (I should know, as I have three planets in Libra in my natal chart.) But in accordance with the astrological indicators, I am authorizing you to be a bit less courteous and solicitous than usual in the next two weeks. Don’t go overboard, of course. But allowing yourself some breathing room like this will help you get more rigorous access to your authentic, idiosyncratic, soulful urges—which will be very tonic.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) I am pleased to inform you that at least 30 percent of what you think you know about love and lust is too prosaic. Probably too narrow and constrained, as well. But here’s the good news: As soon as you agree to relinquish the dull certainty of that 30+ percent, you will open yourself to a surge of fresh teachings. And soon, I expect, dewy throbs and hot flows will awaken in all the erotic parts of your body, including your heart and brain and soul. If you’re brave enough to respond, generous lessons in intimacy will keep you entertained for weeks.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Until 2007, Scotland’s official slogan was “Scotland, the Best Small Country in the World.” Deciding that wasn’t sufficiently upbeat, the government spent $187,000 on a campaign to come up with something better. “Home of Golf” and “Home of Europe’s Fastest Growing Life Sciences Community” were among the proposed phrases that were rejected. The ultimate choice: “Welcome to Scotland.” I bring this to your attention, Scorpio, because you’re in a favorable phase to rebrand yourself. But I hope you will be more daring and imaginative than Scotland. How about “Smolderingly Alarmingly Brilliant”? Or maybe “Safely Risky and Unpredictably Wise” or “Home of the Best Secrets Ever”?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) I cheer you on as you attend to your difficult but holy duties. I send you my love as you summon the wisdom and resourcefulness you need to weather the gorgeous storm. Here are clues GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Over the last two decades, that might be useful: Whether you are partially or totally well-meaning Westerners have donated a profusion of victorious will depend as much on the attitude you hold clothes to low-income folks in Kenya, Uganda, and in your heart as on your outward behavior. Be grateful, Tanzania. Kind and magnanimous, right? Yes, but their never resentful, for the interesting challenges. Love your largesse has had an unintended consequence: the demise of the textile industry in those African countries. struggles for the new capacities they are building in you. With this as a cautionary tale, I’m asking you to take CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) The coming weeks constiinventory of your own acts of benevolence and charity. tute the harvest phase of your personal cycle. That means Are they having effects that you approve of? If not comyou have the pleasure of gathering in the ripe rewards pletely, how could you adjust the way you give your gifts that you have been cultivating since your last birthday. and bestow your blessings? But you also have the responsibility to answer and correct CANCER (June 21-July 22) Is it possible that you might for any carelessness you have allowed to affect your flourish as a topdog after all the work you’ve put in as an efforts during the previous eleven months. Don’t worry, underdog? Can you wean yourself from the worried fan- dear. My sense is that the goodies and successes far outnumber and overshadow the questionable decisions and tasy that you’ve got endless dues to pay, and then harfailures. You have ample reasons to celebrate. But I hope ness your imagination to expand your confidence and you won’t get so caught up in your rightful exaltation that build your clout? I believe you can. And in the coming weeks I will unleash a flood of prayers to the Goddess of you’ll neglect the therapeutic atonements. Holy Reversals, asking her to assist you. Now please AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Like England and Spain, repeat after me: “I am a creative force of nature. I am a the Netherlands has a royal family, including a king, strong song of liberation. I am a wise animal with direct queen, prince, and princesses. They’re an egalitarian access to my primal intelligence.” bunch. The young ones attend public schools, and the previous queen’s birthday is celebrated with a nationLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The next two weeks could be smooth, peaceful, and bland. Is that the experience you wide flea market. The king’s crown is attractive but quite economical. Its pearls are fake, and other “jewels” are