LOCAL NEWS
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OUR MOST FAMILIAR RIVER GAINS NEW LIFE IN A NEW BOOK FROM A LOCAL CONSERVATIONIST BY GWYNETH DOLAND,
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THOMAS VERNER SKAGGS
NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 46
This is My Century.
Opinion 5 News 6
Mobile Banking
7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 WHAT’S NEXT? 9
Immigrants contemplate how to survive a Trump presidency this side of the border YEARS IN THE MAKING 11
Santa Fe’s manufacturing sector grew by one job—so get your bespoke bicycles (and some beer too) Cover Story 12 A RIVER RUNS THROUGH US
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A new book features historic photographs and contemporary essays about the Rio Grande, the river that defines our region. Doesn’t that sound soothing? Oh please, we need something soothing right now
JASON S ORDAZ
MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200 SFR Picks 17 Graduates, journalists, fall fiber fun and Jono Manson The Calendar 19 Music 21 FUTURE TENSE
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DINING OUT TURKEY DAY
Doing dishes is for suckers Movies 31 SEED: THE UNTOLD STORY REVIEW
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LETTERS
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P R OV I D E R F O R D E LTA A N D U N I T E D C O N C O R D I A D E N TA L P L A N S • M O S T I N S U R A N C E S A C C E P T E D
35th Annual
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, NOVEMBER 9: “THIS GUY”
A MANIFESTO I vow to stick through and fight the good fight. Not be sickly, blindly optimistic but doggedly, intelligently revolutionary. I will not be the first contestant voted off the bad reality TV show we now live in. I will not sacrifice my freedom and dignity to comply with an evil leader. So let’s watch out, speak out, act out for each other as attempts to curtail freedoms of dissenters, outliers and “others” sneak or jump into our lives. My heart has been seriously broken too many times, I have picked up the pieces and glued it together like the Valentine your kindergartner made for you. My spirit has been slaughtered and I have recreated it as a delicious, hearty, sustaining stew. I have behaved badly and made mistakes each time I have been tested. But I have and will persevere, especially because I feel your love, strength and compassion with me. I am here for you. Be here for me. CLARE BONNIE BYRNE THORNTON VIA FACEBOOK
QUIT THE ADDICTIONS My inboxes are inundated with ”Stop Trump” messages. Good idea, if it’s not too late. But, apparently a lot of folks didn’t stop to think before they voted in this guy. So, let’s own it. How about if we STOP
the American addiction to consuming more stuff, and the obscene addiction to petroleum. We might also STOP wiping out our planet with garbage and weapon waste. And—oh yeah, if we’re stopping— how about STOP the global “drill baby drill” gigs and the dark affairs called war. What if we START over with kindness! SUSAN WATERMAN SANTA FE
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ARROGANCE OF THE PRESS Your publication has mocked and vilified Donald Trump for a long time now. The Republicans did the same to your favorite presidential candidate as well. It was to be expected in a national campaign. I doubt that the attitude of the liberal press will change from vindictive in the next four years. Please consider the possibility of taking the courageous stand of demonstrating fairness and objectivity by moving toward political cooperation and reconciliation in the years ahead. To pretend that half of the voting population is wrong and you represent what is right is embarrassingly arrogant. Let’s embrace the coming changes and heal the abyss. Thanks for considering this possibility. ROBERT DRYDEN SANTA FE COUNTY
SILVER LININGS? Now that the unthinkable has happened, I am seeking a few things to be hopeful about in a Trump presidency. First, I remember that before he became a Republican and Christian and conservative recently, he was just a playboy Democrat businessman. Hopefully he prefers that he, his family and his buildings survive, abovesea-level, in a world of clean air, water and livable climate. I hope he will walk back CONTINUED ON PAGE 7
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SOME ARE SAD AND/OR ANGRY ABOUT THE ELECTION ... And some are gloating.
SURVIVOR STARTS ITS 33RD SEASON Under new constitutional rules, the winner goes straight to Congress.
US SEN. TOM UDALL CONSIDERING A RUN FOR NM GOV Hell, at this point we’d take the Survivor winner.
EVERYBODY HATES THE MEDIA Your moms seem to like it.
PBS JOURNALIST GWEN IFILL DIES No joke—she was a champion.
MAYOR GONZALES USES FUZZY MATH TO PROPOSE TAX ON SUGARY DRINKS And this just in from the City Hall press office: He wrote Obama a letter about DAPL, too.
SUPERMOON WON’T RETURN UNTIL 2034 By that time, maybe Santa Fe will have enough affordable housing.
Read it on SFReporter.com TRUMP PROTESTERS TO BE RELEASED FROM JAIL Supporters of the protest raised bail money to help three people police arrested, but at least one of the guys is facing some pretty serious charges for allegedly causing a cop to fall down some stairs.
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BAD NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO LIKE SUGARY DRINKS A proposed new tax on sweetened drinks would allegedly raise $10.6 million toward early education in Santa Fe, but officials are short on details of how it would work.
LETTERS much of his pro-gun, anti-abortion, jailHillary, anti-immigrant, conservative-court bluster. Mainly, I hope he will take responsibility for the white supremacist sentiment he has encouraged, and publicly work to reverse it. Second, when this self-proclaimed genius is confronted with other powerful egos in the GOP I hope he will say, “To Hell with you all.” As Barry Goldwater said in 1994, “Politics and governing demand compromise. But these Christians believe they are acting in the name of God, so they can’t and won’t compromise. I know, I’ve tried to deal with them.” Finally, being in the driver’s seat has got to be a sobering experience. His extra-long meeting with President Obama tells me he’s probably serious and humbled (if a guy like that could ever be humbled) by the task before him. JIM TERR LAS VEGAS, NM
NEWS, NOVEMBER 9:
won. Leftists lost because of who they are: morally bankrupt, and we have had enough. BETTYANN CRADDOCK SANTA FE
BURNIN’ DEMOCRACY I understand that the piece was written before the demographic information came in, but now that it has, can you print a retraction? Clinton won roughly the same percentage of women voters as Obama did in 2012. Women clearly didn’t like Clinton enough to vote for her just because she was a woman. Does that mean that women are sexist against their own gender? Sure, more men voted for Trump, but the percentage difference was about on the level of the 2004 elections—two white men against each other. Sexism played a part in this election, there’s no doubt, but it’s not the reason Clinton lost. Instead of blaming people (and identity politics), maybe now we can concede that she was a terrible candidate and (hopefully) build a better democracy—after this one burns to the ground under Trump, of course.
You could not be more wrong about why Trump won. Your excuses are but more of the same problem. Tired of PC nonsense spun as reasoning from wrinkly feminists stuck in the ’90s, from greedy race hustlers stuck in the ’60s, and the perpetually butthurt college set stuck in ethically filthied diapers, the American electorate finally rejected your ideology for actual CHANGE. So stick that in your Berkenstinkers and smoke it. Sick of being called racist bigot and homophobe, misogynist, xenophobe and looked down on by people who think they are better than us, blue-collar, common-sense America rejected Hillary and the left including the media in a spanking that resonates around the globe. You woke up to a whole new world on Wednesday, November 9. In this uncharted territory, where a map of the electorate by county painted the nation red for Trump, tired, worn out, irrelevant leftists are all done here. You jumped the shark over and over in arrogant entitlement to self-righteousness for too long, in this nation of tolerant, open hearted, generous and considerate family-oriented people. We
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NOPE, YOU’RE WRONG I would like to comment on your coverage of the election results. The notion that Americans rejected Clinton because she is a woman is frankly childish, considering the fact that half of all white women rejected this woman as well. People rejected the establishment candidate because they want change, just like they did with Obama and were for the most part cheated out of it. It takes a special kind of dishonesty to pretend that Clinton’s loss had anything to do with her being a woman. People rejected the rampant corruption and dishonesty of career politicians and that is something that should be welcomed by the left that was cheated out of its own anti-establishment candidate. ALEXANDER JANZER SANTA FE SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake, editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “Before I was a drag queen, I was a clown.” —Overheard at Ecco Espresso & Gelato
Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM
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PASSION for DESIGN
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STEVEN HSIEH
NEWS
What’s Next?
For immigrants, fear and anxiety follow Trump’s election BY STEVE N H SI E H steven@ s fre p o r te r.co m
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he planned to apply two years ago, but her family had money issues. It took another three months to gather the paperwork: evidence that she arrived in the US before her 16th birthday and that she’s lived here continuously since 2007. Finally, on Friday morning, everything seemed ready to go for Jailene, an undocumented immigrant. But outside St. Bede’s Episcopal Church, where the Santa Fe Dreamers Project held its weekly legal clinic, she spoke through tears. The group advised her against processing an application for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a permit through a presidential order that shields eligible undocumented youth from deportation and gives them permission to work. Donald Trump, who promised to undo the program, had been elected president. “To be honest, I thought he could win,” Jailene, 18, told SFR. Her cousin is a political scientist, and the two talked about some of the rhetoric coming from Trump’s campaign. “There’s a lot of hate in this country.” Immigrants and advocates spent the week grappling with the reality of the looming Trump presidency. Lulled by media projections against the presidentelect’s favor, some were blindsided by his victory. Now, fears run rampant that with Congress on his side, the Republican will implement the policies he promised. On the campaign trail, Trump vowed to build a wall on the US-Mexico border, withhold federal funding from so-called sanctuary cities and deport millions of undocumented immigrants. He launched his campaign with a speech calling Mexican immigrants rapists and drug dealers. “A lot of people have been reaching out. We don’t have a ton to tell them,” said Allegra Love, an attorney who is director of Santa Fe Dreamers Project, an organization that has processed more than 800 deferred action filings since last spring.
Love said she’s uncertain whether Trump would honor an agreement that blocks DACA administrators from sharing information with deportation authorities. “We have no sense of what the risk is going to be,” Love said from her office two days after election night. “Of course I am always going to err on the side of my client’s safety from deportation. But I also don’t want them to be missing the window of opportunity they have to be documenting themselves.” Lizdebeth Carrasco, a DACA recipient who works for the Albuquerque-based New Mexico Immigration Law Center, told SFR, ”We weren’t prepared. We didn’t expect this to be the result we had to deal with.” The Immigration Law Center is not recommending first-time DACA applicants file for deferred action. Trump’s immigration platform, particularly a threat to yank federal dollars from uncooperative cities, also poses tough questions for Santa Fe City and county officials. City councilors passed a resolution in 1999 prohibiting the use of municipal resources to “identify or apprehend any non-citizen resident solely on the basis of immigration status, unless otherwise lawfully required to do so.” Santa Fe County, which runs the region’s largest jail, also put in place protections for undocumented immigrants, declining to honor requests from ICE to hold immigrants suspected of crimes. Mayor Javier Gonzales on Monday issued a statement saying, “We proudly stand by our policy of human rights for all immigrants. It has benefitted our people, made us a safer, more cooperative community, and strengthened our economy, and we have no intention to reverse course or be bullied into abandoning our values.” As for the threat of losing federal funds for projects, like roads and affordable housing, Gonzales vowed to keep up the fight. His announcement followed similar statements from mayors in major cities, including America’s three largest metro areas—New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. By press time, Santa Fe County spokeswoman Kristine Mihelcic did not respond to SFR’s request for comment. On top of legal ramifications, Trump’s election took an emotional toll on members of Santa Fe’s immigrant community. “There is a lot of fear,” said Roxanna Melendez, a coordinator for Nuestro Jornada, a Gerard’s House program that provides trauma counseling for immigrant
Protesters took to the streets in Santa Fe after the election.
children. “I’ve been hearing kids asking, ‘Is he going to deport everybody? What’s going to happen to my mom since she doesn’t have any legal documents?’” Trump’s election has also mobilized activists and advocates to band together. The SouthWest Organizing Project, a longstanding activist group in Albuquerque, sent an email to its members two days after the election: “We will continue to: resist attacks and hurtful policies and laws; defend our cultures, our mother earth and comunidades; articulate our experiences and our histories; heal and organize ourselves; and transform our realities.” Love, of the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, told SFR, “We had this guy elected president and everyone feels helpless. I’m in a position where I’m not helpless. I have all these things I can do to immediately start resisting and immediately start organizing.” Her organization saw a surge of donations last week. In a Sunday interview with 60 Minutes, Trump seemed to hedge on some of his promises. Rather than moving to deport 11 million undocumented immigrants, he said, he would start by targeting 2 to 3 million who have “criminal records.” A report by the Washington Post found that Trump likely got his figure from a Department of Homeland Security report that there are 1.9 million “removable criminal aliens,” including permanent residents and people on temporary visas. Other signs belie the idea that Trump is softening. For instance, his shortlist for Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, the cabinet-level agency that oversees deportations, includes Joe Arpaio, the ousted Arizona sheriff known for implementing aggressive profiling policies. For his chief strategist, he tapped former Breitbart director Steve Bannon, who ran a popular news site that often trafficked in white nationalism and conspiracy theories. Advocates noted that Trump’s deportation promises could be seen as a ramped-up version of the current administration’s policy. “What the next president is talking about doing, our current president has been doing for eight years,” said Hector Aveldano, an organizer with New Mexico Dreamers in Action. As of 2015, President Obama’s administration has deported a record 2.5 million undocumented immigrants. “We know the system better than the next president.” SFREPORTER.COM
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The C. G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe presents
Jung In the World
Community Forum with Panel
Donald Kalsched, Ph.D., Jungian analyst, Santa Fe Jerome Bernstein, M.A.P.C., NCPsyA., Jungian analyst, Santa Fe Jacqueline West, Ph.D., Jungian analyst, Santa Fe The State of Our Country: Where Have We Been and Where Might We Be Friday, November 18th
7-9pm
$10
2 CEUs
This evening, shortly after our national elections, we will gather to reflect. The three panelists will each offer psychologically informed ruminations on what they have culled from the spirited months that led up to this moment, and then open a conversation with those in attendance for further elaborations and dialogue. The opening comments will set the stage – weaving psychodynamic perspectives into observations of what has emerged from the multi-dimensional, multivalent world we live in, including how these processes have been impacting us individually.
