Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 21

VOL III, Issue 5, March 9, 2016

New Mexicos best alternative newspaper

ABQs Latest Melee:


Bus Rapid Transit
Page 8

Conflict of Interest
In City Hall Crisis Deal?
Page 5

Our Endorsement
In the GOP
Food Fight
Page 21

The Crpe of
Things
to Come
page 27

Nob Hill Med Pot

page 5

Wrestling with Destiny

page 31

NEWS

2 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Will the Real Bernie Sanders Stand Up?

A letter writer to the Washington Post questioned whether photos


that presidential candidate Bernie Sanders published on his website
depicting him as an early advocate of Black civil rights in 1962 are
really him.
The photographer, Danny Lyon, who now lives in Bernalillo and
is a contributor to ABQ Free Press, says they are in fact Sanders.
Critics allege Sanders padded his resume and that the student in
these two photos is another activist named Bruce Rappaport, who
died in 2006.
Lyon, a student at the University of Chicago in 1962 and who, as
the official photographer of the Student National Coordinating
Committee, documented the civil rights movement both in the
North and South throughout the 1960s, says see for yourself.
From Lyon: The slander that Bernie was not a very early leader for
African American civil rights got so outrageous that persons went
into the archives of the University of Chicago and changed captions
on 1962 photos, claiming it was Bruce Rappaport standing in Bernies
clothing leading the demonstration in the administration building.

Photos credit: ABQ Free Press contributor Danny Lyon, courtesy


of Magnum Photos and the University of Chicago Archives

ABQ Free Press Pulp News


compiled by abq free press staff

Trapped

A 43-year-old Chinese woman


was found dead by an apartment
buildings maintenance workers
after she was trapped in an elevator for a month. The incident
took place in the northern city of
Xian in China. Local authorities
said the woman was trapped
after maintenance workers shut
off the power supply to service
the malfunctioning elevator on
Jan. 30, then left for the extended
Chinese New Year break. They
found the womans body when
they returned to work on March
1. The walls of the elevator
were covered with scratches the
woman made trying to get out,
according to local reports.

Robo-veggies

A Japanese company is planning


to build the first farm manned
by robots. The automated indoor
farm will grow lettuce that
will be planted, tended to and
picked by robots, according to
the website TechInsider.io. The
company estimates the farm
will produce up to 30,000 heads
of lettuce every day. The robots
will not be human-like but more
like conveyor belts with arms,
according to the website. The
robots will plant seeds, water

and trim plants and alert human


supervisors when a lettuce
plant is not growing properly.
The company, Spread of Kyoto,
estimates that automation will
cut labor costs by 50 percent. The
farm is expected to open in 2017.

Algeria, Indonesia, Malaysia and


the United Arab Emirates, for
example, will not grant a traveler
a visa if they see an Israeli stamp
in the travelers passport. Unlike
regular passports, a second passport expires after two years.

New record

Richest

An Australian man now holds


the world record for the loudest
burp. Nev Sharp of Darwin
belted out a 110.6-decibel belch
louder than a snowmobile,
motorcycle or power saw. The
new world record holder credits
his win to regular training with
soft drinks and cold water. And
my beer fridge is always full, he
told UPI. Sharp said he learned
how to burp as a kid, from his
sister. The old record of 109.9
decibels was set by a U.K. man
in 2009.

Passports

Its not well-known but Americans can possess two U.S.


passports at the same time. The
duplicate is useful for people
who need to send a passport
off to a foreign consulate to get
a visa but need to travel in the
interim. Journalists and business
people often use a second passport to travel to certain countries.

Beijing has nudged out New


York as the city with the most
billionaires. The Chinese capital
gained 32 new ones last year for
a total of 100, compared to New
Yorks 95. Moscow is third with
65, according to The Associated
Press.

Stalking

With the cooperation of AT&T


and other mobile phone carriers, Clear Channel Outdoor
Americas is working on highway
billboards that will track your
movements through your location-enabled mobile phone after
you pass its billboards. The technology will be installed at tens
of thousands of billboards Clear
Channel owns across the United
States. The goal is to match the
number of billboard impressions with subsequent visits to
advertisers stores or websites
to measure the effectiveness of
the advertising, according to The
New York Times.

Editors a&e Pick

Editor: editor@freeabq.com
Arts: samantha@freeabq.com
News: dennis@freeabq.com
Advertising: pam@freeabq.com

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 3

Hasta La Fantasa

BY SAMANTHA ANNE CARRILLO

On Twitter: @FreeABQ
Editor
Dan Vukelich
(505) 345-4080. Ext. 800
Associate Editor, News
Dennis Domrzalski
(505) 306-3260

ce

Classes for

WorK
PlaY

&

What Will You learn todaY?

Managing Editor/Arts Editor


Samantha Anne Carrillo
(505) 345-4080 ext. 804
Online Editor
Juani Hopwood
(505) 345-4080 ext. 816, juani@freeabq.com
Circulation Manager
Steve Cabiedes
(505) 345-4080 ext. 815

Courtesy of artist

Design
Terry Kocon, C.S. Tiefa

Top: Bernie Sanders leading a sit-in in the winter of 1962 in the University of
Chicago administration building over the schools racial policies.
Bottom: Bernie Sanders next to the University of Chicago President George Beadle,
as he addresses a student rally on housing sit-ins.

www.freeabq.com
www.abqarts.com

Photography
Mark Bralley, Mark Holm, Juan Antonio Labreche, Liz Lopez,
Adria Malcolm
Contributors this issue
Ty Bannerman, Andrew Beale, Jeff Berg, Pete Campos,
Gary Glasgow, Heath Haussamen, Juani Hopwood, Bill Hume,
Ariane Jarocki, Dan Klein, Karie Luidens, Danny Lyon,
Ian Maksick, Joe Monahan, Sayrah Namast, Joey Peters,
Robert Pidcock, Robert Reich, M. Brianna Stallings, Richard
Stevens, Rene Thompson, Tom Tomorrow, Christa Valdez
Copy Editors
Wendy Fox Dial
Jim Wagner

Vanessa Zamora

n her 25 years on Earth, Mexican pop star Vanessa Zamora has achieved an
impressive and buzzworthy international presence. Her formal musical
education began in earnest at age 8 with piano classes; from there, Zamora
moved on to guitar, drums and vocal work.
From shout-outs on NPR to a SXSW showcase, all signs point to an excited
recommendation of this Tijuana native alt-pop singers gig in Albuquerque.
Mexico City resident Zamora enchants at the National Hispanic Cultural Center
(1701 Fourth Street SW) on Tuesday, March 22, at 7:30 p.m. Presented as part of
the Chispa: Latin Diva series, tickets to this all-ages recital are only $12.

Sales Representatives (505) 345-4080


Abby Feldman x802
Cory Calamari x810
Sherri J. Barth x813
Operations Manager
Abby Feldman (505) 345-4080, Ext. 802
Published every other week by:
Great Noggins LLC
P.O. Box 6070
Albuquerque, NM 87197-6070
Publishers
Will Ferguson and Dan Vukelich

[Page 33]
#HelloMyNameIsDoris
Rom-com meets Sally Field
love-in

ABQ FREE Press

Attn: Abby Feldman

KSFR fm
101.1

Size: 1/4 page vertical only 4.75 x 5.4375


Run Date:

March 9, 2016

Placed by Deborah Kastman

santa fe public radio

505-277-6216

[Page 30]
#nirvana #microbrew

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

Start and end your day with us!

UNM Extended Learning/Continuing Education

Yoga+Beer = Pints & Planks

Cover Illustration
Gary Glasgow

505-277-0077
ce.unm.edu/Spring

Vanessa Zamora
Tuesday, March 22, 7:30 p.m. National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 Fourth Street SW, nhccnm.org Tickets: $12

A&E: Three to See

Sales Director (505) 345-4080


Pam Gutierrez x803

Professional Development | Personal Enrichment | Online Training

[Page 36] #WithinRange


#concerts
From nuevo tango to
post hardcore

dkastman@unm.edu

Award winning news,


public affairs & talk radio
Eclectic music

streaming live
@ ksfr.org

Listener supported public radio

NEWS

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 5

Med Pot Comes to Hipster-ville

BY DAN VUKELICH

One Free
General
Admission
Ticket

When Presenting This Ad

March 26th, 6 pm game

ob Hill now has its own


cardholders statewide, about
marijuana dispensary.
half of them in Bernalillo County,
Birdland the Hippie Store,
Salgado said.
The average age of Ultra Healths
3213 Central Ave. N.E., has
customers is 50 people who have
leased part of its space to Ultra
tried unsuccessfully to treat pain
Health, a medical marijuana
with traditional drugs. About half
grower.
suffer from post-traumatic stress
The co-located operations
disorder, Salgado said.
will sell tie-dyed shirts, pipes
Jay Steinberg, owner of Birdand items from the 1960s up
land, said the pairing of the two
front. Behind Birdlands display
businesses in an iconic section of
counter is a brightly painted
Albuquerque was a natural. The
1960s VW van.
neighbors have been so positive
Farther into the store, behind
and
the response from some is that
a locked door controlled by a
they
think it will increase their
buzzer, is a modern showroom
dining
business, Steinberg said.
with glass showcases to display
The
sales
floor of the dispensary
large glass jars full of marijuana
is accessible only to a medical marproducts.
ijuana cardholder and a caregiver.
At the time of our interview,
While its warmly lit, the space is
Leonard Salgado, director of
loaded with surveillance cameras
New Mexico operations for
and motion sensors. After hours,
Ultra Health, awaited a final fire
the inventory of 14 strains of marmarshal inspection, the last step
Dan Vukelich
ijuana and edibles are locked in an
before New Mexico Department
800-pound safe bolted to the floor.
Birdland the Hippie Store, 3213 Central Ave. N.E., shares space with a medical marijuana dispensary.
of Health approval, to begin
Ultra Health is operated by Salsales to medical marijuana
gado
and Duke Rodriquez, former
cardholders.
Albuquerque store at 7401 Menaul Blvd. N.E.
CEO
of
Lovelace
Health
Systems who served as
We sell medical cannabis, a Schedule 1 drug, to
Ultra Health, based in Scottsdale, Ariz., grows
secretary
of
health
under
former New Mexico Gov.
people with a medical marijuana card, and we take
marijuana for its New Mexico dispensaries in a
Gary
Johnson.
Salgado
was
an administrator under
our business as seriously as the Walgreens down
23,000-square-foot greenhouse in Bernalillo, Salgado
Rodriquez
at
Lovelace.
the street, Salgado said.
said. Under state rules, the company can cultivate
Salgado already oversees four Ultra Health
Dan Vukelich is editor of ABQ Free Press.
no more than 450 plants at a time.
locations in Hobbs, Bernalillo, Santa Fe, and another
There are about 21,000 medical marijuana
Reach him at editor@freeabq.com

Mayors Proposed APD Crisis Contract Could Be Illegal


BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI

ayor Richard Berrys administration is


working to give a $131,000, federally funded
contract for crisis intervention training for Albuquerque police to a nonprofit company run by
three APD employees, including two assigned to the
departments Crisis Intervention Unit.
The deal appears to be a violation of the citys
conflict-of-interest rules and of federal purchasing
regulations.
The administration has recommended that the
contract for the video CIT training work go to Crisis
Intervention Team, Inc., a nonprofit formed in 2012.
State records show that CITs president is Nils
Rosenbaum, who makes $113,942 a year as APDs
in-house psychiatrist. The firms secretary is Leah
Acata, and its treasurer is Matthew Tinney. Both are
APD officers who make $58,240 a year, according to
city records.
Tinney and Rosenbaum are currently members of
the citys Crisis Intervention Unit.
Berrys office sent an executive communication, an
EC, to the City Council on March 7 recommending
that the CIT non-profit get the contract. The money

is coming from a U.S. Bureau of Justice Assistance


grant that APD was awarded. Berrys recommendation will be heard before a Council committee,
possibly later this month.
Giving the contract to CIT could violate the citys
conflict-of-interest policy. It states the city cant enter
into a contract for more than $1,000 with a business
in which a city employee has a controlling interest
unless the deal has been put out to competitive bid,
or the citys chief administrative officer has waived
that requirement.
It could also violate federal purchasing rules.
A 2004 guide on contracting by the federal Office
of Management and Budget said, Costs of professional and consultant services rendered by persons
who are members of a particular profession or
possess a special skill, and who are not officers or
employees of the government unit, are allowable.
The EC from Berrys office made no mention
of competitive bidding, conflict of interest or any
waivers.
It was signed by CAO Rob Perry, APD Chief
Gorden Eden and City Attorney Jessica Hernandez,

who presumably knew that CIT is run by APD


employees.
Berrys spokesperson, Rhiannon Schroeder, did
not respond to a phone message and email from
ABQ Free Press asking to talk with Perry about the
proposed contract.
In a telephone interview, Tinney said city and
federal officials knew that CIT was owned by APD
employees.
He added that neither he nor his partners in CIT,
nor their families, can make money from the federal
contract. We cant make any money off it for our
families, and we cant even pay ourselves, Tinney
said.
He added that the contract, if approved, will be
used to hire a coordinator and buy equipment.
Rosenbaum also said that he didnt see a conflict
of interest.
We have no intention of drawing any money
from it [contract/grant]. That would be a horrible
conflict of interest, Rosenbaum said.
Dennis Domrzalski is news editor of ABQ Free Press.