want? Mild satisfactions, sweet boredom, and slow progress? There’s nothing wrong with any of that. Please made of glass, colored foil, and fish scales. In accordance with the astrological omens, I propose that you feel free to loll and loaf as you explore the healing create a regal but earthy headpiece for yourself. It’s high charms of laziness. Grant yourself permission to avoid time for you to elevate your self-worth in an amusing conflict and cultivate sunny self-protectiveness. This is and artful way. What fun and funky materials will you one of those times when silence and stasis are among use in your homemade crown? the best gifts you can give yourself. Welcome the rejuvenating power of emptiness! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) In her book, A Natural History of the Senses, Diane Ackerman reports on the eccentric VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It’s time to replace bangedup, dried-out old obsessions with ripe, juicy fascinations. methods that professional writers have used to galvanize their creative process. Poet Amy Lowell relaxed into her It’s your duty to phase out numbing traditions and work day by puffing on Manila cigars. Novelist Colette deadening habits so as to make room for exciting new rituals, customs, and sacraments. Can you summon the plucked fleas from her cat. T. S. Eliot’s poetry thrived electric willpower to shed influences that are technically when he had a head cold. Novelist George Sand liked to “correct” but lacking in soulfulness? I think you can. Do jump out of bed after making love and immediately begin writing. Novelist William Gass, who is still among the livyou love yourself enough to forswear pretty but ing, wanders around outside taking photos of “rusty, deremeaningless titillations? I think you do. Now get out lict, overlooked, downtrodden” places. As for D. H. there and do the hard work necessary to bring more Lawrence: climbing mulberry trees naked energized his serious fun into your life. Homework: Write an essay genius. What about you, Pisces? Now is an excellent time titled “What I Can Do to Be More Playful.” to draw intensely on your reliable sources of inspiration— LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Over the course of his or her as well as to seek new ones. life, the average British person says “Sorry” on over Homework: Compose a sincere prayer in which you ask 90,000 occasions. The typical Libran Brit probably for something you think you’re not supposed to. Testify utters routine apologies upwards of 120,000 times. at Freewillastrology.com. Libras from other countries may not reach that heady
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 at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 6 R O B B R E Z S N Y
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HITA was found living with her 4 kittens under a shed by an employee at a government agency in Santa Fe. She is a very sweet, affectionate, sociable and lovable kitty who will make a great addition to the right home. She is a beautiful girl with a medium-length coat and dilute calico markings. She has tested FIV+ but is otherwise healthy and deserves a loving home. HITA is just over a year old. City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281 MYSTIQUE is a pretty medium-hair tortie who was recently returned to Felines & Friends by her heartbroken owner who is no longer able to provide a stable for her. She is very affectionate and has lived with a small dog in the past. She loves attention and is playful. MYSTIQUE is approximately 2 years of age. City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mental- emotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. On Saturday, November 5th at 10:30 am we will hold our Autumn Ancestors Service to honor those who gave us life. Please join us. All are Welcome! The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Drop-ins welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com
12 STEP BUDDHIST MEDITATION, Journaling and Discussion Group Facilitated by Judith Bailie Thursdays starting November 3rd 6:00pm to 7:15pm A group for adults who want to learn to blend the critical thinking of both Buddhist and Christian traditions. Thubten Norbu Ling 1807 2nd Street #35. For more information call 505-577-4988.
SANTO NIÑO REGIONAL CATHOLIC SCHOOL Competing on a national stage. Our mission is to provide excellent elementary, academic education with a Catholic tradition for Pre-Pre K to 6th grade. Our committment is to education the whole child in a safe, service oriented environment. No transfer fee! Visit us at santoninoregional.org for more information or call 505-424-1766.
TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD. Get TESOL Certified & Teach English Anywhere. Earn an accredited TESOL Certificate and start teaching English in the USA and abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. Take this highly engaging & empowering course. Celebrating our 15th year. Next Course: Jan 22 - April 15. Contact John Kongsvik. 505204-4361. info@tesoltrainers. com www.tesoltrainers.com
EAST SIDE SANTA FE, FLEA MARKET Atalaya Elementary School 721 Camino Cabra, Nov. 05: 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM Rain or Shine. Flea Market/Rummage Sale to benefit students making significant progress in reading for the year. Join us! 35 vendor stalls; enjoy Ohori's coffee, Whoo's donuts, and Dr. Field Goods Kitchen food truck. 8:30am - 1:00 pm Parking next door at Rio Grande Elementary
Drop Your Card Here. Who fishes for your card in a bowl when you do that? Nobody. A business card ad in The Santa Fe Reporter gets results that will have you swimming in business. Purchase a “biz-card” sized ad in SFR’s classified pages.
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PROFESSIONAL RESEARCH PROJECT Get paid for your opinion! Participate in a focus group on Saturday, November 12 in Santa Fe. Receive a $175 Visa/MC gift card for participating. Please fill out survey to be considered: https://www.sur veymonkey.com/r/J2RK3RD THE BODHISATTVA'S GARLAND OF JEWELS Taught by Don Handrick Sundays, November 6, & 13 and December 4, 11 &18; Bodhisattvas are driven by deep compassion to attain enlightenment, the fully developed state in which they can benefit other beings most effectively. In this course we will examine a brief and lyrical text by Lama Atisha, the great Indian master who came to Tibet in the 11th century. Like a string of precious gems, Atisha's guidelines are to be worn like a beautiful garland by all those who wish to journey the path of full awakening. Thubten Norbu Ling 1807 2nd Street #35. For information email info@tnlsf.org.
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
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“European Trained” Cleaning Services • Residential/ Commercial • Bonded & Insured • Exceptional custom tailored cleaning services Safety, Value, Professionalism. • Pet Friendly We are Santa Fe’s certified • Extremely Dependable chimney and dryer vent • Reasonable Rates experts. New Mexico’s best • Serving Santa Fe & Surrounding areas value in chimney service; • Free estimates get a free video Chim-Scan with each fireplace cleaning. 505 660-4505 Baileyschimney.com. Call Bailey’s today 505-988-2771
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Spacious psychotherapy office, excellent location near Hospital. 3 days/week. $260/month. Includes heat and cleaning. Call Shanti Bannwart: 505-466-2705 Email: Shanticoach@aol.com
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO NO. D-101-PB-2016-00147 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF BYRD DELL OHNING, deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Shannon Bulman has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or sixty (60) days after the date of mailing or other delivery of this notice, whichever is later, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below or filed with the First Judicial District Court for the County of Santa Fe. DATED: October 20, 2016. Submitted by: BULMAN LAW, P.C. /S/Shannon Bulman By Shannon Bulman Post Office Box 6773 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502-6773 (505) 820-1014 Personal Representative FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO Case No. D-101-PB-2016-00164 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CARMEN G. PERT, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that First National Bank of Santa Fe, by and through its Trust Officer Susan Miller, has been appointed by the First Judicial District Court as personal representative of the Estate of Carmen G. Pert, deceased, whose address is c/o Sawtell, Wirth & Biedscheid, P.C., 708 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. Creditors of the estate must present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this notice or be forever barred. Dated: October 21, 2016 Respectfully submitted, SAWTELL, WIRTH & BIEDSCHEID, P.C. Attorneys for the Estate of Carmen G. Pert 708 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 (505) 988-1668 By /s/ Peter Wirth
Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grand Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501.Dated: 10/28/2016Julia R. Gomez, Peter H. Gomez 3201 Zafarano Dr., Suite C#273 Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-470-9551 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ANNA MARIE MADRID FLORES, DECEASED. CASE NO.: 2016-0169 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico. located at the following address: 102 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe NM, 87501. Dated October 21, 2016. Maxine Vigil 2762 Agua Fria St. Santa Fe NM, 87507 505-819-8540 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF SHEILA HOPE REASCHILD, Deceased. CASE NO.: 2016-0182 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 142 W. Palace Ave 3rd Floor, Santa Fe NM, 87501. Dated October 24, 2016. Paul Raedyn 3998 Southpointe Dr. Eugene, OR 97405 562-335-4000
Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, located at the following address: P.O. Box 1985, Santa Fe NM, 87504. Dated: September 6, 2016 Timothy Murray 6100 W Mansfield Ave #31 Denver, CO 80235 720-635-0749 First Judicial District Court State of New Mexico County of Santa Fe In the Matter of a Petition for a Change of Name of Joshua Steven Halbert. Case No.:D-101-CV-2016-02432 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, the Petitioner Joshua Steven Halbert will apply to the Honorable Francis Mathew, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex at Santa Fe, New Mexico at 10:15 a.m. on the 18th day of November, 2016 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Joshua Steven Halbert to Joshua Steven Von Hagel. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Victoria Neal, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Joshua Halbert Petitioner, Pro Se
LEGAL NOTICES ALL OTHERS
NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case Number: D-101- CV-2016- 00157 James Mantell STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case Number: D-101-CV- 2016-00157 Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. James Mantell,; JOHN DOES I-V, inclusive; JANE DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the abovenamed Defendants, if deceased, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this STATE OF NEW MEXICO matter with the power to sell, has STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT ordered me to sell the real property IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY (the “Property”) situated in Santa SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE Fe County, New Mexico, commonly IN THE MATTER OF THE OF LUGARDITA G. GOMEZ, known as 400 Griffin Street, Santa ESTATE OF JACKLYN HAVENS, Fe New Mexico 87501, and more DECEASED. DECEASED. CASE NO.: 2016-0138 particularly described as follows: CASE NO.: 2015-0204 NOTICE TO CREDITORS 1 Timeshare interest(s) consisting NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN of 1 undivided one fifty-second NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as appointed personal representa- that the undersigned has been tenants in common in and to the appointed personal representa- below-described Condominium tive of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate tive of this estate. All persons Unit, together with a corresponding having claims against this estate undivided interest in the Common are required to present their are required to present their claims within two (2) months Furnishings which are appurtenant claims within two (2) months after the date of the first pubto such Condominium Unit, as well after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the as the recurring (i) exclusive right lication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. every calendar year to reserve, Claims must be presented either claims will be forever barred. use and occupy an Assigned Unit to the undersigned personal rep- Claims must be presented to of the same Unit Type described resentative at the address listed either the personal represenbelow within Villas de Santa Fe, a below, or filed with the Probate tative at the address listed Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) Court of Santa Fe, County, New below, or filed with the Probate exclusive right to use and enjoy 38
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the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) nonexclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the thencurrent Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as amended (the “Declaration”). The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 30, 2016, on the front steps of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, City of Santa Fe, County of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted to Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. (“Villas De Santa Fe”). Villas De Santa Fe was awarded a Default Judgment Decree of Foreclosure on September 7, 2016, in the principal sum of $3,019.07, plus attorney fees in the sum of $589.84 and attorney costs in the sum of $404.04 for a total amount of $4,012.95, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from September 22, 2016, until the property is sold at a Special Master’s Sale, plus costs of the Special Master’s Sale, including the Special Master’s fee in the amount of $212.50, plus any additional attorney fees and costs actually expended from the date of this Default Judgment until the date of the Special Master’s sale, plus those additional amounts, if any, which Plaintiff will be required to pay before termination of this action for property taxes, and insurance premiums, or any other cost of upkeep of the property of any sort. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Villas De Santa Fe, its attorneys, and the Special Master disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property, subject to 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, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE
CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. By: /s/ Robert A. Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417- 4113. NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case Number: No. D-101-CV-2016-00183 Robert B. Tsinnajinnie; Myrna Tsinnajinnie, STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case Number: No.D-101-CV-2016-00183 Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Robert B. Tsinnajinnie,; Myrna Tsinnajinnie,; JOHN DOES I-V, inclusive; JANE DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the abovenamed Defendants, if deceased, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE Please Take Notice that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the “Property”) situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, commonly known as 400 Griffin Street, Santa Fe New Mexico 87501, and more particularly described as follows: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current. Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”). Unit Number: 1204 Vacation Week Number: 43 Unit Type: 1 Bedroom Deluxe Initial Occupancy Year: 1999 Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Timeshare Interest The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 30, 2016, on the front steps of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, City of Santa Fe, County of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted to Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. (“Villas De