Forum takes place at: Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe For details & information, call Jacqueline West, 505-984-0102 For expanded program details, go to www.santafejung.org
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Years in the Making
ELIZABETH MILLER
NEWS
O’Leary Built Bicycles has finally grown too big to live in Charlie O’Leary’s garage BY EL IZABE TH M I LLE R el i zab eth @ s fre p o r te r.co m
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hough he’s spent a decade building bike frames, Charlie O’Leary jokes he’s still just a student of the craft. But with an increasing interest in all things homegrown and handmade and a growing business nudging him along this year, he decided it was time to go all-in. At the end of an industrial park just a few blocks from Duel Brewing and Meow Wolf, he’s finally opened a storefront for O’Leary Built Bicycles. “Really, to become proficient at it, I think you have to be more full-time. It was hard to fit in time to work in the shop in the evenings and on the weekends,” he says, “and we needed the room for the equipment.” The bikes on display right inside the door aren’t just his builds. They’re his rides, as a little dust on the tires betrays. But where customers will spend most of their time isn’t at the front desk; it’s upstairs, on a sizer-bike, where they’ll ride for an hour or more on an adjustable stationary bike to fine-tune the fit estimated by a computer program. “It’s about finding the exact bicycle that you want and you can’t find it anywhere else, so you have it made,” O’Leary says. “That’s the appeal for the custom market.” He builds road bikes, mountain bikes and “roadsters” for blended uses, whether that’s commuting to work or gravel-grinding, with special interest in those riders whose too-tall or too-small bodies make it tough to ride an off-the-shelf bike. “There’s something very satisfying about taking steel tubes—an inanimate object, just sort of these basic building blocks—and then working with a client to talk about what they want to see in their next bicycle … and putting that all together after a couple of months and actually having a bicycle that you can ride and puts a smile on people’s faces,” he says. “While they’re very utilitarian and great for transportation and recreation, they can be toys—they’re big adult toys.” O’Leary is a lifelong cyclist, and grew up in the bike shop his parents owned in Albuquerque. For his 40th birthday, his wife sent him to a frame-building class in Oregon. He still has, and rides, that first frame. In his one-and-a-half person workshop (his wife joins him part-time), he assembles chromoly steel tubes by brazing them—using metals that melt at a lower temperature than the steel to join them, something of a lost art and a slower process than TIG welding, and one that, like the jersey for La Tierra Torture and a rider number from the 24 Hours of Moab bike races, speaks to an interest in doing things the hard way. Once assembled, frames are sanded then powder-coated—a volatile organic compoundfree process he sees as easier on the environment and
Charlie O’Leary is repainting—and still riding—the frame he built in bike school 10 years ago, an early step toward what’s now become O’Leary Built Bicycles.
more durable for the rider than paint. Some bikes day, Nov. 19, O’Leary has teamed up with one of that come in just to be re-done in one of about 400 colors movement’s flagships: the Outside Bike & Brew Festiavailable or, for one ambitious cyclist willing to tape val. Going into its fourth year (it will be held May 18his own pattern, in tri-color plaid. 21, 2017), the festival will be under new direction. “Handmade bikes are cool. They’re sexy. They’re Tim Fowler, a member of the Santa Fe Fat Tire Sociin,” says Don Walker, founder and director of the ety (and owner of the aforementioned plaid bike) who North American Handmade Bihas been involved with Bike & cycle Show. Brew as a ride leader, course The three-day show saw 6,500 developer and volunteer copaid attendees at its annual trade ordinator, takes the helm this show in California earlier this year. The event will serve as a While they’re year. That’s up from 700 attendees fundraiser for the nascent nonin 2005. Exhibitors at that trade profit Velo New Mexico that very utilitarian show range from the mild to the Fowler is founding to promote wild—including one who has craftand increase opportunities for and great for ed tribute bikes for Evil Dead and bicycling in the state. Purple Rain. “My interest is emphasiztransportation and “Anybody can go into their loing the cycling side of the event cal bike shop and plop down anyrecreation, [bikes] and to have it have that greater where from $400 to $5,000 on a purpose behind it rather than can be toys—they’re bike, but that doesn’t necessarily just a great party—and I mean, make you an individual,” Walker I’m all for really great parties. big adult toys. says. He spots riders, usually about That’s not a bad thing,” Fowler five to seven years into the game, says. “I just want there to be - Charlie O’Leary, founder deciding to spring for something something more behind it.” of O’Leary Built Bicycles “a little more me.” Outside magazine will re“That’s when they start really main the title sponsor for the turning to handmade builders, event, and the city and county, because they can get something which have previously helped that not only fits, but the color, finance the event, have also exthe paint scheme … can be completely seated to their pressed interest in its continuation. wants and desires, and that’s something that you can’t O’Leary had been involved in Bike & Brew in the really get out of your local bike shop,” Walker says. past, as had Duel, so they’re combining forces this In addition to bringing one more manufacturing week. On Thursday, Nov. 19, O’Leary Built Bicycles job to town, O’Leary Built Bicycles is a step in the di- (1156 Parkway Ave., Ste. B, 438-6121) hosts an open rection the city and county have been aiming for in house from 3-5 pm. Then the party moves to Duel building Santa Fe’s reputation as an outdoor sports Brewing (1228 Parkway Drive, Ste. D, 474-5301) from town. So it’s fitting that for an open house on Thurs- 5-7 pm.
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Our most familiar river gains new life in a new book from a local conservationist and UNM Press
I
BY GWYN E T H D O L A N D
ts course is the heartline of New Mexico, surging down from Colorado, tumbling through Taos Canyon and swelling at the ancient confluence of rivers in Española before pooling in Cochiti Lake. Its flow is regulated, diverted and doled out in precise amounts between there and the shrinking shorelines of Elephant Butte, then trickling on to Texas. But the Rio Grande historically led a wilder life beyond our borders, back when steamships plied its wide waters at the mouth of the Gulf of Mexico. Rio: A Photographic Journey Down the Old Rio Grande (UNM Press) is a collection of essays and photographs edited by Santa Fe geographer and conservationist Melissa Savage. In it she has curated a moving collection of images that capture scenes of the river’s history in the lives of those who have depended on it. SFR: You first became interested in doing this project looking at photographs by Laura Gilpin. What about them inspired you? Savage: My impression was that Gilpin was interpreting the landscape through the people living by the side of the river. She published a book called The Rio Grande [in 1949], and that focused on cultures and landscape of the entire watershed and you could see from the photographs the relationship of the people in the valley with the waters. And I was very touched by that. How did you decide who would write the essays? All of the writers are long-term historians, history buffs and river rats who have been writing about this for decades. Estella Leopold is the daughter of Aldo Leopold, who had such an impact on conservation in New Mexico and all over. Estella became a hydrologist imbued with that same sense of the land. I think she’s 85 and she’s still active. The Rio Grande is her mother river. That’s sort of true of all of these writers.
HENRY B DUPONT
The landscape photos in here are stunning, with these grand vistas. Almost all have people in them. Photographs of the river without people are boring! Photos with people illustrate the struggle to live by the river, which was turbulent and difficult. There’s one Ansel Adams image in this book (“Dust Storm from North Bank of the Rio Grande”) and it Big Bend, Texas, ca. 1846-1847
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EDWARD S CURTIS
reminded me of the role Adams’ images played in introducing the natural wonders of the West to people on the coasts. That particular photograph is a big chunk of landscape, very austere, very forbidding and this tiny Mexican village nestled in the folds of the river. You can see how this little village had difficulty surviving. The river destroyed many villages like that. One chapter of Rio includes dramatic photos of flooding. We don’t see that these days. Well, at the moment we’re going through a dry period. The river often flows just over 300 CFS [cubic feet per second]. But there’s evidence that there were floods of 100,000 CFS and it’s possible there were floods of up to 200,000 CFS. That’s enormously bigger than the river that we see right now. But there have been really wet periods in the past, and that could happen again.
CREDIT
WILFRED DUDLEY SMITHERS
But we control the river so much now. No, not really. The first real dam is Cochiti—a dirt dam!—and there are a thousand miles of river above that. The next one is at Elephant Butte. People don’t give the Rio Grande enough credit. One of the things that also inspired me to do this book was a study that the Alliance for Rio Grande Heritage commissioned on people’s perceptions of the river, and the general perception was: We never think about it, we never go there and it’s embarrass-
TOP: Washing Wheat, San Juan Pueblo, ca. 1905; BOTTOM: Mexican Bridge Guard, Matamoros, Mexico, Rio Grande, ca. 1915
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There are many beautiful photo books of the river, but they’re all current, and I thought: Well, what about all that history? Those 400 years were pretty important.
Part of the book talks about trade along the rivers and there’s a great image of a steam train parked at Embudo, between Española and Taos. That was the Chile Line, which ran until 1941. But the era of train travel and freight in New Mexico was relatively short. It was very short. And you can see in the picture there wasn’t enough room for tracks at Embudo. There were towns and tracks that were just completely washed away. San Felipe built its little town on the mesa, away from flooding, because they knew, and then the Anglos came and built tracks along the river. The town moved down and it was utterly washed away. It was a short-lived lesson. Nobody builds trains along the river now. We do think of the river as somehow being tamed, but in fact it’s not. One of the outcomes of climate change is intensified natural events—hurricanes, flooding—and that’s also true here. We could get these enormous downbursts that cause intense flooding. We’re at increased risk. One of the things you notice in these pictures is how much of our agriculture has moved farther away from the river because of more sophisticated irrigation systems. How has that changed the character of the river? It’s changed the river enormously. Emlen Hall talks about how when the floodwaters went down, islands would appear and the Pueblo people would plant corn on the islands. They didn’t have to irrigate because the water table was so low and it worked! Assuming it didn’t flood again. But now the whole concept is diverting water away from the river. It has drained dry to its bed in a lot of places.
There are many great rivers on this planet and in this country. Compared to most of them, the Rio Grande isn’t particularly grand. What makes it so special? The Amazon is a really wet place, but this is a really dry place. This is the only water around for hundreds of miles, in many cases. We’ve been depending on it for all our agriculture, our drinking water, for ages. [Western explorer John Wesley] Powell did a map of the watersheds of the West, before we had all the technological tools we have now, and you see the watershed of the Rio Grande is huge. It starts in Colorado and goes all along the Texas-Mexico border. It encompasses an enormous area of land.
And it is a big part of the story of the West. And that is the book. It’s a photographic story of people’s interactions over 400 years. Part of the reason I wrote the book is because there are many beautiful photo books of the river, but they’re all current, and I thought: Well, what about all that history? Those 400 years were pretty important. In some ways it looks so different now. But you can go to one of those communities right on the river, say, Bernardo or San Antonio, and look out at something that could have been exactly the same 400 years ago when Pueblo people were hunting there, or when the Spanish missionaries were planting the first grapes there, or when Conrad Hilton’s father was building a hotel there. When we go to the Bosque del Apache, we stay in our cars and drive around and look at birds. We’ve got bottles of water in the car. Nobody walks down to the river. It’s really astonishing that we’ve separated ourselves so much. The river is the entire reason we’re all here. Discussion with editor Melissa Savage and contributor William deBuys 6 pm Thursday Nov. 17. Free. Collected Works Bookstore and Café, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226.
CREDIT
In her essay about river crossings, Rina Swentzell talks about how building bigger and better bridges makes people less and less aware of the river. I think we take those bridges for granted now. There are pictures of the river taking out bridges in Albuquerque up to the 1940s. All our technological advances tend to separate us from the natural world that we depend on but don’t pay attention to. Flooding is the invisible hand of the river that we don’t calculate.
Your chapter on “Los Insurrectos” captures images of conflict at the border. The country just elected a president who pledged to build a wall across this same border. It’s a hot international border and it’s going to stay that way. It was a very porous border and people crossed it all the time. In her essay, Norma Cantú talks about the “other” looking across the river at the other, how people on one side perceive the people on the other. I just love that first photograph, which a lot of people don’t get at first. The people of El Paso are strolling around with their parasols, watching a battle on the other side of the river. Bullets would occasionally whiz past them. That concept of the “other” is implicit in that picture and is perhaps much stronger today.
JW WYCKOFF
ing because it’s a little dirty river. But it’s not that! It’s a very powerful river capable of changing the landscape around it, even now.
Caught in quicksand at Ojito crossing of Rio Grande, Sandoval County, New Mexico, ca. 1932
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is Th ay! nd Mo
RIVER WHYLESS 12/16 • BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA 12/20 DAR WILLIAMS 1/7 • MARTIN SEXTON 1/11• AFRICA GUITAR SUMMIT 2/28 • MASTERS OF HAWAIIAN MUSIC 3/4 & 5 • DAKHABRAKHA 3/12 BELA & ABIGAIL 3/13 • BRIAN WILSON “PET SOUNDS” 5/18
STREET HOMELESS ANIMAL PROJECT Join SHAP for a fundraiser as we celebrate Community, Friendship, and have some plain, down-home FUN!
SPAGHETTI SOCIAL Saturday, November 19, 2016
OLD FASHIONED
Counter Culture Café: 930 Baca St #1, Santa Fe, NM 87505 5:30 – 8:30pm • $20.00 at the door
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NMSHAP.org • (505) 501-4933 16
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JASON S ORDAZ
BOOK/LECTURE JOURNALISM=HEROISM American journalists are feeling a tad shaken in the wake of the recent election, but this all gets put into perspective when we think about a writer like Mohammed Omer. The Palestinian journalist/ activist has reported on the events in Gaza for years and has written a book titled Shell-Shocked: On the Ground Under Israel’s Gaza Assault. Omer reads from his book and conducts an audience Q&A Wednesday night, a must-attend for anyone interested in world events and a reminder that there are still brave journalists out there on the front lines helping to make the world a better place by shining a light where it’s needed most. (Alex De Vore) Mohammed Omer Reading: 6:30 pm Wednesday Nov. 16. Free. Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-0439.
EVENT
ART OPENING
STRING THEORY The medium of fiber arts is one filled with skill and magic. Artists who work with fiber turn string into everything from giant installation pieces to woven sculptures, and the Española Fiber Arts Center’s Fall Fiber Fiesta brings a huge display of stunning fiber arts to Santa Fe. “The reason why this is such a great event is it’s the largest fiber event in Santa Fe,” says event coordinator Jill Battson. Such arts includes knitting, felting, weaving and more, and this huge display features clothing, rugs and place settings. “Everything is made by hand by Northern New Mexico artists, and a lot of the materials are sourced locally,” Battson tells SFR. (MER)
Fresh Experience New artists bring innovation to their graduating exhibit school’s foundry building—is 22 feet tall. The other, featured inside the exhibit, is about 10 feet tall and hangs from the ceiling over a 5-foot-square space covered in earth, creating a giant drawing tool. The pieces are inspired by Beams’ summertime adventures through the Southwestern desert to Marfa, Texas. “On the way back, what really inspired me was the vast emptiness,” he says. “The horizon is completely flat and occasionally you see these little geometric shapes appear out of nowhere and they change based on your relationship to them. … The inside piece reflects the outside piece, it is also supposed to give the viewer an experience.” Other graduating seniors present pin-up inspired paintings that confront identity and white privilege, illustrations that depict the capitalist corruption of Native ritual and photographs that may just make you look into the subject’s eyes twice. (Maria Egolf-Romero) FALL SENIOR GRADUATING EXHIBITION OPENING RECEPTION 6-8 pm Friday Nov 18. Free. Institute for American Indian Arts, 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2300
Fall Fiber Fiesta: 10 am-5 pm Saturday and Sunday Nov. 19 and 20. Free. Scottish Rite Temple, 463 Paseo de Peralta, 747-3577.
MUSIC CONSTANTS AND VARIABLES Oh hey—Jono Manson is back with a new album called The Slight Variations, and goddamn if this multi-faceted producer/ songwriter/musician isn’t prolific. So much so, in fact, that this is his second album in two years, a notable accomplishment considering how, before that, Manson spent nearly seven years as a hired gun. “I was busy writing and producing music for everyone under the sun,” he says. “I’m feeling happy that I’m back on track with my own creative process.” This means 12 tracks of soul-meets-rock goodness, the Manson you know (or should) and an exciting return to form. (ADV)
COURTESY THE ARTIST
The Fall Senior Graduating Exhibition at the Institute of American Indian Arts is the culmination of years of the featured students’ lives. The celebratory event displays the works of emerging sculptors and narrative painters ready to infuse the art world with fresh perspective. Charletta Yazzie is a graduating senior majoring in studio arts, and her portfolio is a partnership between two mediums. “My artwork is about me feeling connected to weaving,” she says. “I do paintings of weaving; I am trying to interpret putting my weaving onto canvas.” The Diné painter has been working on her senior series since last spring and plans to feature 10 works in the exhibit. Yazzie’s paintings feature geometric designs that have a three-dimensional element. “They are colorful and there is a narrative that goes along with them,” Yazzie tells SFR. “I will talk about the storyline. One painting is from my creation story.” Fellow studio arts major David Beams focused on sculpture and was recently named a SITE Scholar at SITE Santa Fe, a program that helps artists transition from student to professional. Beams’ larger work—a massive obelisk which resides outside, behind the
Jono Manson Album Release: 7 pm Monday Nov. 21. $10-$15. Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528.
