Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
6, 2016
Page 9
Page 18
news
BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI
www.freeabq.com
Editor: editor@freeabq.com
News: dennis@freeabq.com
Arts: cara@freeabq.com
On Twitter: @FreeABQ
On Facebook: facebook.com/abqfreepress
Editor
Dan Vukelich
(505) 345-4080. Ext. 800
Associate Editor, News
Dennis Domrzalski
(505) 306-3260
Associate Editor, Arts
Cara Tolino
(505) 345-4080 ext. 809
Circulation Manager
Steve Cabiedes
(505) 345-4080 ext. 815
Design
Terry Kocon, C.S. Tiefa
Photography
Mark Bralley, Mark Holm, Juan Antonio Labreche,
Liz Lopez, Adria Malcolm
Contributors this issue
Ty Bannerman, Irene Entila, Gary Glasgow, Dan Gutierrez,
Bill Hume, Ariane Jarocki, Jim Kenney, Dan Klein, Cory Leyba,
Julia Mandeville, Joe Monahan, Sayrah Namast, Peter St. Cyr,
Christa Valdez, Johnny Vizcaino
Sexual assault
Special session
BY CORY LEYBA
ou are sweating
profusely through
every pore on your body
and no amount of water
can stop the burn, yet you
cant help but try every type
of salsa at this years 12th
annual Salsa Fiesta.
The family friendly event
will sweep through Historic
Old Town Plaza on Saturday,
Sept. 10 from noon to 7 p.m.
Glory Foods
Every dish at the event will
be handmade by the various competitors. Judging will begin promptly at 2:30
p.m. to bestow the best salsa title. A wide variety of freshly made salsa products will be available for your sampling pleasure, but salsa lovers beware: there
are a limited number of free tasting passes and those tend to run out early.
The event will also offer salsa for your ears this years festivities are being
headlined by vocalist Frankie Morales, and salsa band Sabor Canela will also
perform during the tasting.
Copy Editors
Wendy Fox Dial, Jyllian Roach, Jim Wagner
Lyft
Spotlight Picks
Corrections policy:
It is the policy of ABQ Free Press to correct
errors in a timely fashion. Contact the editors
at the email addresses on this page.
Where to find
our paper?
List of more than
550 locations
at freeabq.com
BY CORY LEYBA
Corrections:
In a column by Joe Monahan in the Aug. 10 issue, it was erroneously reported that
Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry won election in 2009 in a run-off election. There was
no run-off that year. Berry defeated two opponents in a single round of balloting.
In a story on the Albuquerque Rapid Transit project in the Aug. 10 issue, ABQ Ride
spokesman Rick de Reyes was quoted inaccurately. De Reyes said there are no minutes from
2012 public meetings on ART, but this newspaper was welcome to file a records request for
sign-in sheets from those meetings.
NEWS
news
Charles Arasim
Greg Pacheco, owner of El Charrito restaurant at 47th and Central, angrily confronts West Side City
Councilor Ken Sanchez and City Hall staffers at a recent Albuquerque Rapid Transit hearing. Many
present complained pre-ART utility work is already driving them to the brink of closure.
Things got personal when Greg Pacheco, owner of the El Charrito restaurant at 47th and Central, recalled how
Sanchezs parents used to bring him
into the restaurant as a child, when
he was still a little peon. Pacheco
continued, Youre still one.
Pacheco said Sanchez hadnt been
in his restaurant since the utility work
started, leaving pipes, construction
equipment, trenches and mounds of
earth blocking access to his and other
businesses.
Eddie Montoya, area supervisor for
Berrys administration
is coming to an end and
we have to hurry up and
get this done? That is not
serving the public
Buck Buckner, owner of Rainbow
Car Spa on West Central Avenue
Buckner told Sanchez that the problem along Central and throughout
Albuquerque was skyrocketing crime
and that ART wouldnt solve that. I
cant even plant a flower garden [in
front of my business], Buckner said.
He recently planted $1,000 worth of
flowers in front of his car wash only
to have it destroyed the next morning
by homeless people sleeping in it, he
said. How are we going to change
Central with a bus? he asked.
ART opponent Donald Clayton
ridiculed the idea that a bus down
Central would lead to economic
development and jobs for the area.
During the 1930s, hundreds of
thousands of people passed through
Albuquerque along Route 66 on their
way to California, Clayton said.
He then reminded the city officials
present that the reason for that westward migration was jobs. California
had jobs, not buses, Clayton said. A
bus is not going to change the situation.
Dennis Domrzalski is an associate editor
at ABQ Free Press. Reach him at
dennis@freeabq.com
COLUMNS/features
ell us what this thing is, and win two tickets to the Get the Led Out
The American Led Zeppelin show, a production of Chuck Deleonardis
Presents, at 9 p.m. Oct. 1 at the Sunshine Theater, 120 Central Ave. SW.
The thing in the photo is something publicly visible around town. If you
know what it is, tell us with as much detail and context as you can. Send
your answers to editor@freeabq.com by 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 2.
