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CLIMATE CHANGE THREATENS TO MAKE GROWING CHILES IN NEW MEXICO TOUGHER THAN EVER BY ELIZ ABETH MILLER
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THE NEXT GREAT
EXTINCTION?
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SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 39 Opinion 5 Blue Corn 9 BIG ANNOUNCEMENT
Santa Feans for Trump has disbanded. ¡Que sorpresa! News 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 8 BRIEFS 10
We’re going through changes at SFR ... good ones STRAIGHT FROM THE SOURCE 11
Panhandlers take center stage
Is your bank still a bank that you can bank on?
THE OTHER MIKE 13
Zoning changes are on the way for St. Michael’s Drive Cover Story 14
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THE NEXT GREAT EXTINCTION?
What do rising global tempteratures mean for New Mexico’s chile crop?
COURTESY DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
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Oh hey—a new Cloacas album A&C 25 PHOTO SET
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Local photographers show the hell out of their work Savage Love 26 Pieces of shit, snowbunnies (whatever that is) and this one Italian guy who needs to DTMFA Food 29 HUMBLE, GLORIOUS CARROTS
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We’re providing more obstetric options in Santa Fe. Presbyterian now provides more obstetric options in Santa Fe with Dr. Eric Manske, Dr. R. Geoff Elmore and Maite Redondo, certified nurse midwife. Our providers focus on everything related to pregnancy, childbirth and the recuperative period following delivery. We welcome new patients and accept most insurance plans. Call 505-473-0390 to find out if your plan offers you access to our Santa Fe location. 454 St. Michael’s Drive phs.org | 505-473-0390
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Presbyterian Medical Group also offers these services in Española at 1010 Spruce St., 505-367-0340. Miguel Trujillo, MD | Biatris Barrera, MD | Rachel Goodman, MD Nuestros obstetras y ginecólogos en Santa Fe y Española hablan Español.
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LETTERS
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FOOD, SEPTEMBER 21: 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, SEPTEMBER 21: “REFUGE AND RESPITE”
GET BETTER OPTIONS I am a member of the mentally ill homeless community in Santa Fe, and as a filmmaker who documents the treatment of this group in our community in the web series produced by me and my husband (The Land of Tranquil Light on YouTube), I am in full support of any crisis triage center and other resources that could be made available to this vulnerable section of society. To those who are supporting the Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center as a viable option to the mentally ill, I have been a patient in the behavioral health wing of the hospital during which time I received exceptional treatment. A second time I was treated in the ER for my mental health issues ... Instead of being transferred to an adequate facility, I was locked in a cell where I begged the head nurse, the security and other aids to allow me to stay in an unlocked room, allow me to call my daughter (whom they refused to allow to stay with me), and to refrain from giving me a hypodermic injection. The first requests they denied me; the last they forced on me against my will. Unfortunately, the ER staff members are not all trained to deal with mentally ill patients and they break their hypocratic oath to commit no harm. I will never return to the local ER again for behavioral health concerns or any other. JODI DRINKWATER SANTA FE
“NOTHING’S WRONG WITH THE CO-OP”
PROS AND CONS? I’d rather like to find a happy medium. I’m not thrilled with the co-op’s reliance on “their distributor,” which seems to have a bias toward “corporate green” labels that have been co-opted by Big Food but still have their folksy founder’s name and reputations to sell them. I’d really rather feel my food dollars are supporting independent and local producers of tinned and packaged foodstuffs, frozen foods, deli meats and cheeses, dairy products, etc. I’d also vastly prefer a more consistently abundant supply of reliable-quality basic organic produce items like celery, green beans, varietal apples, bell peppers, etc., at reasonably low prices, to shelves full of dragon fruit, kumquats, sapote, and five varieties of persimmons. ... I preferred getting a rebate check to the current system of some sort of discount credit against current purchases ... I’d prefer my membership and purchase dollars go entirely to supporting the operations of the store, and let members who need a discount earn it with in-store volunteer labor. ... Why not come up with a way to give members more say, that doesn’t involve trashing the whole institutional structure of the organization?
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SOMETHING’S WRONG The title of this article is blatantly false—if there was truly nothing wrong with the co-op, there would have been no point to writing it in the first place. Just for starters, the fact that 1,000 members have called for a change of leadership is a big problem. A co-op where “nothing’s wrong” does not have long-term employees quitting due to the management, is not firing employees for speaking their minds, and has not had to pay fines due to labor violations. CONTINUED ON PAGE 7
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912 Baca St. Santa Fe
M-F: 9-6 Sat: 10-6
LETTERS
Whether or not you agree with everything Take Back the Co-op has said, there are very obviously problems with La Montañita. PHIL GROSSBLATT SFREPORTER.COM
COURTESY QUIVIRA COALITION
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
Leopold, who observed firsthand right here in New Mexico that grasslands were gradually replacing forests wherever prescribed burning was practiced, and that forests were reclaiming land when periodic burning was halted. ARTHUR FIRSTENBERG SANTA FE
LONG LIVE LA MONTAÑITA Thanks for reporting on this, Gwyneth. ... I have both served on the board, [am a] lifetime member, [an] investor in the farm program and I worked at the coop in my college years. ... [My] understanding of the petition is not that Robin [Seydel] or Martha [Whitman] lose their jobs but that the brand new GM is reconsidered by the board. And, the board itself is reconsidered. That’s because after meeting with the new GM, we learned he has a vision that isn’t described in the 7 Co-op Principles. As he told us, “We’re going to make a lot of money.” Rather shocking from the guy running the “people before profits” grocery we all love. When I was on the board we expanded to the North Valley store. It was not a plan initially embraced by the GM at the time, who had already begun the process of a site plan for a huge store at Eubank and Moon. Because the co-op is democratically controlled, the board scrapped that site during my first board meeting. The valley store opened and the success enabled the coop’s expansion to Santa Fe and Gallup. ... The 7 Co-op Principles ... do not include cheaper food, but allowing the members to decide with their purchases what is carried, and with their votes, who represents them on the board. Also you mention “destroying” the co-op and there is no indication that I’ve seen that by allowing the democratic process to move forward the co-op will be destroyed. I’ve learned about co-ops over decades and was trained extensively on the board and as a staffer. This discussion can only happen while maintaining these principles, and using them as our guide. Long live La Montañita! KATIE STONE SFREPORTER.COM
TAKE BACK SFR Not only do we need to take back the co-op; apparently, we need to take back the media as well. From the headline on, there was not the slightest pretense of fair reporting—not even basic journalistic integrity to include a direct quote from the two Take Back the Co-op folks interviewed. Such conspicuous bias would be comical if it weren’t so disheartening. Time to go back to journalism school, Gwyneth Doland. Or maybe you just need a hard look in the mirror. Shame on you. CAROL NORRIS SFREPORTER.COM
COVER, SEPTEMBER 7: “MAJOR BEEF”
LET ‘EM GRAZE
THANKS, GWYNETH Thank you to Gywenth Doland for her excellent article in support of La Montañita Coop. I have been an owner/member of La Montañita for more than three decades, and it is the only place I shop for groceries. The professionalism, dedication, and accomplishments of their staff and board are remarkable, particularly in these difficult economic times. Their commitment to making quality food available to all, and to listening to their member/owners, should be celebrated. The so-called “Take Back the Co-op” movement is wrong-headed and should go away. STERLING GROGAN SANTA FE
SLANDER AT THE CO-OP? Last week when I went to the co-op there was an employee sitting at the door handing out the “co-op’s” side of the story. I am a co-op member, so I was sort of offended. Then I saw that the letter implied that those of us who are part of Take Back the Co-op had slashed the manager’s tires. I would like to see the police report. That is slander. I am 70 years old, not privileged, living on social security, but I’ve made it a priority to buy organic food because it is good for our environment, good for our local farmers, and people who have cancer, immune deficiencies, etc., have no choice. ... There is a price to pay for cheap food: the loss of our bee population, etc. Not to mention putting poison into your body. [Take Back the Co-op] is not a small group of people. It’s over 1,000, and many of these folks are not wealthy. This is also about labor rights. There has been retaliation towards workers at our co-op after they joined the union. The last time workers tried to unionize, the administrators hired a union-busting lawyer. Is this really what we want at our co-op?
People handing out lies as we walk in the door? Administrators who alert the police that there is going to be a demonstration in front of the store? ... If we don’t win this, I will not renew my membership that I’ve had since the late ’70s. DR. BENAY BLEND SFREPORTER.COM
LETTERS, SEPTEMBER 14: “BEEF WITH BEEF”
LET ‘EM BURN Marc Bender’s assumption that “clearly grasslands existed before either bison or cows” ignores another powerful sculptor of landscapes. Environmentalists who think grasslands are natural should go back and read the work of anthropologist Omer Stewart, and of geographer Carl Sauer, who concluded that most if not all of the world’s grasslands were created by fires regularly set by human inhabitants over very long periods of time. They should go back and read the work of Aldo
New Mexico’s cattle culture goes back to 1598 when Juan de Oñate drove 7,000 head of livestock to NM. Among the livestock were 1,400 head of cattle and 400 horses. The rest were sheep, goats, hogs etc. Other Spanish explorers had driven cattle to NM but only as a food source. ... The Spanish started grazing cattle in the Santa Fe National Forest then and they are still doing it! Now the USFS and other organizations want to end grazing in the forest to protect the watersheds and other riparian areas. One of their main targets is the Northern New Mexico Cattlemen’s Association, which is almost entirely Hispanic. In fact, they are targeting Hispanic ranchers all over the state in an effort to eradicate the Hispanic contribution to the ranching industry. … I don’t know about you, but I’d rather drink from a creek or river where there are cattle and wildlife grazing than a creek where people are urinating and pooping all over, carrying every disease and taking every prescription drug known to mankind. LUCIANO MARTINEZ PECOS
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 “I was thinking about long pants ... Maybe next week.“ —Overheard at Whole Foods
“Where do they get all this stuff?” —Overheard at the Museum of International Folk Art
Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com
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1 2 3
CITY HAS NEW TWITTER ACCOUNT FOR ST. FRANCIS UNDERPASS But will following @AcequiaUnderpas (yes, one S) help us understand how to get to the Rail Trail from the Acequia Trail?
POUR ONE OUT FOR ARNOLD PALMER Add a drop of vodka to that iced tea/lemonade.
DOWNTOWN BOMB THREAT HAPPENS ON SAME DAY TEMPS PLUNGE INTO FALL What the hell else is going to happen around here?!
CO-OP ACTIVISTS HATE ON GWYNETH DOLAND’S OPINION PIECE
4 5 6 7
This is the worst episode of Portlandia we’ve ever seen. Wait...
PLAZA CAFE FAMILY PURCHASES DEFUNCT ZIA DINER One can never have too many brunch options.
CONSERVATIVES CALL ZOZOBRA ‘ANTITHESIS OF CHRISTIANITY’ Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt not commit adultery. Thou shalt not set fire to Old Man Gloom.
FIRST PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE FEELS LIKE SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Trump shouts. Clinton laughs. Everyone else invents new drinking games.
Read it on SFReporter.com
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...AND THE SKIES ARE NOT CLOUDY ALL DAY
KOMBUCHA BREWERS WIN BIG
Did you notice we’ve been streaming the new album from gothic Americana act Cloacas on our website? Check it out in its entirety ahead of their three-day series of release shows this weekend.
HoneyMoon Brewery won over $200K at the Miller Lite Tap the Future Program contest. This probably means you’ll start seeing their alcoholic kombucha everywhere. Finally!
BLUE CORN
Big Announcement
You don’t have any delegates, Bob. Of course I don’t. I just released them.
The end of something…
H
BY ROBE RT B ASLE R
ey, Bob! You must be getting excited now. It’s really getting close! It sure is, isn’t it? Uh, what’s getting close?
The presidential election! You called it right 13 months ago, when you announced the formation of Santa Feans for Trump, in this very column! There were 17 Republican candidates back then, and you saw the future! Thanks! So, you’re with me on this? Hell no. Donald Trump is beyond repugnant, but I admire that you stuck with it. You stayed the course, remained on message, all those political clichés. How many people came to your Santa Fe rallies? None. In 13 months of beating the chamisa bushes, I found not one single supporter here. Some lady did wander into my rally at Fort Marcy last June, but she was just looking for her dog. When she saw my Trump banner, she flipped me off.
You’re saying all those proposed Trump campaign committees you wrote about back in August 2015 never got off the ground? Intelligent Women for Trump? Recent Mexican Immigrants for Trump? Santa Fe Institute Scientists for Trump? The Criminally Insane for Trump? Sadly, no. I really had high hopes for that last one, but it turns out it’s harder than you’d think to get the criminally insane to focus on stuff. Anyway, I’ve made my decision, and it’s final. Final decision? This sounds big. I’m disbanding Santa Feans for Trump, as of today. I’m releasing my delegates.
Sigh. Look, I know you’ve been a keen political observer for many years. Can you share with us the most important thing you’ve learned? Yes. Just when we think we’ve hit rock bottom, we haven’t. I honestly remember telling people, ‘Don’t worry, Americans will never vote for Richard Nixon. Don’t worry, Ronald Reagan doesn’t have a chance. George W. Bush? No way.’ But they all got elected. Two times each. So you’re saying it’s possible that… Exactly. I guess you’ve had a lot of time to think and plan at all those empty rallies. If Trump does win, what will you do? Move out of the country. To Canada, I suppose? Canada? No! They’ll be overrun with American refugees. I’m thinking maybe Assisi, over there in Italy... You’d be willing to do that, relocate to Italy? It’s a sacrifice, but yes. Or Bruges, or Edinburgh, or Zermatt, or Dubrovnik, or Salzburg. Or maybe just Bali or Tahiti. But if you’re a political refugee from your own homeland, what makes you think you deserve somewhere as nice as those wonderful places you just named? Hey, I’m living in a Santa Fe paradise right now. Why should I take a step down, just because I helped elect Archie Bunker to the presidency?
You must have found other Trump loyalists elsewhere, though? I mean, there is Texas, after all. And Oklahoma. Yes, I did find them, and a more frightening bunch of trolls, mutants, paranoids, straw-slurpers, nose-pickers, freaks of nature and poorly educated bottom-feeders I can’t possibly imagine…
You know, Bob, in this strange, strange political year of 2016, what you just said makes sense. Totally. Hey, thanks! It’s like they say, I’m just trying to make America scary again!
But what did… Shhhhhhh, I’m not finished describing them. Mother rapers! Father stabbers! Father rapers! Bob, I’m pretty sure now you’re just quoting from that song, Alice’s Restaurant. Sorry, I got carried away.
Robert Basler’s humor column runs twice monthly in SFR. Email the author: bluecorn@sfreporter.com
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
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BRIEFS Jail Needs New Shrink Santa Fe County is accepting applications for a psychiatrist to perform diagnoses and prescribe medication at the Adult Detention Facility, a government-run jail that serves a large swath of Northern New Mexico. Dr. Luigi Dulanto, the previous psychiatrist, resigned on Sept. 8, citing challenging working conditions. “Working in the corrections environment is difficult because of the population,” Dulanto tells SFR. “Inmates are very difficult to deal with. There are a lot of addiction problems in the jail. It is difficult to provide adequate service.” He adds, “Many inmates want to get high on the medication I was prescribing. It was very upsetting.” Whoever takes his place will be well compensated. With an annual salary of $281,379, Dulanto earned more than any other county employee. To put that into perspective, the jail psychiatrist brings in nearly three times as much as the warden, Mark Caldwell. County Manager Katherine Miller, the next highest paid county employee, earns $177,927 a year. For the time being, an internal medicine doctor will handle inmates’ psych medications, according to Dr. Merritt
Ayad, director of mental health for the county corrections department. The county is working on finding an interim psychiatrist until a permanent one is hired. “It’s not ideal,” Ayad says. “We’re making one guy do another guy’s work. But we’re not falling apart. Inmates are still being cared for.” The jail houses a max inmate population of about 660. Approximately 67 percent of those incarcerated at the jail have mental illness, while about 90 percent have substance abuse issues, according to Ayad. Santa Fe County created the position of jail psychiatrist as a condition of a 2004 agreement between the county and the Department of Justice. Civil rights investigators examined the quality of healthcare at the facility after the death of Tyson Johnson, an inmate who expressed suicidal ideation before guards found him hanging from a sprinkler head. At the time of Johnson’s death, Management and Training Corporation, a private company, ran the jail. Santa Fe County posted the job on its website on Sept. 22. The posting closes on Sept. 30. (Steven Hsieh)
We’re Going Through Changes
SFR has been providing free news and culture journalism and commentary to Santa Fe readers for more than 40 years. One of three newspapers in the City of Roses chain, its sister papers are the Willamette Week in Portland, Oregon, and INDY Week in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. Got feedback about how we’re doing or have a story idea? Write editor@sfreporter.com.
Last week’s masthead included a few important changes that we’d like to point out to readers who might not always read that fine print below the table of contents. Julie Ann Grimm, who’s been editor of SFR for the past three years (pictured right), now serves as both editor and publisher of the organization. Longtime sales expert Anna Maggiore leads the revenue side of things with a new position as both associate publisher and ad director. After serving as publisher of the Santa Fe Reporter since July of 2013, Jeff Norris has stepped down to pursue other goals.