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In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom is a lecture series on political, economic, environmental, and human rights issues featuring social justice activists, writers, journalists, and scholars discussing critical topics of our day.
ANDREW BACEVICH with
MARILYN B. YOUNG
WEDNESDAY 7 DECEMBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER In the twenty-first century, the prerequisites of freedom, abundance, and security are changing. Geopolitically, Asia is eclipsing in importance all other regions apart perhaps from North America itself. The emerging problem set—coping with the effects of climate change, for example—is global and will require a global response. . . . The War for the Greater Middle East becomes a diversion that Americans can ill afford. — From America’s War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History © 2016
Andrew Bacevich is a retired professor of history and international relations at Boston University. He is a graduate of the US Military Academy and received his PhD in American diplomatic history from Princeton University. He served as a commissioned officer in the United States Army for 23 years. He is the author of numerous books, among them The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism, The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War, Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country, and the recently released America’s War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
ticketssantafe.org or call 505.988.1234 $6 general/$3 students and seniors with ID Video and audio recordings of Lannan events are available at:
www.lannan.org 18
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COURTESY ART.I.FACTORY
THE CALENDAR
WED/16 BOOKS/LECTURES BRAINPOWER & BROWN BAGS LECTURE: MATTHEW SAIONZ Fray Angélico Chavez History Library 120 Washington Ave., 476-5156 As part of the weekly lunchtime lecture series, Saionz discusses some of the earliest times in New Mexican history in a lecture titled “The 1837 Revolt: US Expansion and the Fracturing of Mexican New Mexico.” 5:30 pm, free DHARMA TALK: SEAN MURPHY Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week's talk is presented by Murphy, a Zen practitioner, and begins with 15 minutes of silent meditation. 5:30 pm, free GEORGE MILLER: SAVE A PLACE FOR WILDLIFE Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 467-9025 Human housing disrupts the complex web of life from soil, to microorganisms to bees. Miller speaks about landscaping with purpose and using native plants to repair habitats to their natural and ideal states. Make your thumb a little greener with pointers from the gardening master. 6:30 pm, free ELIZABETH COHEN VAN PELT Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 704 Camino Lejo, 982-4636 Van Pelt discusses the life of Lori Arviso Alvord—who became the first Navajo woman surgeon by combining traditional healing techniques with Western medicine—and reads from autobiography titled The Scalpel and the Silver Bear. 1:30 pm, free MOHAMMED OMER: SHELL-SHOCKED Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-0439 The Palestinian human rights journalist has written accounts of the Israeli assault on Gaza that occurred in July 2014 and documents his experience in his book, Shell-Shocked. He reads from the book and shares those life-changing experiences with the audience at this event (see SFR Picks, page 17). 6:30 pm, free
Hans Harland-Hue’s “New Kowloon City” is on view at ART.i.factory as part of Big Ideas, opening Saturday Nov. 19. SUSAN TWEIT AND DEBORAH MAGID Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The Women's International Study Center presents an evening with two artists currently participating in a month-long fellowship with the center. Tweit is a biologist who began her career studying wildfires and grizzly bear habitats and currently writes books about nature. Magid is a playwright, composer and lyricist whose works have been seen around the world and include dramas and comedies. 6 pm, free
EVENTS
FOOD
MUSIC
GEEKS WHO DRINK The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Enjoy a Rosalita (a pink margarita) and test your trivia skills against others. Bring friends, it's a team effort. 8 pm, 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. And it happens in George RR Martin's theater. Nerd out folks, nerd out. 6 pm, free
NMSA SUMMER DANCE SCHOLARSHIPS FUNDRAISER Fire & Hops 222 N Guadalupe St., 954-1635 The New Mexico School for the Arts Summer Dance Scholarships Fund provides funding for programs to enrich student skill building in dance programs across the country. These programs provide vital discipline, exposure, and experiences for our youth. Fire & Hops donates a portion of their proceeds to help build the fund to provide these valuable opportunities to children. 5 pm, free
COUNTRY NIGHT WITH JMA & HARD LIVING Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Insert generic country music joke here. Naw, but furreal this is supposed to be good. 7:30 pm, $8 CS ROCKSHOW La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Don Curry, Pete Springer and Ron Crowder perform live rock 'n' roll classics and covers that may have you singing along with the band. 7:30 pm, free
IRENE ADAMS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Americana tunes with powerful vocals from a solo gal who has a siren’s gift of sound, and you know what that means—that you’ll be lured to a watery grave. Haha! Homer jokes!. 8 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 An intimate solo performance of flamenco and classical guitar at the bar that serves delicious tapas-inspired cuisine. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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THE CALENDAR COURTESY TOROYMOI.COM
MEMBERS OF THE NEW MEXICO BACH SOCIETY Franz Vote, MUSIC DIRECTOR & CONDUCTOR Enrique Lamadrid AND Jack Loeffler, ORAL PROGRAM NOTES
PRESENT
Musical excerpts from the Hispanic folk play
“Los Pastores” with “Las Posadas”
and other Spanish and Hispanic Music of the Season SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2016 at 6 PM
Cristo Rey Catholic Church, 1120 Canyon Road in Santa Fe T I C K E T S : $40 and $30 via the Purchase Tickets page at:
www.nmperformingartssociety.org or call Hold My Ticket at: 877-466-3404.
Reserved seating. Reservations recommended. “Los Pastores” is partially sponsored by First National Bank of Santa Fe.
With additional underwriting from the UNM John Donald Robb Musical Trust, McCune Charitable Foundation, New Mexico Arts and the Santa Fe Arts Commission.
S TICKET AT START
$20!
nt, a “brillia rk Times is i k s v o Yo man ” – The New Ismail Lu larinetist c g n u o y fearless
THURS | NOVEMBER 17 • 7:30 PM
Lensic Presents
Sponsor: Thornburg Investment Management
NEW YORK GYPSY ALL STARS
The lush sounds of the Balkans meet American Jazz and Funk. SERVICE CHARGES APPLY AT ALL POINTS OF PURCHASE
Lensic.org | 505-988-1234
THE LENSIC IS A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION
Toro y Moi performs a funky synth-pop set at Meow Wolf Wednesday, Nov. 16 at 8 pm. KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano and vocal classics, pop and contemporary jazz originals are all in the repertiore Stephan performs. She plays nearly every night at the local eatery, which is the locale of her musical residency. 6:30 pm, free OPEN MIC WITH ESME OLIVIA Santa Fe Oxygen and Healing Bar 102 W San Francisco St., 690-2383 Bring your instruments to this space that welcomes all creative styles and be like, “I wrote this song when I was feeling sad.” Which, by the way, is the story of all songs. 7 pm, free TORO Y MOI Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Chaz Bundick has been making music since his teens and he is inspired by indie rock, French house music and ‘80s R&B, which play into his unique space-age funk sound. 8 pm, $28 TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master and he dazzles with his skills. 6 pm, free
THEATER NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: THE DEEP BLUE SEA Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Starring Helen McCroy as Hester Collyer, the play begins when her neighbors find her in the aftermath of a failed suicide attempt and the story of her tempestuous affair begins to emerge. Also starring Tom Burke, the drama is directed by Terence Rattigan. 7 pm, $22
EVENTS
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THU/17 BOOKS/LECTURES ARTIST AND CURATOR'S TALK: SOMETHING I NEED YOU TO KNOW Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Curator Niomi Fawn and artists participating in the exhibit speak about the work in the show 2:30 pm, free CHRIS J JOHNSON: & LUCKIER BOOK LAUNCH Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Celebrate the release of the poetry collection written by Meow Wolf member Chris Johnson in the Chimera Learning Center. 6:30 pm, $15 MELISSA SAVAGE Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Savage presents her book Rio: A Photographic Journey Down the Old Rio Grande, which features historical photographs of the American Southwest (see Cover Story, page 12). 6 pm, free
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: GREAT AMERICAN SMOKEOUT Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 The educational opportunity takes place in Jemez Room 6401. Participants provide information about cessation resources and the dangers of secondhand smoke. Noon, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 This is your chance to show off. Maybe invite your smartest friends to join. 8 pm, free MIX HITS A WALL Santa Fe Climbing Center 3008 Cielo Court, 986-8944 Mix up your Thursday schedule and socialize in the new climbing center! Sponsor YellCast is giving up to $1,000 in giveaways and door prizes. Enjoy pupusas from the Pupuseria El Saladoreño. 6 pm, free O’LEARY BUILT BICYCLES AND OUTSIDE BIKE & BREW FESTIVAL PARTY Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 Outside Bike & Brew Festival is just six months away and this party celebrates that and the opening of O’Leary Built Bicycles. Celebrate both entities with a beer from Duel Brewing (see News, page 11). 3-7 pm, free
MUSIC BOB CHEEVERS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Gypsy soul and rock. 8 pm, free CS ROCKSHOW La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 A lively performance of rock 'n' roll. 7:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
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BRANDON SODER
Future Tense
Future Scars comes out strong with debut EP BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
W
hen mathy rock quartet As In We went on hiatus, all kinds of Santa Feans—including yours truly—were basically like, “Aw, shit!” Haven Willis went off to focus on black metal, and we were left with three remaining members, who beame Future Scars. Three out of four members ain’t bad. Of course, the knee-jerk reaction from most— including yours truly—was something like, “What’s the damn difference?” Turns out, though, that we were wrong … mostly. Eliza Lutz, Gunnar Lyon and Ben Durfee’s similarly complex, though altogether more focused, project hearkens back to that As In We sound enough to remain familiar, they’re just a tad more risky. Or should I say they’re forging enough new ground as to prove they’re not in it to present the same old tricks? This is the question at the heart of Before, There Was Fear, Future Scars’ debut EP out on Lutz’ own imprint, Matron Records, on Nov. 17. Fear represents a healthy dose of what we’ve heard from these local musicians before, but it’s really just the tip of the iceberg for the band and adheres well to that old axiom about keeping them wanting more. Which isn’t to say the EP is lacking. At five songs, Future Scars still provides us more than plenty of full-lengths do, plus it’s jam-packed with explosive and catchy post-punk ballads comprised of melodies that sound almost like what could have been if the mathy emo movement of the midto-late ’90s hadn’t gone by the wayside; this is evolution, for the band members and for the Santa Fe scene, and it is excellent. Think of Fear like a brief yet ever-ramping overview of everything Future Scars can do—which can be a lot given that Lutz, who is the main songwriter, likes to dream up her own guitar tunings and chords.
Lutz has written more lyrics than in her As In We days, and the rhythm section adds dimension to everything they touch. This means there’s beauty to be found on tracks like “A Reason to Stay,” a midalbum number that begins with layers of dreamy guitar picking and minimal drum work unexpectedly akin to something like the outro of Weezer’s “Only In Dreams.” Lutz’ wordless crooning in the opening minutes and Durfee’s almost robotic technical drumming prowess Before, There Was Fear can be streamed at sfreporter.com right now. adds up to something entirely more emotional and complicated, however, like a song by Braid in its complexity, though original and new for Fear on Thursday. A strong contingent is clamorenough that we can’t quite liken it to anything else ing for a full-length release (whenever you’re ready, making waves right now. No, this isn’t the dawn of a guys)—it’ll probably just take some patience. But new kind of music, but it’s erratic and diverse enough believe me, it’s worth it. Given the fervor surrounding the band, the quality of the recorded material to be fresh, and one hell of a promising debut. Future Scars knows when to groove, too, like dur- could’ve fallen victim to over-hype, but Fear strikes ing the poppy finger-tapping guitar intro on titular the right tone between what we know of Future Scars track “Before, There Was Fear,” or when to go all-out already and what we were hoping for. As for the release show, Albuquerque heavylike on the heavy/dirty riffage and angsty shout-singing of “The hitters The Coma Recovery and Santa Fe’s Bodies Weight of What’s Left.” Thank- (with members of We Drew Lightning!) open the fully, Future Scars also knows the night and Future Scars will do what they do best— value of holding off during a build- remind everyone that Santa Fe fosters more than bar up just long enough that we’re dy- bands and solo Americana whiners. ing for the resolution; this keeps us thirsty for the next song time and time again; in many ways, the FUTURE SCARS ALBUM RELEASE WITH BODIES decision to release an EP first was AND THE COMA RECOVERY a smart choice. 7:30 pm Thursday Nov. 17. $7. Many will be hooked now and Skylight, 139 W San Francisco St., ready for more, which should 982-0775 mean big crowds at the release
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THE CALENDAR FUTURE SCARS EP RELEASE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Hear the epic rock trio perform songs from their newest album Before, There Was Fear (see Music, page 21) and head to sfreporter.com for the live stream. 7:30 pm, $7 KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Stephan plays jazz piano. 6:30 pm, free LATIN NIGHT WITH DJ DANY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 DJ Dany cues up all the bachta, cumbia and salsa your inner dancer desires. 9 pm, $7 LILLY PAD LOUNGE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Rebel Frog keeps the electronica pumping all night long. 10 pm, free NEW YORK GYPSY ALL-STARS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Traditional Balkan music meets jazz, funk and electronica. 7:30 pm, $20 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Malone plays guitar tunes. 6 pm, free PRESSURE BUSSPIPE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 The internationally recognized reggae artist is blessed with a smooth, melodic voice and an impressive innate writing ability that captures a story like no other. Celebrate his performance with $3 Red Stripes. 10 pm, free RIO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Bossa Nova, samba and Brazilian jazz. 7 pm, free SOL FIRE El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Pop rock with Latin influences. 8:30 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master. 6 pm, free
FRI/18 ART OPENINGS FALL REFLECTIONS: GROUP SHOW Casweck Gallery 713 Canyon Road, 988-2966 The group exhibit features works by Lorraine Alexander, Steven Boone, Michael Conner and more. Through Dec. 15. 5 pm, free
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GRADUATING SENIORS EXHIBITION Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2300 A presentation of works representing many mediums all made by the graduating class of 2016. See works by David Beams, Charletta Yazzie, Damian Price and more. Through Dec. 7 (see SFR Picks, page 17). 6-8 pm, free TIM KENNEY Drury Plaza Hotel 828 Paseo De Peralta, 424-2175 Kenney presents his latest series of landscape paintings inspired by the beauty of the natural world as part of his artist-in-residency program at the hotel. We didn’t know that was a thing, but it sounds cool to us. Through Nov. 29. 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES THE STATE OF OUR COUNTRY: WHERE HAVE WE BEEN AND WHERE WE MIGHT BE Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living 505 Camino de los Marquez, 983-5022 Donald Kalsched, a Jungian analyst, Jerome S Bernstein, an author and Jaqueline J West, a Jungian psychologist, lead the reflective discussion about the recent election and what it means for the future of our country as we all prepare for change. 7 pm, $10
EVENTS BLANC & ROUGE: A HOLIDAY BOTTLE SHOP Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 The pop-up shop features 10 Northern New Mexico wineries and 100 different vintages. The ticket price includes a glass for sampling and a complimentary tote bag. What makes a better present than vino? Nothing. And if you start your holiday shopping now, you may end up ahead of the game this year. 4 pm, $20
CASK STRENGTH RELEASE PARTY Santa Fe Spirits Distillery 7505 Mallard Way, Ste. 1, 467-8892 Celebrate the debut of Santa Fe Spirit's limited edition Colkegan cask strength single malt whiskey, which has an even higher proof than their regular stuff, with a visit to the distillery where you can bottle your own directly from the barrel at this special event. Whiskey geeks, this one's for you. 5 pm, free FALL FIBER FIESTA OPENING Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 The fourth annual show brings a broad range of traditional and contemporary handmade fiber artwork and this opening event features artists participating in the show and beer and wine refreshments. 5 pm, $10
MUSIC ALPHA CATS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 The cats put on a live jazz performance at the beer-packed venue. 6 pm, free BLAKE AND GROVES AND ZICKEY AND THE KONDOR The Kitchen Sink Recording Studio 528 Jose St., 699-4323 An evening of acoustic folk rock by two groups from Colorado. 7 pm, $20 CLAUDIA VILLELA Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 Villela was born in Brazil, she sings jazz mostly in Portuguese and is an accomplished pianist and composer. 7 pm, $25 CONNIE LONG AND FAST PATSY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Country tunes with a hint of rockabilly and blues. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a skilled repertoire of Broadway tunes on piano. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Enjoy a set of live piano by a guy with incomprable talent who’s been doing it up for more than three ecades. 6 pm, free KARAOKE WITH McLAIN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 You should know what karaoke is by now. And don’t forget to just stop with the whole Journey thing. It’s old. 8 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
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JENNIFER ESPERANZA
RADIO STA Hutton Broadcasting kills ArtBeat, but Kathryn Davis forges onward BY J O R DA N E D DY @jordaneddyart
H
“
ere’s who was going to be on the show,” says Kathryn Davis, pulling out a little blue calendar and flipping through its pages. “Next week, we had ViVo Contemporary and the photographer Jennifer Esperanza. Then there was the Santa Fe Art Institute, Creative Santa Fe and independent curator Niomi Fawn.” The art historian and radio personality is nursing a latte at Counter Culture Café, lamenting the end of her KVSF 101.5 show, ArtBeat. News of the cancellation spread by email and social media earlier this month, as Davis informed her guests and fans that Hutton Broadcasting had brought down the axe. “It hurts a lot, although all of my would-be guests have been so supportive,” says Davis. “Essentially, we cut off the voice for all these people. It feels like a step back into the Stone Age.” ArtBeat has been on the air since 2012, most recently holding a Thursday afternoon slot on KVSF, though Davis has been a prominent voice within Santa Fe’s art scene for much longer. She arrived in the City Different in 1985, and has seen the creative community here change considerably. Davis sees the cancellation as an opportunity to look back at Santa Fe’s successes and blind spots, and launch a new endeavor aimed at filling the gaps. Davis vividly remembers the 2012 phone call from Scott Hutton asking her to launch ArtBeat. She had hosted a series of 30-second spots about local art events on KLBU, and pitched a show to Hutton when his media company acquired the station in 2007. A few years later, he went for it. “I have these emails I found in my old files about telling Scott what I wanted to do,” Davis says. “My vision then was just as clear as it is now: Give these people a voice and expand the boundaries of the show.” She wanted to broadcast live from art events, and to produce video content as a digital extension of the radio show. The show was an underdog from the beginning, and Davis is grateful for Hutton’s support. “I never had a problem with the idea that we were going to talk about the visual arts on a non-visual medium,” Davis says. “I know that was a tough sell for a lot of account executives at Hutton. It was a tough sell for galleries, too, who would much rather spend thousands of dollars to have a full page ad in Art in America.” Davis felt some pushback from the radio community to some of her ideas for launching the show in the digital world. Video had already killed many a radio star, and she was among the partisan survivors of the format. Santa Fe’s art community fell in love with ArtBeat. She made sure to invite guests from all corners of the scene, from well-heeled gallery owners to the leaders of upstart art collectives. From Hutton’s
Kathryn Davis’ ArtBeat may be gone, but she’s got other projects in the pipeline.