COLUMNS

6 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 7

You Thought they Balanced


The Budget? Think Again
BY JOE MONAHAN

ATTENTION:

ABQ business owners


Dont settle for less
Why advertise in another local newspaper with barely half the circulation
of ABQ Free Press?
Reach our 60,000-plus readers for a fraction of what your business is paying
now.
Tell us what youre paying now, show us an invoice and well better that
deal and guarantee your rate for up to six insertions.

WHATS NOT TO LIKE?


Email ABQ Free Press
Sales Director Pam Gutierrez
at pam@freeabq.com today!

OUR NEXT ISSUE IS MARCH 23


Let ABQ Free Press help your business
be known before its needed.

ay someone
offered you
three or four dollars
if you showed them
you had a dollar bill?
A no-brainer, right?
Apparently not in
the befuddled halls
of the Roundhouse.

Heres the story:


The bean counters are now reporting
that the state Medicaid budget is $86
million short. The healthcare program for
low-income New Mexicans was expanded
by President Obama and Gov. Susana
Martinez signed off on it.
Because the Feds give three matching
funds for every Medicaid dollar plus
the extra money the Feds are throwing
at us for the next couple years for
Obamacare if we dont come up with
that $86 million pronto, the state will
actually come up short $416 million.
With the horrific economic impact such
a drastic cut in spending would have on
an already ailing economy, youd think
SantaFe would be in a rush to fill the
budget gap, take the federal match and
keep Medicaid up and running at full
strength.
But getting $86 million from a state
budget already ravaged by the collapse
in oil revenue, weak tax collections from
a weak economy and years of excessive
tax cutting, has the austerity hawks in the
Martinez administrationand Legislature
looking at cutting Medicaid rather than
fully funding it and, in the process,
leaving that $416 million on the table.
If reimbursement rates for medical
professionals are slashed dramatically,
imagine how many doctors will join
the exodus fleeing our state. Reducing
care for the 850,000 low income New
Mexicans who receive Medicaid benefits
could mean an even less healthy and
less prepared work force. So much for
economic development.
Ironically, healthcare has been one of
the few sectors showing job growth. If this
Medicaid debacle is not resolved, thatll
end. And dont forget, this state already
has the highest jobless rate in the nation.
Before the conservatives go off the
rails over Medicaid being too generous
and that it can withstand severe
cuts,keep in mind that Medicaid covers
single adults who make up to $16,242
a year. A family of four making up to
$33,465 qualifies.
Our economy and wages are so deep
in the cellar that its expected that well
over 900,000 New Mexicansnearly

half the states populationwill qualify


for Medicaid by July 2017. This is not a
population with alternatives.
The recent legislative session ended
with a round of self-congratulations and
back-slapping, but now we are seeing
that the budget that the Legislature
crafted was made with popsicle sticks
and tissue paper. They dodged the
heavy lifting necessary to ensure proper
funding for Medicaid or the rest of state
government, for that matter.
Behind this Medicaid crisislooms
political nonsense. Namely, the insistence
by Martinez and her fellow Republicansthat taxes can never, ever be raised
for any reason.
Never mind if it could mean you get a
ride to the cemetery instead of the ER.
Martinez reluctantly signed onto the
Medicaid expansion. A number of other
Republican governors refused. She had
no choice because of the hundredsof
thousands in need here. If she had
opposed the expansion she might have
lost her re-election bid. Now that she is
no longer running Martinez is pursuing
he national ambitions and has already
put the state in her rear-view mirror.
Hope is not a sound budget strategy,
but thats what the governor and the
Legislature havegiven us. They hope oil
prices jump and they hope the economy
reinvigorates resulting in a leap in
state revenue thatvoila!solves the
Medicaid crunch.
If not, dont worry. Its just a bunch
of poor people who dont vote anyway.
And they certainly dont contribute to
campaigns because theyre too busy
scrounging for money to pay for their
meds.
The mismanagement in Santa Fe is bad
enough during good times, but in bad
times like these, it is truly dangerous.
True and responsibleleadership in
Santa Fe would have a handful of House
Republicans join with Democrats to raise
the gasoline tax to begin solving the
crisis. They could also have agreed to
sweep into the budget millions of dollars
for pet projects approved by the Legislature but left gathering dust, sometimes
for years.
In these ever more challenging times,
the state desperately needs leadership,
but right now wed settle for someone
who knows that getting three or four
bucks in return for spending one is a
good deal.

Joe Monahan is a veteran of New Mexico


politics. His daily blog can be found at
joemonahan.com

8 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Talk About Raucous: ABQ Weighs in on ART

news

What Nob Hill business owners say

BQ Free Press readers are fairly


evenly split on the City of Albuquerques plan to build a bus rapid
transit line along ten miles of Central
Avenue, our online poll shows.
Almost half 48.6 percent of the 724
readers responding oppose the project
while 40 percent support it. About 12
percent had no opinion.
Almost 70 percent of respondents say
they never ride city buses, but when
asked, Would you ride the bus rapid
transit? 50.55 percent said yes and
49.45 percent said no.
The newspapers online poll ran from
Feb. 24 to March 4. Responses were
limited to one per IP address.
The newspaper posed several questions
in two ways, with the bus rapid transit
project presented as either the City of
Albuquerques plan or Mayor Richard
Berrys plan. Each version was presented
to half the respondents.

Astro Zombies owner, Mike DElia: Of


course were afraid of construction, anything that
disrupts the flow in your neighborhood, but it is
inevitable to deal with these issues as a business
owner. Doing a project that is this lengthy, like the
Lead and Coal project that was only supposed to
take six months and ended up lasting 18 months,
hardly any of those businesses down that corridor
survived that project. Every little shop over there
was crushed, but its really not the citys concern,
their only concern is their project. ... The only
people who benefit are the ones who will buy out
all the empty properties once this project is over.
Since there are more than 150 businesses opposed
to this project, there should be more consideration
for the publics concerns. Its clear we dont have
say in this at all and that just blows my mind.
Off Broadway owner, Susan Ricker: Ive been
against this thing for a long, long time, but this
thing is happening, so I want to be for it and to
help make it the best it can possibly be, also so my
business can survive this project. It has put a lot of
stress and strain on our business, and I was getting
to the point that I would like to retire someday,

More Online

and that has definitely been set back. Im just


really trying to survive, and all I can do is embrace
it at this point. I dont believe the city cares about
the financial impact this will have on businesses up
and down the Nob Hill district.
Owner of Ojo Optique, Jed Hoffberg: I am
for it, and I think it will be great. I think that its
going to be really hard getting through it, but we
must get accustomed to change and that takes
time. I think that what the result of the project is
going to bring is definitely worthwhile. Its going
to stimulate improvements here in general and
will give a fresh perspective on the area, and
might encourage people to help keep it moving in
an upward and onward direction.
All is One Tattoo Shop owner Delano Garcia
moved his business in preparation of the ART
project to a better location off of a street with a
stoplight. If people couldnt turn left to my shop
I would have lost out on a ton business. It just
reminds me of that Simpsons episode with the
Monorail and the sleazy, swindling salesman that
tries to take the whole towns money, only in this
case, the swindling salesman is our mayor.

What people who went to the ART meetings had to say


Rene Thompson

An unidentified man gets in the face of City Councilor Isaac Benton at an ART meeting at Manzano Day School.

Although responses were roughly the


same for two of the questions, our readers appeared to be offering a referendum
of sorts on the mayor in response to this
pair of questions: What is your overall
opinion of the citys/the mayors bus
rapid transit plan.
Strong opposition to the plan was
nearly nine percentage points higher
39.29 percent vs. 30.67 percent when it
was labeled the mayors plan.
Readers told us the chief drawback of
the plan will be traffic congestion, while
20.17 percent said the project would harm
Central Avenue businesses. Eighty-eight
percent of the people responding to the
poll said they did not own businesses
along the Central Avenue corridor.
The chief benefit of the project that readers cited from the choices we gave them
were more public transit ridership along
Central, making the Central Avenue
corridor more livable, and sprucing up
Central. Those three choices received
roughly the same number of responses.
Only 13.81 percent of the respondents
cite the cost of the $119 million project as
its biggest drawback.
ABQ Free Press staff writer Rene Thompson
contributed to this story.

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 9


ART/BRT, Page 8

BY DAN VUKELICH

Find detailed results


of our online poll on the
Albuquerque Rapid Transit
on our website at
freeabq.com

NEWS

Chris Anderson: Im for it because Albuquerque is really in need of a timely rapid transit, and also because theres a lack of investment
on this corridor. I feel this project would bring
more of that here and there would be more of a
benefit. This is going to bring jobs we desperately
need here in Albuquerque. This federal money is
going to bring us jobs, and it kind of pisses me off
that people are trying to stand in the way of that
progress.
Maria Batista attended all of the ART meetings. At one, she grabbed City Councilor Isaac
Benton and threw papers: Ive lived here all my
life and I think its pretty disturbing that they have
not included the community in the planning. Their
feasibility studies are almost non-existent besides
research that was done from 05 to 07. They are
not taking the publics safety into consideration.

James Kurt: Im against it because I ride the


bus every day, and let me tell you, we do not have
a reliable transit system here. I find this project
to be redundant. I just dont understand why
they would put this project on the one street
that already has Rapid Ride buses. Instead why
not extend the Rapid Ride buses all over town on
major streets.
Head Engineer of the ART Project, David
Leard on congestion: Obviously when we take
a lane away, traffic is going to slow down, and
thats just going to happen, so the level of service
is going to increase because it will take people
longer to move through. But right now, all data
shows that people will be able to get through
intersections quickly with set lights for better
traffic flow.

What people said in our online poll when they were


asked what would they tell Mayor Berry:

Rene Thompson

Central Avenue business owner Mike DElia makes his opposition to ART known through his business marquee.
cont. on page 9

We need to build our economy first, rapid


transit later. The reason why rapid transit works
in other regional cities is because they already
had a vibrant or semi-vibrant economy. We have
nothing.
Get your chicken sh*t butt to the meetings!!!
Recognize that there is more to Albuquerque
than the Central Corridor. Instead of talking
to your rich buddies, talk to the small business
owners in your city. Eighty-seven percent of a local
economy comes from small businesses. Instead
of courting out-of-state corporations that offer
low paying jobs and take advantage of our lax

combined reporting laws, invest in the individuals


who have staked their claim here, who like it here,
who have ideas about how to make Albuquerque
better. While we appreciate how easy it is to get
up and down Central, there are other neighborhoods in Albuquerque.
If Mayor Berry really insists on a Bus Rapid
Transit plan, put it on Lomas Avenue. It will still
service Downtown, Nob Hill, UNM, hospitals.
Lomas. Think about it. Its a good idea if ART has
to be.
Its the only decent thing youve proposed since
youve been in office.

newS

10 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Plowing Through the Details of Police Oversight


by Dennis domrzalski

he Albuquerque Civilian Police Oversight Board


(CPOB) is up against the clock when it comes
to police abuse cases its supposed to review. The
nine-member board is under extreme and confusing
time constraints in which to review cases against
officers and make recommendations for discipline.