Straight from the Source Panhandlers take the mic at upcoming community forum BY STEVE N H SI E H @sfrepor te r.co m
T
he last time Ernie Barela panhandled, he made about 30 bucks. That cash lasted him two weeks. Barela usually gets by in Santa Fe on his monthly checks: $245 in welfare and $150 in food stamps. But every once in a while he’ll order more fast food than he can afford and find himself short at the end of the month. To get over the hump, Barela might “fly a sign” somewhere on Cerrillos Road. Panhandling takes preparation. As Barela explains, “There’s an art to it.” He’ll stop shaving for two days and throw on some raggedy clothes to engender sympathy. He served in the Army years ago, which makes for effective signage. “You could try to smile or you could look sad. If you look at somebody rudely, they’ll call the police on you,” Barela says. Barela plans to speak on a panel this Friday titled “Why Am I Homeless? Why Do I Panhandle?” Organized by the grassroots group Santa Fe Need and Deed, the forum offers locals a chance to hear straight from the people who spend time on the street. “It’s for people to hear what it’s like and to stop making assumptions based on what they think it’s like,” says Martha Hamblen, executive director of Need and Deed. Christ Church Santa Fe will host. Homeless attendees can obtain a monthly bus pass or $10 gift card to Smith’s. Pizza 9 plans to deliver eight pizzas and plates and napkins, which will be available before the event kicks off at 1 pm. To get ready, Sylvia, a community outreach coordinator for Need and Deed, hands out fliers for the forum to bench-sitters outside Pete’s Place, the nickname for the city-owned Santa Fe Resource and Opportunity Center. They read: “Your life experience is priceless. Your story matters.” Another stack of fliers intended for the general public advertises that city police Chief Patrick Gallagher plans to attend. (Gallagher did not return requests from comment. Santa Fe Police spokesman Greg Gurulé tells SFR the department plans to send a representative, but could not confirm whether it would be Gallagher.) City Council in 2010 passed an ordinance outlining where (on public property, but not near bus stops or ATMs), when (whenever, except for in the business capitol zoning district—which encompass-
STEVEN HSIEH
NEWS es downtown and stretches of the Cerrillos Road corridor near St. Francis Drive and Baca Street— where it’s restricted before dusk and after dawn) and how (not aggressively) panhandlers may ask for money. According to the ordinance, those who panhandle outside the parameters for the first time get a warning. Second offenses prompt a citation. Third time’s an arrest. The rules overturned a blanket ban on the practice that civil rights groups called unconstitutional. Police officers earlier this year handed out their own fliers listing the panhandling provisions to downtown shopkeepers and members of the chamber of commerce. “Remember, panhandling is legal in certain situations and people should be judged by their criminal or outrageous behavior,” it reads. Officers may hand out the same flier at the community forum, according to Gurulé. Before heading to Pete’s Place, Sylvia stopped by the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce office on St. Michael’s Drive to present a personal invitation to the largest business group in the city. “I just want you all to have a voice,” she tells Simon Brackley, chamber CEO and President. Brackley asks Sylvia to post a flier in his window and says he’ll try to get someone at the event. No promises, though. He notes that a week’s notice is a bit short. Sylvia replies that she’s emailed the chamber several times. “I need them to hear it from the horse’s mouth. It can’t always come from the police,” she says later. Sylvia lived in a tent when the going got rough, but now she lives in Section 8 housing. She got hooked up with Need and Deed years ago when I need them to Hamblen stopped by the shelter to hand out bus hear it from the horse’s passes (the group no longer does this). mouth. It can’t always Friday’s forum evolved out of community meetcome from the police. ings held every Monday -Sylvia at 2 pm by Need and Deed at Westminster Presbyterian Church, where volunteers serve hot meals (this week, beef stew) and distribute bags stocked with soap, shaving cream and toothbrushes. Racks of donated clothes are available for the taking. Hamblen invites homeless attendees to say whatever they’re feeling, with the expectation that nothing leaves the room: “We just let them talk because a lot of times people don’t have somebody to talk to that cares about them all week long.” Hamblen, who founded the group five years ago, aims to bring in regulars for long-term mentoring. She says, “As a society, we can always do more than what we’re doing. It behooves us to care more.” “WHY AM I HOMELESS? WHY DO I PANHANDLE?“ 1 pm Friday Sept. 30. Free. Christ Church Santa Fe, 1213 Don Gaspar Ave., 982-8817 .
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RAILYARD URGENT CARE
We put patients first and deliver excellent care in the heart of Santa Fe. Open 7 days a week, 8am – 7pm Railyard Urgent Care is Santa Fe’s only dedicated urgent care clinic operating on a solely walk-in basis, 7 days a week, to ensure excellent medical care with the shortest possible wait times.
6401 Richards Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87508
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OCTOBER CALENDAR OF EVENTS
+ INJURIES & ILLNESS + X-RAYS + PHYSICALS + LAB TESTS + VACCINATIONS + DRUG TESTING + DOT EXAMS No appointment necessary Most insurance accepted Cash Discounted Rates Conveniently located Se habla español
WHERE TO FIND US 831 South St. Francis Drive, just north of the red caboose.
(505) 501.7791
Western Interconnect LLC
Empower Students, Strengthen Community. Empoderar a los Estudiantes, Fortalecer a la Comunidad.
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MON
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TUES
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THURS
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The ABC’s of Arts, Business and Creativity — Public Forums featuring Sandy Zane 2 to 3 p.m., Room 488 505-428-1501 Campus Crossroads Monthly Film Series: For Indigenous People’s Day — Up Heartbreak Hill 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Room 223 505-428-1467 Immigration Panel — Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month Noon to 1:30 p.m., Lecture Hall 216 505-428-1516 AARP BACK TO WORK 50+ Info Session 10 a.m. to noon, Room 223 855-850-2525
19 WED
College Night and Open House 6 to 8 p.m., Fitness Education Center 505-428-1779 Visit with more than 40 colleges and universities.
20 THURS
Autumn Readings Series — Reading & Reception 2016 Santa Fe Literary Review Issue 5-7 p.m., Visual Arts Gallery 505-428-1903
25 TUES
Fall Transfer Day 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Main Hallway 505-428-1462 Find out about bachelor’s and master’s degree programs and transfer options.
27 THURS
SFCC Governing Board Meeting 5:30 p.m., Board Room, Room 223 505-428-1148 Board Finance Committee meets Wednesday, Oct. 26. Public welcome. Halloween Trick-or-Treating 3 to 6 p.m., Main Entrance
505-428-1665
announces the launch of an Open Season
29 SAT
To allocate up to 603 MW of transmission capacity on a 35 mile, 345kV AC transmission line connecting to PNM’s Blackwater substation in New Mexico.
Dental Magnification Matters! 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Room 488 505-428-1258 Education event for licensed dental professionals.
31 MON
Opening Reception: Chapters: An Exhibition of Works by Gordon Fluke 4 to 6 p.m., Main Hallway 505-428-1855 Exhibit of pastels, screenprints, handmade paper and letterpress pieces runs through Dec. 16.
Open Season launch date is October 3, 2016 MORE INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND ON OPEN SEASON WEBSITE:
www.WesternInterconnect-os.com website will be available October 3 12
Events are free unless otherwise noted.
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MORE DETAILS & EVENTS AT SFCC.EDU
Individuals who need special accommodations should call the phone number listed for each event.
LEARN MORE. 505-428-1000 | sfcc.edu
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
NEWS
St. Michael’s Drive could see more housing and services if developers bite on proposed city rule changes.
The Other Mike Big zoning changes proposed for midtown corridor BY JUL IE AN N G R I M M editor@s fre p o r te r.co m
A
watercolor painted by long-range city planner Richard McPherson years ago depicted a rather utopian image of St. Michael’s Drive—not the reality of seven lanes of zooming traffic and a veritable sea of parking lots, but a boulevard with trees in the median, safe places to walk and innovate, and modern spaces in which to live and work. The artwork that appeared in SFR’s 2015 Annual Manual was part of what some described as a “community visioning” process that took place in a vacant storefront now occupied by the new and improved Tecolote restaurant, and even those backing a rezoning plan today say what it depicts might never come to pass. But they say giving private landowners the chance— and incentive—to alter the character of the area is a step toward a new image. City councilors and members of the public who serve on five government committees have already approved the proposal planners are calling the “Midtown Local Innovation Corridor Overlay District.” The most recent was a unanimous vote from four councilors who serve on the Public Works Committee on Monday night. While the idea has been kicking around since way before he took office, Mayor Javier Gonzales became its newest flagbearer two years ago when he talked about it with mayors from other cities at a conference on urban design. Matt O’Reilly is driving the bus on the effort now, along with the mayor and mayor pro tem, Councilor Peter Ives. O’Reilly is a former city planning commissioner and Land Use Depart-
ment director whom Gonzales appointed director of O’Reilly says redevelopment won’t be quick. The asset development, a position Gonzales created. first and most likely changes, he says, will be in exMuch of O’Reilly’s time in that post so far has isting commercial areas where tenants move out and been dedicated to tasks like renegotiating the city’s new tenants choose to move in because of city incenfranchise agreement with telecom giants Qwest and tives that are part of the overlay ordinance proposal. CenturyLink, other leases of city property to bring in Multi-family housing that could address the city’s revenue for the economic development fund, work- shortage of affordable dwellings tops this list for deing on a revamp to regulations about food trucks and sired new development, yet it’s probably further off. acting as liaison in a complicated bankruptcy pro- Meanwhile, businesses such as restaurants, services ceeding in which the city has a stake. But the bulk of like hairdressers, doctors and dentists, and enterO’Reilly’s energy at present is on the overlay. tainment and arts projects (that are part of what he Unlike the city-owned and privately developed says the community “wants to see” there based on Santa Fe Railyard district that’s seen a flurry of con- surveys) could come faster thanks to fee waivers in struction in recent years, O’Reilly says that with this the proposal. plan, whatever new things hapBack in 2009, when city pen along St. Mike’s will be moplanners were talking about tivated in a more organic way. the effort known as RE:Mike, Comprising about 373 acres in things weren’t looking so the geographical center of the hot for the corridor that They’re going city, the zoning overlay would was marked by empty retail give the 161 individual propspaces and businesses with to make their own erty owners opportunities to their eyes on other parts of build in ways that are imposthe city. But that’s changed decisions over time sible with current rules. That somewhat. Ask Buddy Espion what to do with means allowing taller buildings nosa, the general manager of in some places, greater density Santa Fe Toyota. The Toyota their property. throughout, and fewer required dealership at that time had parking spaces for most uses. plans to abandon the St. -Matt O’Reilly “Some of these properties Mike’s location and rebuild have been owned by these famion the Southside, but when lies for 40 years. They have inEspinosa took the helm, he vested in building commercial shifted focus. Now the dealbuildings and developments, ership, which employs 138 they have entered into long-term leases with [ten- people, has purchased two adjacent lots and plans to ants] like with Kmart. … It is not so much the city soon break ground on a new building. trying to impose something on them,” O’Reilly tells “I wanted to stay in the center of town,” he says. SFR. “It is respecting how much they have invested “Look, the Chamber of Commerce was out there in and the fact that they have existing tenants and that the outlet mall and guess what? They’re next door to they’re going to make their own decisions over time me now.” on what to do with their property.” While he’s not up on the details of the zoning proRight now, the area is a combination of zoning posal, he’s says he’s not worried. “It can only be a that’s largely commercial, industrial and, because of good thing.” the 64-acre campus of the Santa Fe University of Art Area residents still have time to let the City Counand Design, institutional. If the overlay is adopted, cil know what they think about the idea. A public one of the big changes is that that the city won’t im- hearing is planned for Oct. 26. pose density rules. New projects can be up to 50 feet tall except within 150 feet of homes, where they can Read a detailed city staff report at SFReporter.com only rise to 38 feet.
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THE NEXT GREAT EXTINCTION? CLIMATE CHANGE THREATENS TO MAKE GROWING CHILES IN NEW MEXICO TOUGHER THAN EVER
U
BY E L I Z AB E T H MI L L E R e liza be th@sf re p or te r.com
ntil an August storm hammered his fields with nickel-sized hail for half an hour, Matt Romero’s chile crop looked to be heading for its biggest season yet. While pinned in his truck, watching, he shot a video of the pummeling his cucumbers, cabbages and chiles received. Between the vegetable rows, inches of muddy water roil in the hail. His swearing and lamenting the devastation can just barely be heard over the drumming on the truck rooftop. “All the extra profits we would have looked at for this year were just gone in one half-hour event,” Romero tells SFR later. “I’ve never had one that severe—ever.” The total hit comes out to $60,000 to $80,000, or roughly 30 percent of his anticipated profits this year from his 11 acres, spread over two plots in Alcalde and Dixon. “It doesn’t let up at all,” he says, revisiting that footage. “Normally, it’s ding, ding, ding, and you’re done. This is 10 rounds and you’re out. Looks like a winter storm, doesn’t it? That’s the bizarre part of how thick it got.” He’ll be fine, he insists over coffee on a quiet Tuesday morning at the Santa Fe Farmers Market, between turns at the chile roaster. There, he dons a pink apron and sunglasses and jokes that he’s the most interesting roaster in town with tourists who break out their phones and iPads to shoot photos and videos of him. “It would be hard to survive that hit if I was a much smaller farmer, or hadn’t had the success along the way,” he says. “But we’ll make it. We’ll make it another year.” The weather hasn’t been easy on anyone this year. In July, farmers ran short on water and temperatures ran high, and worries for this year’s crop ran right alongside. Then all the rain they normally see spread over the month of July seemed to fall in a single day in August. This comes after a February so warm that carrots started to grow. Chiles are a goldilocks crop—they want to be not too hot, not too cold, not too wet and not too dry. The plant doesn’t set fruit in temperatures warmer than 95
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degrees or cooler than 55 degrees. A light frost can be fatal. New Mexico grows a quarter of the United States’ chile supply, and continues to be the second largest producer in the country, but the crop has taken hits in the previous decades. In 1992, 34,500 acres were harvested. By 2012, that number had plummeted to 9,600, and last year was all the way down to 7,700 acres, according to the National Agricultural Statistics Service. At this point, onions account for a greater share of state cash flow from crops, at 8 percent, and pecans wallop both categories, bringing in 19.9 percent. Chile peppers limp along at 5.5 percent, down from $65 million in sales to $38.6 million just between 2012 and 2014. By far, the leading force in those losses has been competition from other countries. As an often handpicked crop, it’s cheaper to grow and pay laborers to harvest chile in Mexico, Asia and India, which have emerged as leading producers globally. Demand for chile has more than doubled, while New Mexico’s supply of it (and share of the profits) has dropped. But while labor poses its own set of problems—from costs to farmers to challenges for the workers themselves, who face long hours of difficult work—the weather also takes some credit for making life tough for chile farmers, and it’s getting tougher. In the heat of July, the Trujillos were most worried about water. After an almost nonexistent spring that rolled right into summer, plants were two weeks late (though last year’s wet summer gave rise to more pests and rodents to go after chiles). Timing is a delicate art for their crops, which are watered by one of four ditches filled by the Santa Cruz dam. Early season overflows readily supply their fields, but those taper off through the summer months. “You can’t have water when you want to have water; you have to water when it’s available,” says Noel Trujillo of Vigil’s Chimayó Produce. He can’t even grow on the 7 acres at his house because the water there isn’t dependable. “We’ve been on the acequia system for God knows how many years, and it works … but it does reach a critical point,” Trujillo says. “You just kind of put the water for the stuff you want to save. Of course you notice the snowpacks are less than they used to be.” That’s where his wife, Gloria Trujillo, picks up the conversation: “This summer has been super hot, and you can see that it’s taken its toll on the plants.” Once water isn’t coming over the spillway, they try to conserve to last the whole season, or at least until the monsoon, she said in a late-July conversation: “But we should have seen that two weeks ago.” There have been worse years, says Jesús Guzmán of Jesús Guzmán Produce, recalling a period in the mid1990s so dry they couldn’t farm his acres near Medanales at all. The situation didn’t improve until around 2006. “Some years are a lot better than others, but we never got back to the early ’90s, late ’80s, when we had more water than we could use,” he says. “It never came back. This year has been one of those years it seems like we’re just going to scrape by. … Water has been getting scarce, more and more. We’re getting to a point that we’re not going to make it, and rain remains to be seen.”