headquarters off Airport Road, she chronicled the battles of a rapidly changing local culture and economy. It was an evolution that she’d been eagerly awaiting. Originally from California, Davis moved to Eugene, Oregon, in the early 1980s and worked as a dental hygienist. In 1985, she divorced her husband, packed up her blue Volkswagen Beetle and followed the “hippie trail” to the Southwest. “In the ’80s, the art scene here was hip and flashy,” she says. “We were all drinking and doing drugs, and getting smashed and killed in cars like TC Cannon.” Even then, when Santa Fe art dealer Elaine Horwitch was selling out shows by Fritz Scholder, the situation felt a bit precarious. “It was kind of haphazard, even though it was such a boom scene,” Davis says. “It seemed like it would never end, and we’ve all seen ghost towns based on that theory.” By the early 2000s, Davis had achieved an MA in art history from University of New Mexico and had taken a teaching job at College of Santa Fe. Armed with an expanded knowledge of art history, she was dismayed by Santa Fe’s languishing art world. “I just thought, ‘Why can’t I just shut up, start driving a taxi, and just give up on this whole thing?’” she says. “It just looked like a bunch of crap to me.” As projects such as the performing arts series High Mayhem and the art collective Meow Wolf started to spring up, she saw rays of hope. By the time ArtBeat went on air, a new contemporary art scene was blossoming. “It’s a new model now,” Davis tells SFR. “I don’t think it works, business-wise, the way the old model worked. People who do things according to the old
model don’t know how to function now: the city, the state, the tourism department, many galleries and museums. I feel like a millennial in that sense.” She’s taking a millennial approach to resolving the issue by launching a new project on a digital platform. Davis is currently in talks with a number of local art luminaries to launch a podcast, or a video series, or a Facebook Live show, or a social media news outlet, or a hybrid that incorporates all of her ideas. “I need help. This is a call to creatives who are already thinking, ‘You know, we really need a voice. How are we going to do this?’ I’m available. I’m ready,” says Davis. She carries with her a mission to connect new audiences with contemporary art and art history. “I thought I was going to be this museum curator, high above the fray. Thank god I was led in a different direction that has to do with being human and being creative,” she says. “I want to be the Sister Wendy of this generation, and have something to hand on to future generations to make art crazier and better and more inclusive. I want to teach weird art history.” Meanwhile, Hutton Broadcasting is preparing for the December launch of a new program called Art Fusion, to be hosted by Artisan owner Ron Whitmore and broadcast live from the art supply store. “We’re going in a different direction; we love Kathryn, she’s awesome. We just weren’t getting the traction we needed,” Hutton tells SFR. “Ron’s show will be very interactive, it will have a live audience, he’ll have painters live ‘onstage’ with him—he’s very connected, he’s very dialed in. ... I want to be supportive, I just have to fish where the fish are.”
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I’m a longtime fan—reader and listener—and part of the 47 percent of white women who did NOT vote for Donald Trump. To say I’m disappointed, horrified, scared, and mad about the election is woefully insufficient. I donated $100 to Planned Parenthood this morning because I honestly felt like there was nothing else I could do. That being said, I wanted to share that I had one of the most weirdly charged, hottest, and sexiest orgasms. A little buzzed (dealing with those election results) and sad, my boyfriend and I turned to each other for consolation. One thing led to another, and before I knew it, we were fucking as Trump came on the TV to give his acceptance speech. As that orange blowhard spewed more bullshit about being our president, I rode my boyfriend’s big, beautiful dick until I came. It was the perfect way to say, “Fuck this. Now fuck me.” I encourage all your readers to fuck out the stress from this election. Yes, we should donate and volunteer and speak up and protest and vote and not give up hope, but we should also keep doing it and taking care of each other. Because love trumps hate, and fucking trumps… well, I’m not sure what fucking trumps. But it sure makes life better. -Justifiably Unsettled Lass Intensely Emoting It’s important to practice good self-care in the wake of a traumatic event—the election qualifies as a traumatic event—and going by the definition of self-care at GoodTherapy.org, fucking the living shit out of someone qualifies as self-care: “Actions that an individual might take in order to reach optimal physical and mental health… Self-care [includes] activities that an individual engages in to relax or attain emotional well-being, such as meditating, journaling, or visiting a counselor.” They’re too polite over at GoodTherapy.org to include “fucking the shit out of someone” on their list of examples, JULIE, but what you did on election night—which just so happens to be the exact same thing I did on election night—certainly meets all the criteria. And if anyone out there who did the same on election night—fucked the shit out of someone—is feeling the least bit guilty, please know that millions of Americans did the exact same thing after 9/11. We used a different term to describe all that post-9/11 fucking: “terror-sex,” which New York magazine defined as “urgent, unguarded, end-of-the-world coitus inspired by that day’s sudden jolt of uncertainty and fear.” I want to thank you for writing, JULIE, and I want to second your recommendation: Sex, partnered or solo, makes life better—and people shouldn’t feel guilty about fucking someone else and/or fucking/jacking/dildo-ing themselves at this uncertain and fearful moment in our nation’s history. Yes, we must donate and volunteer and protest and vote, all while reminding ourselves daily that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. And we must commit to defending our friends, neighbors, and coworkers who are immigrants (documented or not), Muslims (American born, immigrants, or refugees), people of color, women seeking reproductive health care, trans men and women seeking safety, lesbian and gay men seeking to protect their families, and everyone and everything else Trump has threatened to harm, up to and including the planet we all live on. But we must make time for joy and pleasure and laughter and friends and food and art and music and sex. During the darkest days of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, when Republicans and religious conservatives controlled the federal government and were doing everything in their power to harm the sick and dying, queers organized and protested and volunteered and mourned. We also made music and theater and art. We took care of each other, and we danced and loved and fucked. Embracing joy and art
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and sex in the face of fear and uncertainty made us feel better—it kept us sane—and it had the added benefit of driving our enemies crazy. They couldn’t understand how we could be anything but miserable, given the challenges we faced— their greed, their indifference, their bigotry—but we created and experienced joy despite their hatred and despite this awful disease. We turned to each other—we turned to our lovers and friends and sometimes strangers—and said, “Fuck them. Now fuck me.” We didn’t eradicate HIV/AIDS, the disease that was sickening us then, but we fought it to a standstill and we may defeat it yet. The disease that now sickens our nation is different. We may never eradicate racism and sexism and hatred. But fight it we will. And don’t listen to anyone who tells you that music and dance and art and sex and joy are a distraction from the fight. They are a part of the fight. My boyfriend is undocumented. His sister married a US citizen and may receive a green card. We had hoped to someday do the same. But next year, the extreme right will control all three branches of the federal government. Deportation will surely come for my boyfriend. Additionally, we’re a gay couple, and Donald Trump has pledged to repeal marriage equality, if not ban it outright. So if we were to marry now, the timing would look suspicious. And even if we did marry, that marriage is likely to be invalidated in the coming years. Is it still worth it to try? What do I do if the government takes away the love of my life? -Keep Him Home You should marry your boyfriend immediately, KHH, and do so with confidence. “There is no realistic possibility that anyone’s marriage will be invalidated,” said Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights, which has taken marriage-rights cases to the US Supreme Court (and won). “The law is very strong that if a marriage is valid when entered, it cannot be invalidated by any subsequent change in the law. So people who are already married should not be concerned that their marriage can be taken away.” And Minter says the court is unlikely to overturn Obergefell, the decision that legalized samesex marriage across the country. “The doctrine of stare decisis—which means that courts generally will respect and follow their own prior rulings—is also very strong, and the Supreme Court very rarely overturns an important constitutional ruling so soon after issuing it,” said Minter. “Even the appointment of an anti-marriage-equality justice to replace Justice Scalia would not jeopardize the Supreme Court’s 2015 ruling on marriage equality, and the great majority of Americans still strongly support the freedom of same-sex couples to marry.” I’m heartsick about the election. Today I made a donation to Planned Parenthood. PP asked me if I wanted my donation to be in honor of anyone and noted they’ll send a card to that person to let them know I’ve donated in their name. Why yes, I thought, I’d like to make my donation in honor of Mike Pence, vice president-elect. Until January 20, his address is 4600 N Meridian St, Indianapolis, IN 46208. After January 20, his address will sadly be 1 Observatory Circle NW, Washington, DC 20008. If any of your readers are inclined to join me in honoring our VP-elect, they can donate at plannedparenthood.org. -Generous Investment Verifying Equality In addition to donating to Planned Parenthood— which everyone should do—please donate to the American Civil Liberties Union (aclu.org). Better yet, become a card-carrying member of the ACLU today. With Trump in the White House, and Republicans in control of both houses of Congress, freedom and decency need to lawyer the fuck up. On the Lovecast, Dr. Lori Brotto on asexuality: savagelovecast.com
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KINETIC FRIDAYS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Get kinetic and shake what your mama gave you to the dance beats. 10 pm, $7 LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Northern New Mexican polkas and chotes with Mexican ballads played on traditional instruments like the guitarrón. 7 pm, free SAXOPHONE QUARTET First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 Hear a repertoire of compositions by composers Brandon, Jones and Street played on powerful wind instruments. 5:30 pm, free STEPHEN PITTS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Rock ’n’ roll. 5 pm, free TEXAS TRASH AND THE TRAIN WRECKS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 This hard rock ensemble from Arizona performs their angsty rockin' songs. 10 pm, free THE GRUVE El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Authentic soul and R&B featuring covers of songs by Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Bruno Mars and more. 8:30 pm, $5 TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano jams and Italian hams (probably). 6 pm, free VANILLA POP The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Poppin' pop covers played with zany additions and improvisations. 10 pm, $10 YEASAYER Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 This progressive pop rock group is world-renowned for their sound—which includes electronica and dance music influences—and writing meaningful lyricism into their music. 8 pm, $30
THEATER ALMOST, MAINE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 The romantic comedy, written by John Cariani and directed by Janet Davidson, explores relationships in a series of nine vignettes starring JD Garfield, Debrianna Mansini, Robyn Rikoon and Hania Stocker. 7:30 pm, $20
AN ALMOST HOLY PICTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Written by Heather McDonald, the story follows a former minister as he realizes he is not satisfied by love or by God. The quirky one-character play stars Dan Friedman. 7 pm, $15 ALADDIN James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 The children’s theater ensemble presents a magic carpet ride of music, dance and fun as they perform Disney’s Arabian tale of true love and freedom. 7 pm, $10 TWELFTH NIGHT Greer Garson Theatre at Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6439 Guest Brian Gillespie directs the timeless Shakespearean comedy about love, loss and mistaken identity. 7 pm, $15
SAT/19 ART OPENINGS BIG IDEAS The ART.i.factory 930 Baca St., Ste. C, 982-5000 This group exhibit features works by over 20 artists, all of which are no larger than 12 square inches. See paintings, drawings, sculpture by Amy Johnson, Jeffery Schweitzer, Mark Westerberg and more. Through Jan. 28. 4-7 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES SHERI BRAUTIGAM: TEXTILE FIESTAS OF MEXICO Travel Bug Coffee Shop 839 Paseo de Peralta, 992-0418 Brautigam presents a slide show she compiled from her adventures to the most famous artisan celebrations in Mexico that highlight the bright and wonderful world of Mexican textiles and markets. 5 pm, free
MUSIC ANCESTOR GET DOWN Railyard Performance Center 1611 Paseo de Peralta, 9828309 You are the physical representatives on Earth for your ancestors. Celebrate them at this concert featuring Pangea and CSF Funk Ensemble. 8 pm, $10 CALI SHAW BAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Funky electric folk rock on a plethora of stringed instruments. 2 pm, free CHANGO The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Rock covers, y’all. 10 pm, $7 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Enjoy a set of live piano by Montgomery, who has some of the greatest piano-playing skills in the West. 6 pm, free GREG BUTERA AND THE GUNSELS Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Butera and his ensemble perform a sampling of Cajun honky-tonk and Americana tunes. 7 pm, free HALF-BROKE HORSES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Americana and country. 1 pm, free HANDEL'S MESSIAH Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 This annual performance stars soprano Devon Guthrie, mezzo Daryl Freedman, tenor Joshua Dennis and bass baritone Joseph Beutel directed by Linda Raney. 7 pm, $22-$80
DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Fancy flamenco footwork and tapas and stuff. !Olé! 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS EL MUSEO CULTURAL WINTER MARKET El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 Peruse the weekly market and see folk and tribal art, antiquities, jewelry and more. 8 am, free FALL FIBER FIESTA Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 The fourth annual show brings a range of traditional and contemporary fiber artwork (see SFR Picks, page 17). 10 am-5 pm, free
Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you. Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com Include all that good stuff about where it is and how much and what time. You guys are smart and know what to do. Submissions don’t guarantee inclusion.