People have said there are death


squads and that they wont even
call the police. On the other side
is that the APD can do no wrong.
Those are the extremes
oversight agency head Ed Harness

For instance, although the board technically has 30


days to review findings in completed police shooting cases and make disciplinary recommendations,
in reality, because of meeting schedules and other
issues, its only five to seven days.
In less serious cases like those involving officers
being rude, or violations of police department policy,
the board has 30 days to recommend discipline to
the chief of police. But that 30-day clock starts ticking once those investigations have been completed

by the Civilian Police Oversight Agency (CPOA).


And since the board only meets once a month, many
days, or even weeks, could pass before the board
reviews a case and makes a recommendation for
discipline.
That short time frame has some CPOB members
worried that the citys new civilian police oversight
process might be doomed to fail, at least when it
comes to the boards ability to review police shooting and excessive use of force cases in a manner that
gives them enough time to weigh in with disciplinary recommendations.
The question is whether or not it is doable, and
we dont know if that is doable, CPOB member
Joanne Fine said, adding that the process might be
structurally flawed.
Board member Jeffery Scott Wilson said during
a recent board meeting that he was worried the
confusing deadlines, schedules and time constraints
could set the process up for failure.
And CPOA Executive Director Ed Harness said
that some of the timelines get dicey.
The timelines are basically dictated by the police
union contract that says the police chief has 30 days
to decide on discipline against police officers after a
completed investigation, Harness said.
So far, the timelines havent meant much because

the CPOA and the board have been wading through


a backlog of cases from the old police oversight process, and the window of being able to recommend
discipline has long passed. But they could present
problems in the future as the CPOA and the board
move forward on new cases.
As the oversight process moves forward, the
CPOA and the CPOB have vowed to be transparent
and to listen to members of the community.

The Civilian Police Oversight


Board has 30 days to recommend
discipline to the chief of police
I want the public to know that we want to know
what they know, Harness said. We want to be of
service to the public so that we can be part of getting
some trust back to the community.
I hear a wide range of allegations against the
police department, he continued. People have said
there are death squads and that they wont even call
the police. On the other side is that the APD can do
no wrong. Those are the extremes. We would like to
know what the reality is and we cant know what
the reality is unless we get cooperation from the
public.

CALL NOW!
G SOON!
SALES ENDIN

NEWS

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 11

Were Not Done with REAL ID, Not By a Long shot


BY JOEY PETERS
New Mexico Political Report

hen the governor signed the bill that state


lawmakers passed last month establishing a
two-tier drivers license system in New Mexico, all
involved congratulated themselves for ending a
years-long, contentious debate over drivers licenses
for immigrants who are in the country illegally.
The key reason the Legislature passed the bill this
year was to comply with a controversial federal law
passed 11 years ago in the wake of the 9/11 terror
attacks in 2001. Largely absent from the discussion
was how compliance with various provisions in the
law will impact New Mexico in future years.
The Real ID Act establishes national standards for
state identification cards in an effort to crack down
on fraud and identity theft. The law is one of the
national security reforms that came out of recommendations from the 9/11 Commission.
Critics lament the laws potential chilling effect on
privacy.
Its essentially moving towards a national ID
card, state Rep. Antonio Moe Maestas, an Albuquerque Democrat, said in an interview.
Real ID established nearly 100 requirements that
states need to follow in order to comply with the
law. In the decade since it went into effect, not all
states jumped on board. Seventeen states pushed
back and passed laws opposing compliance with
Real ID. The federal Department of Homeland Security, which enforces Real ID, has pushed back its
deadlines for compliance numerous times, although
it rejected extensions requested by New Mexico and
Washington State late last year.

Currently, DHS is enforcing only 18 requirements


to deem states compliant with Real ID, which include making ID applicants undergo a facial image
capture, sign under penalty of perjury they are not
giving false information, and requiring documentation for birth dates, legal status, address and Social
Security number.
The question is whether and when DHS will start
enforcing the other benchmarks.
DHS came with a material compliance checklist,
Jim Harper, a senior fellow with the Cato Institute,
libertarian Washington D.C. think tank, said in an
interview. Thats not full compliance with the law.
One controversial benchmark that currently isnt
being enforced is a requirement that all states share
drivers license information in an interstate network.
Currently just four states are complaint and share
Real ID databases with each other.
At some point later, DHS is going to come back
and say New Mexico is not compliant until the state
puts data into the [interstate] system, Harper said.
Thats going to be the next step.
The text of this part of the law is vague, reading
that all states must provide electronic access to all
other states to information contained in the motor
vehicle database of the state. Harper warns that the
language compels even states with two-tier systems
to share all information in the interstate network.
For now, some state lawmakers dont seem too
concerned about how New Mexico will meet future
compliance with future benchmarks.
That sort of thing, thats something I dont get

into, said Senate Minority Leader Stuart Ingle, a


Portales Republican.
Ingle, a key player in the drivers license legislation, said the lawmakers will cross that bridge
when we get there.
At some point, if its necessary, other things will
come up and I dont know if we can handle it administratively or if well have to do kind of a change
in some kind of a law, Ingle said.
A spokesman with the New Mexico Taxation and
Revenue Department, which will oversee implementation of the states compliance with Real ID,
did not return a phone call or email seeking comment before press time.
A spokesman with the federal DHS referred NM
Political Report to the department websites section
on frequently asked questions about Real ID, which
says the law does not create a national identification
card and gives states autonomy to maintain records
and control who gets access to those records and
under what circumstances.
Regardless of what the laws impact will be here,
Maestas laments that Real ID was really never part
of the debate over the drivers license issue.
Gov. Susana Martinez praised the bill for ending
a state law that she contended made New Mexico
a magnet for illegal immigrants from all over the
world who come here to grab that drivers license
and then leave our state to go elsewhere.
Andy Lyman of NM Political Report contributed
reporting for this story.

Alas, Poor GOP, I Knew Him Well


BY robert reich

Plan Familiar
de llamadas
ilimitadas a casas
y celulares de
Mxico! Slo
$9.99/ mes,
ms impuestos.

TV Programming

Home Internet

more than
200 channels
only

$29.99/mo!

$29.99/mo!

only

Stand alone,
no bundling
required.

NEW
LOCATION!
2325 San Pedro NE
Suite 1A2
Albuquerque, NM
87110

m writing to
you today to announce the death
of the Republican
Party. It is no longer
a living, vital, animate organization.
It died in 2016.
RIP.
It has been replaced by warring
tribes:
Evangelicals opposed to abortion,
gay marriage, and science.
Libertarians opposed to any government constraint on private behavior.
Market fundamentalists convinced
the free market can do no wrong.
Corporate and Wall Street titans
seeking bailouts, subsidies, special tax
loopholes, and other forms of crony
capitalism. Billionaires craving even
more of the nations wealth than they
already own.
And white working-class

Trumpoids who love The Donald and


are becoming convinced the greatest
threats to their wellbeing are Muslims,
Blacks, and Mexicans.
Each of these tribes has its own separate political organization, its own
distinct sources of campaign funding,
its own unique ideology and its own
candidate.
Whats left is a lifeless shell called
the Republican Party. But the Grand
Old Party inside the shell is no more.
I, for one, regret its passing. Our nation needs political parties to connect
up different groups of Americans, sift
through prospective candidates, deliberate over priorities, identify common
principles, and forge a platform.
The Republican Party used to do
these things. Sometimes it did them
easily, as when it came together behind William McKinley and Teddy
Roosevelt in 1900, Calvin Coolidge in
1924, and Ronald Reagan in 1980.

Sometimes it did them with difficulty, as when it strained to choose


Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Barry
Goldwater in 1964, and Mitt Romney
in 2012.
But there was always enough of a
Republican Party to do these important tasks to span the divides, give
force and expression to a set ofcore
beliefs, and come up with a candidate
around whom Party regulars could
enthusiastically rally.
No longer. And thats a huge problem for the rest of us.
Without a Republican Party,
nothing stands between us and
a veritable Star Wars barroom of
self-proclaimedwanna-bes.
Without a party, anyone runs whos
able toraise (or already possesses) the
requisite money even if he happens
to be apathological narcissist who
has never before held public office,
even if hesa knave detested by all his

Republican colleagues.
Without a Republican Party, its just
us and them. And one of them could
even become the next President of the
United States.
Robert B. Reich, chancellors professor of public policy at the University of
California at Berkeley and senior fellow at the Blum Center for Developing
Economies, was secretary of labor in the
Clinton administration. Time magazine
named him one of the 10 most effective
cabinet secretaries of the 20th century.
He has written 13 books, including the
bestsellers Aftershock and The Work of
Nations. His latest, Beyond Outrage,
is now out in paperback. He is also a
founding editor of the American Prospect
magazine and chairman of Common
Cause. His newest film, Inequality for
All, is available on Netflix, iTunes,
DVD and On Demand. His blog is
robertreich.org

newS

12 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Expert: APD Following Wrong Path in Crisis Intervention


T

Competing models

Nationally, there are two models for handling


crisis situations: the Memphis model that Cochran
helped create and the Portland model. The most
important difference between the two is the number
of officers specifically designated as crisis intervention specialists.
In the Portland model, all officers in a department
are given training in crisis intervention and are
expected to respond to crisis calls. In the Memphis
model, a small group of specialized crisis officers
within a department, who work closely with community advocacy groups, is summoned to all crisis
calls.
APD is following the Portland model and is giving
all officers 40 hours of crisis training, but it is not
developing a specialized unit to respond to dangerous crisis events.
In a public presentation Cochran gave in Albuquerque last month, he pointed to a U.S. Department of Justice review of the City of Portlands
performance. The review specifically rebukes the

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 13

ABQ Free Press Local Briefs

BY ABQ FREE PRESS STAFF

BY ANDREW BEALE

he man who set up the nations


first Crisis Intervention Team
has a message for Albuquerque:
Youre following the wrong model.
Sam Cochran, a 30-year veteran
of the Memphis police force before
he retired, was charged with
implementing the first CIT program
in the country following what
he describes as a tragic event
that may sound all too familiar to
Albuquerque residents.
In 1988, Memphis police shot and
killed Joseph DeWayne Robinson,
27, who suffered from paranoid
schizophrenia, after his mother
called 911 for help with her suicidal
son.
The City of Memphis responded
by seeking and listening to the
advice of advocacy groups and
family members of the mentally ill,
including the National Alliance on
Mental Illness.
Their solution: a highly specialized group of highly trained, highly
motivated officers within the department tasked with responding to
calls involving a person in mental
crisis to keep them from escalating
into gunfire.
Cochran is quick to point out the strengths he
sees in the Albuquerque Police Department. Hes
enthusiastic about the work done by APDs crisis
outreach officers, and he has nothing but praise
for the officers he encountered on a recent visit to
Albuquerque.
But Cochran said he cant shake the feeling that
our city is making a mistake in the way it handles
crisis intervention.

NEWS

social worker interdiction approach


is dangerous.
What they [APDs crisis unit] do
is really a case-management function
in order to sort of encourage, coerce,
persuade people to take treatment, to
stay home, stay sober, go to the day
program if they have one, you know,
to just kind of keep them on the
straight and narrow so that we dont
end up with a future crisis, Cubra
said.
Thats different from a team that responds to an ongoing crisis, he said.
I would happily say for the record
that what Albuquerque has done has
been contrary to all of the principles
of crisis intervention teams, Cubra
said. And its quite dangerous and
needs to stop.
APD spokesman Tanner Tixier,
contacted for this article, directed the
ABQ Free Press to email questions
to him. He then failed to respond to
repeated emails over several days.
Stock image by Aaron Amat

Portland Police Bureaus crisis intervention model.


While we commend PPB for training all officers
on crisis matters, this approach assumes incorrectly
that all PPB officers are equally capable of safely
handling crisis situations and fails to build greater
capacity among qualified officers, the report states.