The trouble with a changing climate is that it’s not just a slow cranking up of the thermostat, says New Mexico State University horticulture professor Paul Bosland—also known as the “Chileman,” who signs his emails “hottest regards.” “One thing people have to understand with climate change is, it’s not just this gentle warming, like it’s going to be 1 degree warmer or 2 degrees warmer. We’re seeing these fluctuations where it seems to be more dramatic, and things happening like, much colder than normal, much hotter than normal,” he says. “Climate change, it’s real. Nobody should ever doubt it. But we know it’s not climate warming, per se. It is getting warmer, but it’s not going to be just a gentle warming. We just see this real dramatic shift, more dramatic weather events.” That’s problematic for an already finicky plant that produces less when it’s too hot or too cold. In 2015, NMSU’s teaching garden saw 70 days of temperatures above 90 degrees. “It was the lowest chile year we saw on our research plots, ever,” Bosland says. This year, two plots were hit with hail that set back their production. “Mother Nature is just making it a little more difficult for our growers,” Bosland says. The teaching garden at NMSU in Southern New Mexico is planted with more than 150 types of chiles, sourced from all over South America, including 10 wild types and wild varieties from domesticated species. Many of these the American public has never tasted, but they provide a veritable toy box for chile breeders, full of options for them to select for plants that can set fruit at higher temperatures. Chiles can self-pollinate, producing seeds that grow into plants very similar to their parents. Introducing new genetic material to get something more like daughters and sons than twins takes an external hand to mix pollen from two plants selected as good parents. Their progeny are then planted in test plots, and from there, breeders choose plants that seem to have inherited the best of their parents—like disease resis-
tance and heat tolerance. “We’re going to have to keep selecting for plants that can set at that hotter weather, and that’s going to be possible because the original chiles, the ones before we began breeding here in New Mexico, really grew in a much more temperate area. They liked around 68, 72 degrees Fahrenheit,” Bosland says. “We selected and selected until we had one that would grow here in New Mexico.” But 10 years will pass between creating new varieties and seeing farmers stock those varieties in their fruit stands. Can that process keep pace with the changing climate? “We don’t know,” Bosland says. “We’re watching it. We are cognizant of this fact, so we’re looking now to see how do our chiles do.” Chiles aren’t alone in this problem. Nature Climate Change recently published research into Africa’s maize crops that tracked a 30-year process to breed, deliver and adopt new varieties of maize adapted to hotter conditions that shorten crop duration and decrease yield. At that speed, new varieties are outpaced by changes in the climate and therefore rendered useless. The researchers suggested developing new crops in greenhouses already heated to the temperatures projected for the decades ahead. Terry Berke, who has been the hot pepper breeder with Monsanto Company for 16 years, has a different perspective. “The climate has always been changing,” he says. Their program runs entirely out of fields, with a base in Woodland, California—which saw an exceptionally hot summer, with many days over 100 degrees—and breeding nurseries in Florida, Mexico and Guatemala. “Breeders see that as job security. We just keep doing our breeding and selecting for better adaptation, better plant, better yield, better disease package. I don’t worry about it so much. I think breeding is going to be able to solve whatever issues we have, in conjunction with technology like drip irrigation. At least for the considerable future, I think we’ll be fine.”
New Mexico State University horticulture professor Paul Bosland wants to see New Mexico establish a reputation for the highest quailty chile.
There’s only so much science can do to intervene on the chile’s behalf in the face of a changing climate, and what they do, they have to do in largely old-school ways. No one has yet cracked the chile genome. “I’m 100 percent sure you’re not getting a GMO chile, because it can’t be done,” Bosland says. One NMSU researcher focuses specifically on what it is that renders the chile genome recalcitrant to gene editing; it’s the one plant in its family to hold that distinction. A pepper crop typically takes five months from seed to seed, and while there are some options for speeding that up, they’re laborious and not very cost effective, says Berke, so they basically just have to wait out the natural cycle. “Pepper breeding is a long-term process,” he says. At Monsanto, just building new “parent” peppers— two varieties to cross-pollinate to produce a new hybrid that has won the genetic lottery by taking desired traits from both of its parents—can take five years. Another five will pass with internal testing, selecting the best of the best offspring, ramping up seed production and launching commercially. “We can manipulate earliness, plant height, yield, disease resistance, even things like shelf life without affecting flavors, so that’s essentially what we try to do,” Berke says. “We always run commercial varieties as our checks, and we send a lot of stuff to our vegetable quality lab, where we measure pungency, sugars, dry matter and other quality traits and, basically, we try to match more or less the commercial checks.” He describes a program driven by popular opinion—not his thoughts on what tastes good, but the purchase power of, say, the 100 million Mexicans who eat peppers. They try to keep the flavor steady while manipulating other characteristics of the plant that could affect its resiliency and production. And always, always with an eye on the specific length-to-width ratio demanded, which is 2.5 to 1 for jalapeños, 1:1 to habaneros and 4:1 for serranos. There’s a little variance in that, but stray too far, he says, and consumers “really start to squawk at you.” While chiles haven’t opened up to genetic modification, researchers have identified molecular markers, like reading a DNA fingerprint. Traditional pathology screenings take six weeks to three months and have to run for one disease at a time. The latest testing for molecular markers for disease resistance, which involves taking and testing a hole-punch sample of a leaf, can be completed much earlier in the plant’s life and can screen for a dozen different resistances. It’s much faster. Faced with diseases that can wipe out a chile harvest, Berke says, breeding for disease resistance has been the focus at Monsanto. “We’ve identified a disease resistance package of four different traits that we’re focused on,” he says, listing four fungi and bacteria that can attack peppers from their roots to their leaves. “We think with those four disease resistances we should be able to grow a hybrid anywhere in the US or Mexico.” Increased natural resistance to those pests could also reduce the use of pesticides. To be clear, Monsanto does no genetic modification work on chiles—not for “Roundup Ready” crops and not for built-in pesticide-resistance often now deployed in corn and soybeans. A NMSU faculty member has received funding from the New Mexico Chile Growers Association to
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SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016
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MARK WOODWARD
THE NEXT GREAT EXTINCTION
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develop a chile resistant to glyphosate, the key ingredient in Roundup, but results of that research have not yet been published. The drip irrigation revolution that started around 2005 has dramatically reduced the amount of water required to grow crops, Berke says, alleviating some of pressure for research in that area. “Nobody is really asking me about drought resistance at this particular time,” Berke says. “Peppers are a fairly high-value crop. They can afford to pay for water to irrigate them, much more so than wheat or cotton or row crops with fairly high water consumption but low value, so they’re happy to pay for whatever water they need for peppers.” Whatever the next change that comes, Berke sees it likely to arrive on the wings of gene-editing technology. This more precise method for changing specific base pairs to create alleles that exist already in nature could be applied to existing hybrid parents, instantly giving them a new resistance without having to breed new parents. “This would be a lot faster and more convenient, so that’s going to be the next big thing coming down the pike in breeding,” Berke says. “We think this is going to be more widely accepted than, say, the GMOs that have caused such a controversy.” Drones have also increasingly found a place in farm country, checking conditions on massive fields of commodity crops. Whether they’ll be able to work for vegetable crops remains to be seen. Camera and battery technology will need to improve, but could potentially allow for drones to be used to monitor for drought stress and nitrogen defi-
ciency, alerting farmers where to target fertilizer and water. “There’s a lot of potential. There’s a lot of interest, for sure,” Berke says. “I think it’ll be a very useful tool in the future.” Another solution at play is the oldest in the book—the question of allowing crops to naturally evolve within their landscape. After all, selective breeding by farmers over eons has played a large role in how we’ve gotten the wide range of flavors, shapes, colors and spice levels already available. “Maybe now is when allowing plants to adapt naturally becomes more important than creating clones of an existing plant,” says Romero, back in Santa Fe. “So maybe we need to go back to the open-pollinated-type plants that are able to adapt to their region, and that’s part of what the local chile has become.” Much of his seed he purchases, then plants seedlings in a greenhouse in Dixon and later moves them to his fields. But he’s also bred his own new variety, the Alcalde Improved, which he says is their best-tasting and hottest chile, and was the fastest-moving among his roasted chiles that Tuesday morning at the farmers market. He sells it as a seedling as well. “If you’re up here in this altitude, it’s probably the only one that will do well here, because it’s more adapted to Northern New Mexico,” he says. “If you take a plant to another bioregion, it can adapt to that region’s altitude and latitude and heat and season length within seven years. It becomes a new species, a new variety based on its adaptations. … What’s going to be the key is allowing
the NuMex varities,” he says. All NMSU-produced varieties include the tag NuMex in their name. That’s produced oddities, like the NuMex Trick-orTreat, a no-heat habañero pepper sought for its flavor and aroma rather than spice, or the NuMex 6-4, which boasted six times more flavor than its competitor when it entered the market. For an analogy, he looks to Californian wine. For years, vineyards there cranked out affordable wine by the gallon. Then Robert Mondavi came along and elevated the level of craftsmanship and care. “I think we’re going to have to do the same thing if New Mexico wants to compete,” he says. Like heirloom tomatoes and the campaign for more options for apples than red and yellow delicious, he says, “it costs more to grow, you have to pay a little more, but I think the American public is willing to spend a little more if they’re going to get a real quality product.” The price difference might amount to a 10 percent hike, he estimates. “It’s an industry that I think is really trying to adapt to all the changes and challenges that it’s currently facing, it really is, and there are a lot of people out there who have put a lot of effort into making it better for New Mexico,” says Kelly Urig, author of New Mex-
Mother Nature is just making it a little more difficult for our growers.
In all of this change, Bosland cautions, let’s not lose sight of what really matters: flavor. While New Mexico’s crops may cost more to grow, he sees them as capable of dropping the competition when it comes to quality, so that’s where he focuses his attention. “What we’re trying to do is make chile more flavorful—taste better—so that the consumer will demand
-Paul Bosland
DEGREES FAHRENHEIT
AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURE IN NEW MEXICO
The average annual temperature between 1901 and 2000 was 52.9 degrees.
CHILE ACRES HARVESTED
NEW MEXICO CHILE PRODUCTION
This drop is attributed to disease and weather.
A late freeze and hot and cold spells contributed to this dip.
YEAR
COURTESY MONSANTO
the plants to adapt to the conditions.” One of the main providers for seeds in New Mexico is a seed company out of southeastern Arizona, the 33-year old Curry Seed and Chile Company, which claims that 80 to 90 percent of the chiles grown commercially in the US can be traced to Curry’s farm. The concern is that when a single company produces the seeds for crops and distributes them around the country, that system of inherited resilience gets disrupted. “Landrace chile cultivars” such as the Alcalde Improved are unique to their areas, developed by farming families over generations of selection, and have adapted to Northern New Mexico’s cooler temperatures and shorter growing season—where the last spring freeze can hit as late as May or June, compared to January for counties in the southern portion of the state. Familiar names in landrace lineup include the Chimayó, Velarde, Jemez, Escondida and San Felipe. Guzmán has also been saving his own seeds and replanting from those since the 1980s. That’s 30 years of wisdom about what it takes to grow in Northern New Mexico bred into those plants. He cleans the seeds from chiles that are then turned into chile powder, which he also sells at his stand at the farmers market. When someone loses their crops, he’ll reload them with seeds grown from his farm. “I think they do better,” he says. “They do a lot better than ones that you buy.”
Terry Berke, who has been the hot pepper breeder with Monsanto Company for 16 years, says disease resistance will be key to future chile crops.
ico Chiles: History, Legend and Lore. “I am concerned about its future. … It’s become in such high demand, and because it’s so popular all over the US now, people won’t care if it’s coming from New Mexico or a different state like Colorado or Arizona and they’ll buy it regardless because they want that taste, and because it’s popular.” If real New Mexican chile costs more, would people pay it? “I hope so. The only reason I hope so is that I really hope that money goes back to the farmers so they can continue to do what they’ve done for generations. This is a 400-year tradition for us,” she says. “I hope people are willing to pay a little bit so that that’s something that is continued to be part of our culture and our New Mexican identity, more than any other state.” Romero sees a lot of strategies for farmers to boost their profit margins, going organic among them. At the New Mexico Chile Conference (yes, that’s a thing) in February of this year, he provoked chile growers with the question, “How would you like to triple your income without planting one extra acre?” The combined forces of a limited supply and a buyer more motivated by the product’s organic label than a price tag allow for that, he argues. The level of record-keeping required for organic growers also means that at the end of the season, when a farmer realizes a crop should have been planted weeks earlier, there’s a journal detailing exactly when that crop was put in the ground. An uncle who briefly dabbled in farming gave Romero an axiom he still often cites: Farmers don’t plan to fail, they fail to plan. That applies both to each year’s harvest, and the broader trend of growing these crops. “I don’t see the future farmers really coming up with the solutions for the future,” he says. “If we don’t think about our future and we don’t plan for it, one day you’re going to wake up, it’s going to be there unexpectedly and you’re not going to be ready for it.” A fellowship from the National Press Foundation supported some of the research for this story.
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ART BY NEW MEXICANS LIVING WITH MENTAL ILLNESS Friday 9.30.16 + Saturday 10.1.16
In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom Former James Kelly Contemporary 1611 Paseo de Peralta
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.
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DAVID BARSAMIAN
WEDNESDAY 5 OCTOBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
SHANGHAI ACROBATS
I have been trying to document the Israeli occupation for more than twenty years, during which time the occupation has inexorably tightened its grip. I have sought to record the increasing—and ever more rapid accumulations of war crimes and human rights abuses committed during that period. It is an exasperating calling to write in Israel what so few want to read. — From The Punishment of Gaza © 2010
China’s most exciting acrobatic troupe will transport you to another world!
Gideon Levy, who was born and resides in Tel Aviv, Israel, is a columnist and member of the editorial board at Haaretz daily newspaper, where he has covered the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza for the last 25 years. The author of The Punishment of Gaza, he has received several peace and freedom awards for his work. In 2015 Levy and Palestinian pastor Mitri Raheb were awarded The 2015 Olof Palme Prize “for their courageous and indefatigable fight against occupation and violence, and for a future Middle East characterized by peaceful coexistence and equality for all.”
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China’s most exciting acrobatic troupe will transport you to another world! Thursday, October 6, 2016 7:30 pm Lensic Performing Arts Center PerformanceSantaFe.org | 505 984 8759 18
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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
PAINT THAT SHIT GOLD Can we just say that the folks behind The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Company have been killing it in recent months? It’s a happy fact reinforced by an upcoming performance from none other than Minnesota hip-hop heavy-hitters, Atmosphere. You can start freaking out now. Support from Brother Ali, Dem Atlas, Plain Ole Bill and Last Word doesn’t hurt either, and it’s nice to see the genre getting some due respect on a bigger stage around here. The Bridge’s dedication to quality sound is cause for celebration as well, and we expect this bad boy will totally sell out before you know it. So get on it. (Alex De Vore)
DAN MONICK
COURTESY DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
MUSIC
Atmosphere with Brother Ali, Dem Atlas, Plain Ole Bill and Last Word: 7 pm Wednesday Sept. 28. $25. The Bridge @SF Brewing Co., 37 Fire Place, 424-3333.
SEAN RITCHEL
LECTURES ART OPENINGS
It’s Lit
Eight weeks of local art
Santa Fe Art Tours founder Elaine Ritchel wraps up her stint as a guest educator for the New Mexico Museum of Art this weekend with an hour-long event called Artful Looking. Museum-goers will discuss works on view with Ritchel (she’s an expert) and leave with a little extra knowledge for cocktail parties and the like. “The format and focus for each event varies a bit, but we always spend a lot of time looking closely and discussing what we see,” Ritchel says. “We’ll move from formal observations like line, color, balance and movement into interpretation.” Sounds good to us. (ADV) Artful Looking: 3 pm Saturday Oct. 1. Free. New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072.
WORKSHOP THE INCREDIBLE VOLK Poet and publisher Jeff Volk can actually show you how audio frequencies affect the physical world (including you) with a scientific process called cymatics. It’s a concept he’s explored for 30-plus years and that has a dramatic impact on everything around us through archetypical patterns created by said frequencies. Volk’s workshop, which also includes harpist Esther Mirjam Griffioen, may just help participants tap into latent poetic abilities, tune in to the power of experience and foster a deeper understanding of the life force of the universe. “I’d call it reconditioning,” Volk says. “It’s really a way of exploring how we limit ourselves through the stories we tell ourselves.” (ADV)
ELLEN FRANKLIN
The Santa Fe Art Project is a multi-fac- more established artists in the exhibit, Anne Farrell, has lived in Santa Fe for eted, eight-week-long exhibition and more than 30 years and screens her collaborative effort between emerging newest film, Processed Nature. “It’s a and established local artists and curafive-minute piece presented on a montors split into two-week sections. Part II, curated by David Richard Gallery itor and it’s kind of psychedelic and owner David Eichholtz, opens Friday. “I a little trippy,” Eichholtz tells SFR. “A am really struck with the creativity and combination of nature and sort of the innovation on a couple of levels,” nature-derived abstractions.” Farrell Eichholtz tells SFR. “One is the conmashes natural images with bold neon colors for images that scream digital ceptual level, just the thoughtfulness despite their analog subject matter; that goes into the work. But the other imagine your screen saver circa 1998. thing, too, is the great use of all sorts Still, Part II of the Santa Fe Art Project of materials.” Take Chris Collins, for offers a peek into the future by placing example. “He finds these metal pieces its focus on boundary-pushing mediout in the desert,” Eichholtz says, “and he cleans them up and transforms ums that utilize new-school aesthetics them by adding copper and gold and and creation. “Creativity, innovation silver foil to one surface or one aspect and art-making have been part of of the surface.” Similarly, Santa Fe Uni- Santa Fe’s DNA forever,” Eichholtz says. “This is a great way to see that versity of Art & Design student Chase continuum in this current/next generaStafford creates light art that calls to mind the mood-capturing colorful tion.” (Maria Egolf-Romero) installation rooms by artist James Turrell. Though Stafford’s pieces aren’t as large as Turrell’s, they do emote amber THE SANTA FE ART PROJECT—PART II: melancholy or cerulean calm in their illuminations. According to Eichholtz, 5-8 pm Friday Sept. 30. Free. “He is using what looks like a light, but David Richard Gallery, 1570 Pacheco St., it’s really a video of a light.” One of the 983-9555.