A cast of thousands, OK, more than a dozen, solved last issues puzzle.
Gordy Andersen is our first two-time winner with his explanation, sent at
3:30 p.m. Aug. 10:
Thats a close-up of the stitching on the Albuquerque Dodgers/Dukes/
Isotopes giant baseball that originally
sat in front of Tingley Field across
from the zoo back in the day and
resides currently in front of Isotopes
park. It has somehow survived well
over half a century of potential abuse
and vandalism. It is also a popular place
for parents and others to use as a prearranged meeting spot before or after
a game and it has a special place in the
hearts of Albuquerque residents regardless of their interest in baseball or not.
Arguably, its one of the oldest and most
endearing landmarks in our city.
Also identifying the thing were Al
Thiel, Armand Huertaz, Talericod27,
Nick Chavez, Joyce OConnell, Daisy
columnS
BY JOE MONAHAN
s the traditional
Labor Day
campaign kick-off
nears and regular
voters and not just
political junkies
begin paying attention, there is cautious
optimism among
state Democrats that
the historic Republican takeover of the
state House of Representatives will end
just as it did when the Rs last took control
of the chamber over 60 years ago.
It was in 1952 when the Rs last
claimed the House and it was short-lived.
Two years later, in 1954, they were
swept away by the Dems, staying in the
minorityuntil they took the prize again
in 2014, with Gov. Susana Martinezs big
re-election win providing a major assist.
The Republicans have a 37-33 advantage (there is one vacancy) so it will take
a pick-up of a handful of seats by the
Democrats to take back control. A top
political aide to state Senate Democrats
says the Republican candidacy of Donald
Trump could be pivotal.
Right now, in August, Trump has
been scaring Democrats, making them
more likely to vote while many Republicans are rejecting their nominee and
less likely to vote. If the top of the ticket
performs very poorly, that cant help but
influence the legislative races. Thats the
main reason there is cautiousoptimism
about our chances, the aide said.
Alderete, Dave Ink, Lisa Garcia, Anton Brown, Sanjuana Garcia, Val Zaba,
Mark Del Frate, Jonathan Roybal, Diane Glenn, Gabe Radler and Ginger
Hindman.
Remember, theres a deadline for answering correctly to win, so get that
answer to us pronto.
is now having trouble with her base supporters, you can bet her approval rating
is sinking. A popular sitting governor
could have success in making the case
for continued control of the House for
her party; an unpopular governor not so
much.
No matter whos in charge in Santa
Fe, come January its going to be more
headache than celebration. The gargantuan state budget shortfall will still be
front and center. Unpleasant choices of
spending cuts and tax hikes await the
governor and lawmakers.
Unpleasant choices of
spending cuts and tax
hikes await the governor
and lawmakers
That will be despite a special session
of the Legislature the governor says shes
calling in September to tackle the budget crisis brought on largely by a crash
in oil and natural gas prices. A session
smack in the middle of a campaign when
all 112legislators stand for re-election
guarantees that the minimum will be
done.
In this case key legislators are looking
at plugging a hole as big as $200 million
left over from the budget year that
ended June 30. But as far as taking on
the even bigger shortfall forecast for the
current budget year that began July 1,
the politicians will kick that can into the
next regular session of the Legislature
in January. If they are lucky, by then
revenues will have stabilized. If they are
unlucky, as they have been for two years,
the state will still be coming up short.
Getting elected is the first order of
business for a politician. Ours are going
to end up administering pain to a wide
cross section of voters but they arent going to give those same voters the chance
to punish them at the polls in November.
Meanwhile, be on guard for some
extreme ideas to surface in these
extraordinary budget times. Already we
are hearingproposals to shorten the
school year for the public schools by two
full weeks to save money. Another plan
would take a meat ax to the states $2.7
billion public school budget and shave it
by an alarming $250 million. With that
kind of stuff on the table, who controls
the Legislature in 2017 is going to be
more than a parlor game.
news/opinion
N.M. Should Exploit
The Cannabis Economy
Chill out
Looming shortage
Peter St. Cyr has covered medical cannabis in New Mexico since the state
legalized it in 2007. Reach him at
peter.stcyr@gmail.com
BY JIM KENNEY
Colorado collected
more than $135 million
in cannabis taxes and
fees with more than
$35 million earmarked
to school construction
projects
agriculture, etc.
New Mexico needs an economic
boom like Alaska, Colorado, Oregon,
and Washington received from
cannabis, and the state needs to stay
competitive with its neighbors, such
as Arizona, which may be considering
a cannabis ballot initiative this fall.
New Mexico needs to take advantage
of its agricultural heritage and use
recreational cannabis to help plug the
hole in our budget and not just as a
quick fix but as an ongoing source of
revenue, job creation, property value
increases, etc.
The upcoming special legislative
session needs to enact financial legislation that diversifies and increases
state revenues. Cutting state agencies
and state programs hurts New Mexicans educational programs, senior
services, mental health services, law
enforcement, state employees, etc.