APDs path

Paradoxically, the U.S. Justice Department settlement agreement with APD over its history of excessive use of force seems to take the opposite direction
of what the DOJ concluded in Portland.
I think theres not a flaw in what [Albuquerque
is] trying to do. I think people are trying to best
promote as much training as possible to elevate the
officers to a better awareness, Cochran said.
But training is only going to carry you so far,
he said. Not all police officers are suited for or are
even interested in crisis work with the mentally ill.
An example of the flaw in APDs approach, Cochran
said, is that theres no clear on-scene leader in such
events.
Thats a serious flaw, right there, he said. If
everybody is trained, [theres a] lack of clarity of
who is the leader, and Im saying in a crisis event,
there needs to be a designated leader.
Albuquerque attorney Peter Cubra, who has
litigated major cases involving the rights of disabled
people, helped bring Cochran to Albuquerque last
month. Cubra praised APDs progress but said as
now constituted, its crisis unit does not have the
same duties as a specialized Crisis Intervention
Team.
He said the path APD is taking following a

Outside review

Ed Harness, director of Albuquerques Civilian Police Oversight Agency, said his agency hasnt
had a chance yet to review Albuquerques crisis
intervention policies. The agency is in the process
of hiring a data analyst, he said, and he was unable
to provide specific information about APDs crisis
training process.
Cochran said APD Lt. Glenn St. Onge, who oversees crisis training for the department, did express
his preference for the Portland model as opposed
to the Memphis model during a presentation that
Harness attended.
Its not Cochrans first time in the Duke City. He
played a minor role in establishing Albuquerques
first (and now disbanded) Crisis Intervention Team
in 1997 during a period when APD was first pushed
to develop nonlethal approaches to crisis events
use of verbal judo, bean-bag rounds and stun
devices.
That approach was eventually eclipsed by APDs
preference to use heavily armed SWAT teams,
armored vehicles and shootings, which in turn
fueled APDs culture of aggression that led to
DOJs intervention to stop the departments pattern
of unconstitutional policing that left up to 30 people
dead.
After visiting the city this year, Cochran said the
officers he interacted with left him with the same
optimism he had 19 years ago.
I am leaving Albuquerque with the same feelings
and expectations of when I left Albuquerque in
1997, he said. And that was a good feeling.
Andrew Beale is an Albuquerque freelance journalist
and frequent contributor to ABQ Free Press.

Holm loses

Holly Holms reign as the UFC


bantamweight champion didnt last
long less than four months. On
March 5, Miesha Tate took down
Holm in the fifth round of their title
bout with something called a rearnaked choke. Apparently realizing
she was losing on all the judges
scorecards, Tate went for it in the final
round. She jumped onto Holms back,
slipped her right under the champs
chin and choked Holm until she went
unconscious. Holm was honest about
the defeat. I let my guard down
and it cost me the fight, she said in
her post-fight news conference. It
was only last November that Holm
stunned the UFC world by defeating
Ronda Rousey in Australia.

More chile

Theres some good news for New


Mexico chile lovers and growers.
After years of steady decline, chile
production in the state jumped by 2.5
percent in 2015. The number of acres
planted grew to 8,300 from 8,100, and

the harvest jumped to 66,700 tons


from 58,700 tons in 2014, the New
Mexico Department of Agriculture
reported. The value of that crop was
$41.1 million compared to $38.7
million in 2014. While New Mexico
farmers planted more chile last year,
they harvested the same number of
acres 7,700 as they did in 2014.

Webster slaying

U.S. Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham


wants answers from the federal government about why it let a dangerous
convicted felon stay on Albuquerques
streets. Davon Lymon, is alleged to
have fatally shot Albuquerque Police
Officer Daniel Webster last October,
about three weeks after he sold a gun
to federal agents and could have been
arrested. In a March 3 letter to the U.S.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives, Lujan Grisham asked
if the ATF has written guidelines on
when to arrest a suspected criminal
during undercover operations. She
also wants to know if the ATF shares
information regarding its undercover
operations with state and local police

departments, and whether ATF


considers how potentially dangerous
or violent a suspected criminal is
when determining when to arrest a
suspected criminal during undercover
operations.

New brewery

A brewery of the people and by the


people is taking shape in Cedar Crest.
The idea behind the Ale Republic is
to have customers help the owners
decide what kind of beer to brew.
Brewery co-founder Zach Gould
said hell invite customers to help
develop beers. Once thats done, those
customers will vote on what beers the
Ale Republic should have on tap. The
owners are completing the permitting
process and the brewery should be
open later this year.

DA says: No mas

District Attorney Kari Brandenburg,


Bernalillo Countys longest-serving
head prosecutor, said she will not seek
a fifth term. Three candidates have
announced. Brandenburg did not rule
out a run for another office.

New jobs?

Presbyterian Health Plan is looking


for business outside the state. The
insurer has signed a letter of intent
to provide Medicaid managed care
services to a group of 11 health systems in North Carolina. The prospect
of new business has Presbyterian
considering a $20 million expansion
to its corporate headquarters in
Albuquerque. If the deal is approved
by federal and North Carolina
regulators, it could bring 600 jobs to
Albuquerque.

No sick leave

Heres some lousy news for New


Mexico workers: Nearly 50 percent
of private-sector workers in the state
dont receive paid sick leave the
lowest rate in the nation, according
to a study by New Mexico Voices for
Children. It means that workers cant
stay home when theyre sick, nor can
they take the time to go see a doctor,
or take their children to get better,
without forfeiting wages.

Ask A Professional

Odes Armijo-Caster has the distinction of being the sole person


in New Mexico with dual Solar Photovoltaic and Solar Thermal
technology. He has also provided presentations, workshops and
seminars on solar energy systems throughout the world.

I currently have a gas heater

Sacred Power
1501 12th St. NW
Albuquerque, NM 87104
(505) 242-2292

A:

Q: that makes my swimming pool


very expensive to heat. Are
there solar systems can heat
my pool, and if so, how much
do they generally cost?

Absolutely! There are two types of solar hot water heating systems that
can be used for swimming pools and hot tubs. 1) If you have an outdoor
pool, you can use a UV stabilized polypropylene solar pool collector:
lightweight, easy to install and a super economical way to heat your pool.
These systems usually cost around $4000 installed and will extend your
outdoor pool heating season by a least a couple of months compared to not
having (or limiting) the use of a gas or electric pool heating system. 2) If
you have an indoor pool or hot tub, you will need to use an insulated solar
collector with a copper tubing/absorber plate and a low iron glass covering, which traps the heat inside the collector on cold winter days. This type
of solar system is quite a bit more expensive primarily because there are
more components required, including special fluids and heat exchangers to
protect the system from freezing. Be aware however, these systems may not
qualify for State/Federal solar tax credits due to swimming pools being
labeled as a luxury item in the tax code.

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Come in
with this ad
today & receive
LED lightbulb
special!

6-pack of
LED bulbs with
every free home
consultation &
this ad!

pets/columns

14 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Helping the ABQ Indian Center,


And is a Special Session Likely?
by sayrah namast

CALLING
ALL PETS
John Wombacher sent us this photo of Bucky W., a 3-and-a-half-year-old
mixed-breed training to be a therapy dog with the Warm Hearts Network
of New Mexico. I convinced his owners to let me adopt him when he was
8 weeks old, John said. Soon hell be certified and Ill share him with
even more folks. Also, Im training him to be in show business.

Send it to

petphotos@freeabq.com
Include your name, phone number, and your pets name,
and well try to reserve their spot in the pet parade.

hat the
heck happened at the
Roundhouse? Sen.
Jerry Ortiz y Pino,
an Albuquerque
Democrat, offers
his annual post-legislative town
hall on the 2016
legislative session and policies that affect
Albuquerque residents. The event is 1 p.m.
Sunday, March 13 at the Hotel Blue, 717
Central Ave. N.W.
I hold town halls at least four times a
year to get feedback from constituents
about issues that are important to them,
Ortiz y Pino said. I think the highlight will
be a frank discussion of just how serious
our economic situation is, and how likely
we are to require a special session to deal
with falling revenues, he said.
More impact from the economic
downturn: There are many homeless
Native Americans in Albuquerque and they
need vital help like a place to pick up their
Social Security check or VA benefits, or a
place they can go simply to use the phone.
The Albuquerque Indian Center, located
in the International District at 105 Texas St.
S.E., has served those needs for more than
25 years, helping Native Americans who
lack housing or are experiencing poverty.
The center provides counseling, free
meals, legal help, and domestic violence
and batterers treatment, and AA meetings. Also available are Internet and email
access, and hygiene kits.
But this year, the center is facing
financial problems and it needs support to
pay its water and utility bills until funding
comes through.
The center is holding a benefit concert at
6 p.m., Saturday, March 12 at Warehouse
508, located at 508 First St. N.W. The event
is titled Native Voices Showcase and will
feature Grammy nominee and former Miss
Navajo Nation, Radmilla Cody.
For more, go to facebook.com/
events/1715419282026797
Harassment of the homeless: One
overlooked and continuing problem
that homeless people have to deal with
is police harassment. Two years ago, the
fatal shooting by police of homeless
camper James Boyd as he tried to sleep
in the foothills became an international
news story.
Boyds shooting galvanized sustained
protests against Albuquerque Police
Department violence, and Bernalillo
County District Attorney Kari Brandenburg
eventually filed murder charges against
two police officers.
The anniversary of Boyds death will
be marked with a vigil and placement of
a descanso, a traditional marker often

seen at roadsides where a person has died.


It is illegal to destroy a descanso, so local
activists hope police will stop removing
tributes that remind people of his killing.
The vigil and placement of the memorial
is set for 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 16 at
the spot in the foothills where Boyd was
killed, not far from the trailhead east of
Tramway Boulevard at Copper Avenue N.E.
Bringing scholars and community together: A common problem for university
scholars and researchers is a disconnect
from the local community, resulting in
work that doesnt serve the public.
Aiming to change that is the Raza
Graduate Student Conferences annual
event starting at 8 a.m. on both Thursday,
March 24 and Friday, March 25 at the
UNM Student Union Building.
The event is titled Atl-Tlachinolli:
Decolonized Healing. Atl-Tlachinolli
is a Nahuatl, or Aztec, term that means
burning water. It symbolizes the
coalescing of contradictions that creates a
balanced union from which neither force
overpowers the other.
As scholars of color we often struggle
to balance our identities with the realities
of academia, said one of the organizers,
Melina Juarez.
My experience at the beginning of grad
school was really difficult. There was not
support for non-traditional grad students
and it made me want to quit. So I sought
out a support system from other students
of color through Raza Graduate Student
Association, shared what was going on
and the idea of the conference came
about, she said.
The conference brings together people
of color, non-traditional graduate students
and the local community.
The public is encouraged to attend
the free conference and learn about
topics that include Historical Trauma;
Indigenous struggles and methodologies
and (De)Colonization politics and theory.
There will be a social justice panel with
grassroots activists.
Academics can get insulated and this
is a way for scholars and researchers to
produce work that is valued and needed
by the community, Juarez said.
As part of the event, a healing center
will be set up during the events second
day offering four hours with free
massages, traditional limpias, and other
healing work.
For more, visit:
facebook.com/events/157932074567505

Sayrah Namast is an organizer with


the American Friends Service Committee
in Albuquerque. She writes about events
of interest to Albuquerques activist
community.

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 15


analysis
The Link Between Gun Violence and Police Shootings
BY BILL HUME

24-year-old Army
veteran accosted at
gunpoint at an Albuquerque ATM pulled
his own sidearm and
chased the would-be
armed robber back to
his car. With the veteran
and his friend, armed
with a knife, approaching, the would-be robber
sped away, shooting and
killing the veteran.
Gun violence yet
again on the streets of
Albuquerque.
The nagging question
is: If the veteran hadnt
had a gun, would this
episode have more
likely ended with an
angry vet having been
robbed but still alive?
Guns on both sides of
a confrontation are a
virtual guarantee of a
violent conclusion.
Gun violence in this
country has increased
exponentially in recent years, highlighted by senseless multiple homicides by firearms. For many, the
obvious remedy is to curtail access to guns particularly by those with histories of violence or mental
illness.