STATE OF THE ART
Seeing Sound as a Creative Archetype: 2-6 pm Sunday Oct. 2. $45. Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, 983-5022.
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THE CALENDAR ROXANNE SWENTZELL AND PATRICIA PEREA: THE PUEBLO FOOD EXPERIENCE COOKBOOK Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Two authors present their new book The Pueblo Food Experience, which includes recipes and stories from the Pueblo people of New Mexico and was featured in SFR’s cover story last week. 6 pm, free
COURTESY MEYER GALLERY
Want to see your event here? Email all the relevant information to calendar@ sfreporter.com. You can also enter your events yourself online at calendar.sfreporter.com (submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion). Need help? Contact Maria: 395-2910
WED/28 BOOKS/LECTURES ALAIN ANTOINE: A MUSLIM SPY IN THE PARIS OF LOUIS XIV St. John's College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 Explore the many facets of the mysterious character that sits at the center of the 17thcentury novel, Letters Writ by a Turkish Spy, with Antoine, who graduated from St. John’s College in 2003 and is a PhD candidate at UNM. 3:15 pm, free DHARMA TALK: MAIA DUERR Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week's talk presented by Duerr is titled "Standing in the Stream of Ancestors." The evening begins with a 15-minute meditation, so don’t be late because the meditation thing is done in total silence and you don’t want to be the jerk who interrupts. 5:30 pm, free FRANK VON HIPPLE Center Stage 505 Camino de los Marquez The Los Alamos Study Group presents a lecture titled “New Directions in Nuclear Disarmament.” 6:30 pm, free GALLERY TALK: KATHERINE WARE Phil Space 1410 Second St., 983-7945 Ware is the photographic curator at New Mexico Museum of Art and she discusses work from Mary Peck’s exhibit, Everglades; Time’s Discipline, with Scott Canning of the Santa Fe Botanical Gardens. 7 pm, free HOW NATURE WORKS School for Advanced Research 606 Garcia St., 954-7203 A discussion between Sarah Besky of Brown University, Alexander Blanchette of Tufts University and Naisargi Dave of the University of Toronto examines the effects of humanity on the natural world. Noon, free
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Estefania Ramirez and his company Entreflamenco. Both featured dancers have lifelong flamenco experience and we have to hand it to them—they keep at the fancy footwork with nearly nightly performances. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26 SWING DANCE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Put on your dancing shoes and your best swing skirt, it's time to take it back to a better era and boogie all night long. Jump ’n’ jive right into Thursday. 8 pm, $5
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Stop by this perfectly dark downtown spot and measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others'. Oh, and get a drink. 5 pm, free TAPS AND TABLETOPS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Do you love board games? This evening is for you. And it happens in George RR Martin's theater, so nerd out folks, nerd out. 6 pm, free
FOOD ROBERTA PARRY: DINNER WITH THE ARTIST Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Parry is a watercolorist and she brings her painted landscapes to dinner at this event, which offers a three-course meal. Get a real taste for the art. Wink, wink. 6:30 pm, $35
Natalie Featherston’s “Dia De Muertos” is on view at Meyer Gallery as part of a two-person show opening Friday.
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ALCHEMY HARVEST Saturday, October 1 , 1–6 st
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“What Time Travel Feel Like Sometimes # 1” by Erika Wanenmacher is on view as part of Axle Contemporary’s show Wilderness Acts 2016 at the Leonora Curtin Wetland Preserve.
MUSIC
WORKSHOP
ALTO ESTILO El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Enjoy an acoustic set of roots and soul tunes with your favorite cocktail in hand. Humpdays are hard. 8:30 pm, free ATMOSPHERE The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 424-3333 The inventive hip-hop duo comes to the brewing company stage with openers Brother Ali, Dem Atlas and Plain Ole Bill. This is a big one if you’re a hip-hop lover (see SFR Picks, page 17). 7 pm, $25 BRANDEN JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo plays everything from Bieber to Bach, and there’s a cello involved. 7 pm, free JIM ALMAND El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 The guitarist and singer performs roots and blues music. 7 pm, free
GAGA DANCE WORKSHOP/ PEOPLE CLASS National Dance Institute of New Mexico 1140 Alto St., 983-7646 Dancer and instructor Amy Morrow gives Santa Feans ages 16 and over an opportunity to experience the Gaga method firsthand. She is one of a small handful of instructors trained in this modern method. 9 am, $8
THU/29 ART OPENINGS INSIDEOUT James Kelly Contemporary 1611 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1601 The exhibit features works by artists living with mental illness and is the very last one to take place at James Kelly, which closes its doors with the show. The reception is gala-style and comes with a ticket price. Through Oct. 1. 5-7 pm, $50
NEW MEXICO DESIGNS Molecule 1226 Flagman Way, 989-8906 An exhibit featuring works by six local product designers who create beautiful furniture and functional sculptures using a variety of natural materials like wood and stone. The opening event celebrates craftmanship and features live music by Ten to Two. Through Oct. 31. 5-7 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES JOHN HORNICK: RENESAN INSTITUTE LECTURE St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Hornick, who is an attorney in Washington, DC, presents his lecture about how 3D printing may change the future titled “3D Printing Will Rock The World.” Say goodbye to manufacturing jobs, and probably a whole slew of other professions too. It’s the future, people, machines > man. 1 pm, $10
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KATE RUSSELL
Sky Blue Sky Cloacas comes out swinging with a brand new album and their best work yet BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
T
he immediate assumption when one hears Cloacas’ particular blend of Americana, folk, gypsy-jazz and oddball experimentation is that we must have heard this someplace before. Indeed, all the elements are there for the perilous journey into same-old, same-old—acoustic instruments, lots of banjo, uh, vests—and yet for every straightforward time signature or familiar stylistic choice on the new album, …and the skies are not cloudy all day, there exists a bizarre counterbalance in the form of spooky circus music, a forlorn singing saw peering out from just behind the musical focal point or even, at times, an almost punk rock breakdown. Think the stranger moments on an album like Squirrel Nut Zippers’ 1995 debut, The Inevitable, only with a deft enough hand and vision to steer clear of swing music corniness for sincere eccentricity; Cloacas, in fact, would probably already be huge were this 20-ish years ago. Of course, that doesn’t mean they’re stuck in a time or place now irrelevant, rather that their catalog pulls from the old (and older still) and/or from the far and wide sounds of the globe to compress the nearly incompressible into something very then, but also very now. Take the Middle Eastern flair of “Poison Sumac (Toxicodendron Vernix),” a song that kicks off with a cacophonous orchestra of kazoos, or the looming darkness that sneaks up during “The Great Rhinehart Tire Fire of 1983,” which exists just shy of a Danny Elfman-esque soundtrack movement. There are those toetappin’ tunes with which one might whistle along as well, like “East Faught Shunt” (a banjo-driven number that wouldn’t sound out of place if performed by Kermit the motherfucking Frog) or “Just Another Day,” one of the more vocally heavy numbers that is
DELICIOUS!
You can tell Cloacas really means it because they’re always hanging out in old-timey saloons and stuff.
simultaneously jam-packed with gospel appeal and a down-South aesthetic. Recorded as a sort of tribute to the then-active home of nonprofit weirdo-arts collective High Mayhem (they’re still around, they’re just not venueish these days), skies represents the most solid yet sprawling vision the band has been able to impart to date, and a rather impressive evolution given the sheer number of moving parts. It could be the topnotch mastering courtesy of local audio champ Will Dyar (read Dyar’s 3 Questions interview on page 27) or the know-how and equipment at High Mayhem’s disposal, but Cloacas seems closer as a unit and more in sync than they’ve ever been, a notion all the more evident in that skies was mostly recorded live—minus a few vocal overdubs. They’ve also doubled down on recorded
media and will offer the record digitally and on CD as well as on limited edition blue vinyl for a mere 200 fans. Each LP comes with a digital download code, by the way, but for all those vinyl nerds out there who always express the warmth and tone as the reasons why they so love records, skies seems tailor-made and an obvious buy. Such a tremendous achievement also deserves a tremendous release window, which Cloacas has provided and then some. In addition to the exclusive week-long stream of the album on our website, the sextet has planned three days of release events to be held between Santa Fe, Taos and Madrid. As skies is the tightest they’ve ever been as a band and is far and away their most definitive and well-executed collection of songs made available in their relatively short existence, it would be highly advisable for pretty much everyone to be there. It isn’t out of the question for Cloacas to be headed into some semblance of success at this point, and it’s exciting to muse over what might happen next.
DAY 1
DAY 2
DAY 3
7 pm Thursday Sept. 29. $10 (comes with free CD or $10 off the vinyl release). Iconik Coffee Roasters, 1600 Lena St., 428-0996
9 pm Friday Sept. 30. Free. Taos Mesa Brewing Taos Tap Room (say that five times fast), 201 Paseo del Pueblo Sur, Taos, (575) 758-1900
7 pm Saturday Oct. 1. Free. Mine Shaft Tavern, 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743
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THE CALENDAR DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Estefania Ramirez and his company Entreflamenco. Both featured dancers have lifelong experience and we have to hand it to them—they keep at the fancy footwork with nearly nightly performances. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26
EVENTS CLOACAS ALBUM RELEASE PARTY Iconik Coffee Roasters 1600 Lena St., 428-0996 We’ve got their new album streaming for you at sfreporter.com, so you know it’s great. Head to the first of three release parties and listen to it live (see Music, page 21). 7 pm, $10 SANTA FE FASHION WEEK GARDEN PARTY Drury Plaza Hotel 228 E Palace Ave., 333-8354 Join the festivities of the kickoff event and mingle with Project Runway designers Richard Hallmarq and Emily Payne. 7 pm, $25
MUSIC BRANDEN JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo plays a selection of everything from Bach to Bieber. 7 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist performs a selection of Broadway tunes bound to strike your fancy if you're one of those Broadway lovers. 6 pm, $2 JOHN RANGEL DUETS SERIES El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Rangel plays jazz piano and is accompanied by a secret surprise guest. Drop in to see who he's going to duet-it-up with. 7 pm, free LATIN NIGHT WITH DJ DANY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 What’s that you say? You haven’t heard the Top 40 pop hits enough today? DJ Dany has you covered. 9 pm, $7 LILLY PAD LOUNGE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Rebel Frog brings you the best in old-school funk, hip-hop and soul. 10 pm, $7 SOL FIRE El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Pop-rockin' Latin music played by two local guys on guitars. 8:30 pm, free
WELSH & WATT Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Explorative rock samples from other genres, combining their sounds and techniques with classic rock. 6 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 The plot of this performance is inspired by true events. Watch a love triangle unfold in 19thcentury Rome between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. 7:30 pm, $22
FRI/30 ART OPENINGS ALISON KEOGH: PIXELS William Siegal Gallery 540 S Guadalupe St., 820-3300 Keogh shows her newest inkon-paper works. The artist curates specific drops and flows to create a larger image made of tiny squares that have a calligraphy feel. Through Dec. 6. 5 pm, free ANN LEHMAN Coyote's Paw Gallery 324 Paseo de Peralta, 820-6191 See the artist’s egg tempera and graphite works depicting images of the Southwest using elements she learned in studying Chinese and Japanese art. Through Oct. 15. 5 pm, free DAVID SIMPSON: THEN AND NOW Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St., 989-8688 Simpson presents a retrospective of works that come from all different periods in his career. Some themes, like color and light, are present throughout. Through Oct. 31. 5 pm, free FLORENCE MILLER PIERCE AND BEATRICE MANDELMAN Addison Rowe Gallery 229 E Marcy St., 982-1533 The exhibit highlights the two American modernists who were active in New Mexico's art scene during their lifetimes. Pierce moved to Taos in the 1930s and was awarded the Governor's Award for Excellence in 2003. Mandelman founded the Taos Valley Art School in 1947. Through Dec. 16. 5 pm, free KURT SOLMSSEN: REAL WORLD LewAllen Railyard 1613 Paseo de Peralta, 988-3250 Solmssen portrays an idyllic universe in his wonderfully simplistic landscapes that depict ordinary moments in all their glory. Through Nov. 6. 5 pm, free
NATALIE FEATHERSTON AND ROBERT LaDUKE Meyer Gallery 225 Canyon Road, 983-1434 The two-person exhibit features Featherston’s playful shadow-boxes and LaDuke’s collages. Through Oct. 7. 5 pm, free RICK PHELPS: WHIRL(D) Café Pasqual's Gallery 103 E Water St., 983-9340 Phelps presents his newest papier måché sculptures, which resemble globes, each filled with visual surprises that suggest other worlds. 5 pm, free THE SANTA FE ART PROJECT: PART II David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 The second exhibition in the series brings works representing a variety of mediums, all made by artists living and creating in Santa Fe. See art by Caity Kennedy, Matrin Rixe, Chase Stafford and more. Through Oct. 15 (see SFR Picks, page 17). 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ELLEN R MALCOLM: THE RISE OF WOMEN IN AMERICAN POLITICS Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Delve into the dramatic rise of women involved in American politics with founder and chair of the board of Emily’s List, a three-million-member community that fundraises for political causes. 6 pm, $25
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Estefania Ramirez and his company Entreflamenco. We have to hand it to them—they keep at the fancy footwork with nearly nightly performances. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Fiery flamenco and tapas. 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS MOODY LITTLE SISTER: PARKINSON'S BENEFIT Center Stage 505 Camino de los Marquez, 501-2606 This Portland, Orgeon Americana band plays to benefit the Santa Fe chapter of New Mexico's Parkinson's Coalition 7 pm, $25 SANTA FE NEED AND DEED PUBLIC FORUM: WHY I AM HOMELESS, WHY I PANHANDLE Christ Church Santa Fe 1213 Don Gaspar Ave., 982-8817 Open and honest firsthand accounts from homeless Santa Feans. (see News, page 11) 1-3 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
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Edition One brings Santa Fe’s diverse contemporary photography community into focus BY J O R DA N E D DY @jordaneddyart
P
“
MARK BURNDT
hotography is kind of an isolating field,” says Jerry Courvoisier. “You’re always in your own world and trying to produce your work.” He lounges on an easy chair in the front room of Edition One, a concept gallery for contemporary photography hidden in the upper reaches of Canyon Road. Pilar Law, who co-founded the space last December, nods in agreement from a nearby sofa. “I think we can re-coin the phrase ‘it’s like herding cats,’” she says. “It’s like herding photographers!” On the walls hang 40 prints by a diverse group of local artists that Courvoisier united for his traveling exhibition, 20 New Mexico Photographers. He’s been a prominent member of Santa Fe’s photography scene for over 25 years, which is almost as long as Law has been away from New Mexico. She grew up in Santa Fe, but has lived in California for the better part of the past three decades. This show, with its rich cross section of area photographers, has sparked a discussion between the veteran and the newcomer about what it takes to strengthen their community in rapidly changing times. “I wanted to create a project that was specific to New Mexico,” Courvoisier says. “The exhibition and the edition had to be unique, so I started with the square.” All of the images in the series are in a square format, and about 70 percent of them were originally shot on film. “I asked these photographers to look
Jerry Courvosier and Pilar Law bring local photographers to Canyon Road. Right: A mere sampling of the exhibit.