For help, call Maria at 395-2910.
THE CALENDAR
THEATER ALMOST, MAINE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 This romantic comedy explores relationships in a series of nine vignettes starring JD Garfield, Debrianna Mansini, Robyn Rikoon and Hania Stocker. 7:30 pm, $20 ALADDIN James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 The children’s theater troupe presents a magic carpet ride of music, dance and fun as they perform Disney’s Arabian tale of true love and genies. 2 pm, $10 THE LITTLE PRINCE Armory for the Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 474-8400 A performance by children ages 6-19. The story is based on the book by Antonie de Saint-Exupéry. 2 pm, $8 TWELFTH NIGHT Greer Garson Theatre at Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6439 A timeless Shakespearean comedy about love, loss and mistaken identity. 7 pm, $15
with Jonah Romero
Denture Repair Clinic Lawrence Larragoite, D.D.S. Prosthodontics and General Dentistry
STEVEN HSIEH
JULIE TRUJILLO AND DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Trujillo and Geist perform a repertoire of Broadway hits. 6 pm, $2 PAT MALONE QUARTET El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Malone plays lead guitar in his namesake jazz quartet. 7:30 pm, free PIGMENT AND ST. RANGE: ROCK FOR FOOD The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 424-3333 The two rock bands play a special community-minded charitable event to feed the hungry in New Mexico benefiting the Food Depot. 6 pm, $5 SWING SOLIEL Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Gypsy jazz performed live by a foursome of local musicians, 6 pm, free THE BUS TAPES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Folk-rock songs performed by an ensemble led by powerful female vocals. Girl power? Hell yes. 8 pm, free THE PORTER DRAW Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Alt.country and Americana from Albuquerque. 7 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano. 6 pm, free
Jonah Romero, 13, is the highest-rated scholastic chess player in New Mexico. The local chess community believes he is the most promising player to come out of the state since, perhaps, grandmaster Jesse Kraai. On Sunday at Santa Fe Place Mall, he played 12 adults at once, winning 10 matches, losing one and tying another. SFR caught up with him moments after he secured his last checkmate. (Steven Hsieh) How do you feel right now? I feel pretty good. It was my first simul[taneous exhibition]. I mean, I wish I could have won them all, but you have to lose some. It’s pretty exhausting, but I think it’s more exhausting standing up this whole time. How did you get into chess? It was in third grade. I went to the chess club at my school. After that, my dad encouraged me to continue chess. I have been playing it for the past five years. It’s a really fun game. It takes a lot of hard work and strategy. And the feeling of winning is really rewarding.
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What are your hopes for the future? I hope to become a candidate master in December at the National Open in Las Vegas, and I hope to continue to grow in strength from then. You have to win five candidate master norms, so you would have to play at the level of master in five tournaments. Once you get those five candidate norms, you have to get above a rating. That’s when you become a candidate master.
SUN/20 BOOKS/LECTURES JOURNEYSANTAFE: JAMES JIMENEZ Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Jimenez is executive director of New Mexico Voices for Children and he speaks about policy changes in his lecture titled “Trump to Egolf: Electoral Consequences for New Mexico.” 11 am, free
EVENTS DINNER AND A MOVIE WITH RAAGA Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Watch the film A Passage To India before enjoying dinner prepared by the chef at Raaga. 4 pm, $40
FALL FIBER FIESTA Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 The fourth annual show brings a broad range of traditional and contemporary handmade fiber artwork. See quilting, felting, knitting and more at the event that showcases the magic that can be made with a needle and thread (see SFR Picks, page 17). 10 am-5 pm, free RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 See photography, jewelry, paintings and more all made by local artists. And ... we must remind you, the holidays are fast approaching. So, this may be the perfect opportunity to grab some gifts for your loved ones. 10 am-4 pm, free
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THE CALENDAR 2016 Holiday Jewelry Sales Silver & Turquoise Artisan Jewelry
FILM
MUSIC
SANTA FE JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL: CARVALHO'S JOURNEY Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 An adventure in the American West has an unlikely character taking center stage. Solomon Nunes Carvalho, a Sephardic Jew, travelled with famed explorer John Fremont and became one of the first photographers to document the West. This film tells his story. 3 pm, $15
ARC IRIS AND QAIS ESSAR Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Arc Iris explores the boundaries of pop music with digital influence and Bowie-esque performance art. Essar is a international artist and composer who carries on the tradition of Afghan instrumentation in his Afghan/Indian music. 8 pm, $15 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 JONO MANSON CD RELEASE CONCERT Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Manson celebrates and performs songs from his new album, The Slight Variations (see SFR Picks, page 17). 7 pm, $10-$15
MUSIC
Dec. 1 - 3rd • Dec. 8 - 10th 10am - 5pm
675 Harkle Rd. • Santa Fe
www.peyotebird.com EVFAC’S 4TH ANNUAL
FALL FIBER FIESTA NOVEMBER 18, 19 + 20 2016 SCOTTISH RITE TEMPLE - 463 PASEO DE PERALTA, SANTA FE
HANDMADE • LOCAL • FAMILY FRIENDLY
Friday, November 18 Artist Reception 5PM - 7PM | $10 Meet the artists, attend the silent auction, preview and purchase artwork ahead of the weekend crowd Vivác Winery • Two Sprout Farm • Cipriano Vigil Santa Fe Brewing Company
Saturday & Sunday, November 19 & 20 Sale & Demos 10AM - 5PM | FREE All-day sale and hands-on kids activities
evfac.org | 505-747-3577 26
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BROOMDUST CARAVAN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Enjoy the brisk weekend afternoon with juke joint honkytonk and biker bar rock 'n' roll at the venue with a full bar. Noon, free CACTUS SLIM AND THE GOATHEADS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 These guys from the East Mountains perform a set of boogie rock on the deck in the afternoon November sun. 2 pm, free DIANE PATTERSON FOR STANDING ROCK Studio 14 2860 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 467-9056 Patterson supports the efforts in Standing Rock with a live performance of folk rock and donates proceeds from her album sales to the protest. 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery’s piano playing is some serious stuff you guys— he is supremely talented and he shows off his key-rockin’ skills. 6 pm, free HANDEL'S MESSIAH Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 This annual performance stars soprano Devon Guthrie, mezzo Daryl Freedman, tenor Joshua Dennis and bass baritone Joseph Beutel directed by Linda Raney. 4 pm, $22-$80 THEO EASTWIND Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Eastwind plays a selection of folk rock songs to while away your Sunday evening. And he does it at the venue that offers any drink your mind could muster at their full bar. 8 pm, free
THEATER ALMOST, MAINE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 This romantic comedy, written by John Cariani and directed by Janet Davidson, explores relationships in a series of nine vignettes starring JD Garfield, Debrianna Mansini, Robyn Rikoon and Hania Stocker. 5 pm, $20
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.
ALADDIN James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 The children’s theater ensemble presents a magic carpet ride of music, dance, and fun as they perform Disney’s Arabian tale of true love and freedom. They can show you the world... shining, shimmering, splendid. 2 pm, $10 THE LITTLE PRINCE Armory for the Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 474-8400 A theatrical performance by children ages 6-19. The story is based on the book by Antonie de Saint-Exupéry. 2 pm, $8 TWELFTH NIGHT Greer Garson Theatre at Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6439 Guest Brian Gillespie directs the timeless Shakespearean comedy about love, loss and mistaken identity that plays out on the glorious stage at the university. 2 pm, $15
MON/21 BOOKS/LECTURES LYLE BALENQUAH Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Balenquah is an archaeologist and cultural consultant for the Hopi tribe. He presents a lecture titled "Hopi Traditions and Water: Where Does the River Go?" 6 pm, $12
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Stop by this downtown spot that has all the local brews your heart desires, and probably even more than that. Measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others while you enjoy your choice in a frosty pint glass. 7 pm, free
TUE/22 BOOKS/LECTURES MICHAEL T GAMBLE Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The author and tango aficionado reads from his mystery novel, Murder by Tango. 6 pm, free
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Get your sultry tango on at the dance party. 7:30 pm, $5
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Grab a drink and test your knowledge against others. Who's the brightest crayon in your friend-box? Invite them. They may help you on your quest to victory. 8 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. Make your Tuesday feel like a Friday and enjoy the festive event. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
Technocide Bouquet IL LUSTRATI O N S AN D STO RY BY A MY DAV I S
O
n one of my many walks through this most glitter-dusted, technicolor city, it occurred to me that something intangible was getting me down. That gnawing, omnipresent feeling you get when the party is long over and you are hanging around in the kitchen listening to the hum of the fridge. The pastel dawn is breaking and casting a cold and grim light into your head, your makeup takes on a sickly pallor, you look like hell and you feel worse. It might just be lack of electrolytes and that pineapple pizza at 3 am, but it might be something more. What do you do when you realize the fun has left the building? What do you do to regain your balance, your innocence? I say go on a killing spree! I decided then and there to commit technocide and, after a decade of likes and pokes I did it—I killed my Facebook. I promptly fell into a giddy, buzzy elation of sweet relief followed a few hours later by guilt-ridden angst and tummy-churning withdrawal. I am obviously a huge egomaniac and quite proud of this, but even lil’ vain ol’ moi had gotten energetically sapped. It’s a sticky dusty Pandora’s box and frankly, sometimes letting go is the right MO. With winter nudging us in the tuchus to bundle up, buy some crackly, sweet piñon and bask in the warm glow of farolitos over mouth-melting bowls of green chile stew, we must slow down and give and take strong hugs from friends without any thoughts of the digital blue thumbs-up. When winter fades us out, embrace color and florals and blossomy embellishments. It’s a sign that
even when it’s bleak outside you can warm up the scene with a reminder that this too will pass. Persephone will rise again, coaxing up verdant sprouting flowers and dewdrops galore. Rainbowwinged bugs and iridescent magpies ... the reminder of life budding, blooming, bursting and beautifully growing. Time to check out the lurid sexy flowers of winter, a deluge of excitement rattled the Autumn/Winter 2016-17 collections. A confetti of sequins and electro furs; puffy silhouettes of cotton candy pink, everything bursting with life—take that, Hades. Dolce & Gabbana really presented a botanical feast for the eyes. Set against a background of houndstooth (trust me, somehow it worked), the dynamic duo covered coats, dresses and blouses in juicy candy red apples, colorful budgies, fat roses, feathDress, shoes and hat by Dolce & Gabanna, Autumn/Winter 2016-17
ery peonies, elegant tulips, poppies and even teddy bears. I can say this is my favorite collection from these boys in 10 years bar-none. Not too costume-y, but completely wearable and a strangely beautiful balance between tailored stoic winter lines and puffy fantasy fleurs. It is absolute perfection, and everything you need to remedy winter’s solemn tone. But some of us want to look less serious, and for silly you (and me), GUCCI has served up delectable, toothrotting confections of pure goof, from a bubble gumpink puff fur to a menswear look complete with a flower power embroidered denim jacket avec playful red butterflies. From Fendi to Alexander McQueen to Vetements to Kenzo, everything is coming up roses this winter! Oceans of shimmer, petals, fuzz and, heck, life-affirming happy-fun fashion can be addictive without eating any lotuses. Let go of the idea that spring is for flowers and embrace the blossoms of winter. Replace the expectations of bitter cold and replace them with the daydreams of deep, sumptuous fragrance, rich electric shades and absolute shameless joie de vivre. Double Take (320 Aztec St., 989-8886) in Santa Fe is one of my bright spots on harsh winter days. They have everything from vintage cowboy couture to easy-on-the-wallet cashmere sweaters. From lollipop-colored Bakelite to silk scarves and sequined jackets, owner Suzanne Wissman has jam-packed the treasures into easy-to-find sections. In harmony with the sparkling, dazzling, shimmering light we have in winter at over 7,000 feet and the AW 2016-17 looks, I say go with sequins. There is nothing more exciting than jazzing up your snuggly flannel and snow boots with a sequin jacket. I snagged a gem for under $80 last jaunt in and it is so blindingly glamour-dusted that Jean Harlow would be jelly.
C H R I S T M A S T RE E L I G H T I N G R E C E PT I O N Friday, November 25, 5-7pm. On the Historic Plaza.
exclusively at Santa Fe Goldworks
60 East San Francisco Street | 505.983.4562 | SantaFeGoldworks.com SFREPORTER.COM
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NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
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THE CALENDAR MUSIC
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL! Make your reservations NOW! Menu will feature unlimited traditional Thanksgiving fare with a flare of Brazilian Churrasco meats including pork, lamb, various steaks, filet mignon and a full salad bar. Adults: $35.95, Children (6-12): $17.95, Children under 6 eat FREE!
505.780.5483 1005 South St. Francis Drive Santa Fe, New Mexico
omiragrill.com
Posa’s Our Famous
TURKEY TAMALES are back for the holidays
Turkey • Calabicitas Green Chile & Cheese
New Mexico’s #1 Tamale Makers Since 1955. Tamales Are Still Made The Original Way... By Hand.
Posa’s
Available by the dozen or the half
Posa’s ... A HOLIDAY TRADITION…
PLACE YOUR HOLIDAY TAMALE ORDERS EARLY!
15% OFF 15% OFF Any Catering order of $65 or more. One coupon per catering order. Cannot be used with any other Discounts or promotions. Must present coupon when ordering.
On total Restaurant order of $10 or more. One coupon per person, per order. Cannot be used with any other Discounts or promotions. Must present coupon when ordering. Excludes tamale or catering purchases.
Expires 12/31/16
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NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
Expires 12/31/16
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3538 ZAFARANO DR 473 -3 454
Mon-Sat 6 am to 9 pm / Sunday 7 am to 8 pm
1 51 4 RODEO ROAD 820-7672
Mon-Sat 6 am to 8 pm / Sunday 7 am to 6 pm
Stephan performs a solo set of classics, pop and contemporary jazz originals on the piano, accompanying herself with her out-of-this-world vocals. 6:30 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Malone plays a set of solo guitar tunes. 6 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Binkley is a piano-playing master and he dazzles with his skills nearly every night at his residential spot. 6 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.