And, budget cuts today simply postpone dealing with the fiscal issue. The
state will face this again and again
until something is done about it.
If the special legislative session
does not adopt financial reform
through expanding New Mexicos
cannabis economy, exercise your disapproval in November when voting
for your representative in the New
Mexico House and Senate.
Jim Kenney is a resident of Albuquerque.
He is not affiliated with Ultra Health or
any other medical cannabis company.
Reach him at kenney.jim@gmail.com
NEWS
BY JOHNNY VIZCAINO
Johnny Vizcaino
Julio Martinez, owner of Nob Hill Shoe Repair, 4207 Central NE, has seen plenty of changes in Nob Hill since he started working in the family
business in 1963.
A Cops
View
columns/letters
To the Editor:
Dan Kleins recent column, DAs
Legacy of Failure, is rampant with
errors and misinformation.
The evidence room scandal at
APD occurred in 2004 and 2005,
years after I took office. Contrary to
Kleins assertion that nothing was
done about the scandal, the New
Mexico Attorney Generals Office
was called in to aid in the investigation. They have the capacity to
initiate and investigate their own
cases, unlike the DAs Office. We
deferred to them, as we often do
in our longstanding and ongoing
partnership with them.
I have always tried to maintain
a good working relationship with
all the agencies we depend on
and interact with. This was true
when Chief Schultz was with
APD. However, any allegation our
relationship was too close is fiction. I dont believe I ever met with
Chief Schultz outside a meeting
including many other persons, nor
did I ever have lunch with him. The
lines of communication were open,
as they needed to be, but it was
common for weeks to pass, possibly
months, when communication with
the Chief wasnt necessary and we
interacted with others at APD. I
absolutely deny there was ever any
informal agreement not to criticize
each others agency. The record of
our disagreements negate this falsehood.
Criminal cases have been dismissed in record numbers since
the inception of LR2-400, which
became effective on February 2,
2015. The New Mexico Supreme
Court imposed the rule in Bernalillo County as an attempt to fast
track criminal cases. There were
meetings, involving all the affected
parties, for 18 months prior to its
imposition. Unfortunately, APD
did not attend most of the meetings
and thus was unaware of its impact
on our criminal justice system. The
rule mandates all discovery must be
turned over to the defense counsel
at arraignment. Discovery includes
police reports, lapel cameras, CAD
reports, witness statements and numerous other items. The DAs Office
does not create, nor have control
over discovery until it is handed
over to us.
Since LR2-400 came into effect,
and even before, we have been
involved in training APD as to the
requirements and implications of
the rule and have been meeting
letters/cartoons
To the Editor:
As we have seen in the current presidential race and in recent local elections,
big money still dominates the way we
fund campaigns at all levels. From the
Koch brothers spending millions in the
Republican presidential primary to the
Santolina developers spending tens of
thousands in the recent Bernalillo County
Commission Democratic primary, powerful wealthy individuals and organizations
seek to influence elections by spending
big money in campaigns. But we have a
chance to reduce that influence in next
years mayoral race.
On an 8-1 vote, the Albuquerque City
Council recently passed legislation to
make the citys public financing program
workable again. Our thanks go to City
Councilors Don Harris and Pat Davis for
reaching across the aisle to fix the current
system, which was originally approved
by about 69 percent of the voters in 2005.
As soon as the Bernalillo County
Commission works out the positions of
various measures on this falls ballot, city
voters can expect to see it on the ballot
in November. If the charter amendment
passes, it will apply to next years mayoral race. And that will certainly determine
who will choose to run or sit out the
contest for our most important local office. It will also determine whether those
candidates will spend their time raising
money or talking directly to voters and
learning the issues.
Both of us are proud of our roles in
advancing voluntary public financing
for elections on the state level for
the Public Regulation Commission and
higher courts, and here in Albuquerque
for the City Council and Mayors Office.
Despite some of its limitations, its still
the best tool we have to allow candidates
to concentrate on voters rather than large
donors and to increase the field to the
widest range of candidates.
But since Citizens United and other
court decisions, there are some problems
that need to be addressed in the current
system. The current program leaves
candidates who participate at a disadvantage because the amount they are granted
by the city is not even in the ballpark
when they are up against candidates who
are privately funded. Thats what happened to the losing candidate who ran
using public financing in the last mayoral
election. He was outspent two to one by
the current mayor, who ran on private
contributions.
The councils charter amendment solves
this problem by increasing the public stipend for participating mayoral candidates
from $1 to $1.75 per voter. A qualifying
mayoral candidate would get $630,000,
enough to compete with privately funded
news
BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI
columns/features
by sayrah namast
Courtesy PNM
Tracking outages
State regulators require New Mexico
utilities to maintain records of unplanned interruptions of service that
document the cause, date and time,
and duration of outages that affect
10 percent or more of customers or
involve 100 megawatts or more of
jurisdictional load.