straight into the deep end in Santa Fe,” Law says. She opened her doors to the community through a series of juried shows, challenging local photographers to submit images in an edition of one. “Doing just one print of an image triggers a need to go out and make more work,” she explains. “It inspires people to keep creating, to stay on the cutting edge and think about what it is they’re doing.” Courvoisier’s show—with its guest curator and large edition—was a bit of a departure from Edition One’s short history, but its premise fit Law’s mission. Both Courvoisier and Law have spent significant time in the digital world, and they sense a growing desire among their peers for community. Throughout the show, they’ve hosted soirees that connect the participating photographers with the public in novel ways. “If you go to most galleries in town, there’s a specific artist being displayed for four to six weeks. Here, there’s a community of people showing work,” Cour-
TONY O’BRIEN
Photo Set
back through their huge archives,” he continues. “I’m mining information from the past, because it’s beautiful and really quite interesting.” Courvoisier thinks of photographs as “windows in time and space,” and these works deftly chronicle almost a century of photographic output in New Mexico. The show includes crisp black-and-white photographs by Elliott McDowell and Alan Ross, who worked alongside Ansel Adams. Seasoned photojournalists Jane Phillips and Jack Parsons appear in the show, along with celebrated fine art photographers Lenny Foster and Tony O’Brien. Many of the participating artists are in their 50s, 60s and 70s, but Courvoisier also included a number of younger emerging photographers, including Jennifer Spelman and Rumi Vesselinova. In 1994, Courvoisier left a teaching position at Southern Illinois University to direct the digital program of the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops. “I haven’t shot a piece of film since 1999,” he says. “The first digital camera that I had was probably something that Kodak gave me, and it had a 40 megabyte hard drive as a backpack. It was about the cost of a European sports car. I’ve been on that track forever.” He helped direct the workshops for almost 14 years and built a web of connections that would later inspire his ambitious new project. There are 26 prints of each of the 40 images in the 20 New Mexico Photographers series, totaling 1,040. Courvoisier is offering each print for $165, which is a steal for some of the bigger names in the show. “I wanted this to be accessible to people, so that they could affordably collect significant New Mexico artists,” he says. The first manifestation of the exhibition was a pop-up show near the Santa Fe Plaza this July, and now Courvoisier has teamed up with Law for a second round at Edition One. “It’s a time capsule for what’s going on in New Mexico right now,” says Law. “You have the old school photographers who have been here for a really long time, and the emerging photographers who are doing something new.” Law is just starting to feel out the photographic community. Her mother is local documentary photographer Lisa Law, so she grew up with an older generation of Santa Fe artists. After attending college in Northern California, she worked at a digital photography lab in southern New Mexico and then moved to Los Angeles. There she worked in online photo printing, collaborating with many notable photographers to create some of the first self-published photography books. When she made her way back to New Mexico and opened Edition One, Law planned to exhibit photographers she’d met through her career in California, but she was also eager to connect with a new generation of Santa Fe photographers. “My approach to group shows is about creating community and diving
voisier tells SFR. “A lot of these photographers had given up on doing shows like this, so to bring them together and get them talking is pretty cool.” After the show closes on Oct. 7, Courvoisier hopes to take the works to other photography venues and festivals around the state. Meanwhile, Law plans to continue cultivating the community that the show has helped strengthen. “It’s what we live and breathe,” Law says. “It’s what we know and feel passionate about. I’m all about being a venue and outlet for photographers to make a living and be recognized in the fine art world.” 20 NEW MEXICO PHOTOGRAPHERS CLOSING RECEPTION 5-7 pm Wednesday Oct. 5. Free. Edition One Gallery, 1036 Canyon Road, 570-5385
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THE CALENDAR by letting this behavior go and also for some insight into why he’s doing it in the first place. -Upset Girlfriend Hates Eroticized Racial Secrets
I’m a guy, 35, and a cheating piece of shit. I’m engaged to a woman I love, but earlier this year I cheated on her. I have no excuse. She discovered the dating app I used, and we worked through that. But she doesn’t know that shortly after her discovery, I went ahead and cheated. To my meager, meager credit, I did seek out only women who were looking for NSA hookups. But I quickly came to realize how big of a mistake this was, how much I love my fiancée, and that I’m a shitty person. I see a therapist, and he advised that, if I’m certain this was a one-time thing, and if I’m convinced that I’m happy with my fiancée, I should keep quiet. I shouldn’t burden my fiancée with this knowledge. I’m inclined to agree but, dear God, the guilt. I feel like I’m not the person my fiancée thought I was. What do I do? Should I just accept this as a lesson learned and keep it to myself? Perhaps there’s selfishness at play here, since I’m trying to make myself feel better, but I’m struggling. -Can’t Personally Overlook Selfishness I’m with your therapist, CPOS—and, hey, it’s nice to see “keep your mouth shut about a one-time infidelity” make the jump from our finer advice columns (Dear Prudence, Dear Sugar, Savage Love) to some of our actual therapists. While honesty (best policy) and confession (good for the soul) get all the positive press, there are times when unburdening yourself is absolutely the wrong thing to do. The person who confesses may wind up feeling better—because at least now they’re being honest—but the person to whom they’ve confessed can wind up feeling a whole lot worse. Some burdens should be borne not shifted. If your fiancée is going to inevitably find out, CPOS, better she find out about it from you. But if the secret can be kept and if living with the guilt motivates you not to cheat again, then you can keep your mouth shut with a semi-clear-ish conscience. This advice is not a license for serial adulterers. If you can’t be faithful to someone—if that’s what you discovered when you had the affair—then you should extract yourself from the monogamous commitment you’ve already made to your fiancée and refrain from making monogamous commitments to anyone else in the future. But if you honestly believe you can be faithful, CPOS, you don’t have to see yourself as a cheating piece of shit. A serial adulterer/betrayer/liar is a cheating piece of shit; someone who cheated once, regrets it, and makes a good-faith, multi-decade effort not to do it again is a fallible human being. My boyfriend of five years is a sweet, smart, handsome, loving, supportive, middle-aged, chubby white guy. We have a fulfilling sex life. When we first met, he shared a fantasy he had about watching me get fucked by a black guy. (He knows it’s not something I’m interested in IRL.) I’ve caught him several times posing online as a young, buff, handsome black guy looking for a “snowbunny.” I call him out on it every time, and it causes huge fights. He says he’ll stop, but he never does. Weighed against all his other good qualities, this isn’t that big of a deal. Clearly he’s not going to meet up with the women he’s chatting with. What makes me sad is that I adore him as he is—I love his big white belly, his bald head, and his rosy cheeks. I think I do a good job of communicating this to him. I guess I’m writing to you for some reassurance that I’m doing the right thing
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If this isn’t that big of a deal, UGHERS, why are you calling him out on it? Why are you monitoring his online activities/fantasies at all? What your boyfriend is doing sounds relatively harmless—he’s pretending to be someone he’s not while flirting with other people online who are most likely pretending to be someone they’re not. (I promise you most of the “snowbunnies” he’s chatted with were other men.) The world is full of people who enjoy pretending to be someone they’re not, from cosplayers pretending to be Captain America or Poison Ivy to creative anachronists pretending to be knights and ladies to Donald Trump Jr. pretending to be a human being. We can’t gloss over the racial/racist cultural forces that shaped your boyfriend’s kinks, of course, but it’s possible to explore those kinds of fantasies online or IRL without being a racist piece of shit. And a person can pretend to be someone of another race online—because it turns them on—without injecting racial hate into online spaces and/ or thoughtlessly reinforcing damaging stereotypes about people of other races. You’ve seen your boyfriend’s online chats, UGHERS, so you’re in a better position to judge whether he’s exploring his fantasies without making the world a worse place than it already is for actual black men. If he’s being a racist piece of shit online, UGHERS, call him out on that. If he isn’t, stop policing his fantasies. I am a 36-year-old Italian straight man. I love my girlfriend endlessly. One month ago, she told me she has thoughts about missing out on the things she didn’t get to do in her teens. She is 29 years old now. Also, she says she feels only a mild love for me now and is curious about other men. Yesterday we met and cried and talked and made love and it felt like she still loves me passionately. But she also told me she had sex with a stranger a week ago and she is going for one and a half months to Los Angeles on her own. Now I feel confused. I should hate her for what she did to me, I should tell her to fuck off, but I can’t do it. I am so in love and I want to be together again after her trip. How do I exit this turmoil? -Pensive And Insecure Now You exit this turmoil by breaking up with your girlfriend. She wants to get out there and do “things she didn’t get to do in her teens,” i.e., fuck other guys and most likely date other guys. This isn’t what you want, PAIN, you’ve made that clear to her, but she’s gonna fuck other guys anyway. You don’t have to pretend to hate her, PAIN, and you don’t have to tell her to fuck off. But you do have to tell her that it’s over—at least for now. And once she goes, PAIN, don’t lie around tormenting yourself with mental images of all the things/men she’s doing in Los Angeles. Don’t put your life on hold—love life included—while she’s gone. You’re going to be single. So get out there, date other women, do some things/women you haven’t done. If she wants to get back together when she returns, and if you still want to get back together with her, you can pick things up where you left off. But you should act like it’s over while she’s gone, PAIN, because it most likely is. On the Lovecast, Cheryl Strayed schools Dan on hiking sex: savagelovecast.com mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter
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MUSIC ALI RYERSON Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 The jazz flutist performs with Bert Dalton, Rob Jaramillo and John Trentacosta in an evening of jazz greatness. 7 pm, $25 CHRIS NEWMAN AND MÁIRE NÍ CHATHASAIGH GiG Performance Space 1808 2nd St., 989-8442 A breathtaking blend of traditional Irish music, hot jazz and bluegrass. Chathasaigh plays the harp and Newman the guitar, creating a symphony of strings that may enchant you. 7:30 pm, $20 DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes bound to strike your fancy if you're one of those Broadway lovers. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery has smooth skills. This you know, because we’ve told you. 6:30 pm, free IAN MOORE The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 424-3333 The former lead guitarist for Jason Mraz comes to the City Different to play folky selections from his new album, The Noble Art. 7 pm, $12 JAQUES GREENE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 The Montreal-born artist performs a captivating program of dance music that pushes preconceived notions about what house music can be. 9 pm, $15 KINETIC FRIDAYS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Move your feet to the beat. 9 pm, free LAURIANNE FIORENTINO & JOHN KURZWEG El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A rocking duet puts on a poprock show. 6:30 pm, $25 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 The local group performs rock 'n' roll covers and throws in a little comedy, keeping it variety-style. 8:30 pm, $5 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Have a glass of wine and listen to the jazz guitar talents of Malone. 6 pm, free
SANTA FE COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA’S EDUCATE YOUR EAR: BRAHMS MELODIC SHAPE-SHIFTING AND ROMANTIC RESERVE James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 467-6429 Educate your ear, it will change the way you hear! That’s their motto and they listen to and discuss Brahms’ Symphony No 2. 7 pm, free SEAN LUCY Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The locally based singer-songwriter performs folk originals. 5 pm, free SIREN SHIPWRECK AND THE IMPERIAL ROOSTER Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Siren Shipwreck plays a mix of indie rock, folk and hip hop led by powerful female vocals. They are followed by roots music from Imperial Rooster. 7 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 The plot is inspired by the true events of a 19th-century love triangle in Rome between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. Reé is Jewish, a fact he keeps from Salomé, so Nietzsche is perpetually trying to expose him. What a peach. 7:30 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Written by Kenneth Lonergan and directed by Staci Robbins, the play tells the story of Jeff, a down-and-out fellow who is accused of murder just after returning home from the Navy. It stars Dylan Thomas Marshall, Scott Shettig, Merritt Glover and Vaughn Irving. 7:30 pm, $20 REVOLUTION Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 The story of trans man Fernando Reyes' life unwinds on the stage before you in Alix Hudson's historical fiction theatrical work. Directed by Malcom Morgan. 7:30 pm, $20 FRANCISCA BENITEZ: MOEBIUS PATH SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 Benitez connects institutions through a community walk that brings participants to the Kenneth E Brasel Centennial Museum, where Santa Fe School for the Deaf students give presentations, that may be poetic, composed of sound effects, or translated by an interpreter. The public then walks back to SITE Santa Fe, where Douglas Ridloff leads an ASL poetry slam. 4 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.
WORKSHOP GEORGIA O'KEEFFE WATERCOLOR PAINT MOMENT Santa Fe Art Classes 621 Old Santa Fe Trail, 575-404-1801 This guided painting class, inspired by O'Keeffe, is great for beginners and makes a perfect friend date. 10 am, $55
SAT/1 ART OPENINGS KATHY PERREN: TILES; WOMEN & ANIMALS Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 An exhibit of Perren's newest clay tiles, inspired by and created in the likeness of ink drawings. Through Oct. 31. 5 pm, free WILDERNESS ACTS 2016 Axle Contemporary, 670-5854 This exhibition explores the relationship between art and nature. Twelve artists create a sculpture using natural materials at the Leonora Curtin Wetland Preserve in La Cienega, which is accompanied by related works in the Axel Gallery. Through Oct. 30. 1 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES GALLERY TALK: DAVID SIMPSON AND LOUIS GRACHOS Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St., 989-8688 A book signing of the new book, David Simpson – Works 1965-2015, published by Radius Books, follows a discussion between Simpson and Grachos about the exhibition of work from across the span of Simpson’s career. 3-4 pm, free
DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 The dancers do their thing and you can watch with your favorite drink in hand. 6:30 pm, $25
THE CALENDAR EVENTS
MUSIC BRIAN MAYHALL, FEATHERICCI AND SPOOLIUS MELANGE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Mayhall is off to Mexico and Santa Fe sends him off with an evening of great local musical performances from Mayhall himself, Feathericci and Spoolius Melange. Dance the night, and Mayhall, away. Don’t be sad, it’s a party. 9 pm, $10 CLOACAS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Gypsy jazz by a local ensemble of incredible talent that sounds as cool as its genre’s title. They just released a new album, so they may pull out some new numbers throughout the show (see Music, page 21). 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 This guy’s piano skills are so smooth, he slides right into your memory. Don’t miss Montgomery’s talent. 6:30 pm, free DUO BOHEMIA Starlight Lounge at Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 Ron Romanovsky and Hillary Schacht play a mix of indie and folk rock on the guitar. 7 pm, free LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Evangelo's 200 W San Francisco St., 982-9014 The local group puts on a show that’s one part varietyact, one part comedy and one part rock 'n' roll. 9 pm, $5 ROUND MOUNTAIN AND EVET San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 Two bands who share a member and a reverence for traditional Balkan music perform together in a night of alt-folk heaven. 6 pm, $15
with Will Dyar
BRANDON SODER
ARTFUL LOOKING New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Examine and experience art through fresh eyes with the help of guest educator Elaine Ritchel as you explore the importance of composition, color, texture and more (See SFR Picks, page 17) 3 pm, free SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave., See works made by local artist at the outdoor market. Who doesn’t want to soak up that autumnal air? It’s freakin’ glorious and so are some of the art works. 10 am-4 pm, free
Has everyone been enjoying the stream of the new Cloacas album, ...and the skies are not cloudy all day, this week at sfreporter.com? Of course you have, which is why we tracked down Will Dyar, the mastering engineer behind its phenomenal sound. Dyar has also fine-tuned any number of local albums for the likes of Greg Butera, Storming the Beaches with Logos in Hand, Nathan Smerage and so many others it’s almost crazy. Check him out at hillsaudio.com and right the heck here in our pages right the heck now. (Alex De Vore) Can you explain the difference between recording and mastering a record? To me, recording is about the performance. I’ve found that you can record in a lot of different ways, and if the performance is there, the rest is going to be cake. Then you’ve got the mixing phase, which is getting the balance and maybe adding effects. And then mastering is the final phase, and I look at it like I’m trying to accent everything that’s come before to bring out the best qualities. It’s there to support, not to step on things or leave my mark. Why should bands master their albums? Number one, to get a second set of ears on something you’ve maybe heard a hundred times and lost perspective on. Getting someone to critically listen, to make adjustments that are subtle but that make a big impact, to bring consistency. Do you have a solid piece of advice for bands that might record? Yes—to practice as much as possible and to do as much of the recording live as you can. We feed off each other, and there’s an energy and vibe created when there’s more than one person in a room playing together. Have that conversation together and there’s a much better chance of that vibe coming through.
SCOTT AND JOHANNA HONGELL-DARSEE: MEDIEVAL BALLADS AND RUNES Center Stage 505 Camino de los Marquez, 501-2606 The pair perform The Mountain King, a musical that tells the Scandinavian story of a mythical being who lures beautiful young women to the underworld. It’s like the Viking version of the Greek myth of Persephone, so it’s probably really awesome. 7 pm, $20 SO SOPHISTICATED WITH DJ 12 TRIBE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 So-phisticated they remix other peoples’ music. Just kidding. DJ-ing is really hard you guys. Hear the top 40 pop and hip-hop hits. 9 pm, $7
THE BUS TAPES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Folk rock covers and originals performed with powerful vocals by a local ensemble. 8:30 pm, free THE MAJOR DUDES El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 These dudes play with major talent as they cover rock songs from the past three decades. 8:30 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 See a performance inspired by true events. Watch a love triangle unfold in 19th-century Rome between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after. 7:30 pm, $22
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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THE CALENDAR LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Staci Robbins directs playwright Kenneth Lonergan’s story about a guy named Jeff, a down-and-out fellow who is accused of murder just after returning home from the Navy. Starring Dylan Thomas Marshall, Scott Shettig, Merritt Glover and Vaughn Irving. 7:30 pm, $20 REVOLUTION Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 The story of trans man Fernando Reyes' life during the time of the Mexican Revolution. His life plays out on the stage before you as he joins the Zapatistas in Alix Hudson's historical fiction play. Directed by Malcom Morgan. 7:30 pm, $20 UNSHAKABLE: ENCORE PERFORMANCE Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 Composed by Performance Santa Fe's artistic director Joseph Illick, the opera tells a post-apocalyptic story, set 25 years in the future, of Wyatt and Meridian, lovers who have amnesia due to a viral pandemic. 4 pm, $10
WORKSHOP BEGINNER PAINT MOMENT Santa Fe Art Classes 621 Old Santa Fe Trail, (575) 404-1801 A two-hour guided painting class starts with the basics and provides you the perfect opportunity to make your own mini masterpiece and impress your family the next time they visit. Show everyone how artsy Santa Fe has made you. 10 am, $45
CHERYL ALTERS JAMISON IS HEATING IT UP WITH A BOLD NEW BRAND, WEBSITE, VIDEOS & RADIO SHOW!