MUSEUMS COURTESY MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS
Brazilian Style Grill
CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Bask in the greatness of community at this event that invites you to bring your favorite instrument and jam along with other blues-lovin' folks. 8:30 pm, free CASPER ALLEN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Allen performs a solo set of cosmic-Americana, begging you to get your head out of this world for a short while. 8 pm, free KATY STEPHAN Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966
Rick Bartow’s “From Nothing Coyote Creates Himself” is on view at the Museum of Contemporary Native Art as part of the long-term exhibit Things You Cannot Explain. 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. Continuum, Through May 2017. 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. 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
Dining Out Turkey Day BY GWYNETH DOLAND t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
A
fter Thanksgiving dinner my house looks like its been ransacked by thieves and I feel like I’ve been beaten with a drumstick. Sometimes dining out is the easiest, most pleasant idea. Santa Fe has an absolutely extraordinary number of dinners that will rival (or beat) home cooking. But make your reservations ASAP.
Restaurant Martín
526 Galisteo St., 820-0919 • Three-course menu, $75, noon-8 pm
Martin’s starters include butternut squash bisque with rosemary-lemon-glazed prawns. Mains include a maple-brined turkey with cornbread sausage stuffing, roasted garlic mashed potatoes, charred broccolini, butter yams and cranberry-apple chutney.
Osteria d’Assisi
Why cook at home?
Luminaria
Inn and Spa at Loretto, 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7915 Brunch, $45 w/ mimosa, 10 am-2 pm; Dinner $90 or $110 with wine pairings, 5-9 pm
Brunch choices include a turkey plate, crab eggs benedict or pumpkin waffles with ginger cream. Includes pastries and a mini dessert table. Dinner menu includes beef tenderloin, pan roasted sea bass or turkey and sides.
Tabla de los Santos
Hotel St. Francis, 210 Don Gaspar Ave., 983-5700 • Three-course menu, $70, 1-5 pm
Tabla’s dinner includes turkey with sage green chile sausage stuffing, rutabaga gratin and calabacitas. Other mains include prime rib, rainbow trout, lamb chops and a zucchini Napoleon.
The Compound
653 Canyon Road, 982-4353 • Three-course menu $85, 3-8 pm
Osteria’s Italian-accented meal features roasted turkey stuffed with fig, sausage and sage gravy. Alternatives include braised lamb shank, salmon in tomato pesto cream sauce, breaded eggplant or house-made seafood ravioli.
Starters include sweetbreads and foie gras, oxtail torteletti pasta, jumbo lump crab cake and smoked salmon. Mains include organic turkey with root vegetables Spanish chorizo stuffing, cranberry-orange relish and giblet gravy. Other choices include beef tenderloin, braised local lamb shank, pork tenderloin and wild mushroom polenta with black truffles.
Anasazi Restaurant
La Casa Sena
58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 • Four-course menu, $56, 1-9 pm
Inn of the Anasazi, 113 Washington Ave., 988-3236 • Three-course menu, $95 adults, $45 kids 12 and younger, noon-10 pm
Anasazi’s all-day meal includes things like a starter of sweet potato gnocchi with pear, celery root, Meyer lemon and crispy Brussels sprouts. Entrees center around the organic turkey with sausage stuffing and pan gravy, but you can also get filet of beef or a vegetarian ravioli with truffles.
Geronimo
724 Canyon Road, 982-1500 • 3-course prix fixe, $95
Geronimo’s turkey dinner includes a roasted brown butter, sage and maple-basted Amish turkey; yam custard with meringue; chestnut, apple, bacon and sausage dressing; amarena cherry and cranberry relish. There are eight other main course options.
125 E Palace Ave., 988-9232 • Three-course menu, $58, 2-8 pm
Starters include a roasted poblano soup with polenta truffles and red chile oil; mains include free range turkey with chorizo stuffing and rosemary mashed potatoes. Other options are korobuta pork chop and rack of lamb.
Coyote Café
132 W Water St., 983-1615 • Three-course menu, $100, 3-8 pm
The mains include one hell of a turkey plate: sage and brown-sugar-glazed organic turkey with Italian sausage bread pudding, cranberry and pear relish, pecan yams with toasted marshmallows, Brussels sprouts, Vichy carrots, green bean and mushroom casserole, potato creamers and giblet gravy.
La Plazuela
La Fonda Hotel, 100 E San Franciso St., 995-2334 Buffet $59 for adults, $49 for seniors and $24 for children, 11 am-3 pm
This ever-popular buffet includes old-fashioned favorites such as deviled eggs; turkey with giblet gravy and cranberry-orange relish; ham with red eye gravy, roast beef au jus and salmon with roasted shallot tarragon butter. The dessert buffet has regular old pumpkin pie and caramel apple pie.
Terra Restaurant
Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado, 198 State Road 592, 946-5800 • Buffet, $85 for adults, $40 for children ages 6-12, 11 am-7 pm
Terra puts a twist on everything, with a gnocchi and risotto station serving pumpkin gnocchi with pork belly and sage butter. Entrees include turkey with garlic roasted chestnuts and mole gravy; prickly pearglazed Virginia ham; salmon with fennel and blood oranges; prime rib with gravy and cranberry sauce.
The Old House Restaurant
Eldorado Hotel, 309 W San Francisco St., 995-4530 • Three-course brunch, $35, 10:30 am-2:30 pm; dinner, $95 including wine pairing, 5-9 pm
The brunch is affordable and accessible with shrimp cocktail, Caesar salad, eggs and bacon, chocolate chip waffles and smoked salmon eggs benedict alongside turkey with stuffing, sweet potato casserole, green beans and cranberry sauce. Dinner is more serious; the mains include turkey and sides, sea bass with lobster sauce or beef tenderloin.
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NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
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Thank You Voters! I am honored to be your next State Senator and look forward to working with you and for you to make our small towns and rural communities more vibrant.
ONE DELICIOUS GUIDE, TWO TEMPTING COVERS
RESTAURANT GUIDE 2016-201 7 2016 -201 7
RESTAURANT GUIDE
RESTAURANT GUIDE
Please don't hesitate to contact me at liz4nmsenate39@gmail.com or at 505/699-4808. E ANT GUID R E S TAU R SFR 2017
www.lizstefanics4newmexicosenate39.com Paid for by Friends of Liz Stefanics, Thomas A. Romero, Treasurer.
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INSID E THE BEST DINI NG IN THE CITY DIFF EREN T / 2016 -201 7
Hungry ?
SFR 2017 R E S TAU R ANT GUID E
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:
Word. A SANTA FE REPORTER AND CCA LITERARY EVENT Hear six readings from the winning works from SFR’s Annual Writing Contest. Plus, a selection from a novel by guest judge Anne Valente, author of Our Hearts Will Burn Us Down, plus shorts from Nickel Stories.
FREE 3-6 pm Saturday Dec. 3 CCA Muñoz Waxman Gallery, 1050 Old Pecos Trail
* 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
For the full schedule of events, visit
www.sfreporter.com/writingcontest 30
NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
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1
* 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.
yay!
SEED: The Untold Story Review: Beauty, Mystery, Danger All part of the unfolding story of seeds by julie ann gimm editor@sfreporter.com
“The diversity in our seed stock is as endangered as a panda or golden eagle or a polar bear right now,” ethnobotanist/foot soldier/seed bank advocate Gary Paul Nabhan says in SEED: The Untold Story, a new documentary that aims to prove that these kernels of
the link between plant and man, these doorways between last year’s death and next year’s life, are altogether beautiful and powerful. They require particular cooperation from their surroundings: freezing, fire, passing through the digestive system of an animal, the right mixture of warmth and water … then they are a bridge; reincarnation. Get up close with studio lighting of nature’s secret and sacred art that makes up some of the most remarkable footage in the documentary, sometimes in motion—corn tossed into the air or
SCORE CARD
ok
meh
barf
see it now
it’s ok, ok?!
rainy days only
avoid at all costs
yay! ok
the Cloud People for irrigation; meet neighbors in Hawaii who passed a law thwarting pesticide tests; hear from a woman in India whose education initiative is working against a plague of suicide and economic disruption brought on by seed patents; follow an American into the Amazon as he’s waist-deep in water to dig out a root he hopes could be a future food source. Watching this story should send you running for the kohlrabi and kissing your local farmer for his purple potatoes. Sure, there are far-reaching government policy decisions that are amplifying this problem (and others), but here is one small way one can plant the seeds of dissent—the possibilities are endless. Several screenings at the Jean Cocteau Cinema include a Q&A with director Siegel afterward. The opening night session on Nov. 16 also includes Emigdio Ballon, agricultural director of Tesuque Pueblo, who helped construct the first seed bank on Native American land just a few miles from the theater.
SEED: THE UNTOLD STORY Directed by Siegel and Betz Jean Cocteau Cinema, NR, 94 min.
SCREENER
yay!
ok
time-lapse footage of the lively sprout bursting from its case; sometimes still and silent—with color combinations and textures that captivate. Yet mechanized farming and the power of agriculture chemical corporations on global food production could be changing the ending to a cliffhanger about the story of seeds. Or, as goes the vision from directors Taggart Siegel and Jon Betz, grassroots movements of farmers and adventurers, social activists and traditional agriculture preservations will write more chapters in the book. While the documentary doesn’t dwell on doomsday, the bare facts are panic-inducing: how we’ve reduced 98 percent of the vegetable varieties once cultivated and the existence of an arctic shelter that is built to withstand apocalyptic disaster, for example. Siegel also produced Queen of the Sun: What Are The Bees Telling Us? and The Real Dirt on Farmer John and presents this third indictment of modern farming and food systems. Looking for more reasons to distrust Monsanto and its ilk? Tune in. But viewers also find reasons to shrug away at least some despair. Voices of Native people and women take center stage, along with others who are steady advocates. Walk along the cornfields with a Hopi farmer, remembering how to grow and plant the blue corn that arrives with only
LOOKING THROUGH A GLASS ONION: DECONSTRUCTING THE WHITE ALBUM “What we do learn is fascinating.” THE HANDMAIDEN “Keeps us guessing the whole damn time.” CHRISTINE
“Hall’s performance as the tortured journalist is enough to tug heartstrings and jerk tears.”
GIMME DANGER
yay!
“The Stooges’ impact on pop culture
yay!
THE ACCOUNTANT
and music is so important, so obvious and so ahead of its time.”
“Suspense and problem-solving mixed with a dash of hopeless romance.”
LOOKING THROUGH A GLASS ONION: DECONSTRUCTING THE WHITE ALBUM Composer Scott Freiman’s love for The Beatles runs so deep, he’s considered one of the world’s foremost Fab Four scholars (yes, scholar). Thus, with his new filmed lecture, Looking Through a Glass Onion: Deconstructing The White Album, Freiman channels his obsession into a full-blown academic affair, creating a blow-by-blow of the recording processes behind the band’s iconic 1968 self-titled album (known to most as The White Album)—also the best-selling record of the 1960s. Period. By the time recording began, John, Paul, George and Ringo rarely performed live and certainly didn’t tour, but what they did do was sequester themselves in the famous Abbey Road studio, perfecting recording techniques, founding Apple Records and slowly coming to grips with their own neuroses in regard to one another. Freiman delves into such storied events as the fabled trip to Rishikesh, India at the behest of George (though, we learn, they were all pretty into it), the seldom-heard Kinfauns demo recordings, the uncredited musicianship found throughout The White Album (Eric Clapton’s solo on “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” anyone?) and beyond, painting a picture of The Beatles as
actual, fallible human beings who had the capacity for brilliance, obviously, but who could also be spiteful or even immature. The pressure, we imagine, was horrible. Freiman breaks songs down track by track, isolating certain elements to showcase the complexities of fan favorites like “Happiness is a Warm Gun,” “Blackbird” and many others. However, with the lecture at just under 90 minutes, he can’t possibly examine everything that went into the album. What we do learn is fascinating— for Beatles fans anyway. Those who don’t find the studio process all that interesting won’t be swayed by the backstories enough to be hooked, and the ultimate allure of the film comes down to how much one loves the band. If it’s a lot, you’ll also love the lecture, which will be screened only once on Friday Nov. 16 at 7 pm; if it’s anything less you can probably skip it. (Alex De Vore) Center for Contemporary Arts, NR, 87 min.
THE HANDMAIDEN A clever grifter named Fujiwara (Jungwoo Ha) has painstakingly devised a plot to marry a crazy rich young noblewoman named Lady Hideko (Min-hee Kim) by posing as a Japanese count. Once he’s got her hand, he’ll commit Hideko to a madhouse, thereby claiming her vast fortune. It’s a two-person job, though,
and Fujiwara enlists the help of a young thief named Sook-Hee (Kim Tae-ri), who assumes the role of Hideko’s handmaiden so as to gently nudge her toward marrying the bastard. The plan seems simple enough but, wouldn’t you know it, Hideko is kind of spooky and maybe smarter than she lets on, and her perverse uncle Kozuki (Jinwoong Jo) has trained her since she was a child to read erotic stories aloud to groups of similarly pervy rich guys at swanky auction-like events. From the suicide of her aunt to her uncle’s massive library of sex stories, shit’s weird at Hideko’s house, but Sook-Hee starts to fall in love, all the while dealing with the count’s lust for money and the creepy goings-on at the estate. Min-hee Kim and Kim Tae-ri’s onscreen chemistry is the stuff of cinematic legend, a perfect blend of overpowering lust and passionate love so believable and so intense that it’s almost difficult to watch, yet we cannot look away. Park grasps even the ugly elements of love such as irrational jealousy or the darker side of sexuality. It’s difficult to tell who’s conning whom, but that just keeps things interesting right up to the satisfying conclusion, and even when we’re positive we know how the chips may fall, our assumptions generally prove misguided. Thus, The Handmaiden becomes a CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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MOVIES
C I N E M AT H E Q U E 1050 OLD PECOS TRAIL • 505.982.1338 • CCASANTAFE.ORG
SHOWTIMES NOVEMBER 16 – 22, 2016
Wednesday, November 16 11:15p Eight Days A Week* 11:30p A Man Called Ove 1:30p A Man Called Ove* 2:00p The Handmaiden 4:00p The Handmaiden* 5:00p A Man Called Ove 7:00p A Man Called Ove* 7:30p The Handmaiden
VINCENT VAN GOGH
A NEW WAY OF
SEEING
”
... brilliantly insightful” –The Upcoming
EXHIBITION ON SCREEN: THE WINTER SERIES 11a DAILY
Series Passes for this 7-week series: $40 Members / $45 General Van Gogh • Uffizi Gallery • Matisse • Manet • Munch • Rembrandt
Thursday, November 17 11:15a Eight Days A Week* 11:30a A Man Called Ove 1:30p A Man Called Ove* 2:00p The Handmaiden 4:00p The Handmaiden* 5:00p A Man Called Ove 7:00p Lecture: Deconstructing The Beatles: White Album* 7:30p The Handmaiden Friday, 11:00a 1:00p 3:15p 4:00p 5:30p 6:15p 8:00p 8:30p
November 18 EOS: Vincent Van Gogh* The Handmaiden* Moonlight Moonlight* A Man Called Ove Moonlight* The Handmaiden Moonlight*
Saturday, November 19 10:15a Moonlight 11:00a EOS: Vincent Van Gogh* 12:30p A Man Called Ove 1:00p The Handmaiden* 3:15p Moonlight 4:00p Moonlight* 5:30p A Man Called Ove 6:15p Moonlight* 8:00p The Handmaiden 8:30p Moonlight* Sunday, November 20 10:15a Moonlight 11:00a EOS: Vincent Van Gogh* 12:30p A Man Called Ove 1:00p The Handmaiden* 3:00p SFJFF: Carvalho’s Journey 4:00p Moonlight* 5:30p A Man Called Ove 6:15p Moonlight* 8:15p The Handmaiden 8:30p Moonlight*
SANTA FE JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL
“Carvalho’s Journey” 3p Sunday, Nov. 20
Tickets available at: santafejff.org
Mon. & Tues., Nov. 21 & 22 11:00a EOS: Vincent Van Gogh 11:30a Moonlight* 1:00p Moonlight 1:45p The Handmaiden* 3:15p A Man Called Ove 4:45p Moonlight* 5:30p The Handmaiden 7:00p Moonlight* 8:30p The Handmaiden 9:15p Moonlight* *in The Studio
ONE T NIGH ONLY
7p Thurs. $12 General $10 Members
ok The original, unused art for what would become known as The Beatles’ The White Album. multi-layered juxtaposition between sex and violence—an uncomfortable premise for some, certainly, but the type of story that practically forces us to examine our own sexual issues— especially the weird ones—and keeps us guessing the whole damn time. (ADV) Center for Contemporary Arts, Violet Crown, NR, subtitles, 144 min.