For many, the gun is only the tool;


the shooter is the problem.
If Guns Kill, Spoons Make
Rosie ODonnell Fat! is the not
illogical bumper sticker assertion
For many others, the gun is only the tool; the
shooter is the problem. If Guns Kill, Spoons Make
Rosie ODonnell Fat! is the not illogical bumper
sticker assertion.
By way of background, this writer came of age
in a small New Mexico town. My father taught me
to shoot with the family .22 bolt-action rifle. If we
had the family car at school, there might easily have
been firearms in the trunk. I bought my first gun
at 16 years of age in an Albuquerque department
store, without parental participation. The only
requirement was that I showed a drivers license
and produced $64.

Grab your gun

Restrictions on purchasing, anxieties about ease of


ownership and incidents of gun atrocities were
virtually nonexistent in the 1950s and 60s. So whats
different today?
One factor, I think, is that use of guns in the street
has acquired an uncertain legitimacy through

contemporaries civilian or police than was


ever the case in the late
20th century. The result
is more separation,
more latent hostility
in interpersonal interactions. In minority
communities, these
tendencies are greatly
magnified.

Police tactics

familiarity. There are drastically more cases of


persons shooting strangers. It keeps the public constantly concerned that these things are a palpable
risk. Proliferation of licenses for concealed carry has
blossomed.
And then theres the new, more hardened perception of law enforcement. The wave of police shootings in recent years has turned on its head the image
of a policeman as a benign authority figure.
People read of persons shot to death by police in
situations in which in retrospect it seemed unnecessary. The public especially the Albuquerque
public grew accustomed to seeing the almost daily
deployment of SWAT teams groups of officers
armed and uniformed like heavies from a war zone
traveling in armored military vehicles.

View of police

The net result is that people have changed their


attitudes toward police. Call police when a family
member is distraught? Maybe not. Experience warns
that theres a real possibility it might end in death.
The red- and blue-marked police vehicles of the
community policing era are being phased out for
sinister gray-black cruisers that look like special
effects from a police state movie. Protect and Serve
is segueing perhaps to Protect Ourselves from
Those We Serve.
It goes without saying that the actions painting the
black eye on police are perpetuated by an exceedingly small minority of the force but they form the
publics impression. Instead of being perceived as
a benign authority figure, the officer is increasingly
seen as a sinister adversarial force to be feared.
So, the average informed citizen of today has a
much greater sense of personal threat from armed

I remember many
years ago when I
watched a confrontation
between an apparently
drunk man armed with
a pistol and a group of
APD officers. I heard
officers, crouched behind their car, pointing
their pistols at the man,
shouting, Drop the
gun, drop the gun.
Another officer tiptoed
around the corner of
the building, quietly up
behind the man and
deftly grabbed the pistol out of his hand. The others
rushed up, holstering their arms, and none too
gently took the man to the ground and handcuffed
him alive.

The wave of police shootings


in recent years has turned on
its head the image of a policeman
as a benign authority figure
Its hard to imagine todays APD risking a maneuver like that. But at the same time, they work
in meaner streets, with their quick use of guns
matched by their more violence-prone adversaries.
When one citizen in the 100 that an officer encounters during a shift presents an actual deadly threat,
the officer must still use some measure of precaution
with the other 99 as he goes about his business.
It seems to me that guns dont cause violence, but
peoples attitude about others proclivity for their
use certainly does. And the increased threat of gun
violence to police officers increases officers quick
use of deadly force which in turn increases the
likelihood that somebody with a gun will be quick
to use his.
Somehow, we have to nurse this fear/acceptance
of gun violence out of our everyday attitudes on
both sides of the badge and among all strata of our
society. Only through something like that will we
ever exorcise the gun violence scourge.
Bill Hume is a former editorial page editor of the
Albuquerque Journal and later served as a policy adviser
to former Gov. Bill Richardson.

opinion

16 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

By Any Measure, the APS-CNM Bond Election Was Rigged

BY ROBERT PIDCOCK

have been asked by ABQ Free Press


why I chose to file a lawsuit against
the Albuquerque Public Schools and the
Central New Mexico Community College
concerning the tax and bond election held
on Feb. 2, 2016.
Some people would look the other way
if they saw a child being abused. Some
would not. Some people would walk past
if they saw an old person on the street in
trouble. Some would not.
Some people would just say, Its New
Mexico if they saw repeated and systemic failure in their schools and a failed
election process. I did not.
The success I have found as a lawyer affords me the opportunity to do the right
thing in ways that others are unable. I
have been gifted with a law license and
wonderful clients over the years. Now, I
have the opportunity to give my work to
the public when I see the need.
I will not discuss the specific legal issues
in the lawsuit, since those would best be
understood by reading the complaint.
However, the issues are numerous and
substantial, including:
APS changing the tax mill levy rate on
the ballot just 12 days before the election,
when the law requires the ballot issues to
be published 50 days before the election;
No individual projects to be funded
were listed on the ballots, which forced
voters to accept all spending by APS
and CNM or reject everything, just to get the small
portion that they may think is really needed;
The vague wording on the ballot gave APS and
CNM the legal ability to ignore any statements
they made prior to the election to fund any specific
projects and spend the money on any buildings they
wish.
In 2014, Manzano High School had a four-year
graduation rate of only 57.2 percent. Six percent
of the schools students there dropped out in 2013
alone.
This year, APS has decided to spend $21.9 million
at Manzano, but when you voted last month, if you
thought the planned spending would be on science
or computer labs or a better library for research and
learning, you would have been mistaken.
The money will actually be spent on a new athletics complex.
CNM says it will spend some of its share of the
bond money on a new wine and beer academy.
Even though I enjoy wine and beer, in a state with
the level of alcohol-related issues we have, it is
particularly irresponsible for a public-funded
educational institution to choose to spend taxpayer
money on such a program. CNM may as well use
tax dollars to teach farmers how to grow tobacco for
cigarettes.
I have lived in Albuquerque for 30 years. It seems
that the news stories about APS written today could

opinion

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 17

Lets Call ART What It is,


A Victory for Our Ruling Class

Coming soon: Your Flying Car

BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI

have been written 30 years ago. Stories of poor graduation rates, top-heavy administration that earns too
much and does too little, perpetually disgruntled
teachers that want higher pay but no more work,
and a seemingly clueless APS Board of Education,
have been repeated over and over for decades.
The public is simply numb to it all, and very few
bother to vote on the requests for obscene amounts
of money for replacing leaking roofs and pencils
in the classrooms, when the money for roof patching and pencil purchases actually turns into a $5
million private health clinic for administrators and
employees or $55 million for athletic facilities, as in
the most recent election.
In election after election, whatever amount APS
and CNM request to tax, borrow and spend virtually always passes thanks to the small number of
voters and CNMs and APS hide-the-ball strategy of
selecting voting locations.
Five of the initial 30 voting sites for the most recent
election were put on CNM campuses. There were
nearly 485,000 eligible voters in the election and
there are about 27,000 CNM students of all types,
full time and part time.
Instead of using sites convenient to voters, voting
was held in hard-to-navigate school locations, often
without general parking. By contrast, the selection
of voting sites was incredibly convenient for the
27,000 CNM students, faculty and employees, but

not so for the other 458,000 eligible voters of the


general public.
And this year, it all worked as it has for years.
Roughly 19,000 people voted to give APS the
authority to tax everyone $375 million and borrow
$200 million, and that far exceeded the roughly
10,000 people who voted against the issues.
Nearly 20,000 people voted for the CNM bond
issue while roughly 9,000 voted against. CNMs
share of the bond issue would have passed if just
37 percent of the CNM student body alone walked
down the hall from class and bothered to vote.
Nor did APS or CNM governing boards bother to
advertise the election.
CNM spent a total of just over $62,000, according
to CNM documents, to obtain $84 million.
APS has not provided the total of what it spent,
but from the documents they have produced in
response to requests, the school district produced
proof of only about $16,000. In return, theyll get
$575 million.
Maybe this can all be changed.
One thing I know: We have to try. We have to
require APS and CNM to comply with the law so
voters can make informed choices. That would be a
good beginning.
Robert Pidcock is an Albuquerque attorney who
unsuccessfully ran for Congress in 2008.

here are only a


few things that
stir my soul to joy,
gratitude and ecstasy:
a cold 15-pack on a
Saturday morning,
an ICBM streaking
through the night
sky from Vandenberg
Air Force Base, and
the moving words of that great leader
who once proclaimed, Government of
the bureaucrats, by the planners, for the
developers and contractors shall not perish
from the earth.
Unfortunately, all great concepts mutate
over time into the horrific opposite of
their original meaning and intent. Such
has it been with that noble concept of
government by the bureaucrats, which is
being perverted by the people.
Puny little people pathetic troublemakers who never learned their place to bow
subserviently before their kings have
created in their defective minds a warped
and so disfigured view of our beloved
bureaucratic oligarchy that they believe
that its supposed to be government of
the people, by the people and for the
people.
Sickening, to be sure. Dangerous.
The slovenly masses have failed to
understand that it is their place to be
governed by the rich, powerful and
connected, and from these unwashed
masses has arisen the stench of dissent
that had threatened the bank accounts of
our noble ruling class.
But now, thanks to strong leadership,
things are changing back to their proper,
and hopefully, permanent alignment.
That glorious concept of government by
bureaucrats, and not by farmers, factory
workers, car mechanics and retail workers,
has reasserted its authority within the City
of Albuquerque. The loud and unenlightened masses are being properly put in
their place.
To thank for this righteous return to
the divine right of the bureaucrats and
the politically connected to impose their
will, we have Mayor Richard Berry and his
Albuquerque Rapid Transit project.
It is beautiful to watch.
The tiny minds and squeakers are now
whimpering that they never had a say
in the $119 million project that will rip
up Central Avenue for months and will
probably drive many small companies out
of business; that they were never asked
whether they wanted or needed the
project; that they feel dictated to; that
the deal is the definition of a mayor who
doesnt have a real economic development

plan; and that its Berrys way of throwing


gobs of public money at his pals, our pals,
in the contracting business and in NAIOP
and nothing more.
Of course thats what it is. And so what?
Thats the way things operate. Thats
how money is made. The little people
need to get used to it. The politicians,
bureaucrats, planners and developers run
this town.
Heres another way this thing is the
absolute gorgeous embodiment of
government by and for the bureaucrats.
Did anyone see any mobs of people
storming City Hall and the mayors office
demanding Bus Rapid Transit down Central? Did Berrys office receive thousands,
hundreds, or maybe even tens of letters
from citizens demanding BRT?
Are the CEOs of IBM, Microsoft, Boeing
and other global corporations in New
York, Chicago and Silicon Valley, firing off
urgent messages to their boards, saying,
Thank God almighty! Theyre building a
10-mile-long BRT system in Albuquerque.
Its what weve been waiting for. We move
to Albuquerque now!
Of course not.
This wasnt on anyones mind until our
bureaucrats realized there were pots of
federal grant money to be had, money
that could be thrown at our best people,
the developers and contractors.
The bureaucrats and planners undoubtedly with the input of wise
developers saw that money and hatched
the plan that would benefit the noble
citys oligarchy. Of course BRT isnt needed,
but if we governed and acted on the basis
of need and whats right instead of whats
best for our pals, our pals would never
make the kind of money we want them to.
Now, some losers are whining that the
citys ART meetings were a sham because
the project was a done deal. Theyve
complained that during meetings they
were forced into separate groups so as
to divide them and dilute their voices of
opposition to ART.
Well, thats exactly what went on. So
what?
Remember, its government of the
bureaucrats, by the planners, for the
developers and contractors. The little
people, the ones who pay the bills, get no
voice and have no power. We do!
It was Abe Lincoln who spouted that
garbage about government of the people
not perishing from the Earth. Well, who
needs Lincoln when youve got Richard J.
Berry?

Dennis Domrzalski is an associate editor


at ABQ Free Press. Reach him at
dennis@freeabq.com

wo men from Slovakia have been testing a two-seat flying car with collapsible wings
since 2014 and plan to put it on sale this year for delivery within three years.

Aeromobils Flying Roadster (shown in flight above and road configuration below) can
reach a top speed of 124 miles an hour in the air and 99 miles an hour on land. A sport pilots
license will be needed to fly it. No price has been announced.