Cheryl Alters Jamison FRIDAYS 11AM - 12PM
SUN/2 BOOKS/LECTURES JOHN CASQUARELLI: OVERPASS BOOKS AND OTTER MAGAZINE Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 The published author and poet introduces two new publications to Santa Fe's literary community and explains how prospective writers can submit their work. 5 pm, free JOURNEYSANTAFE: RAY RIVERA Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Rivera was a staff reporter at both The New York Times and Washington Post before becoming the editor of The Santa Fe New Mexican. He presents a lecture titled "The Last Dog Barking: Why Local Newspapers Matter More Than Ever." 11 am, free
EVENTS RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 See artworks by local artists, representing many mediums. 10 am, free SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave., An open-air market allows you the chance to peruse art in a variety of mediums, all made by local artists. Enjoy that temperature because winter is coming and soon we will all be crying about how freezing it is. 10 am-4 pm, free
MUSIC DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 You know that Billy Joel song “Piano Man?” It’s probably about a guy like Montgomery because he has the most natural piano skills you ever did see, or hear. 6:30 pm, free SANTA FE COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA James A Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 The community group performs Brahms' Symphony No 2 and Beethoven's Egmont Overture with students from the Aspen Magnet School's band. 2:30 pm, free THE SANTA FE REVUE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A great cover band that will play one of your all-time Americana favorites. Spending a Sunday afternoon with a drink and live tunes sounds lovely. Noon, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 The plot is inspired by the true events of a 19th-century love triangle in Rome between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. 4 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The play by Kenneth Lonergan follows the life of Jeff, a downand-out fellow who is accused of murder just after returning home from the Navy. It stars Dylan Thomas Marshall, Scott Shettig, Merritt Glover and Vaughn Irving. 7:30 pm, $20 REVOLUTION Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 The story of trans man Fernando Reyes' life during the time of the Mexican Revolution happens before you on the stage in Alix Hudson's historical fiction play. Directed by Malcom Morgan. 3 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.
UNSHAKABLE: ENCORE PERFORMANCE Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 Composed by Performance Santa Fe's artistic director Joseph Illick, the opera tells the apocalyptic story, set 25 years in the future, of Wyatt and Meridian, lovers who have amnesia due to a viral pandemic. See if they remember each other, or anything, as the plot plays out in the theatrical performance. 4 pm, $10
WORKSHOP JEFF VOLK: THE HEALING POWER OF STORY AND SONG Center for Spiritual Living 505 Camino de los Marquez, 983-5022 Learn about the art and science of sound in this four-hour workshop led by Volk, who is a producer and poet. Maybe you will leave feeling healed and like you know everything you ever wanted to know about noise (see SFR Picks, page 17). 2 pm, $45
MON/3 BOOKS/LECTURES GARY URTON Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Urton is a professor of preColumbian studies and he presents a lecture titled "Inka Khipu Project" as part of the School for Advanced Research series. 6 pm, $12
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Feel like showing other people how much trivia you know? Stop by this downtown spot and measure your knowledge of useless facts against others' while you enjoy your choice in a frosty pint glass. 5 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
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Humble, Glorious Carrots
GWYNETH DOLAND
FOOD DO CHUA (Vietnamese Pickled Carrots and Daikon) This is the ubiquitous garnish you find nestled in your banh mi sandwich and snuggling up to the grilled pork with your rice vermicelli. Daikon radishes are those long, skinny white radishes you see in Asian markets. The flavor is much milder than regular red radishes and it mellows considerably in this quick pickle. INGREDIENTS: ·· 2 cups warm water ·· 2 tablespoons sugar ·· 1 tablespoon salt ·· 1/4 cup vinegar ·· 1/2 pound carrots and daikon radish, julienned
Raw carrots are marvelous fresh from the garden
DIRECTIONS: 1. In a stainless steel or glass mixing bowl, combine the water, sugar, salt and vinegar. Stir until the sugar and salt are dissolved. 2. Pack the julienned vegetables into glass jars and pour the vinegar mixture over them. Seal the jars and let them sit overnight or preferably several days before using. They’ll last a few weeks in the fridge.
BY GWYNETH DOLAND t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
I
’ve been pulling carrots out of my garden this week. I eat most of them raw, just sitting at my desk, mindlessly munching. The other humans in my house aren’t into our stubby little Red-Cored Chantenays (although the dogs think they’re amazing treats). So I laughed out loud the other day when I was watching It Happened One Night on TV. You remember this one. It’s a classic Frank Capra screwball rom-com from 1934 that won the big five Academy Awards that year. Dreamy Clark Gable is a journalist on the run with spoiled heiress Claudette Colbert, dead broke and hungry, and he offers her a carrot he’s pilfered from someone’s garden. Mortified, she looks at him as though he’s insane. “RAW?!” she huffs and turns up her nose even though she’s starving. A few minutes later she’s bumping down the road in a purloined jalopy and we know she’s made a major life transition when she humbly picks up a carrot and chomps away. Whether you grow them, buy them at a farmers market or just pick up a 99-cent bag at the grocery store, humble carrots get pretty fancy when you turn them into perfect little matchsticks. You can use your sharpest chef’s knife to cut those matchsticks, or try a julienne peeler. It looks like a regular vegetable peeler, but with a row of sharp teeth. It makes skinny little matchsticks from almost anything and it doesn’t take up much room in the drawer. Julienne peelers usually cost less than $10. A mandoline is an awesome thing to have around the house. I use mine for pommes Anna or Tarte Tatin, two recipes that transform humble ingredients into delicious works of art. But it’s also the best tool for julienning a bunch of something. Williams-Sonoma has a particularly wide selection, from a $40 Oxo model to a $200 de Buyer Revolution. Somewhere in between is probably fine. Of course you can also just shred carrots with the same box grater you’ve had forever—the point is to cut raw carrots into small pieces. You can simply toss them with some fresh herbs and a homemade vinaigrette and voila! A little salad even Claudette Colbert would eat. Or here are a few other ideas:
GRATED MOROCCAN CARROT SALAD Most recipes for this dish use chunks of lightly cooked carrots, but it’s also a great way to use grated fresh carrots. INGREDIENTS: ·· 2 tablespoons olive oil ·· 2 teaspoons lemon juice ·· 1 clove garlic, minced ·· 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin ·· 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon ·· 1/2 pound carrots, grated ·· 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, mint or cilantro ·· Cayenne, hot paprika or red chile powder to taste ·· Salt to taste DIRECTIONS: 1. In a medium bowl, whisk together the olive oil, lemon juice, garlic and spices. Add the carrots and herbs and toss to combine. Season to taste with chile and salt. 2. Serve immediately or allow the flavors to meld on the counter for an hour or so. RAW CARROT AND BEET SALAD If you’re pulling beets out of the garden with the carrots, why not mix the two together in a pretty, earthy salad? INGREDIENTS: ·· 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar ·· 1 teaspoon orange zest ·· 1/4 cup orange juice ·· 4/6 tablespoons olive oil ·· Honey or agave nectar to taste ·· 1 pound carrots and beets, grated or julienned ·· Salt and pepper
Matchstick these suckers and get chompin’.
DIRECTIONS: 1. In a small bowl, add the balsamic vinegar, orange zest and juice, then pour in the olive oil, whisking constantly, until you like the consistency. 2. In a large bowl, toss the grated vegetables with enough vinaigrette to coat. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and serve.
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THE CALENDAR MUSIC
SFR’s annual Restaurant Guide is coming on Oct. 26. Did your favorite eatery make it into our Top 10 or 25 Best lists? Pick up a copy and find out! We’ll also give you the down low on stellar happy hours, coffeehouses, food trucks and more.
SFR’s Restaurant Guide: The authority on local eats.
TUE/4 BOOKS/LECTURES JERRY RIGHTMAN: THE PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY OF SANTA FE St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Rightman, who is a docent at the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, presents a program that details the impact O'Keeffe had on early American photographers and how her technique infiltrated the art world during her lifetime. 6:30 pm, free
MUSIC CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Bring your instrument and jam along with other musicians. 8:30 pm, Free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery does that really smooth piano thing again. 6:30 pm, free SANTA FE BLUEGRASS JAM Derailed at the Sage Inn 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Drop by with your instrument and make some acoustic magic with bluegrass lovers. 6 pm, free
MUSEUMS COURTESY INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF FOLK ART
Hungry?
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 Montgomery’s piano skills are the best around. You will probably hear that Billy Joel song in your head while you listen to his set. He’s the Piano Man. 6:30 pm, free
“Spirit House, Chiang Mai, Thailand” by Felicia Katz-Harris is on view at Museum of International Folk Art as part of Sacred Realm: Blessings & Good Fortune Across Asia. EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Far Wide Texas; Georgia O’Keeffe. Through Oct. 30. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, (575) 758-9826 Mabel Dodge Luhan & Company: American Moderns and the West. Ken Price, Death Shrine I. Agnes Martin Gallery. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Rick Bartow: Things You Cannot Explain. Through Dec. 31. Lloyd Kiva New: Art. Through Dec. 31.
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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. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Anne Noggle, Assumed Identities. Alcoves 16/17. 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. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Eveli, Energy and Significance.
yay!
Starving the Beast Review: Higher Education Battle against deep cuts to higher education funding fuels documentary by julie ann grimm editor@sfreporter.com
Should students and the private sector bear the financial burden of sustaining the publicly funded universities in the United States because individuals and businesses are the beneficiaries? Or does the benefit and responsibility of education fall on our society as a whole? Starving the Beast, a documentary about higher education funding policy’s dramatic shift toward disruption and reform, proposes dozens of other big-
thinking questions with these at its heart. And even though producer Bill Banowsky told an audience at its Santa Fe premiere that he and writer/director Steve Mims aren’t aiming to take sides on the predicament, that they spent years on what he calls “a passion project” speaks volumes. That they noticed the growing trend which one person in the documentary calls “the nation’s most important and least understood fights” should get your attention. Maybe it’s just the right PR stance when you’re trying to deliver a message. Considering that the opening salvo speech in the production is a fiery one delivered by James Carville, and that his pithy and poignant perspective takes center stage in much of the film’s sto-
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professor Siva Vaidhyanathan, have a more liberal leaning, arguing that letting those voices decide what’s valuable is a toxic ideology for the nation. After a century of higher ed being a relatively untouchable priority for all political parties, domestic education investments peaked in 1980 and have fallen precipitously over the last 35 years. It wouldn’t matter so much if drastic cuts to public money for public higher education were limited to Texas or Louisiana, but Beast demonstrates they’re gripping the nation in Virginia, North Carolina, Minnesota, and although it’s not mentioned in the documentary, New Mexico too. Even as the New Mexico Legislature and governor grapple with some of the lowest educational rankings in the country, they’re talking about stripping even more money from the budget of the University of New Mexico. Banowsky—the founder of Magnolia pictures and the owner of the Violet Crown chain of cinemas with locations not coincidentally in Austin, Texas, and Charlottesville, Virginia, and the Santa Fe Railyard—says he’ll give any policymaker a free ticket to the film and hopes everyone who sees it gets motivated to weigh in because—and we all agree—we can’t afford to not invest in the next generation. STARVING THE BEAST Directed by Steve Mims Violet Crown, NR, 95 min.
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ryline, also hints where this is leaning. Carville wears a tattered Louisiana State University cap in his commencement address there, but he’s no up-the-middle educator. He’s a long-time capital D political consultant and media darling who worked on Bill Clinton’s first presidential campaign and Hillary Clinton’s 2008 push for the White House. And he hasn’t been shy about calling out what he recently said “the suicide of the Republican party.” “You can have the Koch brothers draw up your curriculum for you,” Carville says in the documentary. “They’d be happy to do that.” Yet, there’s more to drink than the Carville Kool-Aid. Banowsky is not exaggerating when he points out that the subjects who provide the Beast narrative are diverse, as we get to look into the cold eyes of the director of the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy as he explains how it just doesn’t make sense to help poor people learn stuff that doesn’t make money and that tenured teachers are mostly bad apples (we paraphrase). Much of the impetus of the reform effort comes from the idea of “disruptive innovation,” explored by Clayton Christensen in a series of publications that became gospel for conservative politicians and their business-minded (read: wealthy) allies. They want education institutions to prove that what students are learning has a value in the marketplace. Other voices, including that of University of Virginia media studies
THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN
“The Magnificent Seven is fine. Just
fine.”
THE HOLLARS “Director John Krasinski and writer Jim Strouse manage to keep the story from feeling corny.”
MAX ROSE
“It mostly winds up sad and wanting.”
SNOWDEN
“Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s depiction of
boyish Snowden has audiences swooning.”
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS “The soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold.”
THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Hold onto your hats, because here comes another remake—this time in the form of legendary Western The Magnificent Seven (which was itself a retelling of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai). In this new iteration, the black-hearted Bartholomew Bogue (a cartoonishly evil Peter Sarsgaard) is hellbent on taking over the small valley town of Rose Creek, and the people who live there are pretty sad about it. Cue social unrest exploding into street violence and a whole mess of murders. Observing her husband gunned down in broad daylight doesn’t sit too well with Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett), so she hires a duly licensed warrant officer named Chisolm (Denzel Washington) to take Bogue down. “I seek righteousness,” Emma says, “but I shall take revenge.” Dang! Chisolm takes on the job, natch, and it seems like maybe he has his own mysterious reasons for pursuing Bogue— but he can’t do it alone. This is where the six other guys come into play, though their motivations are flimsy at best. Faraday (the always likeable Chris Pratt), for example, owes Chisolm for getting his horse out of hock, and Goodnight Robicheaux (a surprisingly decent Ethan Hawke) joins because, uh … well, he just does. Ditto for his stereotypical Asian pal Billy Rocks
(Bynug-hun Lee), the tracker Jack Horne (Vincent D’Onofrio), a Mexican outlaw named Vasquez (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) and a loner Comanche warrior named Red Harvest (whom they meet completely by chance and who joins the posse because he seemingly didn’t have anything else going on—played by Martin Sensmeier). It’s fun enough to watch the assemblage of the group, and there is definite chemistry between Washington and Pratt, but this must be about the most predictable movie of all time. And sure, it’s a remake, but we honestly expected a more sophisticated retelling from such an accomplished writer (True Detective mastermind Nic Pizzolatto). Everything plays out exactly how you’d expect and the overused filmic devices just keep on a-coming. It sure is entertaining, though, and one does wonder how on earth a two-hour film that’s basically just dudes getting shot in the face didn’t pick up the R rating. Regardless, The Magnificent Seven is fine. Just fine. (Alex De Vore) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 133 min.
THE HOLLARS The Hollars probably have something in common with your family. Though the film’s title might evoke images of swampy coastline or deep Appalachian valleys, the family is really just a melting pot white Midwestern tribe in a city that’s never SFREPORTER.COM
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mentioned along that vast highway that cuts the breadbasket of the nation, I-70. Meet Don, Ron, John and their mom (Sally). Dad’s business is failing; his rock of ages, Sally, is struggling with her weight; son No. 1 is back home in the den when he’s not stalking his ex-wife and son No. 2 is bummed out even though he’s got it all going on far away in New York City. When Mrs. Hollar is diagnosed with a brain tumor and the menfolk gather round, their coping strategies run the gamut from a slap fight in a hospital room between the den-dwelling, off-kilter kid (Sharlto Copley, District 9) and the limp father (Richard Jenkins, Jack Reacher) to a touching threepart rendition of one of her favorite songs as she’s wheeled off to the operating room. Most of the tear-jerking moments end with laughter drying out their edges, but there’s enough unsettled to keep it real. The bond between mother and the good son, John (John Krasinski, The Office, who also directs) is endearing with a bedside honesty as Margo Martindale plays the woman who’s holding up many a man. Meanwhile, Anna Kendrick’s Becca brings her own brand of smart, strong and altogether lovely, weighing in at a formidable 8-plus-months pregnant and full of insight about helping a fearful Krasinski CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016
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1:00p Eight Days a Week PLUS Shea Stadium 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* 3:30p Landfill Harmonic 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* THE BAND YOU KNOW. THE STORY YOU DON’T. 5:30p Eight Days a Week 6:15p Landfill Harmonic* 7:30p Eight Days a Week 8:15p Hieronymus Bosch: 30 MINUTE CONCERT OF THE BEATLES’ PERFORMANCE FROM SHEA STADIUM 1965! Touched by the Devil* HEAR THE BAND WITH DIGITALLY REMASTERED SOUND AND RESTORED 4K PICTURE THEBEATLESEIGHTDAYSAWEEK.COM
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“A fascinating blend of modernity and ritual. Ixcanul is a delicious, strong brew.” –The Guardian
Thursday, September 29 12:15p Landfill Harmonic* 1:00p Eight Days a Week PLUS Shea Stadium 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* 3:30p Landfill Harmonic 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* 5:30p Eight Days a Week 7:00p Story, Song and… Cymatics? w/ Jeff Volk* 7:30p Eight Days a Week Fri-Sun, Sep 30-Oct 2 10:30a Ixcanul 11:00a Inspired Architecture: Infinite Space* 12:30p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil 1:00p Eight Days a Week* 2:30p Landfill Harmonic 3:15p Ixcanul* 4:15p Eight Days a Week 5:15p Kate Plays Christine* 6:15p Ixcanul 7:45p Kate Plays Christine* 8:15p Eight Days a Week
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“RIVETING” VARIETY
Monday, October 3 1:45p Landfill Harmonic* ROLLING STONE 2:00p Kate Plays Christine 3:30p Ixcanul* 4:15p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil 5:30p Inspired Architecture: INSPIRED ARCHITECTURE ARCHITECTURE INSPIRED Infinite Space* five-week series series celebrating celebrating architecture’s architecture’s magnificence magnificence five-week 6:00p Ixcanul Infinite Space: Space: The The Architecture Architecture of of John John Lautner Lautner 7:30p Kate Plays Christine* Infinite 11a Fri-Sun Fri-Sun // // Sep Sep 30-Oct 30-Oct 22 11a 8:00p Eight Days a Week 5:30p Monday Monday // // Oct Oct 33 5:30p Tuesday, October 4 1:30p Kate Plays Christine 1:45p Landfill Harmonic* 3:30p Ixcanul* 3:45p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil 5:30p Eight Days a Week* 5:45p Idiocracy 10th Anniversary + Live Stream 7:30p Kate Plays Christine* ct 4 O e u T 5:45p ed by 8:30p Eight Days a Week w llo Fo / eam w live-str dge u J e ik M tors and ac
The Rise of Women
FINAL SHOWS
in American Politics
Bosch • Landfill Harmonic • Hunt for the Wilderpeople 32
SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016
*in The Studio
WOMEN & MONEY
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Fri, Sep 30 // 4p // wisc-amh.org
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ok “Do you guys also find it amazing that we manage to keep our outfits so clean?” Denzel Washington asks his Magnificent Seven compadres. figure out how to embrace his future and that of their new family. Since we all heard enough of it in Pitch Perfect, she holds off on the singing. Although it’s full of the circle-of-life predictability you’d expect from the emergency surgery plus the new one on the way, director Krasinski and writer Jim Strouse (New York, I Love You) manage to keep the story from feeling corny. If this is an example of the kind of storytelling we can expect from Krasinski’s future directorial efforts, we could be settling in for some good stuff. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, PG-13, 88 min.