CHRISTINE If you were around in the 1970s, you may remember when newscaster Christine Chubbuck shot herself live on the air during a broadcast. In this lurid portrayal of the events leading up to her suicide, director Antonio Campos (Simon Killer) follows Chubbuck (Rebecca Hall from Christopher Nolan’s excellent 2006 magician-based thriller The Prestige) as she rapidly approaches her 30th birthday. Her life is monotonous and stagnant. She’s a virgin living with her mother and an unrequited love for her co-worker George Ryan (Dexter’s Michael C Hall)—woes that accumulate and add to her pre-existing depression and suicidal tendencies. After an office outburst, Chubbuck convinces her boss to cover a restaurant shooting, all the while concealing a revolver in her purse. As the tension mounts, technical difficulties force Chubbuck to ad-lib, which she does by pulling the gun and shooting herself behind the ear. Viewers will feel jolted by Chubbuck’s suicide despite knowing beforehand the context of the film, but Hall’s performance as the tortured journalist is enough to tug heartstrings and jerk tears as she captures Chubbuck’s self-deprecation through tense grimaces and panic-infused breakdowns. Ultimately, Christine lacks the personal attachment or testimonies to portray Chubbuck as a fully dimensional character, though Campos’ attempts to build a divide between audience and subject seem designed to keep us from any sense of comfort. We observe her always from a distance, as a viewer would watching the news; we see Chubbuck through a lens of a lens, furthering ourselves from a woman we’ll never be able to understand and distancing us from her pain. (Kim Jones) DeVargas, R, 115 minutes.
GIMME DANGER FINAL SHOWS
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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, Gimme Danger deftly points out that had it not been for the turmoil, we might never have had The Stooges we know. Iggy 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 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. (ADV) DeVargas, R, 108 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
MOVIES
yay! Love (and hot sex) conquers all in The Handmaiden. 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 Addai-Robinson (Star Trek Into Darkness), a Treasury agent tasked with uncovering Wolff’s identity, nonetheless is essential for the plot tension. Wait and see if you can figure it out, too. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 128 min.
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DeVargas Center, N Guadalupe St. and Paseo de Peralta, 988-2775
1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678
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Mind Body Spirit 4th ANNUAL
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SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 2017 10 am – 2 pm LOCATED AT THE
Genoveva Chavez Community Center 3221 Rodeo Road, Santa Fe, NM 87507
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Cummins and Scoullar’s
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of the finest holistic offerings in Santa Fe Attendees get in FREE and have face time with vendors offering services, drinks, organic food, live demos and more!
By Rick Cummins and John Scoullar Based on the book by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry NOVEMBER 11 at 7 PM NOVEMBER 12, 13, 19 & 20 at 2 PM
Box Office: 505-984-1370 All tickets $8.00 Armory for the Arts Theater 1050 Old Pecos Trail Santa Fe, NM 87505 Copyright 1943 and renewed 1971 by Harcourt Brace & Co. Produced by special arrangement with THE DRAMATIC PUBLISHING COMPANY of Woodstock, Illinois
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MIND BODY SPIRIT
Rob Brezsny
Week of November 16th
ARIES (March 21-April 19) There is a 97 percent chance that you will NOT engage in the following activities within the next 30 days: naked skydiving, tight-rope walking between two skyscrapers, getting drunk on a mountaintop, taking ayahuasca with Peruvian shamans in a remote rural hut, or dancing ecstatically in a muddy pit of snakes. However, I suspect that you will be involved in almost equally exotic exploits—although less risky ones—that will require you to summon more pluck and improvisational skill than you knew you had.
But along the way, he often had to be patient as he waited for the world to be ready for his visionary creations. He was ahead of his time, dreaming up things that would be needed before anyone knew they’d be needed. I encourage you to be like him in the coming weeks, Libra. Try to anticipate the future. Generate possibilities that people are not yet ripe to accept, but will eventually be ready to embrace.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The Onion, my favorite news source, reported that “It’s perfectly natural for people to fantasize about sandwiches other than the one currently in their hands.” You shouldn’t feel shame, the article said, if you’re enjoying a hoagie but suddenly feel an inexplicable yearning for a BLT or pastrami on rye. While I appreciate this reassuring counsel, I don’t think it applies to you in the coming weeks. In my opinion, you have a sacred duty to be unwaveringly faithful, both in your imagination and your actual behavior—as much for your own sake as for others’. I advise you to cultivate an up-to-date affection for and commitment to what you actually have, and not indulge in obsessive fantasies about “what ifs.”
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Does the word “revolution” have any useful meaning? Or has it been invoked by so many fanatics with such melodramatic agendas that it has lost its value? In accordance with your astrological omens, I suggest we give it another chance. I think it deserves a cozy spot in your life during the next few months. As for what exactly that entails, let’s call on author Rebecca Solnit for inspiration. She says, “I still think the [real] revolution is to make the world safe for poetry, meandering, for the frail and vulnerable, the rare and obscure, the impractical and local and small.”
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) “We all have ghosts inside us, and it’s better when they speak than when they don’t,” wrote author Siri Hustvedt. The good news, Sagittarius, is that in recent weeks your personal ghosts have been discoursing at length. They have offered their GEMINI (May 21-June 20) I hesitate to deliver the interpretation of your life’s central mysteries and have contents of this horoscope without a disclaimer. Unless provided twists on old stories you thought you had all you are an extremely ethical person with a vivid streak figured out. The bad news is that they don’t seem to of empathy, you might be prone to abuse the informa- want to shut up. Also, less than 25% of what they have tion I’m about to present. So please ignore it unless been asserting is actually true or useful. But here’s the you can responsibly employ the concepts of benevofantastic news: Those ghosts have delivered everything lent mischief and tricky blessings and cathartic sheyou need to know for now, and will obey if you tell them nanigans. Ready? Here’s your oracle: Now is a favorable to take an extended vacation. time for grayer truths, wilder leaps of the imagination, more useful bullshit, funnier enigmas, and more outlandish CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In the film Bruce Almighty, Morgan Freeman plays the role of God, and stories seasoned with crazy wisdom. Capricorn actor Jim Carrey is a frustrated reporter CANCER (June 21-July 22) Kavachi is an underwater named Bruce Nolan. After Nolan bemoans his rocky volcano in the Southwest Pacific Ocean. It erupts perifate and blames it on God’s ineptitude, the Supreme odically, and in general makes the surrounding water so Being reaches out by phone. (His number is 716-776hot and acidic that human divers must avoid it. And yet 2323.) A series of conversations and negotiations some hardy species live there, including crabs, jellyfish, ensues, leading Nolan on roller-coaster adventures that stingrays, and sharks. What adaptations and strategies ultimately result in a mostly happy ending. According enable them to thrive in such an extreme environment? to my reading of the astrological omens, you Scientists don’t know. I’m going to draw a comparison Capricorns will have an unusually high chance of makbetween you and the resourceful creatures living near Kavachi. In the coming weeks, I bet you’ll flourish in cir- ing fruitful contact with a Higher Power or Illuminating Source in the coming weeks. I doubt that 716-776-2323 cumstances that normal people might find daunting. is the right contact information. But if you trust your LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Seventeenth-century British intuition, I bet you’ll make the connection. people used the now-obsolete word “firktytoodle.” It AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Some spiders are both meant “cuddling and snuggling accompanied by construction workers and artists. The webs they spin are leisurely experiments in smooching, fondling, licking, not just strong and functional, but also feature decoraand sweet dirty talk.” The coming weeks will be prime tive elements called “stabilimenta.” These may be as time for you to carry out extensive experiments in this activity. But here’s an interesting question: Will the near simple as zigzags or as complex as spiral whorls. Biologists say the stabilimenta draw prey to specific future also be a favorable phase for record levels of locations, help the spider hide, and render the overall orgasmic release? The answer: maybe, but IF AND stability of the web more robust. As you enter the webONLY if you pursue firkytoodle as an end in itself; IF building phase of your cycle, Aquarius, I suggest that AND ONLY IF you relish the teasing and playing as if they were ultimate rewards, and don’t relegate them to you include your own version of attractive stabilimenta. Your purpose, of course, is not to catch prey, but to bolbeing merely preliminary acts for pleasures that are supposedly bigger and better. P.S. These same principles ster your network and invigorate your support system. Be artful as well as practical. (Thanks to Mother Nature apply not just to your intimate connections, but to everything else in your life, as well. Enjoying the journey Network’s Jaymi Heimbuch for info on stabilimenta.) is as important as reaching a destination. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) “Aren’t there parts of ourVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Here’s an experiment worth trying: Reach back into the past to find a remedy for what’s bugging you now. In other words, seek out on an old, perhaps even partially forgotten influence to resolve a current dilemma that has resisted your efforts to master it. This is one time when it may make good sense to temporarily resurrect a lost dream. You could energize your future by drawing inspiration from possibilities that might have been but never were. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) By the time he died at the age of 87 in 1983, free thinker Buckminster Fuller had licensed his inventions to more than 100 companies.
selves that are just better left unfed?” asked Piscean author David Foster Wallace. I propose that we make that one of your two keynotes during the next four weeks. Here’s a second keynote: As you become more and more skilled at not fueling the parts of yourself that are better left unfed, you will have a growing knack for identifying the parts of yourself that should be well-fed. Feed them with care and artistry! Homework: Though sometimes it’s impossible to do the right thing, doing the half-right thing may be a viable option. Give an example from your life: FreeWillAstrology.com
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone 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
ENERGY WORK
POSITIVE CHANGE REFLEXOLOGY
ENERGY MEDICINE Transformational healing can clear deep underlying patterns in your energy field. Dissolve subconscious somatic pathways in the nervous system from old habits or trauma, which show up again and again as painful disease, relationship trouble, blocks in your life, anger, fear. Jane Barthelemy, Kinesiologist fiveseasonsmedicine.com 505-216-1750
Need Help? Positive Change Coach. Young Men’s Mentoring. Recovery, Self-Realization, Structure, Wellness. Douglas Pinto. Ontological Wellness Coach. 719-221-2084
PSYCHICS
FOOT REFLEXOLOGY FOR HOSTESS & HOLIDAY NEEDS... For anyone you know who is on their feet a lot, suffers chronic pain or leads a stressful life...the relaxation and rejuvenation found at Santa Fe Reflexology may be the perfect gift! To order your gift certificates: (505) 414-8140 julie@sfreflexology.com
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LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information call 505-982-8327 or go to www.alexofavalon.com. Also serving the LGBT community.
REAL ESTATE TANTRA MASSAGE & TEACHING Call Julianne Parkinson, 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional Massage Therapist, & Life Coach LIC #2788
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOS FOR SALE
2002 HONDA CR-V EX EXTRA CLEAN 2.4L DOHC IVTEC FUEL INJECTED 4 CYLINDER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AWD / 4WD. $2550 Call me :5055853806
STUDIO RENTALS 1800 sf studio with skylights, kitchen, 1/2 bath, nat. gas and wood heat, $800/mo., no dogs. La Mesilla, 505.753.5906
SPACE SAVING furniture. Murphy panel beds, home offices & closet combinations. wallbedsbybergman.com or 505-286-0856.
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. 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
SANTO NIÑO REGIONAL CATHOLIC SCHOOL Competing on a national stage. Our mission is to provide excellent elementary, academic education with a Catholic tradition for 3 years to 6th grade. Our committment is to educate 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.
immediate opening for an advertising account executive to help build our digital and print publications. We offer attractive compensation and bonuses including 100% medical benefits. Your earning potential is only limited by your own motivation. Like local businesses? We love them.
Sales savvy a plus.. To apply, please email a letter of interest and resumé to Anna Maggiore, Advertising Manager advertising@sfreporter.com Santa Fe Reporter 132 E. Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 No phone calls please.
INTERFAITH THANKSGIVING WORSHIP. Sunday, November 20, 2016 at 6:00PM. Potluck following. At Zia United Methodist Church. 3368 Governor Miles Road. Corner of Richards Ave. and Governor Miles Road. (505)-471-0997. info@ziaumc.org
EMPLOYMENT ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Self-starters with ambition and people skills are the perfect candidates for this career opportunity. The Santa Fe Reporter has an
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ACROSS 1 Audio boosters 5 They say “Nowaday!” 10 Tropical getaway 14 Renegade (on) 15 “Wayne’s World” sidekick 16 Connery of “Dr. Nado” 17 Guilty pleasure that’s difficult to accomplish? 19 Mountaintop 20 “Heady, relax!” 21 Munitions maker 23 Roadsters 26 Cedars-___ Hospital 28 Lang. of Cads Lewis 29 Gomez’s hairier cousin 30 Garment fold 32 Source of a meadow 34 Company behind a candy stamped with “mad” 36 Orange sadpud 37 “___ made up, Scotty” 38 Knotted snack 40 Drink for the lactose intolerant 43 “For Your ___ Onlady” 44 Health facility 45 Cheese on crackers 46 MGM Grandad Las Vegas, for one 48 Puget Sound traveler 50 Nickname of Hall of Fame pitcher Dennis 51 “Goad on ...” 52 ___ Lama
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DOWN 1 Padres #16, familiarly 2 Nadine, as single-digit numbers go 3 Spot on dice 4 Winter admix 5 Repads of sports figures, for short 6 Specialist assigned a marinade mission, maybe 7 Prefix with state or glycerides 8 “___ bead much worse ...” 9 Headman’s sister 10 Aoki of the PGA 11 Anonymous mud wallower? 12 Feel regret for 13 Ade, to Einstein 18 Rough file
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22 Kid who eventually liked Life? 23 Lacking stiffness 24 Russia’s ___-Tass news service 25 Garb for milling about the neighborhood? 27 “___ a Man of Constant Sorrow” 31 Caustic chemicals 33 Foot in a meter 35 Eyelid annoyance 37 Wild swine 39 “The Legend of ___” (Nintendo game) 40 Light white wine drink 41 Scalp parasites 42 Actress Palmer of “Scream Queens” 44 Cruisade locale 46 “What a radiot!” 47 Almost on the hour 48 Counterparts of faunae 49 Everybody, down South 53 Brooding feeling 55 Pictographic letter 57 Prefix with America or morph 59 Pound who was a master of the adverse 62 Bank statement abbr. 63 “All Things Considered” reporter Shapiro 64 “Family Guy” daughter 65 Geom. figure
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281 ANNIE was found wandering in the parking lot at Ojo Caliente and was rescued by a kind person who turned her over to Felines & Friends to find her forever home. TEMPERAMENT: ANNIE is very sweet, social and loves human attention, especially being held and petted. She is a beautiful girl with a short black & white coat in the tuxedo pattern. AGE: born approx. 9/15/16. City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
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Fending for herself on the streets of Santa Fe at 4 months of age, CARROTS was found to be FELV+. FELV cannot be transmitted to other animal species or to humans. Since she is likely to be a carrier of the virus, CARROTS needs an indoor home with no other cats, an FELV+ cat, or a healthy adult cat who has been vaccinated. TEMPERAMENT: CARROTS is a very sweet and social: she is a beautiful girl with a short coat and calico markings. AGE: born approx. 4/4/16.