The TF-X, another car-plane being developed by Massachusetts-based Terrafugia, will have
a top speed of 200 miles an hour on the ground and 500 in the air. When it finally hits the
market several years from now, the TF-X will have a reported priced tag of $261,000.

www.ruizdelatorre.com
(505) 544-5400
Have you been seriously injured?
Are you being charged with a crime?
Have you been wrongfully convicted?

WE HELP LAW MAKE SENSE


Personal Injury
Civil Rights
Foreclosure
Estate Planning
Divorce
Entertainment Law
Family Law

Criminal Defense
Appeals
Habeas Corpus
Extraordinary Writs
Drug Possession
Murder
DWI

Se Habla Espaol

columns

18 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Mr. Mayor, Repeating a Lie


Doesnt Make it True

news

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 19

Why Did We Shoot This Photo?

hats in this photo? Why the hell did


we shoot it? This is the start of a new
ABQ Free Press photo feature of places and
things around Albuquerque that may have
some sort of significance historical,
cultural, or notorious.

BY dan Klein

DID YOU KNOW


THERE MAY BE MONEY
AVAILABLE TO YOU
FOR EYEWEAR AFTER
CATARACT SURGERY?
Must be 65 Years of Age

You May be Eligible


For Benefits!
Call MULLER OPTICAL
Today for your FREE
Consultation
elp
Let Us H our
ind Y

You F

te

Soulma

www.freeabq.com/dating/
9000 Menaul NE
(505) 296-8187

t appears neither the mainstream


Albuquerque media nor our government officials care about the truth.
A story from KRQE-TV on Feb. 25, 2016,
proclaimed, Its a problem all across the
state, agencies struggling to fill their
police academies. The same problem goes
for New Mexico State Police.
An Albuquerque Journal editorial
stated that because the Legislature
failed to approve Mayor Richard Berrys
double-dipping bill for retired police,
citizens who need a cop should try
calling your state senator.
Both KOB-TV and KOAT-TV stations
chimed in with their own statewide
police-shortage reports. Berry is now
threatening to raid smaller departments
by offering signing bonuses to lateral-transfer officers because APD is in
a hiring crisis. The media drinks this
rhetoric like a Berry-flavored Kool-Aid,
never bothering to check the facts.
If they did, they would know its a lie.
I naively thought the truth would be
reported after an ABQ Free Press survey
of 60 police agencies in New Mexico
this past October proved there is no
shortage of police officers outside of
Albuquerque.
I honestly thought this urban legend
perpetuated by Berry would end and
that the mainstream media would use
our survey to put an end to the myth of
a statewide police shortage. Instead, they
ignored it. Nor did they ask Berry for
proof of the statewide cop-acalypse.
I can only assume the news editors
found it was easier to repeat what Berry
was selling them rather than fact-check
him.
With that in mind, allow me to
fact-check the local media as well. In an
editorial, the Journal blamed the Senate
Democrats for the failure of Berrys
return-to-work bill.
The truth is that neither Sen. Stuart
Ingle, a Portales Republican who
serves as Senate minority leader, nor
Albuquerque Republican Rep. Larry
Larraaga two of the bills co-sponsors
took time to present the bill in the
Senate Public Affairs Committee at a
crucial point in the session.
After the committee waited hours
for the return-to-work bills sponsors to
appear, without someone to present the
bill and ask the committee to act on it,
the bill died.
Instead of telling their readers to call
their senator, the Journal should more
accurately be telling them to call Ingle
and Larraaga.
But wait, theres more.

Next up: New Mexico State Police


Chief Pete Kassetas. My survey of the
New Mexico State Police,conducted
after they graduated a new class in early
December, revealed that that agency
was 100 percent staffed, at 678 officers,
with no openings.
That led Pete Dinelli, Albuquerques
former director of Albuquerques public
safety task force, in testimony before
a House committee less than a month
later, to praise Kassetas for achieving
100 percent staffing.
Kassetas responded by telling Dinelli,
How dare you say my agency is 100
percent filled! I guess Kassetas doesnt
take compliments very well. Then,
Kassetas boss, Greg Fouratt, secretary of
the New Mexico Department of Public
Safety, testified before another House
committee that NMSP was down 81
officers.
Fouratt now headed to Las Cruces to
be a U.S. magistrate never explained
why his head count was in conflict with
what NMSP told us. He just dumped a
number out there, and no one in the
mainstream media challenged him. Just
days after Fouratts testimony, Kassetas
appeared on KRQE-TV and stated, Im
probably down 52 officers.
So which is it? Is NMSP 100 percent
staffed or short 81 officers or short 52
officers? In less than 90 days, the leaders
of NMSP floated three different staffing
figures. Why is the truth so difficult?
And why does the mainstream media
ignore this?
APD is graduating 38 new officers,
bringing its numbers to 852 sworn
officers. APD has another 30 cadets on
track to graduate in June. This will bring
APD close to 90 percent staffing. Why
hasnt anyone in the news media, other
than ABQ Free Press, challenged Berry
with the facts?
New Mexico is last in everything good
and first in corruption. When the news
media are just a public relations arm for
those in power, they do a disservice to
their community. The lies about a police
shortage are one example, but there are
many more.
Journalists have an obligation to
check facts rather than just regurgitate
them. They have to ask hard questions
of those in authority. The First Amendment demands that the media challenge
those in power to tell the truth.

Dan Klein, a retired Albuquerque


police sergeant, is a columnist for
ABQ Free Press. Reach him on Facebook.

Whether its locations or details from


Breaking Bad or Better Call Saul or just
close-ups of everyday things that an
observant Burqueo should recognize,
well be out there with our smartphones.
Your job is to identify it and send us
your answer, plus a little bit of detail and
context. Each issues winner will be the
person who our judges believe provided the
most entertaining explanation in 150 words
or less. Well publish the winning answer
the following issue.
Send your entries to editor@freeabq.com
with the subject line Mystery Photo by
5 p.m. the Wednesday after each issues
publication date in this case, March 16.

Dan Vukelich

ce

How will you lead ?

Whether you are aspiring to obtain a PMI credential or looking for project
management experience, UNM Continuing Education offers four certificate
options and a range of classes to build and polish your project management skills.
Improve your organizations project results measured in cost, time, and quality
using accepted project management tools, techniques, and principles.
Project Management Certificate Options
Visit ce.unm.edu/Project to review certificate options and download our Project
Management Certificate Flyer.
Upcoming Project Management classes
Integrating Project Management: Principles and Practices
Project Management Professional/CAPM Exam Preperation
MS Project Module 1: Project Plan Definition
MS Project Module 2: Budgeting and Tracking
MS Project Module 3: Team Communication and Productivity
MS Project 2013: Project Reports
Lean Mastery - Online
Six Sigma Green Belt - Online
Six Sigma Black Belt - Online

Start Dates
Apr 4
Apr 7
May 3
May 10
May 17
Jun 1
Self-paced
Self-paced
Self-paced

For more information, contact bizskills@unm.edu.

505-277-0077
ce.unm.edu/Project

This issues prize: Two tickets to the


March 23 Gladiators arena-football game
at Tingley Coliseum.

20 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

EDitorial cartoons/ANALYSIS

How Long Must We Wait For


Santa Fe to Clean Up its Act?

By HEATH HAUSSAMEN

ribery. Fraud. Perjury.


Tampering with public
records. Violating the ethical
principles of public service.
Former Sen. Phil Griego is
charged with egregious abuses of
the public trust. As a lawmaker
he pushed a bill to let a private
company buy a historic Santa Fe
building from the state. What
Griego didnt disclose, the attorney general alleges, is that the
company paid Griego more than
$50,000 for his assistance.
If its true, Griego should be
punished.
But what then? Weve been
convicting and ousting misbehaving state government officials
for more than a decade. It doesnt
seem to be reducing corruption
or helping our state rise from the
bottom of important lists.
I believe the vast majority of
New Mexicos 112 legislators
and other government officials
and employees are hard-working,
good people.
But systemic, structural flaws
discourage ethical behavior. We
dont pay lawmakers or give
them adequate resources to do
their jobs. We choose to let them
be dependent on campaign
donors and lobbyists.
Paying legislators alone wont
fix this mess. There must be
stronger accountabilityincluding a commission that sets ethical
standards for government and
helps police violationsand
better transparency.
Its noteworthy that archived
video of a 2014 Senate Rules
Committee hearing, recorded
by the Governors Office, helps
make the case against Griego.
The amateur recording shows
Griego presenting the resolution authorizing the real-estate
transaction.
Fortunately, House members
finally voted this year to begin
publicly archiving video of their
hearings. But senators continue
resisting archiving their webcasts.
Webcast archiving isnt
enough. New Mexico needs
many reforms. For example,
Gov. Susana Martinez and some
Republicans have pushed a bill
that would require all candidates
for legislative and statewide
offices and many other officials to file financial disclosure

statements. It would require


those who have consulting businesses or spouses with consulting
businesses to disclose information about clients who paid them
more than $1,000.
The legislation comes partly in
response to an issue I reported
on in 2015. State Auditor Tim
Keller, when he was a senator,
failed to disclose that he did work
for Laguna Pueblo. He actually
claimed the opposite.
Kellers Laguna work created
a potential conflict. He repeatedly criticized the Martinez
Administrations awarding of a
25-year lease toThe Downs at
Albuquerqueto operate a casino
and racetrack at the state fairgrounds. Laguna Pueblo was the
losing bidder.
Keller had reason to scrutinize the questionable deal. The
fairgrounds are located in the
Senate district that as a state senator he represented at the time.
But Keller also had a business
relationship with Laguna that he
didnt disclose.
The situation highlights a serious problem: Many of our unpaid
lawmakers have to seek other
employment that creates conflicts.
In the extreme that can lead to
Griegos alleged crimes.
Our weak laws sometimes
dont require transparency. How
many others act unethically in
secret?
Keller and Martinez have
made mistakes, but theyre
among those working for change.
Both support increased financial
disclosure.
We must work together to
build a system that encourages
ethical behavior. Voters should
embrace amending the state
Constitution to pay our legislators. Policymakers must accept
widespread reforms to increase
transparency and accountability.
That will help the best among
us lead. It will enable government to act in the interest of all
New Mexicans. Its how well
begin to rise from the bottom of
important lists.

Haussamen runs NMPolitics.net,


an online news organization.
Reach him at heath@haussamen.com,
on Facebook at /haussamen, or on
twitter @haussamen

editorial

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 21

Were for Kasich the Sane One


I
BY DAN VUKELICH

f there must be a Republican in the White


House, please, God, let it be John Kasich.
We agree with him that in the recent Republican presidential debates, hes been the only
adult on the stage.
Thats why were endorsing him in the GOP
primary. Too bad theres a chance hell likely be
out of the race before New Mexicos Republicans
vote in June, but we can only hope.
This newspaper endorsed Hillary Clinton within
a week of her announcement last year. We stand
behind that endorsement, although we get an
email a week urging us to feel the Bern.
But back to the Republicans.
Who can support Donald Trump with his
boorish, junior high insults and race-baiting
behavior and call themselves a fair-minded,
tolerant American?
In a recent phone call, a friend in Maine
pointed out that Trumps rhetoric mirrors
perfectly that of Adolf Hitler as he rose to power
in Germany in the 1930s: Lets Make Germany
Great Again.
Trumps speeches echo another Hitlerian theme:
Our nations problems are the machinations of
others. Not Jews, but Mexicans and Muslims.
Even Trumps demand that his crowds raise their
hands to swear theyll vote creepily echoes the
stiff-armed salute of the Nazis.
The other choices are hardly more appealing.

Fresh-faced Marco Rubio, hoping to be the


GOP establishment alternative, has been clearly
outclassed by his rivals. We reluctantly agree with
Trump that Rubio who has the backing of Gov.
Susana Martinez is a lightweight.
But well go further and suggest Rubio will
be little more than a stooge for the GOP establishment, which includes Wall Street, the War
Machine and the fossil fuel industry.
When we look at Ted Cruz, we see a religious
zealot who will roll back 75 years of progress on
civil rights. And then theres the likeability factor.
Quoting Cruzs fellow Republican, South Carolina
Sen. Lindsey Graham, If you killed Ted Cruz on
the floor of the Senate, and the trial was in the
Senate, nobody would convict you.
That leaves Ohio Gov. Kasich. While theres
much not to like his stands on labor and
abortion, for example he has bolstered the
economy of a faltering Rust Belt state and
straightened out Ohios finances. In Congress,
while the ranking member of the House Budget
Committee, he helped balance the U.S. budget.
Rather than throw insults, Kasich talks about
jobs and working with the other side of the aisle.
Thats what the United States of America needs
now.