Since 2014, PNM filed 21 reports
for the Albuquerque area. Causes
ranged from inclement weather and
technical mishaps to car accidents,
as well as accidents involving snakes
making contact with energized
underground facilities.
The nearest in scope to the recordsetting Aug. 7 outage occurred in
August of last year, when 16,478
customers were affected and 25
megawatts of electricity were lost.
By contrast, 550 megawatts of
electricity were lost in the Aug. 7
outage.
Johnny Vizcaino
ant to help
free an innocent man from
prison? Activists
in Albuquerque
and around the
world hope to do
just that for American Indian Movement leader Leonard Peltier, who has
maintained his innocence during more
than 40 years of imprisonment.
The late South African president
Nelson Mandela, Amnesty International, Harry Belafonte, the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference, National Congress of American Indians,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Rev.
Jesse Jackson are just
some of the people
who have asked for
his release.
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey
Clark has served
as one of Peltiers
lawyers pro bono.
Even Judge Heaney,
who originally ruled
against him, now
supports Peltiers release, saying that the
FBI used improper
tactics to convict him.
You may be surprised to learn that
Peltier has strong
connections to our city. The Indigenous Rights Center, which opened
last year in Albuquerque, was created
at the behest of Peltier. Local resident
Peter Clark is the co-director alongside Peltiers niece, Kari Ann Boushee.
They are just a few people who are allowed to be in regular communication
with him. The programs the Center
runs are based on the vision of Peltier
and carried out on his behalf.
Peltier was arrested as a 31-yearold and charged with killing two FBI
agents on very little evidence. Now
turning 72, his health is failing and he
has exhausted every legal option. His
last chance at freedom is clemency from
President Obama in his final months of
office. It is highly unlikely Peltier will
live through another presidency.
This is why local activists and
people around the world are fervently
working to persuade Obama to grant
clemency. And they are optimistic
Send it to
petphotos@freeabq.com
DDY
STUDY BU
ADOPTION EVENT
The film Incident at Oglala will be
shown by the Indigenous Rights Center,
the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee
and the Red Nation from 47 p.m. on
Saturday, Sept 10 in Ballrooms A and B
of the UNM Student Union Building.
A discussion about how people can get
involved in the clemency campaign will
follow the film.
On Peltiers birthday, Sept 12, the
film, Warrior, which tells his life
story, will be shown at the Guild Cinema, 3405 Central Ave. NE. Show times
are 4 p.m., 6 p.m., and 8 p.m. Tickets
are $5 and $8. Updates on the clemency campaign will be shared at each
showing. Prints of Peltiers artwork
will be awarded as door prizes.
Sayrah Namast is an organizer with the
American Friends Service Committee in
Albuquerque. She writes about events
of interest to Albuquerques activist
community.
August 26 - September 1
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CREATIVITY
(or, things I talk about all the time and want everyone to know)
BY JULIA MANDEVILLE
creativity
Brian Sena
Lilah Roseis an electronic pop/alternative rock singer-songwriter based out of Albuquerque. Rose
uses vocal looping to showcase the voice as an instrument and continues to explore all genres of
music, incorporating melodic synthesizers, rhythms, beats and visuals to her sounds. Sheis todays
featured Music Maker.
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backstory, introduce our Elliot, and make
a child sitting a few feet away from me
say out loud, Mommy, Im scared. She
wasnt alone, I was scared too.
Years later, Natalie (Oona Laurence)
discovers a much older Pete in the wild,
and her dad (Wes Bentley) and his
girlfriend, Grace (Bryce Dallas Howard)
bring him home in hopes of identifying
his origins.
Locked with the vocabulary of a
5-year-old and the knowledge of the
outdoors, the now 11-year-old Pete becomes increasingly desperate to return
to his natural home. Elliot also wants to
reunite with Pete. All the while, Gavin
(Karl Urban), a logger who is Natalies
uncle, has become aware and wary of
Elliots presence and devises a plan to
capture him.
I was so engrossed in the story, I
cried like the child who was sitting just
a few seats away. Actually, she held it
together better than I did. This tale is
truly a tribute to our pet companions.
Its sweet, its lovable, its something I
highly recommend for the whole family.
Dan Gutierrez is a member of the Broadcast
Film Critics Association, hosts a nationally
syndicated radio program called Directors
Cut Radio, and can be seen each Friday
on Good Day New Mexico on KOB-TV 4.
Follow @movieguydan on Twitter.
drink
by TY BANNERMAN
Pub stop:
Bathtub Row
On a fest
It seems like weve only just recovered from Hopfest in late August, but
that was really just to get you primed
up for a season of festivals from now
until Christmas.
On Sept. 3 and 4, we have the
much-vaunted Mountain West Brew
Fest, which slid into the spot at
Loretto Park in Bernalillo that was
occupied by the New Mexico Wine
Festival until two years ago.
One of the best things about this
event is how close it is to a Rail Runner station, which means you can take
a pleasant train ride up to the fest,
give your sampling mug a workout
and then tipsily stumble back to the
train, all without endangering your
fellow humans.