Santa Fe”). Villas De Santa Fe was awarded a Default Judgment Decree of Foreclosure on August 29, 2016, in the principal sum of $6,225.75, plus attorney fees in the sum of $321.00 and attorney costs in the sum of $452.87 for a total amount of $6,999.62, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from August 29, 2016, until the property is sold at a Special Master’s Sale, plus costs of the Special Master’s Sale, including the Special Master’s fee in the amount of $212.50, plus any additional attorney fees and costs actually expended from the date of this Default Judgment until the date of the Special Master’s sale, plus those additional amounts, if any, which Plaintiff will be required to pay before termination of this action for property taxes, and insurance premiums, or any other cost of upkeep of the property of any sort. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Villas De Santa Fe and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property, subject to 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, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. By: /s/ Robert A. Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417-4113
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICES ALL OTHERS NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case Number: No. D-101-CV-2016-00161 Samer Soufan STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case Number: No. D-101-CV-2016-00161 Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Samer Soufan,; JOHN DOES I-V, inclusive; JANE DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the abovenamed Defendants, if deceased, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the “Property”) situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, commonly known as 400 Griffin Street, Santa Fe New Mexico 87501, and more particularly described as follows: An undivided 10000/263000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 2119, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Units), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, A Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, A Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”). The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 30, 2016, on the front steps of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, City of Santa Fe, County of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted to Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. (“Villas De Santa Fe”). Villas De
Santa Fe was awarded a Default Judgment Decree of Foreclosure on September 20, 2016, in the principal sum of $10,051.59, plus attorney fees in the sum of $589.84 and attorney costs in the sum of $667.04 for a total amount of $11,308.47, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from September 20, 2016, until the property is sold at a Special Master’s Sale, plus costs of the Special Master’s Sale, including the Special Master’s fee in the amount of $212.50, plus any additional attorney fees and costs actually expended from the date of this Default Judgment until the date of the Special Master’s sale, plus those additional amounts, if any, which Plaintiff will be required to pay before termination of this action for property taxes, and insurance premiums, or any other cost of upkeep of the property of any sort. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Villas De Santa Fe, its attorneys, and the Special Master disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property, subject to 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, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. By: /s/ ROBERT A. Doyle, Special Master P.O Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417-4113
named Defendants, if deceased, Defendant. Summons The State Of New Mexico To: Anita L. Lucero, 5828 Ashcroft Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55424. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice that 1. A lawsuit has been filed against you. A copy of the lawsuit is attached. The Court issued this Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) days from the date you are served with this Summons. (The date you are considered served with the Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is listed above. 3. You must file (in person or by mail) your written response with the Court. When you file your response, you must give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request one in writing and pay a jury fee. 6. If you need an interpreter, you must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You may contact the State Bar of New Mexico for help finding a lawyer at www.nmbar.org; 1-800- 876-6227; or 1-505- 797-6066. The Name And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona 85282, Phone: 505-242- 4198, Fax: 505-2424169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 12 day of January, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ Victoria Martinez Deputyy