Dan Vukelich is editor of ABQ Free Press.


Reach him at editor@freeabq.com

What N.M. Needs Next


BY SEN. PETE CAMPOS

believe we can diversify our economy and begin


to stabilize state revenues by:
Strengthening our support of the film industry;
Promoting our natural attractions;
Cutting red tape and focusing on what
works best for small businesses, particularly
in rural areas; and
Expanding the clean energy industry; and
Improving our statewide broadband
technology system by shoring up dead spots
in rural communities.
We should discuss making the best use of
our water and strengthening our agricultural
industry, too.
Its true that these measures will help us
diversify our economy, which should translate to
a more stable, predictable budgeting process (at
least as far as revenues are concerned).
There is an even greater benefit to these
measures, though: well-paying jobs. Growing the
film and clean energy industries and promoting
small businesses will equal more jobs for New
Mexicans.
Plus, small businesses help make up the fabric
of all New Mexico communities, particularly the
smaller, rural ones. Helping them grow and be
able to hire people has always been a top priority
of mine.
To me, there is no better source of hope than a
job with a decent wage or owning a business that
functions as a vital part of the community, both in
terms of goods and services and in employment
of others.
We also have to re-evaluate our tax base by

examining exemptions and credits and whether


they are functioning as intended. I have served
in the Legislature for over 25 years, and in that
time, I dont think I have ever seen a proposed
tax exemption that wasnt sold to the Legislature
as economic development.
We need to take a close look at those exemptions to determine whether they still represent
economic development. Tax reform is going to
mean some hard choices for the Legislature, but
this session showed that our dependence on too
few sources of revenue can get us into trouble.
We need to develop innovations that are
genuinely tailored to meet the needs of New
Mexicans. I firmly believe that we have the brain
power, experience and ability to develop the
kind of innovations we will need to diversify our
economy and reform our tax system.
In addition to diversifying our economy and tax
reform, we should begin immediately to carefully
review our budget. Analysis should be conducted
to assess current and trending public needs, like
public education and health care. It is critical
that we get started as early as possible on this
and that we stay committed to it throughout the
interim.
I began the 2016 legislative session with a
message of hope. I will not give up on that hope,
especially now, when there is so much work yet
to be done and the vision for our path forward
has never been more clear.

Sen. Pete Campos is a Democrat from Las Vegas


who sits on the Senate Finance Committee.

sports
Is This Finally the Year
For Birminghams Lobos?
BY RICHARD STEVENS

he sky is falling! The sky is


falling! That was
the cry of Chicken
Little, who really
did believe the sky
was falling. The
cowardly chicken
was wrong.
Lobo baseball coach Ray Birmingham
has a yearly cry, too: The road to
Omaha. The road to Omaha. The
optimistic New Mexico coach believes
his Lobos will make it to Omaha some
day. This is the site of the College World
Series. Its where the big boys of college
baseball go to play.
So far, Birmingham has been wrong
about reaching that lofty destination,
and you cant help but wonder if
Chicken Littles prediction will come true
first.
Its not that Birminghams Lobos
arent doing well. They have wedged
their foot onto the NCAA path four
times from 2010 to 2013, which is a
tremendous achievement and a credit to
UNMs shoot-from-the-hip (Ah, shucks,
Im from Hobbs) coach. The Lobos last
NCAA bid prior to Birmingham came in
the 1960s.
Birmingham has done a lot of good at
UNM since his hire in 2008 was pushed
through by a lot of wise politicians and
powerful money men, who put the lean
on the UNM administration to pluck
Birmingham away from New Mexico
Junior College.
Birmingham had won 75 percent of
his games at NMJC and won a national
JC title. He also had the reputation of
building his squads with New Mexico
talent. A lot of Lobo fans like to see
New Mexico talent on UNM rosters.
Birmingham has a nice squad in 2016,
too. His Lobos clawed their way into the
Top 25 earlier this season, and they have
the potential to move in and out of
those rankings all year.
Because Birmingham has pitching.
The backbone of Birminghams success
at UNM has been his sticks. His Lobos hit
baseballs the way Donald Trump smacks
around political opponents. But in baseball, you often hit for show and pitch to
advance in NCAA play. The Lobo hitting
can be overrated, too. The Lobos have
always hit the ball. From 1971, UNM had
40 seasons hitting .290 or higher. From
1991, UNM had 24 of 25 seasons above
.300 at the plate.
But a lot of those Lobo teams had

very little on the mound. In 1998, UNM


hit .332 at the plate and yielded an ERA
of 9.04. Thats awful. Birminghams last
four seasons produced an ERA under
5.00. Thats pretty good.
His Lobos of 2016 have the chance to
produce the right combination at the
plate and on the mound. Birmingham
has a strong core of hitters back. Better
yet, he returns nine of 11 pitchers from
2015.
The Lobos under Birmingham are 3-8
in NCAA play going 1-2, 0-2, 1-2 and 1-2.
The Lobos also have missed the NCAA
tourney the past two seasons. UNM
went 32-27 in 2015, finishing 17-13 in
the Mountain West (fourth place) with
a young team.
The Lobos might have the balance
to make a little more noise in the first
round of NCAA play, but there are issues
that could roadblock Birminghams stroll
down the lane to Omaha: the homefield advantage.
Usually, of course not always, the
home team advances. Birminghams
Lobos have been sent on the road each
time partly because of their status
in the NCAA pecking order but also
because of their facility.
Lobo Field now called Santa Ana
Star Field is a work in progress. It
is a far cry from the days when UNM
played in Isotopes Park, which had to be
considered one of the premier college
sites in America. Isotopes Park has
stadium seats, modern concession stands,
decent restrooms, and is protected
from the wind, rain and sun. It was
fan friendly, and a lot of fans attended
Lobo games for the same reason they
attend Isotopes games for the venue.
Now, you go to Lobo games only for
the Lobos. On a bad weather day, that
might not be enough.
The Santa Ana Star Field is something
you might expect to find in . . . well,
lets say its not something you would
expect to find as an NCAA site.
So, are Birminghams Lobos doomed
and destined to die on the NCAA road?
Maybe not this year! The Lobos have
hitting. The Lobos have pitching. The
Lobos have Birmingham.
Maybe the sky will fall on somebody
else.

Richard Stevens is a former sports


writer for The Albuquerque Tribune.
More recently, he was an insider at the
Lobo athletic department. Reach him at
rstev50@gmail.com

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 23

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 25

Ruiz de la Torre Law Firm: We Help Law Make Sense


1801 Rio Grande Blvd. NW, Suite C
Albuquerque, NM 87104
Open MonFri, 9 am5 pm

(505) 544-5400
ruizdelatorrelaw.com

Our March 23 ABQ Free Press Small Business Spotlights and


Taxes special issue will feature:

The latest news


in the tax world
How to file accurately
(and advantageously)
How this tax season differs
for individuals and small
businesses

Carlos Ruiz de la Torre may seem young at 36, but he


has more than ten years of experience defending clients
in criminal cases. He meticulously investigates his cases
and he ensures his clients have a good understanding of
the law.
We sat down with Ruiz de la Torre to find out what his
firm is all about and why he is so passionate about
providing second chances to his clients.

Q: Why the law?

A: Because I enjoy helping people with the law and solving their problems. When I went into law school, it was actually because a friend was going
and my dad was also lawyer, so I figured I would try it out.

Q: What type of cases do you handle?

A: Ive done a lot of criminal defense appeals. If they didnt get a fair trial for whatever reason, sometimes you can get a persons conviction
overturned. Thats always the best feeling and one of the most exciting things that Ive been able to accomplish. Were taking on more than criminal
defense work, and some personal injury, family law and some entertainment law. Were also trying new forms of handling cases for family law and
divorce such as collaborative or mediated divorces. When people come in, sometimes theyre confused about the process and we want to make
sure they know the process of the law every step of the way.

Q: How many cases have you represented?

A: Ive represented hundreds of cases. I did appeals with the Public Defenders office for more than five years. Theres no end to the caseloads the
PDs office takes on appeal.

Q: Other than a law degree, what kind of special training or knowledge do you have?

A: Actually, my background before criminal law was entertainment law and I studied music and got bachelors and masters degrees concentrating in
jazz and master piano.

Q: What is your philosophy, your key to winning?

A: Really, its all about preparation and thoroughness in what I bring to a case, and to truly
understand the history of the case, as well as planning the best strategy possible. I pride myself on
being a lawyer who will take the time needed to properly prepare.

Q: What makes your firm stand out from the rest?

A: Were compassionate and we make sure the law makes sense to our clients.

pam@freeabq.com

(505) 345-4080 ext. 803

Our Small Business Spotlights and Taxes


Issue publishes March 23

Q: How do you or your business contribute to the local community?

A: We do help to set up non-profits in getting them organized, and some non-profits could be
charged up to $5,000 for a lawyers services, so we assist them as much as we can in the
beginning stages so they dont end up broke before they even get started. We also contribute to
a lot of local stuff, like Gods Warehouse

Q: Why Albuquerque?

A: I love the mountains and wide-openness of Albuquerque, the pace of life here, the people and
the mix of cultures, as well as the small town feel in such a big city.
PAID ADVERTISEMENT

arts
Matters of the Art: Meow Wolf, Chupacabra Cantina

26 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

BY M. BRIANNA STALLINGS

ey there, Matters of the Art


readers. Im still filling in for
the eminent Lisa Barrow, who will
soon return to these pages.

Meow Wolf

Its life force stems from fierce creative passion; its physical space
Santa Fes old Silva Lanes Bowling
Alleyis partly owned by literary
sensation George R. R. Martin.
Its opening attracted talents like
musician/author Amanda Palmer,
accordionist/artist Jason Webley
and beloved country doomers The
Handsome Family, for an already
sold-out weekend of music. The
Meow Wolf artspaces eagerly anticipated emergence has even been
heralded in the LA Times.
On Thursday, March 17, at 5
p.m., The City Different welcomes
The Venue Different, at the grand
opening of the Meow Wolf Art Complex (1352 Rufina Circle). Guests are invited to experience Meow
Wolfs first permanent exhibition, The House of
Eternal Return.
From the outside, it looks like the ceiling split open
and an old Victorian house dropped fully-formed
from the sky. Inside the whopping 20,000 square
foot space, visitors of all ages can play live-action
choose-your-own-adventure in an assortment of
passageways within an imaginative multiverse of
unexpected environments.
Thursdays $250 VIP gala includes dinner, drinks,
and entertainment. The public opening starts at 2
p.m. on Friday, March 18. Although The House
will be open and available until 2 a.m., the music
portion of the evening (Palmer and Webley) quickly
sold out, as did the next nights The Handsome
Family concert.
Exhibition hours on Sunday, March 20 run from

9 a.m. to 2 a.m., with sweet dance beats provided


by Chicagos Sassmouth, Denvers David Last and
homegrown Numbtron. The music starts at 9 p.m.,
and tickets are still available. Opening weekend
prices for viewing the exquisite House are $25 for
adults and $15 for kids. Thereafter, general admission will range from $10 to $18.
Regular Meow Wolf hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Wednesday through Sunday, with late hours possible on Fridays and Saturdays; the complex is closed
Monday and Tuesday. For arts patrons with pockets
too light to invest in the $2,000 Lifetime Pass, a
$150 annual family pass thats good for up to five
family members is also available. For more info,
call (505) 395-6369 or visit
meowwolf.com/tickets

Story Space

People leave their homelands for a variety of


reasons, including extreme poverty, religious and
ethnic persecution and perpetual war. In their flight,

they must abandon many things that


made up their lives. You cant outrun
a soldiers gun while carrying a grand
piano on your back.