As usual, a lineup of local breweries (and even a holdout winery or
two!) will be on the spot to tantalize
you with their wares. Of particular
note will be a booth run by The 377
Brewery, an outfit thats been working
toward renovating the old furniture
store at 2027 Yale Blvd SE. This will be
a chance to sample the brews before
the official opening (still no word on
when that might be, exactly, but soon
probably).
Brew Fest admission is $20 and
includes a sampling glass. If youre
some kind of bigshot, you can opt
for the VIP admission for $30 and get
early access and entry to the VIP
tent where, no doubt, all kinds of
shady activities will be underway.
Check mountainwestbrewfest.com for
more info.
Got a hot tip on Albuquerques beer scene?
Know of a seasonal draft Ive simply got to try?
Drop me a line at beertownabq@gmail.com
film
New Mexico Film Focus:
Star Gazing in the Desert
On a particularly
hot weekend I
decided to do
what all Albuquerqueans should do
when the weather
gets unbearable
and escaped to
the mountains.
The Jemez was the
range of choice,
so after a few
hours in the upper
alpine reaches, I
came down to the
secret city to check
out the latest in
weapons-grade
breweries.
Bathtub Row
(163 Central
Park Square, Los
Alamos) is Los
Alamos only
brewery so far, and
it seems to be quite
successful. Tucked into a non-descript
strip mall and sparsely furnished, its
more of a first-wave taproom of the
kind that would have been perfectly
at home in Albuquerque about 10
years ago.
A recent change in brewers left
the selection at bare minimum (two
house-made ales versus the seven that
are normally on tap), but what was
there was on point. I tried the Hoppenheimer IPA and found it a suitably
explosive hop bomb.
Fortunately, what the brewery
lacked in style and brews-on-hand
was more than made up for with a
cadre of loyal drinkers enjoying themselves and their beverage of choice
with the kind of gentle atmospheric
conversation that the best pubs bring
out in their clientele. Ill definitely
stop in next time Im up on the Mesa,
and hopefully theyll have a few more
beers for me to try.
Ty Bannerman is a beer drinker, co-host
of the City on the Edge podcast and
author of Forgotten Albuquerque, as
well as a forthcoming memoir. He most
recently served as feature and food editor
at Weekly Alibi.
Facebook.com/HughJackman
by CHRISTA VALDEZ
DEFINITIVE DOZEN
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
5 EVENTS: Zozobra
MONDAY, AUGUST 29
3 SHOWS: Tanya Tagaq
AUGUST 2930
4 SHOWS: Twelfth Night
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4
Jazz Goes to the Opera
List you r
SEPTEMBER 45
in the
SEPTEMBER 28
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
CALENDAr CALENDAr
SEPTEMBER 229
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
12 EVENTS: OFFCenters Folk
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
8 SHOWS: Endorphin Power Company
Benefit feat. Marc Maron
Art Festival
e venT
ABQ Free
Press
calendaR
Email even
t info,
including
event nam
e, date,
time, addr
ess and co
ntact
phone num
ber
or website
, to
calendar@
freeabq.co
m
one month
in advance
of publica
tion.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
Misfits Cabaret
7 pm, National Hispanic Cultural
Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org
SEPTEMBER 810
Michael Hearnes Big Barn
Dance Music Festival
Kit Carson Park,
211 Paseo del Pueblo Norte, Taos,
michaelhearne.com/bigbarndance
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
Black Sabbath
7:30 pm, Isleta Amphitheater,
5601 University Blvd SE, ticketmaster.com
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
AlmaZazz
AUGUST 26SEPTEMBER 18
AUGUST 27SEPTEMBER 16
SEPTEMBER 315
SHOWS
AUGUST 27SEPTEMBER 8
Sister Bar
Launchpad
618 Central Ave SW, 764-8887,
launchpadrocks.com
August 27, Drew Baldridge,
Michael Tyler
August 30, Danava, The Shrine
August 31, Retox
September 1, Bleached
September 2, Kid Dinosaur, St
Petersburg
September 3, Michelle Arnold
Memorial Show
September 5, Death Angel, Suspended
September 6, Russian Circles,
Cloakroom