MAX ROSE When the legendary Robin Williams went dramatic (like in 1982’s The World According to Garp or 1989’s Dead Poets Society), the results wound up stunning. When Jerry Lewis attempts to broaden his résume and do the same, however, it mostly winds up sad and wanting. Lewis aims for your tears in Max Rose, a film that debuted at Cannes in 2013 but never really made it wide until April of this year. He stars as the titular Rose, an aging jazz pianist who discovers shortly before his wife’s death that she may have had an affair in the late ’50s. As he grapples with feelings of loneliness and jealousy, his son (The Usual Suspects’ Kevin Pollak) and granddaughter (Kerry Bishé of the disastrous final season of sitcom Scrubs) try to lend a hand, but he ultimately winds up obsessed with his wife’s potential fling and rallies against their love constantly. It’s annoying. Lewis, who generally only appeals to those too young to understand why his comedy is terrible or to the French, tries his very best to create something memorable, but his character winds up bisected into lines delivered far too- hammily or a confused silence that masquerades as an almost passable performance. We’re never shown enough of Max’s backstory to build up an affinity for the character, and we only see hints of his son and granddaughter’s own troubles that might have been better explained had one of them looked directly into the camera and told us, “Sometimes life is hard.” There is, perhaps, a moral about communication or the true nature of love in there somewhere, it’s just buried under so many tropes about how getting old sucks or how families aren’t perfect that we don’t bother to go looking. Lewis probably took this role in a last-ditch attempt to be remembered as
anything other than the “Hey nice LADY!” guy, but as the thin plot unfolds and Rose’s search for answers limps along, the only thing worth gleaning is that closure doesn’t actually exist. (ADV) DeVargas, NR, 83 min.
SNOWDEN Oliver Stone doesn’t do short and sweet. He does long and developed. Most of the time, he’s even really good at doing important, tense, conflicted moments in US history. If there’s a confusing saga that’s worth this kind of unweaving and reassembly, that of domestic surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden seems to qualify; Stone conveys its importance in a story that feels expertly dramatic. By now, the furor surrounding Snowden’s remarkable 2013 actions has died down, and this biopic that hits the highlights of his foreverchanged life revives a tale that could fall into the virtual weeds of computer jargon. Instead, it grows into a furious flower under the storied director’s hand and with the solid foundation laid by an earlier award-winning documentary, Citizenfour, directed by Laura Poitras. Stone is certainly sympathetic to his cause, sticking to the theme that Snowden has continued to preach: He leaked classified documents that revealed extensive data collection methods by the United States government so that the people of the nation could debate their use and consequences. Government officials say Snowden is far from a hero, having committed treason on the modern battlefield, and their perspective clearly wears the black hat in Stone’s packed narrative. Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s (Inception) depiction of boyish Snowden has audiences swooning for a loveable love story while cringing at the difficult decisions he makes. When the camera shifts in the final frames to the real Ed, the transition is seamless enough to reinforce how believable the effort came off. (JAG) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 134 min.
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS Practically everyone is familiar with the story of The Beatles and their rise from the basement venues of Liverpool and Hamburg to unprecedented crowds of screaming fans. For those who weren’t there, however, what is left is a mere idea of what Beatle-Mania was truly like and an intellectual understanding of the insanity sans experience. Director Ron
MOVIES
yay! Turns out The Office’s John Krasinski (right) is better at directing than you might think. Howard (In the Heart of the Sea) provides an in-depth look into those early years of the band from 1963 to 1966, as well as their impact on the globe in The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-The Touring Years, a new documentary opening at the Center for Contemporary Arts a full two days before hitting its intended home at hulu.com. Through found footage, hundreds of photographs, television/radio coverage and decades of sound bites and interviews, Howard weaves together one of the most intimate portraits of the Fab Four’s younger days that we’ve ever seen, and it doles out the feels in both jubilant and heartbreaking fashion. It’s a story that outwardly showcases society’s sick obsession with fame or being famous, but that also examines the psychological toll taken on Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr in a riveting way. Certainly none of them were opposed to their fame at first, but as the years rolled by and the music
creation began to play a secondary role to rabid curiosity and borderline psychotic fandom, we begin to understand why The Beatles eventually became studio hermits and ditched the live shows. Much of the real substance—or at least the consequence of fame—is saved for the final half hour, which is unfortunate despite the fun of watching four close friends take on the world. By the time we get to the famous Shea Stadium concert of ’66 (that’s the one that basically made ‘em quit), we can see exactly why they were burnt out, but Eight Days a Week doesn’t spend quite enough time focused on the actual impact their hectic existence had on their personal lives. It’s excellent to see how much they looked out for one another, and the soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold, but this one might not have major appeal to those who aren’t Beatle-maniacs or already know the tale. (ADV) CCA, 137 min., NR
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WRITING CONTEST Your Great Adventure
SFR’S
2016
It’s time for the SFR Annual Writing Contest. Get to work on short fiction and nonfiction on this year’s theme, “Your Great Adventure.” Enter one or both categories for a chance to take home cash prizes worth up to $100 and gifts from local businesses, and best of all, be published in our Nov. 23 issue. THE RULES: 1. Entries must be made on the contest website (www.sfreporter.com/ writingcontest) before 11:59 pm on Nov. 1. A $10 fee applies for each entry. 2. Entries should not exceed 1,800 words, must be submitted digitally and previously unpublished. Paid contributors to SFR in the last year are not eligible. 3. Each work of fiction must include a form of each of the following words: reservoir, deplorable and swindle. Nonfiction entries do not need to contain these words.
Visit SFReporter.com/writingcontest for details. Entries must be received before 11:59 pm Nov. 1. Questions? Contact editor Julie Ann Grimm at 988-7530 34
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF HECTOR CRUZ Case No.: D-101-CV-2016-02132 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-81 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Hector Cruz will apply to the Honorable Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico at 1:00 p.m. on the 14th day of October, 2016 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Hector Cruz to Hector Simon Cruz. Stephen T. Pacheco, District Court Clerk By: Victoria B. Neal, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Hector Cruz Petitioner, Pro Se
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal IN THE MATTER OF THE representative of this estate. ESTATE OF KELLEY S All persons having claims GLASGOW, DECEASED against this state are required to present their claims within NOTICE TO CREDITORS two months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the claims will be forever barred. that the undersigned has Claims must be presented either been appointed personal to the undersigned Personal representative of this estate. Representative, RAYMOND All persons having claims MARTINEZ, c/o PADILLA LAW against this estate are FIRM, P.A., P.O. Box 2523, Santa required to present their claims within two (2) months Fe, New Mexico 87504-2523, or after the date of the first filed in the First Judicial District publication of this notice, or Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, the claims will be forever PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, New barred. Claims must be Mexico, 87505. presented either to the underDATE: August 31, 2016. signed personal representaRAYMOND MARTINEZ, tive at the address listed Personal Representative of the below, or filed with the Estate of Margarito G. Maes, Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located Deceased at the following address: 102 PADILLA LAW FIRM, P.A. By: ERNEST L. PADILLA Grant Ave, Santa Fe, New Attorney for the Personal Mexico, 87501. Representative of the Estate of Dated: September 13, 2016 Margarito G. Maes, Deceased PO Box 2523 Santa Fe, NM 87504-2523 (505) 988-7577
STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY NO. 2016-0147
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NOTICE IS GIVEN that one hundred percent (100%) of the issued and outstanding limited liability company interests in Fashion Outlets of Santa Fe LLC, a Delaware First Judicial District Court FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT limited liability company State of New Mexico STATE OF NEW MEXICO (“Fashion Outlets”), and all County of Santa Fe COUNTY OF SANTA FE related rights (collectively, IN THE MATTER OF A the”Sale Collateral”) will be In the Matter of a Petition for PETITION FOR CHANGE OF sold by PCI Investors Fund II a Change of Name of Jacob NAME OF ZACHARY WRIGHT LLC, a Delaware limited liability Walawelsky Entwisle. REITZ-WELLS company (the “Secured Party”), Case No.: D-101-CV-2016-01990 Case No.: D-101-CV-2016to the highest qualified bidder NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME 01884 at a PUBLIC SALE on October TAKE NOTICE that in 24, 2016 at 3:00 p.m. (ET) at accordance with the provisions NOTICE OF CHANGE OF Reed Smith LLP, 599 Lexington of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. NAME Avenue, 22 nd Floor, New 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, the York, New York 10022. Fashion Petitioner Zachary Wright TAKE NOTICE that in accorOutlets is the fee owner of the Reitz-Wells will apply to the dance with the provisions of real estate and improvements Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40- Honorable Sarah M. Singleton, commonly known as 8380 8-3 NMSA 1978, the District Judge of the First Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, New Petitioner Jacob Walawelsky Judicial District at the Santa fe Mexico. The purchase price Entwisle will apply to the Judicial Complex at Santa Fe, of the Sale Collateral must be Honorable Sarh Singleton, New Mexico at 1:00 p.m. on the paid at the time of the sale in District Judge of the First 11th day of October, 2016 for immediately available funds, Judicial District at the Santa an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF except that Secured Party may Fe Judicial Complex at Santa NAME from Zachary Wright Fe, New Mexico at 1:00 p.m. Reitz-Wells to Eugenia Elizabeth pay the purchase price by crediting it against the unpaid on the 14th day of October, Reitz-Wells.Stephen T. Pacheco, 2016 for an ORDER FOR balance of the loan secured District Court Clerk CHANGE OF NAME from by the Sale Collateral. Any Jacob Walawelsky Entwisle to By: Gloria Landin, Deputy Court prospective purchaser must Clerk Submitted by: Jacob Wall Entwisle. purchase the Sale Collateral Zachary Wright Reitz-Wells for its own investment and Petitioner, Pro Se STEPHEN T. PACHECO, account and not for subsequent District Court Clerk resale or distribution. By: Stephen Pacheco, IN THE FIRST DISTRICT COURT PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS Deputy Court Clerk STATE OF NEW MEXICO MAY PARTICIPATE IN THE COUNTY OF SANTA FE SALE EITHER IN PERSON OR Submitted by: NO. D-101-PB-2016-00122 REMOTELY BY TELEPHONE. IN THE MATTER OF THE FOR MORE INFORMATION, Kristi Wareham ESTATE OF MARGARITO G. CONTACT CHRISTOPHER A. MAES, Deceased. LYNCH, ESQ. AT 212-521-5400. Petitioner, Pro Se
Summons/D-101-CV-2016-00163 David Ray Wilkerson 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-2016-00163 Judge: Francis J. Mathew Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. David Ray Wilkerson 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: David Ray Wilkerson, PO Box 6413, Sevierville, Tennessee 37864. 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 22 day of January, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ Victoria B. Neal Deputy
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PUBLIC NOTICE - In accordance with Sec.106 of the Programmatic Agreement, T-Mobile West, LLC plans to upgrade an existing telecommunications facility at 1615 Old Pecos TR., Santa Fe, NM 87105. Please direct comments to Gavin L. at 818-898-4866 regarding site NM01045C. 9/21, 9/28/16 CNS-2925758# SANTA FE REPORTER SFREPORTER.COM
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BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND! An employee of a business at Rodeo Plaza in Santa Fe noticed a young cat going in and out of a storm drain nearby, and quickly discovered another adult cat plus five kittens: RONDA, RODEO, RODDY, ROLAND AND ROSARIO [not pictured]. The adults were sterilized and returned to the location where they will be fed and taken care of in exchange for pest control services. The kittens were transferred to Felines & Friends so we could find them forever homes. TEMPERAMENT: All the kittens are very sweet; however, since they were born to a semi-feral mother, they are all in the process of learning to trust humans through daily interaction and play with the family who is fostering them. Each of the kittens needs to be adopted with a sibling, or into a home with another kitten or active cat to play with. AGE: born approx. 7/31/16. City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281
www.FandFnm.org
ADOPTION HOURS: Petco: 1-4 pm Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun. Teca Tu is now at DeVargas Center. Prosperous Pets and Xanadu/Jackalope during business hours. Thank you Prosperous Pets. Cage Cleaners/Caretakers needed!
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mental- emotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. On Saturday September 24th at 10:30 am we are holding our monthly Gratitude Service, please join us. All are Welcome. The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Drop-ins welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you binge or fast to such an extent that it’s having negative effects on your life? Overeaters Anonymous is a food issues recovery group which involves no dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, and no diets. We meet every day of the year in Santa Fe from 8-9 a.m. at The Friendship Club, 1316 Apache Avenue (505-982-9040).
JEWISH HIGH HOLIDAY CEMETERY GATHERING TO REMEMBER On Sunday, October 9th at 1:30, the Jewish Community Council of Northern New Mexico will continue the Jewish tradition of remembering deceased family and friends on the Sunday between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. In addition to remembering departed loved ones, we will also unveil the completed perimeter wall, the newly built seating area, and the 2016 Bimkom Kever Remembrance Plaques. A reception will be held after the event at the Memorial Chapel. Family and friends are welcome. Please join us in the Jewish section of Rivera Memorial Gardens Cemetery, 417 Rodeo Road, Santa Fe at 1:30 on Sunday, October 9th. AMPERSAND SUSTAINABLE LEARNING CENTER: Water Systems Walk-Through, Oct 2, 3pm - 4pm. Tour our our off-grid site with a focus on: rain catchment throughout the built environment; water harvesting earthworks for food growing and land restoration; water distribution, gravity feed and pumps; greywater in the greenhouse and outdoors; and three different kinds of solar water heaters. RSVP amanda@ampersandproject.org 505 780-0535
HEALING THROUGH THE ART OF TRADITIONAL NATIVE AMERICAN POTTERY. Open group for men and women 21 and up where we will incorporate the traditional pottery teachings and history into a collaborational therapeutic model. $10/session, sliding scale. Group meets on Tuesdays 5-7pm, October 11 November 29 at Tierra Nueva Counseling Center. Group led by student therapist and traditional Native American potter Sanda Sandoval. Call 471-8575 to register.
BEGINNING MEDIUMSHIP CLASSES Learn how to communicate with loved ones and guides in Spirit. This 10 week class with Santa Fe medium Tom Newman will provide techniques and methods to develop your own clairvoyance, clairaudient and clairsentient abilities. Classes will be offered twice on Tuesdays from Oct. 18 to Dec 20. Daytime Class - 11:30 am to 1 pm and Nighttime Class - 7 pm to 8:30 pm. Fee is $10 per class. To register, send an email to tnewman@gte.net or call 505 438-2098.