Summons/D-101- CV-2016- 00061 Russell W. Meyer STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, Summons/D-101- CV-2016- 00061 225 Montezuma Avenue, Anita L. Lucero Santa Fe, NM 87501, STATE OF NEW MEXICO (505) 455-8250 COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST Case Number: D-101- CV-2016- 00061 JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, Judge: Francis J. Matthew 225 Montezuma Avenue, Villas De Santa Fe Santa Fe, NM 87501, Condominium Association, Inc. (505) 455-8250 Plaintiff, v. Russell W. Meyer; Case Number: D-101- CV-2016- 00061 Anita L. Lucero; John Does Judge: Francis J. Matthew Villas I-V, inclusive; Jane Does I-V, De Santa Fe Condominium inclusive; Black Corporations I-V, Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. inclusive; White Partnerships Russell W. Meyer; Anita L. I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs Lucero; John Does I-V, incluand Devisees of each of the sive; Jane Does I-V, inclusive; above-named Defendants, if Black Corporations I-V, includeceased, Defendant. Summons sive; White Partnerships I-V, The State Of New Mexico inclusive; Unknown Heirs and To: Russell W. Meyer, 5828 Devisees of each of the aboveAshcroft Avenue, Minneapolis,
Minnesota 55424. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice that 1. A lawsuit has been filed against you. A copy of the lawsuit is attached. The Court issued this Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) days from the date you are served with this Summons. (The date you are considered served with the Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is listed above. 3. You must file (in person or by mail) your written response with the Court. When you file your response, you must give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request one in writing and pay a jury fee. 6. If you need an interpreter, you must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You may contact the State Bar of New Mexico for help finding a lawyer at www.nmbar.org; 1-800- 876-6227; or 1-505- 797-6066. The Name And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona 85282, Phone: 505-242- 4198, Fax: 505-242- 4169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 12th day of January, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ Raisa Morales Deputy Summons/D-101- CV-2016- 00146 Beverly F. Cohen STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 455-8250 Case Number: D-101- CV-2016- 00146 Judge: Sarah Singleton Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Beverly F. Cohen; Natalie K. Shemonsky, as unmarried women, as Joint Tenants; John Does I-V, inclusive; Jane Does I-V, inclusive; Black Corporations I-V, inclusive; White Partnerships I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the abovenamed Defendants, if deceased, Defendant. Summons The State Of New Mexico To: Beverly F. Cohen, 484 Fairmount Avenue, Jamestown, New York 14701. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice that 1. A lawsuit has been filed against you. A copy
of the lawsuit is attached. The Court issued this Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) days from the date you are served with this Summons. (The date you are considered served with the Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is listed above. 3. You must file (in person or by mail) your written response with the Court. When you file your response, you must give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request one in writing and pay a jury fee. 6. If you need an interpreter, you must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You may contact the State Bar of New Mexico for help finding a lawyer at www.nmbar.org; 1-800- 876-6227; or 1-505- 797-6066. The Name And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona 85282, Phone: 505-242- 4198, Fax: 505-242- 4169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 20th day of January, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ Raisa Morales Deputy
issued this Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) days from the date you are served with this Summons. (The date you are considered served with the Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is listed above. 3. You must file (in person or by mail) your written response with the Court. When you file your response, you must give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request one in writing and pay a jury fee. 6. If you need an interpreter, you must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You may contact the State Bar of New Mexico for help finding a lawyer at www.nmbar.org; 1-800-876-6227; or 1-505-797-6066. The Name And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona 85282, Phone: 505-242-4198, Fax: 505-242-4169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 9th day of June, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ illegible Deputy
DID YOU KNOW
Summons/D-101-CV-2016-00070 Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer State Of New Mexico County Of Santa Fe First Judicial District Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 455-8250 Case Number: D-101-CV-2016-00070 Judge: Sarah Singleton Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Kathleen R. Osmon; Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer; John Does I-V, inclusive; Jane Does I-V, inclusive; Black Corporations I-V, inclusive; White Partnerships I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the abovenamed Defendants, if deceased, Defendant. Summons The State Of New Mexico To: Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer, 419 Bryn Mawr Drive SE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice that 1. A lawsuit has been filed against you. A copy of the lawsuit is attached. The Court SFREPORTER.COM
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