September 7, Master, Sacrificial
Slaughter
September 8, Mic Club 41
September 9, Concepto Tambor
September 10, Dark Arts: A Night of
Darkly Decadent Burlesque
September 11, The Minders,
Marty Crandall
September 13, Ronoso, Crawl
September 16, Mac Sabbath
Low Spirits
2823 2nd St NW, 344-9555,
lowspiritslive.com
Sunshine Theater
120 Central Ave SW, 764-0249,
sunshinetheaterlive.com
September 3, Watsky, Witt Lowry
September 8, Black Uhuru
September 10, Tiger Army
September 11, Bayside,
The Menzingers
September 13, Cavalera Return
to Roots
September 15, SWANS, Baby Dee
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 24
Hand to God
The Cell Theatre, 700 1st St NW,
766-9412, liveatthecell.com
AUGUST 2627
The Merchant of Venice
7 pm, Santa Fe High School Performing
Arts Center, 2100 Yucca St, Santa Fe,
internationalshakespeare.center
AUGUST 2628
Soaring Eagle Dance Group
Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
Entourage Jazz
TUESDAY, AUGUST 30
Souren Baronian & Paul Brown
11:30 am, Free, Special Collections
Library, 423 Central NE, 848-1376,
abclibrary.org
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31
Rubi Ate the Fig
Sol de La Noche
Part of Summertime in Old Town
7 pm, Free, Historic Old Town,
Rio Grande Blvd & Central Ave NW,
768-3556, cabq.gov
Tal Burdine
Part of Art in the Afternoon
2 pm, Free,
Albuquerque Museum of Art & History,
2000 Mountain Rd NW,
242-4600,
albuquerquemuseum.org
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1
The Black Lillies
Mstrkrft
9 pm, El Rey Theater,
622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com
Tracy Lawrence
7 pm, Expo New Mexico,
300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700,
exponm.com
SEPTEMBER 917
Cinderella
North Fourth Arts Center,
4904 4th St NW, 440-0434, elitnm.net
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Polish Ambassador
8 pm, Taos Mesa Brewing,
20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado,
(575) 758-1900, taosmesabrewing.com
Todd Tijerina
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
SEPTEMBER 23
The Merchant of Venice
7 pm, Santa Fe High School Performing
Arts Center, 2100 Yucca St, Santa Fe,
internationalshakespeare.center
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
Calle 66
6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Caf,
2401 12th St NW, 724-3510,
puebloharvestcafe.com
Talmage Burdine
Contemporary Piano
Foreigner
Alchemie
7 pm, Los Cuates Sandia Park,
12540 NM-14, Sandia Park,
281-0315, loscuatesrestaurants.com
Carmina Burana
Auntie Mame
38 Special
Cafe Mocha
AUGUST 26SEPTEMBER 11
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8
Jesse Vernier
5 Seconds of Summer
7:30 pm, Isleta Amphitheater,
5601 University Blvd SE, ticketmaster.com
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13
Tumbleweeds
Part of Art in the Afternoon
2 pm, Free, Albuquerque Museum of
Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd NW,
242-4600, albuquerquemuseum.org
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14
Chase Bryant
6:45 pm, Expo New Mexico,
300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700,
exponm.com
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15
LOCASH
6:45 pm, Expo New Mexico,
300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700,
exponm.com
El Ten Eleven
8 pm, El Rey Theater,
622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com
SEPTEMBER 1618
Frequinox
Taos Mesa Brewing,
20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado,
(575) 758-1900,
taosmesabrewing.com
SCREENS
AUGUST 27SEPTEMBER 15
Guild Cinema
3405 Central Ave NE, 255-1848,
guildcinema.com
Through August 27, Satanic
Through August 29, Tale of Tales
Through August 29, Therapy for A
Vampire
August 27-28, Space Dogs: Adventure
to the Moon
August 30-Sept 1, NOT FILM Documentary
August 30-Sept 1, FILM
September 2, Mystery Men
September 2-5, Les Cowboys
September 2-5, Microbe & Gasoline
September 6-7 & 13-15, Dont Blink:
Robert Frank
September 6-7 & 13-15, Nuts!
September 8-11, For the Love of
Spock
September 8-11, Sundance Film
Festival 2016 Short Films Tour!