YOGA AND RECOVERY Monday Night Group 6:45 pm-8:15pm Mondays beginning September 19th Led by Darren Littlejohn, bestselling author of The 12-Step TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND Buddhist (2009) and the new THE WORLD. Get TESOL AN EVENING OF WISDOM book, How to Gain Nothing Certified & Teach English HEALING QIGONG WITH from Buddhist Practice. The Anywhere. Earn an accredited MASTER MINGTONG GU group is open to anyone, but is TESOL Certificate and start Join internationally recognized specifically designed to teaching English in the USA address issues around recovery and abroad. Over 20,000 new qigong teacher and healer from all types of addiction. Master Mingtong Gu for an jobs every month. Take this Processes and practices will evening of Wisdom Healing highly engaging & empowerteach members how to inteQigong. Master Gu will be ing course. Celebrating our grate Buddhist principles with 15th year. Next Course: Jan teaching qigong practices those of 12-Step, as well as 22 - April 15. Contact John that optimize health and the Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. connection to our body, mind other modalities. Format: 30 mins yoga; 5 info@tesoltrainers.com and heart. He is offering a minute break, 20 minutes www.tesoltrainers.com group healing session that silent meditation; Dharma Talk will help create a foundation on a topic related to Dharma THE HEALING POWER for the abundant flow of life and Recovery; Discussion; OF STORY, SONG AND... energy. Friday, September 30, Dedication. You may attend CYMATICS? SEEING SOUND Santa Fe Community College just the yoga portion, just the AS A CREATIVE ARCHETYPE Jemez Rooms. 7-8:30 pm meditation/discussion portion, Experience the art and science $15. Everyone is welcome. or the whole group. Thubten of sound in this interactive, experiential workshop with award- Additional information and to Norbu Ling 1807 2nd Street register: chicenter.com or call #35. Donations accepted and winning documentary producer, 707.347.6489. appreciated. For more inforpoet and Cymatics publisher, mation email info@tnlsf.org or Jeff Volk, and his special guest WISDOM HEALING darrenblittlejohn@gmail.com from Brittany, storyteller and therapeutic harpist, Esther Mirjam QIGONG FOR HEALTH AND HAPPINESS WITH MASTER Griffioen. A unique pairing of music and storytelling, poetry and MINGTONG GU Join Master science, art and Cymatics, sound Mingtong Gu, recipient of the and psyche! Qigong Master of the Year Sunday, October 2, 2-6 p.m., $45.00. by the 13th World Congress FOR SALE Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living, for Qigong, for a full-day 505 Camino de los Marquez. 2005 POLARIS RANGER 96 workshop of movement, More info/registration: miles, Excellent condition. sound, meditation and www.cymaticsource.com • Original owner, 96 hrs, in healing practices to increase jeffvolk@rcn.com great shape, always kept energy, health, happiness inside. $2,350 (972) 863and creativity. Learn how to BECOME AN ESL TUTOR. 2195 influence your own physical Literacy Volunteers of Santa and emotional health to live Fe’s 3-day, 20-hour training a life in balance. Sunday, workshops prepare volunteers October 2, The Center for to teach adults “English as a Wisdom Healing Qigong, 40 Second Language”. Fall 2016’s STUDIO RENTALS Camino Vista Clara, Galisteo workshop is October 6, 7, 8: N.M., $97. 10am to 5pm. Must 1800 sf studio with skylights, October 6, 4-6 p.m.; October pre-register at chicenter. 7 & 8: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. For kitchen, 1/2 bath, nat. gas and com. Additional information: more information, please call wood heat, $800/mo., no dogs. 428-1353, or visit www.lvsf.org. 707.347.6489. La Mesilla, 505.753.5906
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Damaged parapets and cracked stucco can lead to multiple damage issues costing more money later~call for free estimate on repair before the wet weather begins Introducing new TOTAL WALL color for stucco projects. Guarantee lowest price using same products. Affordable, fast and efficient. Call 505-204-4555.
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“European Trained” Cleaning Services • Residential/ Commercial Safety, Value, Professionalism. • Bonded & Insured We are Santa Fe’s certified • Exceptional custom tailored chimney and dryer vent experts. New Mexico’s best cleaning services value in chimney service; • Pet Friendly get a free video Chim-Scan • Extremely Dependable with each fireplace cleaning. • Reasonable Rates Baileyschimney.com. Call Bailey’s today 505-988-2771 • Serving Santa Fe & Surrounding areas • Free estimates
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REMOVE/REDUCE EMF/RF EXPOSURE AT HOMES & WORK RU living near power-lines and/or cell towers? Concerned about Electromagnetic Fields Exposure? We can reduce EMFs up to 90%! Create a Sleep Sanctuary. Julia Whitfield, EMF Consultant, Building Biology, Radon Gas. http://safelivingspaces.com (505) 670-6738 info@safelivingspaces.com
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
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THE HANDYMAN YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED. Dependable and creative problem solver. With Handyman Van, one call fixes it all. Special discounts for seniors and referrals. Excellent references. 505-231-8849 www.handymanvan.biz
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
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EMPLOYMENT WINTER INTERN You won’t earn a salary, but internships at the Reporter are a proven method to learning about journalism, photojournalism, news and culture reporting, web development and social media management. We’re happy to work with college students for course credit. Be sure to include the time period that you are interested in and would be available. Send a cover letter, writing samples and three story ideas before our Sept. 30 deadline. Six weeks minimum commitment required. Julie Ann Grimm, Editor editor@sfreporter.com Santa Fe Reporter 132 E. Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 No phone calls please.
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MIND BODY SPIRIT MASSAGE THERAPY Rob Brezsny
Week of September 28th
ARIES (March 21-April 19) What’s the difference between a love warrior and a love worrier? Love warriors work diligently to keep enhancing their empathy, compassion, and emotional intelligence. Love worriers fret so much about not getting the love they want that they neglect to develop their intimacy skills. Love warriors are always vigilant for how their own ignorance may be sabotaging togetherness, while love worriers dwell on how their partner’s ignorance is sabotaging togetherness. Love warriors stay focused on their relationship’s highest goals, while love worriers are preoccupied with every little relationship glitch. I bring this to your attention, Aries, because the next seven weeks will be an excellent time to become less of a love worrier and more of a love warrior.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Thank you for all the entertainment you’ve provided in the past 12 months, Libra. Since shortly before your birthday in 2015, you have taken lively and gallant actions to rewrite history. You have banished a pesky demon and repaired a hole in your soul. You’ve educated the most immature part of yourself and nurtured the most neglected part of yourself. To my joyful shock, you have even worked to transform a dysfunctional romantic habit that in previous years had subtly undermined your ability to get the kind of intimacy you seek. What’s next? Here’s my guess: an unprecedented exemption from the demands of the past.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) How will you deal with a provocative opportunity to reinvent and reinvigorate your approach to work? My guess is that if you ignore this challenge, it will devolve into an obstruction. If you embrace it, on the other hand, you will be led to unforeseen improvements in the way you earn money and structure your daily routine. Here’s the paradox: Being open to seemingly impractical considerations will ultimately turn out to be quite practical.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Are you able to expand while you are contracting, and vice versa? Can you shed mediocre comforts and also open your imagination to gifts that await you at the frontier? Is it possible to be skeptical toward ideas that shrink your world and people who waste your time, even as you cultivate optimism and innocence about the interesting challenges ahead of you? Here’s what I think, Scorpio: Yes, you can. At least for right now, you are more flexible and multifaceted than you might imagine.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You Sagittarians are famous for filling your cups so full they’re in danger of GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Is it possible that you’re on spilling over. Sometimes the rest of us find this kind of the verge of reclaiming some of the innocent wisdom cute. On other occasions, we don’t enjoy getting wine you had as a child? Judging from the current splashed on our shoes. But I suspect that in the coming astrological omens, I suspect it is. If all goes well, you weeks, the consequences of your tendency to overflow will soon be gifted with a long glimpse of your true will be mostly benign—perhaps even downright beneficial. destiny—a close replica of the vision that bloomed in So I suggest you experiment with the pleasures of surging you at a tender age. And this will, in turn, enable you to and gushing. Have fun as you escape your niches and actually see magic unicorns and play with mischievous transcend your containers. Give yourself permission to fairies and eat clouds that dip down close to the earth. seek adventures that might be too extravagant for polite And not only that: Having a holy vision of your original company. Now here’s a helpful reminder from your fellow Sagittarian, poet Emily Dickinson: “You cannot fold a flood self will make you even smarter than you already are. and put it in a drawer.” For example, you could get insights about how to express previously inexpressible parts of yourself. You CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) I believe that during the might discover secrets about how to attract more of coming weeks you will have an extra amount of the love you have always felt deprived of. freedom from fate. The daily grind won’t be able to grind you down. The influences that typically tend to CANCER (June 21-July 22) I’m not asking you to tell me sap your joie de vivre will leave you in peace. Are you about the places and situations where you feel safe and ready to take full advantage of this special fragile and timid. I want to know about where you feel dispensation? Please say YES YES A THOUSAND safe and strong and bold. Are there sanctuaries that TIMES YES. Be alert for opportunities to rise above the nurture your audacious wisdom? Are there natural sites lowest common denominators. Be aggressive about that tease out your primal willpower and help you clarify rejecting the trivial questions that trap everyone in low your goals? Go to those power spots. Allow them to exalt expectations. Here are my predictions: Your willpower you with their transformative blessings. Pray and sing and will consistently trump your conditioning. You won’t dance there. And maybe find a new oasis to excite and have to play by the old rules, but will instead have incite you, as well. Your creative savvy will bloom in extra sovereignty to invent the future. November if you nurture yourself now with this magic. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) According to my analysis LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) One of your old reliable formulas of the astrological omens, you can expect an unlikely may temporarily be useless or even deceptive. An ally coincidence or two in the coming days. You should also could be withholding an important detail from you. Your be alert for helpfully prophetic dreams, clear telepathic favorite psychological crutch is in disrepair, and your messages, and pokes from tricky informers. In fact, I go-to excuse is no longer viable. And yet I think you’re suspect that useful hints and clues will be swirling in going to be just fine, Leo. Plan B will probably work extra abundance, sometimes in the form of direct better than Plan A. Secondary sources and substitutes communications from reliable sources, but on occasion should provide you with all the leverage you need. And I as mysterious signals from strange angels. bet you will finally capitalize on an advantage that you PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You know that inner work have previously neglected. For best results, be vigilant you’ve been doing with such diligence? I’m referring to for unexpected help. those psycho-spiritual transformations you have been VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Attention! Warning! One of your signature fears is losing its chokehold on your imagination. If this trend continues, its power to scare you may diminish more than 70 percent by November 1. And then what will you do? How can you continue to plug away at your goals if you don’t have worry and angst and dread to motivate you? I suppose you could shop around for a replacement fear—a new prod to keep you on the true and righteous path. But you might also want to consider an alternative: the possibility of drawing more of the energy you need by feeding your lust for life.
attending to in the dark…the challenging but oddly gratifying negotiations you’ve been carrying on with your secret self…the steady, strong future you’ve been struggling to forge out of the chaos? Well, I foresee you making a big breakthrough in the coming weeks. The progress you’ve been earning, which up until now has been mostly invisible to others, will finally be seen and appreciated. The vows you uttered so long ago will, at last, yield at least some of the tangible results you’ve pined for. Homework: What most needs regeneration in your life? And what are you going to do to regenerate it? 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 38
SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016
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CHRISTIAN YOGA
ARE YOU A THERAPIST OR A
TANTRA MASSAGE & TEACHING Call Julianne Parkinson, 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional Massage Therapist, & Life Coach LIC #2788
CHRISTIAN YOGA: THE LOST TEACHINGS Dana discovered the lost teachings of Christian Yoga in a library at Yale University. He discovered more in a medieval monastery in Belgium and in a private collection in France. Come and enjoy a remarkable, multimedia presentation at the Santa Fe Community Yoga Center. October 7, 7 - 9 p.m. (505) 316-6986 danananda@gmail.com
PSYCHICS REFLEXOLOGY
HEALER? YOU BELONG HERE IN MIND BODY
LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information go to www.alexofavalon.com or call 505-982-8327. Also serving the LGBT community.
SANTA FE REFLEXOLOGY...... Sooth your feet, quiet your mind, and rejuvenate your body. Personalized care, by appointment only, 7 days a week. Located off of St. Michaels near the hospital. Specializing in Reflexology: Julie Glassmoyer, CR (2006) (505) 414-8140 julie@sfreflexology.com
SPIRIT!
CALL 983.1212
Eavesdropper
Hear something around town? Get it in the paper... Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com
WE BUY... DIAMONDS GOLD & SILVER GEMOLOGIST AVAILABLE THINGS FINER Inside La Fonda Hotel 983-5552
COLONICS BY A RN 699-9443 Metta Massage! Swedish and Deep Tissue. 505-289-7522. 1480 Saint Francis Lic 8160
NATIONAL PERSONAL INSTRUCTION EARTH-KIND® SANTAFEYOGA.COM ROSE TRAIL GARDEN. PRIVATE LESSONS AT OUR
YOGA THE BEST WAY ROSARIO HILL STUDIO 505-819-7072
LU’S CHINESE HEALING MASSAGE LLC 1540 Cerrillos Road • 986-1110
N.M. HOMESTEAD LAW State Law Protects Only $30K Of Your Real and Personal Property From Court Seizure WESTTEXASTRUST.COM
MASSAGE BY JULIE Swedish/Deep Tissue. Same Day Appts Welcome. $50/hr 19 yrs experience Lic. 3384 670-8789
WHAT A GREAT IDEA! A WEDNESDAY EVENING FARMERS MARKET Santa Fe Farmers Market Wednesdays 4pm-8pm
Saturday October 1, 10:00am-Noon
County FairgroundsRose Trial Garden 3229 Rodeo Rd. Learn about our gorgeous, healthy sustainably landscaped rose garden.
Come and learn how we’ve created this gorgeous, healthy rose garden using Earth-Kind® Environmentally Sustainable Landscaping Principles. We’ve added supplemental water an average of only four times a year 2013 -2016, used no pesticides or fertilizer and reduced yard waste going to the landfill. SANTA FE MASTER GARDENER ASSOCIATION
First Aid CPR AED
for Therapists SELF-LOVE CIRCLE Certification Call Frank 983-2673 FOR WOMEN FREE HOUSESITTER Oct. 6 and 20, 7-9pm, $15 SistersofGreatness.com Call Carola 310-866-7066
Tennis Lessons W/ A PRO WHO HAS 25 YRS. EXPERIENCE Kids of all ages & adults welcome! Call Coach Jim 505.795.0543
TEXTILE REPAIR 505.629.7007
Experienced, former teacher, animal lover 1 week minimum 505-983-1953
SFR INSIDE BACK PAGE BASE PRICE: $25 (Includes 3 lines of NORMAL text) CUSTOMIZE YOUR TEXT WITH THE FOLLOWING UPGRADES:
TOP PRICES • CASH 3 GEMOLOGISTS ON STAFF Earthfire Gems 121 Galisteo • 982-8750
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WWW.SFRCLASSIFIEDS.COM 505-983-1212
Foundation Training 505.603.8090
COLOR COPIES 35¢ PRAJNA YOGA Printers, Design Center 418 Cerrillos Rd Black on White 8¢
988-3456/982-1777 AMATA CHIROPRACTIC Medical Intuition Gentle Chiropractic Neuro-Emotional Attunement Nutritional Therapies 505.988.9630
BEING HELD For 1 hr • sliding scale • www.duijaros.com
WEDDING OFFICIANT
YOGASOURCE VOTED BEST YOGA STUDIO Sound Healing w/ Kristina & Aaron 10/1 Partner Yoga w/ Kristina & JoeRael 10/2 RAMA JYOTI VERNON OCT 28-30 982-0990 YOGASOURCE-SANTAFE.COM
TAKE YOUR NEXT STEP Positive Psychotherapy • Career Counseling
SantaFeChiropractic.info
Krav Maga Self Defense Class
OCTOBER EVENTS THE TIDES OF THE FLUID BODY 10/18 ADVANCED ASANA NMKRAVMAGA.COM IMMERSION 10/27-30 310-508-7827 DROPPING INTO DEEP SILENCE 10/31-11/3 PRAJNAYOGA.COM | 988-5248
JA SON @ 57 7. 8036 / ME DIA SLINGE R .COM
COMPUTERS, TABLETS, SMARTPHONES NETWORKS, SECURITY, SMARTHOME
JERRY COURVOISIER Photography Photoshop Lightroom Professional 1on1 505-670-1495
SWARTZTECH 505-310-6890
Non-denominational / LGBT weddings. Call Robbie at (505) 231-0855
SAM SHAFFER, PHD 982-7434 • www.shafferphd.com
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Beginners welcome! MAc/iphone HELP Get your Mac /iPhone/iPad / GOT TECH iCloud and Email working for you. Home & O f fice . QUESTIONS?
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XCELLENT MACINTOSH SUPPORT 20+yrs professional, Apple certified. xcellentmacsupport.com • Randy • 670-0585
226 BOX LOCATIONS
WOMEN’S GROUP
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Safe, Deep, Empowering Naraya 505-652-2885 Details @ journeymapping.net
WHOLE FOODS
SMITH’S
2110 S Pacheco Street
753 Cerrillos Road
TRADER JOE’S
CHAVEZ CENTER
Sue 231-6878
PILATES SANTA FE 995-9700
SILVER • COINS JEWELRY • GEMS
LARGE: $12/Line (18 characters) | RED: $12/Line (18 characters)
NEW EVENING MAT I LOVE TO ORGANIZE CLASSES!! Experienced References 10-Class Pass for $90
Diamonds and GOLD WE BUY AND SELL
Nicholas Brown MA LPCC
3221 Rodeo Road
530 W Cordova Road
VITAMIN COTTAGE NATURAL GROCERS
542 N Guadalupe Steet
HASTINGS
3328 Cerrillos Road
LA MONTAÑITA CO-OP 913 W Alameda Street
OP.CIT.
DeVargas Mall, 157 Paseo de Peralta
Voted Best Pilates Studio! Psychotherapy / Ecotherapy Mon-Fri 7am-7pm | Sat 8am-2pm 795-5529 nicholas11tigers.com
“YOU ARE WHAT YOU INK”
INNER FOR TWO
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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NOW OPEN
227 DON GASPAR | SUITE 11A
Inside the Santa Fe Village
• Chicken Fried Asian Ribs • Brie & Apricot Jalapeno Poppers • Mushroom Ragout w/ Boursin in Phyllo • Blue Crab Cakes & Remoulade
505-920-2903
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SEPTEMBER 28-OCTOBER 4, 2016
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Register to Vote by
OCTOBER11 at the Santa Fe County Clerk’s office 102 Grant Avenue Or online at www.sos.state.nm.us
Register. Then