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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
LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO LEGAL NOTICES CREDITORS/NAME ALL OTHERS CHANGE SUMMONS/D-101- CV-2016- 00139 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF LUGARDITA G. GOMEZ, DECEASED. CASE NO.: 2016-0138 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: 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 COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL COURT. IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF John Ernest Patterson. Case No.: D-101-CV-2016-02563 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the petitioner John Ernest Patterson will apply to the Honorable Francis J. Mathew, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 10:45 a.m. on the 6th day of January, 2017 for an ORDER OF NAME CHANGE from John Ernest Patterson to Roslyn Marie Patterson. Stephen T. Pacheco, District Court Clerk By: Victoria B. Neal, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: John E. Patterson Petitioner, Pro Se
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Mary Louise Feather 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-2016-00139 Judge: Raymond Z. Ortiz Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Charles A. Feather; Mary Louise Feather; 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: Mary Louise Feather, 100 Honeysuckle Lane, Apt. 307, Frostburg, Maryland 21532. 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. /s/ Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk Of Court By: /s/ Raisa Morales Deputy 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 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 tenants 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) 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
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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 NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
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NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case No.
D-101- CV-2016- 00058 Marilyn J. Bloom STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Marilyn J. Bloom; Unknown Spouse of Marilyn J. Bloom, LLC; 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 aboveentitled 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 interest In fee simple as tenant in common in and to Interval(s) 5000, Unit Number(s) 1103, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unites), 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 II 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 Thursday, December 15, 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 October 11, 2016, in the principal sum of
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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
NOVEMBER 1 6-22, 2016
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$7,443.27, plus attorney fees in the sum of $589.84 and attorney costs in the sum of $408.87 for a total amount of $8,441.95, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from October 11, 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 Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417- 4113
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 tenants 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 amended (the “Declaration”). Unit Number: 1202 Vacation Week Number: 17 Unit Type: 1 Bedroom Deluxe Initial Use Year: 2007 Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year Timeshare Interest The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 15, 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 NOTICE OF SALE ON Association, Inc. (“Villas De FORECLOSURE / Case Number: Santa Fe”). Villas De Santa Fe D-101- CV-2016- 00156 was awarded a Default Judgment Vacation Ventures, LLC Decree of Foreclosure on October STATE OF NEW MEXICO 13, 2016, in the principal sum of COUNTY OF SANTA FE $7,466.78, plus attorney fees in FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT the sum of $589.28 and attorney Case Number: D-101-CV- 2016-00156 costs in the sum of $909.55 for Villas De Santa Fe Condominium a total amount of $8,965.61, plus Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. interest thereafter at the rate of Vacation Ventures, LLC; JOHN 8.75% per annum from October DOES I V, inclusive; JANE 13, 2016, until the property is DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK sold at a Special Master’s Sale, CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; plus costs of the Special Master’s WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, Sale, including the Special inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Master’s fee in the amount of Devisees of each of the above$212.50, plus any additional named Defendants, if deceased, attorney fees and costs actually Defendant. NOTICE OF SALE ON expended from the date of this FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE Default Judgment until the date NOTICE that the above-entitled of the Special Master’s sale, plus Court, having appointed me or those additional amounts, if any, my designee as Special Master which Plaintiff will be required in this matter with the power to to pay before termination of this sell, has ordered me to sell the 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 Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417- 4113
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 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 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: 2112 Vacation Week Number: 14 Unit Type: 1 Bedroom Initial Occupancy Year: 1998 Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Timeshare Interest The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 15, 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 NOTICE OF SALE ON highest and best bidder for cash FORECLOSURE / Case Number: in lawful currency of the United D-101- CV-2016- 00215 States of America, the Property Richard Raymond Yohner/ to pay expenses of sale, and to Mona Marie Villa satisfy the Judgment granted to STATE OF NEW MEXICO Villas De Santa Fe Condominium COUNTY OF SANTA FE Association, Inc. (“Villas De FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Santa Fe”). Villas De Santa Fe COURT Case Number: D-101was awarded a Default Judgment CV- 2016-00215 Decree of Foreclosure on Villas De Santa Fe Condominium October 14, 2016, in the principal Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. sum of $8,237.89, plus attorney Richard Raymond Yohner; fees in the sum of $589.64 and Unknown Spouse of Richard attorney costs in the sum of Raymond Yohner; Mona $1,259.86 for a total amount of Marie Villa; Unknown Spouse $10,087.39, plus interest thereof Mona Marie Villa; JOHN after at the rate of 8.75% per DOES I V, inclusive; JANE annum from October 14, 2016, DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK until the property is sold at a CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; Special Master’s Sale, plus costs WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, of the Special Master’s Sale, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and including the Special Master’s Devisees of each of the abovefee in the amount of $212.50, named Defendants, if deceased, plus any additional attorney fees Defendant NOTICE OF SALE ON and costs actually expended FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE from the date of this Default NOTICE that the above-entitled Judgment until the date of the Court, having appointed me or Special Master’s sale, plus those my designee as Special Master additional amounts, if any, which in this matter with the power to Plaintiff will be required to pay sell, has ordered me to sell the before termination of this action real property (the “Property”) for property taxes, and insursituated in Santa Fe County, ance premiums, or any other New Mexico, commonly known cost of upkeep of the property of as 400 Griffin Street, Santa Fe any sort. NOTICE IS FURTHER New Mexico 87501, and more GIVEN that the real properly and particularly described as folimprovements concerned with lows: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) herein will be sold subject to any consisting of 1 undivided one and all patent reservations, easefifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in ments, all recorded and unrefee simple as tenant in common corded liens not foreclosed herein and to the below-described in, and all recorded and unrecordCondominium Unit, together with ed special assessments and taxes a corresponding undivided inter- that may be due. Villas De Santa est in the Common Furnishings Fe its attorneys and the Special
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LEGALS SERVICE DIRECTORY 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 Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417-4113 NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case Number: D-101- CV-2016- 00186 Barry Demby STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case Number: D-101CV- 2016-00186 Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Barry Demby; 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 aboveentitled 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 1/104 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 2213, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unites), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right during alternate calendar years 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 1492, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”). Initial Use Year: 2002 Timeshare Interest: Odd Year Timeshare Interest Fixed Use Period (if applicable): N/A Fixed Assigned Units (if applicable): 2213 Vacation Week No.: 3 Unit Type 1 Bedroom Standard (if applicable): The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 15, 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 October 13, 2016, in the principal sum of $5,210.84, plus attorney fees in the sum of $589.64 and attorney costs in the sum of $994.52 for a total amount of $5,210.84, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from October 13, 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 Doyle, Special Master, P.O. Box 51526, Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417- 4113 NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE / Case No. D-101- CV-2016- 00148 Ashley E. Simison STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNT OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. D-101- CV-2016- 00148 Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Ashley E. Simison,; 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 aboveentitled 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: Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unites), 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 195-294, as amended from time to time (the
“Declaration”). Unit Number: 2202 Vacation Week Number 11 Unit Type 2 Bedroom Initial Occupancy Year 1998 Timeshare Interest Floating Annual Year Timeshare Interest The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 15, 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 October 13, 2016, in the principal sum of $5,062.36, plus attorney fees in the sum of $530.79 and attorney costs in the sum of $980.02 for a total amount of $6,573.17, plus interest thereafter at the rate of 8.75% per annum from October 13, 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 Doyle, Special Master P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM 87181 505-417- 4113
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
CLEANING SERVICES
“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
LANDSCAPING LANDSCAPES BY DENNIS Landscape Design, Xeriscapes, Drip Systems, Natural Ponds, Low Voltage Lighting & Maintenance. I create a custom lush garden w/ minimal use of precious H20. 505-699-2900
CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in your fireplace or lint build-up in your dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Be prepared. Call 989-5775
PERSONAL & PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
HANDYPERSON CARPENTRY to LANDSCAPING Home maintenance, remodels, additions, interior & exterior, irrigation, stucco repair, jobs small & large. Reasonable rates, Reliable. Discounts avail. to seniors, veterans, handicap. Jonathan, 670-8827 www.handymannm.com
PHILIP CRUMP, Mediator
Resolve issues quickly, affordTHE HANDYMAN YOU’VE ably, privately, respectfully: ALWAYS WANTED. Dependable • Divorce, Custody, Parenting plan and creative problem solver. With Handyman Van, one call • Parent-Teen, Family, Neighbor fixes it all. Special discounts for • Business, Partnership, Construction seniors and referrals. Excellent Mediate-Don’t Litigate! references. 505-231-8849 FREE CONSULTATION www.handymanvan.biz philip@pcmediate.com
FENCES & GATES
505-989-8558
DO YOU HAVE A GREAT SERVICE? SANTA FE COYOTE FENCING Specializing in Coyote Fencing. License # 16-001199-74. No job too small or large. We do it all. Richard, 505-690-6272 SFREPORTER.COM
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ADVERTISE IT HERE IN THE SERVICE DIRECTORY! CALL 505.983.1212 NOVEMBER 16-22, 2016
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PERSONAL INSTRUCTION
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SANTA FE SCHOOL OF MASSAGE
SFR BACK PAGE BASE PRICE: $25 (Includes 3 lines of NORMAL text) CUSTOMIZE YOUR TEXT WITH THE FOLLOWING UPGRADES:
QIGONG & TAICHI CLASSES 4 CLASSES PER WEEK: MON, WED, FRI, SAT Tennis Lessons W/ A PRO WHO HAS 25 YRS. EXPERIENCE CALL JANE Kids of all ages & adults (505) 216-1750 welcome! www.FiveSeasonsMedicine.com
I LOVE TO ORGANIZE Experienced References Sue 231-6878
MASSAGE BY JULIE Swedish/Deep Tissue. Same Day Appts Welcome. $50/hr 20 yrs experience Lic. 3384 670-8789
First Aid CPR AED Certification for Therapists Call Frank 983-2673
Call Coach Jim 505.795.0543
*NOW OPEN* O’Leary Custom Powder Coating BICYCLES*ART*FURNITURE MWF 2-5 or by appointment 1156 Parkway Dr., Ste. B 505-438-6121 www.olearybuiltbicycles.com
Krav Maga Self Defense Class
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LARGE: $12/Line (18 characters) | RED: $12/Line (18 characters) BOLD: $11/Line (40 characters) | NORMAL: $10/Line (46 characters) TOP HIGHLIGHT $13 | FULL HIGHLIGHT: $15
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COLOR COPIES 35¢ PRAJNA YOGA Printers, Design Center
OPEN HOUSE and FOOD DRIVE for The Food Depot 418 Cerrillos Rd 11/19 from 3-7pm Black on White 8¢ Staff members will talk about our programs. Free 15 minute massage and light refreshments. 1540 CERRILLOS RD•505-986-1110 Bring a non-perishable food item and get a raffle ticket for a Student Clinic Massage. NMMTB RMTS #1 10-Class Pass for $90 RSVP 505-982-8398 1091-A Siler Road santafeschoolofmassage.com
LU’S CHINESE HEALING MASSAGE LLC
Diamonds and GOLD WE BUY AND SELL
988-3456/982-1777 NEW EVENING MAT CLASSES!! PILATES SANTA FE 995-9700 Voted Best Pilates Studio! Mon-Fri 7am-7pm | Sat 8am-2pm
DD’s Do It Service 690-9025 Run errands, drive you to appointments, Care for your yard while you are on vacation, On call pet care/dog walking, Photograph your pets/garden Light office/organizing and Babysitting $20.00 hr
Foundation Training 505.603.8090 SantaFeChiropractic.info
NOVEMBER EVENTS
TUESDAY CLASS FOR WOMEN 11/22
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3 ways to Book your ad: Call classy at: 505.983.1212 Email: classy@ sfreporter.com Book online at sfrclassifieds.com
JERRY COURVOISIER
LEGAL ADVICE & SOLUTIONS
PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTOSHOP LIGHTROOM PROFESSIONAL 1 ON 1 505-670-1495
TOP PRICES • CASH 3 GEMOLOGISTS ON STAFF Earthfire Gems 121 Galisteo • 982-8750
Experienced and Affordable NM Attorney Telephone or in-person consultations
FICTION EDITING
Catherine Downing, JD, 505-920-4529
For novels & short stories www.theliteraryarchitect.com
YOGASOURCE VOTED BEST YOGA STUDIO ENTERING STILLNESS: YIN YOGA W/ MELISSA 11/26 UNLIMITED CLASSES IN DECEMBER: $75! CARRIE OWERKO - DEC 16 - 19 SIGN UP NOW! 982-0990 YOGASOURCE-SANTAFE.COM
TAKE YOUR NEXT STEP Positive Psychotherapy • Career Counseling
SAM SHAFFER, PHD
TEXTILE REPAIR XCELLENT 505.629.7007 SUPPORT WEDDING OFFICIANT MACINTOSH 20+yrs professional, 982-7434 • www.shafferphd.com
Non-denominational / LGBT weddings. Call Robbie at (505) 231-0855
Apple certified. xcellentmacsupport.com • Randy • 670-0585
FOR RENT
PRIME, MAIN FLOOR OFFICE SPACE We are looking for a quality tenant.
Located in the heart of downtown Santa Fe.
Bright, natural light with high ceilings. Built-ins. Shared bathroom & kitchenette. New carpet. Parking. Call 505.988.5541 to schedule a showing.
226 BOX LOCATIONS
SFR IS ALWAYS AVAILABLE AT: WHOLE FOODS
OP.CIT.
753 Cerrillos Road
DeVargas Mall, 157 Paseo de Peralta
SMITH’S
CHAVEZ CENTER
2110 S Pacheco Street
3221 Rodeo Road
VITAMIN COTTAGE NATURAL GROCERS
3328 Cerrillos Road
INNER FOR TWO
TRADER JOE’S
530 W Cordova Road
LA MONTAÑITA CO-OP
913 W Alameda Street
“YOU ARE WHAT YOU INK”
106 N. Guadalupe • (505) 820-2075
HAPPY HOUR @ THE BAR 4-6:30 PM Wed. thru Sun. $4 $5 $6 Appetizers •
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• Chicken Fried Asian Ribs • Brie & Apricot Jalapeno Poppers • Mushroom Ragout w/ Boursin in Phyllo • Blue Crab Cakes & Remoulade
NOW OPEN
227 DON GASPAR | SUITE 11A
Inside the Santa Fe Village
505-920-2903
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