September 10-11, Igby Goes Down
September 12, Warrior: The Life of
Leonard Peltier
AUGUST 27SEPTEMBER 22
Jean Cocteau Cinema
418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe,
(505) 466-5528,
jeancocteaucinema.com
Through September 1, From Afar
(Desde All)
Through September 1, Summertime
(La Belle Saison)
Through September 1, This is
Spinal Tap
September 2-8, Hiroshima
September 8-15, Elevator to the
Gallows
September 16-22, Fantastic Planet
September 16-22, Klown Forever
AUGUST 28 SEPTEMBER 18
Center for Contemporary Arts
Cinematheque
1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe,
(505) 982-1338, ccasantafe.org
Banana and
Champagne Time
BY CORY LEYBA
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
The Water is so Clear that a
Blind Man Could See
3 pm, Harwood Museum of Art,
238 Ledoux St, Taos, (575) 758-9826,
harwoodmuseum.com
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28
The Desperate Hours
2 pm, KiMo Theatre,
423 Central Ave NW,
768-3544, kimotickets.com
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1
Forrest Gump
7 pm, KiMo Theatre,
423 Central Ave NW,
768-3544, kimotickets.com
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
The Birds
KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW,
768-3544, kimotickets.com
Smoke Signals
Part of Movies on the Plaza
Dusk, Free, Civic Plaza, 1 Civic Plaza NW,
3rd St NW and Marquette Ave NW,
albuquerquecc.com
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8
Little Miss Sunshine
7 pm, KiMo Theatre,
423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544,
kimotickets.com
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
Frozen
Part of Movies on the Plaza
Dusk, Free, Civic Plaza, 1 Civic Plaza NW,
3rd St NW and Marquette Ave NW,
albuquerquecc.com
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Lake Placid
Part of Movie on the Lake
6:30 pm, Inn of the Mountain Gods
Resort & Casino,
287 Carrizo Canyon Rd, Mescalero,
(800) 545-9011,
innofthemountaingods.com
EVENTS
THROUGH AUGUST 27
THROUGH AUGUST 28
Albuquerque Latin Dance
Festival
Various Locations, Albuquerque,
abqlatinfest.org
Martin Adolfsson
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
SEPTEMBER 34
AUGUST 2728
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4
CALENDAr CALENDAr
SEPTEMBER 818
ONGOING
2ND WEDNESDAYS
1ST FRIDAYS
MONDAYS
Drinking Liberally
ABQ Chapter
Free Fibromyalgia
Movement Class
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Indian Pueblo Cultural Centers
7th Annual Gala
6 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org
Xtreme Bulls
7 pm, Expo New Mexico,
300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700,
exponm.com
COMMUNITY
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 22
Mindfulness Meditation Classes
Thursdays, 7 pm,
Kadampa Meditation Center,
142 Monroe St NE, 292-5293,
meditationinnewmexico.org
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
Learn Bridge in a Day
Duke City Bridge Club,
8616 Northeastern Blvd NE,
RSVP: 228-3512
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Paws and Stripes Celebration
of Heroes Gala
5 pm, Sheraton Albuquerque Uptown,
2600 Louisiana NE, 999-1201x301,
www.pawsandstripes.org
2ND MONDAYS
Veterans for Peace Chapter
063 Meeting
5:30 pm, Albuquerque Center for Peace
& Justice, 202 Harvard Dr SE, 271-9274
TUESDAYS
Casino del Rueda Dance Class
6 pm, National Hispanic Cultural
Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org
Knit Clique
4 pm, Esther Bone Memorial Library,
950 Pinetree Rd SE, Rio Rancho,
891-5012x3128, riorancholibraries.org
Foreclosure Defense
Support Group
6:30 pm, John Marshall Multi-Service
Center, 1500 Walter St SE, Rm 214,
RSVP: 336-0509, dontmoveout.com
1ST WEDNESDAYS
Book to Art for Kids
10 am, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org
3RD SUNDAYS
FRIDAYS
WEDNESDAYS
1ST SATURDAYS
SUNDAYS
2ND TUESDAYS
Storytime Saturday
Salsa En La Bodega
Salsa Sunday
2ND SATURDAYS
American Veterans
Post 7 Meeting
OUTDOORS
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28
Coder Dojo
1ST THURSDAYS
3RD SATURDAYS
SATURDAYS
TUESDAY, AUGUST 30
THURSDAYS
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
SATURDAYS
International Vulture
Awareness Day
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Medicinal Herbal Plants
in the Habitat Garden:
May Deaguero
10 am, Free,
Albuquerque Garden Center,
10120 Lomas Blvd NE, 296-6020,
albuquerquegardencenter.org
EATS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
9th Annual Albuquerque
Hopfest Beer Fest
Isleta Resort & Casino,
11000 Broadway Blvd SE,
724-3800,
albuquerquehopfest.com
SEPTEMBER 34
Mountain West Brew Fest
Noon, Loretto Park,
237 S Camino del Pueblo, Bernalillo,
mountainwestbrewfest.com
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5
Albuquerques
34 ANNUAL
th
Premier Facility
AM 2 PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 8QU
ERQUE, NM
BU
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DoggieDashAndDawdle.org
Witness preparation
Political
polling
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
Indian Bread Baking
11 am, Maxwell Museum of
Anthropology,
500 Redondo Dr SE, 277-4405,
unm.edu/~maxwell
ONGOING
TUESDAYS
Truckin Tuesdays
11 am, Civic Plaza,
1 Civic Plaza NW, 3rd St NW and
Marquette Ave NW,
albuquerquecc.com
WEDNESDAYS
Talin Market Food Truck
Round Up
11 am, 88 Louisiana Blvd SE
THURSDAYS
Thirsty Thursdays
6 pm, Balloon Fiesta Park,
5500 Balloon Fiesta Parkway,
768-6050, yogazoabq.com
FRIDAYS
Coffee Education and Tasting
trialmetrixnm.com
SUNDAYS
Rail Yards Market ABQ
10 am, Free, 777 1st St SW,
railyardsmarket.org
WORD
AUGUST 27SEPTEMBER 16
Bookworks
4022 Rio Grande NW, 344-8139,
bkwrks.com
August 27, Francis Healey, Eat to Beat
Alzheimers
August 28, Zelda Gatuskin,
Digital Face
August 30, Charles M, The Jungle
Within
August 31, Megan Feldman
Bettencourt, Triumph of the Heart
September 1, Ron Chapman, Killer
Grace & My Name is Wonder
September 6, Patrick Conoway,
Listening with My Eyes: An Abused
Horse, a Mother with Alzheimers, the
Journey to Help Them Both
September 7, John Fleck, Water is for
Fighting over: and Other Myths about
Water in the West
September 8, Christina Florence, Be
Alive in Five for Parents and Kids
September 9, Barbara Schoichet,
Dont Think Twice: Adventure and
Healing at 100 Miles Per Hour
September 10, Mel Yazawa, Contested Conventions
September 11, Seth Hoffman, Janie
and the Hummingbird, for kids
September 13, Shauna Osborn,
Arachnid Verve
September 15, Ron Hart, Sephardic
Jews: History, Religion and People
September 16, Jamie Tworkoski, If
You Feel Too Much
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
Computed Tomography
New Technology Applied to
New Problems: Dr. Jimenez
7 pm, New Mexico Natural History
Museum, 1801 Mountain Rd NW,
nmnaturalhistory.org
(505) 466-3533,
internationalshakespeare.center
SEPTEMBER 2OCTOBER 2
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
Leaving TimeJodi Picoult:
Bookworm Book Club
Every Performance is an
Interpretation!:
Shakespeare Talks
5:30 pm, Santa Fe Womans Club,
1616 Old Pecos Trail Santa Fe,
ONGOING
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
Artful Looking: Elaine Ritchel
SEPTEMBER 327
WEDNESDAYS
1ST WEDNESDAYS
CULTURE
SEPTEMBER 330
FIRST SATURDAYS
THROUGH SEPTEMBER
AUGUST 26OCTOBER 21
SEPTEMBER 930
Two-woman Show: Maura Allen & Jenny Gummersall
AUGUST 26SEPTEMBER 24
SEPTEMBER 9DECEMBER 30
Residency
AUGUST 26SEPTEMBER 30
ReForm: Subversive Fashion
Reception, Friday, August 26, 68 pm
Central Features, 514 Central SW,
243-3389, centralfeatures.com
SEPTEMBER 123
The 20 New Mexico Photographers Project Edition and
Exhibition
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
Abstract Architects
THROUGH AUGUST 28
SEPTEMBER 2NOVEMBER 2
Weyrich Gallery,
2935-D Louisiana Blvd NE, 883-7410,
weyrichgallery.com
Pressient
SEPTEMBER 24
Celebrate Sunshine:
Barb Ruble
Reception, Friday, September 2,
58 pmHistoric Old San Ysidro Church,
Innovation in Print:
Garo Antreasian
Free, Tamarind Institute,
2500 Central Ave SE, 277-3901,
tamarind.unm.edu
SEPTEMBER 1011
Alameda Studio Tour
10 am, maps available at:
Desert Rose Antiques,
7209 4th St, 710-0257,
alamedastudiotour.com
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
Adult Night at Explora:
Inventive Art
6:30 pm, Explora,
1701 Mountain Rd NW,
224-8300, explora.us
ONGOING
THROUGH AUGUST 27
Celebration of Color
The Joy of Splash Art
Blue Lily Atelier, 3209 Silver Ave SE,
263-6675,
bluelilyatelier.com
Watercolor Show
Jewish Community Center,
5520 Wyoming Blvd, 332-0565,
jccabq.org
THROUGH AUGUST 30
Wheres the Green?: DyeFusion
Esther Bone Memorial Library,
950 Pinetree Rd SE, Rio Rancho,
891-5012x3128, riorancholibraries.org
THROUGH AUGUST 31
Contemporary Traditionalist:
Kevin Red Star
Sorrel Sky Gallery, 125 W. Palace Ave,
Santa Fe, (505) 501-6555,
sorrelsky.com
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 1
Placitas Community Center
Painting Class Exhibit
Reception, Saturday, August 13, 24 pm
Placitas Community Library,
453 Hwy 165, 867-3355,
placitaslibrary.com
Puzzle on page 24
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7. Visited
10. French way
11. Black color
14. C.E.O.s degree
15. Dependence
17. Musicians asset
18. 1973 Supreme Court
decision name
19. Matinee hero
21. Home ____
24. Nonstick pan
27. Farm team
28. Greenery
29. Yes, ___!
30. Bake eggs
32. Tear
33. One who leaves
prison without
permission
35. Sparkling wine
36. Daze
37. Monopoly purchase
38. Formal accessory
39. Hilo garland
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Crossword
40. O.K.
42. In between liquid
and solid
47. ___ Maria
48. Decree
49. Protein source
50. Fuse
51. ESPN sportscaster
52. Compass direction
Down
1. Great time
2. Larry __ Melman
3. Growing area
4. Necktie
5. Entry point
6. Kimono sash
7. Be suspicious (3
words)
8. Lawyers org. for
short
9. Combat
12. Stand about idly
13. Make lovable
16. Clothes presser
20. Not edible any
more
Answers on page 23