Fortunately for all of us, we can
carry our cultural heritage with us as we
seek refuge in a new place: our foods,
jokes, music, art, stories and legends. But
how do our traditions evolve, and how
are they maintained in the strange new
place we call home?

Thats one of many questions
raised by Story Space: Stories & Songs
Immigrant & Refugee Artists, happening from 2-4 p.m. on Sunday, March 20,
at Outpost Performance Space (210 Yale
SE). All ages are welcome for a series of
short performative talks with renowned
immigrant and refugee artists who
now live in Albuquerque. Story Space
explores art as it relates to notions of
cultural identity, migration and belonging.
Featured artists include two-time Grammy
Award nominee Rahim Al Haj, a virtuoso oud
musician and composer from Iraq who The San
Francisco Chronicle described as one of the
greatest oud players in the world; Nada Kherbik,
a journalist, teacher and Arabic interpreter from
Syria; Rujeko Dumbutshena, a dancer from Zimbabwe who appeared in Fela!, a Broadway musical
about Nigerian music legend Fela Kuti; and Mexico
native Chuy Martinez, a musician and former host
of TV show Lo Maduro De La Cultura.
Story Space is moderated by folklorist and
urban/regional planner Wade Patterson and presented in conjunction with 516 ARTS exhibition At
Home in the World which runs through April 16.
Five-dollar tickets for Story Space are available at
holdmyticket.com. To learn more, call 268-0044 or
visit outpostspace.org

ABQ Free Press


is now hiring
Account Executives
(salary plus commission)
Contact Pam Gutierrez:
pam@freeabq.com
(505) 345-4080, ext. 803

Now Hiring:

cont. on page 27

food

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 27

French Fusion Invades Downtown


BY KARIE LUIDENS

Breve Crpes & Coffee


400 Gold SW
620-4148
breveabq.com
Hours: MonFri, 7 a.m.4 p.m.
Sat. 8 a.m.3 p.m.

alk into Breve Crpes & Coffee


(400 Gold SW), and you may
feel youve stepped out of downtown
Albuquerque and into a caf in southern France.
Sunlight streams in through an
all-glass front facade, setting upholstered seats aglow. Burlap coffee sacks
and jars of freshly cut flowers hang
above tables. Behind the counter, the
baristas aprons match the wall an
expanse of Yves Klein blue thats
reminiscent of the Mediterranean.
And, of course, theres the heavenly
scent of coffee and crpes.
On Breves vibe, food and
moniker
On the ambiance: We purposely did half
our seating with comfy chairs and couches so
people would stay and relax, says co-owner
Mandy Garrison.
On the name, Breve: I wanted it to
be something that would roll off the tongue,
something that just sounded good when you
said it.
On the menu: People eat with their eyes
first, which is why we work so hard to make the
crpes pretty.

Espresso machines are now relatively commonplace in American


cafs, but Breve offers an even rarer
sight, a genuine crpe griddle. The
cooks spread batter over its 16-inch
surface and flip it with a careful flick

Courtesy of Breve

Is this crpe heaven?

of a spatula. The resulting tissue-y


gold pancakes are crisp around the
edges but thick enough in the center
to support your choice of toppings.
Which toppings, you ask? Coowner Mandy Garrison addresses the
topic over a macchiato: The Nutella
crpes are very popular. And all of the
fruit, any combination you can think
of. Berries, bananas and Nutella?!
Vive la France!
Examine Breves design more
closely, and its plain to see Garrison
and partners Billy Nguyen and Teddy
Friedman are doing more than merely
emulating chic French eateries. Bagels,
complete with green chile cream
cheese, are also on the menu.
The potted succulents rep
the Southwest, not the south of
France. Alongside the Nutella sits

matters of art, Page 26

The Chupacabra Cantina

Las Meganenas (the big girls) is a Latina


repertory troupe operating on the core belief that its
members hold a unique position in society, that of
storytellers. Company founder, Atrisco neighborhood native, actress, filmmaker, photographer and
Chupacabra director Alicia Lueras Maldonado is
something of a Renaissance woman.
The troupe, which has already received two
McCune grants, presents The Chupacabra Cantina
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 10 and 17; Friday,
March 11 and 18; Saturday March 12 and 19; and at
2 p.m. on Sunday, March 13 and 20, at VSA North
Fourth Art Center (4904 Fourth Ave NW).
The production includes stories from around the
globe, from Palestine to Tierra Amarilla, a ghost
town in Northern New Mexico. Live music and

Skippy peanut butter and a bag of


mini-marshmallows. This is still
America, yall.
More than being anything in particularFrench, Italian, whateverI
want it to be a welcoming experience,
Garrison confirms. The priority here
isnt tedious authenticity; its sensory
pleasure.
One glance at Breves Instagram
feed (instagram.com/breve) reveals
how breathtakingly bouquet-like their
creations are. That unparalleled visual
component is thanks to chef Friedman,
who brings more than a decade of
culinary experience to the Brev team.
Were always looking for inspiration, Friedman says. Were going
to do crpe cakes as well layered
crpes with buttercream frosting.
Shes also experimenting with a crpe

cannoli and sushi-like mini-rolls.


Given how protective the French
are of their culinary customs, what
would they say about this sort of experimentation? When an online photo
of crpes stacked and cut cake-style
went viral recently, French commenters reacted with shock and horror.
BuzzFeed France declared it un
crime international against crpes.
Friedman and Garrison dont care
about such snobbery. They believe
Burqueos are ready to embrace new
twists on an old-world favorite. And
it seems theyre right. Within an hour
of their grand opening early on Saturday, Feb. 27, every seat in the house
was filled.
When I joined the line, it was all
hands on deck as staff hustled double
time to meet demand. Despite valiant
effort, a single griddle can cook only
one crpe at a time, and some of
us waited a full 15 minutes for our
orders. Oh, well, I thought, theres
nothing more French than leisurely
service.
Then Friedman finished my order
and delivered it with an apologetic
grin. Sorry it took so long. Thanks
for waiting! Lets face it: Theres
really nothing more American than
service with a smile.
So, is it more French or American?
On first bite of my crispy-soft pancake
and its melting Nutella, it was clear
that Brev offers the best of both
worlds. As for the wait, dont fret;
Friedman assured me theyre getting
a second griddle soon.
Karie Luidens is an Albuquerque-based
writer of criticism, commentary, current
events, and semiconnected musings.

song embellishes the tales. This is the second year of The Chupacabra Cantina,
written by Soledad Hindi. It was first performed in 2015 at the National Hispanic
Cultural Center.
Presented by Atlixco Productions as
part of N.M. Women & Creativity Month,
the play boasts performances from Hindi,
Valerie Borrego, Vivian Fernandez Gelln,
Nicole Gramlich, Juanita Roberts, Jaime
Pardo, JoAnn Ulibarr, Olivia BaldwinGeiln, Miranda Sol Urrea and Lita
Sandoval.
Thursday tickets are $10. For Friday
through Sunday shows, general admission is $18. Students and seniors save
three bucks. For more info, visit holdmyticket.com/event/233562
M. Brianna Stallings writes so you dont
have to.

Courtesy of Las Meganenas

28 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

On Service: The Boss Is Coming To Dinner

living

BY IAN MAKSICK

MG! Your better half invited


their boss and spouse to dinner.
Theyre from New Mexico but have
traveled extensively and dined in fine
restaurants worldwide. You met them
at the holiday party and company picnic. Theyre great, but you havent had
any special guests over in a while, and
you want to make a great impression.
To access an expanded version of this
article, with Professor Services place setting
download, visit freeabq.com and browse
Living, How To subcategories.

Professor Service says, KISS:


Keep It Service Simple. Dont try to
compete with restaurants. Instead,
add New Mexico touches to standard
American fare. Use the good china, if
you have some. If not, make sure all
items are spotlessly clean and nothing
is chipped.
If youre fretting about setting
the table, re-watch that scene
from Pretty Woman where the
hotel manager tells Julia Roberts,
We always eat from the outside
in. A good KISS menu is a Caesar salad, a duo of roasted-grilled
beef overlapping grilled chicken
breastno worries about
rare, medium or well-done
preferencescomplemented
by potatoes and vegetables and
a dessert pie. For beverages,
provide bottled water, wine and
beer. Have ice cream on hand,
along with diet soda and sugar
substitutes.
To look like a mind-reader, call
the boss assistants or co-workers
to glean inside info on their food
preferences, allergies and sensitivitiesthink gluten-freeso
youre prepared for all contingencies. Serve a dynamite bread
item. For a touch of New Mexico,
serve warm tortillas and a choice
of garlic croutons or tortilla chips
with the Caesar salad. Some hot
New Mexican appetizers wouldnt be
amiss here. Use imaginative garnish
aka plate dcor because presentation
is what makes simple special. As a
centerpiece, fill a sombrero with cacti
or flowers.
The secret to setting a table is TTT
(Touch Touch Touch*) so every setting
is identical. Tuck a simple rectangular
napkin fold under the base plate
or place a pyramid fold to the left,

leaving the base plate free so salad


can be preset; this leaves more time
for conversation with everyone at the
table. (See TTT sample setting online.)
Like a catered affair, set the table
in advance. If you remember that
the boss drank Corona at the picnic,
kick off small talk by asking a
related trivia question: Does anybody know the reason why lime
is served in a bottle of Corona?
(Answer: To keep the flies away.)
Its always a nice ice-breaker.
Get out the good linen or use
placemats for a less formal feeling.
If youre really nervous about the
lefts and rights of service, remember to serve food with the left hand
from the left, pour beverages from
the right with the right hand and
clear everything from the right
with the right hand. In any case,
its always LL/RR; whatever you
do from the left of the guest, use
your left hand and from the right,

use your right. This method of serving


ensures youre always maintaining
open body language and eye contact
and never backhanding or putting
your elbow in someones face.
Use the base plateor a napkin folded in a 10-inch by 10-inch
squareas the template with forks
touching the left of the napkin, knives
touching the right and dessert flatware
touching the top. The water glass is

the guide glass, and it always touches


the tip of the dinner
knife, while the wine glass touches
the water glass. Never lift a glass or

below the tine or bowls) and knives


by the waist (between blade and
handle). Grab glasses by the stem or
base. These spots are least likely to

DRINK

Beer Town: The View from Barley Peak


by TY BANNERMANN

ow many more breweries and tap


rooms can our city handle? Ive
heard people asking that question and
have asked it myself for a couple years
now; so far, the answer has repeatedly
come back as More, more, more!
Thats no problem from where Im
sitting, somewhere near the top of
balmy Barley Peak. But while taking
in the hop-scented breeze, Ive stumbled upon a theory. In order for the
beer bubble to continue expanding,
breweries will have to orient themselves away from the novelty of the
beer itself and toward the community
that supports it.
Were long past the point where
most people will drive across town for
the sheer excitement of trying a microbrewed ale. Instead, as the taprooms
anchor themselves in new neighborhoods, let them adapt to serve those
neighborhoods and become comfortable, family friendly gathering spots,
with clientele that actually reflects the
neighborhood.

Bienvenidos!

cup and saucer off the table to pour.


Use a napkin splash-guard with your
left hand a rectangular fold will
stop anythingbetween the glass
and guest when pouring water or
wine with your right hand.
Show you care about your guests
safety by using a 10-inch round plate
as a splash-guard to prevent hot ouch
splashes. So germs shall never mix,
always hold flatware by the neck (just

be touched by guests, thus lessening the spread of germs.


Dessert and coffee can be
offered at the table, but serve
it in the living room or on a
patio or porch to mix it up. Set
it up buffet style. As a parting
gift, offer a bottle of water
for the road adorned with a
ribbon and a thank-you-forcoming card attached.
When were out of something in the service industry,
we say 86, but thats a
whole nother story. In my
next column, learn to add
pizzazz features to make the
boss coming to dinner an even
more memorable occasion.
Thats an 86 for now from
Ian Maksik, Professor of
Service.
*TTT (Touch Touch Touch)
is copyrighted by Ian Maksik,
Professor of Service.
Ian Maksik is a Cornell Hotel School
graduate, former Hilton general manager
and catering editor for New York magazine CUE. Known as Americas Service
Guru, Maksik has keynoted, lectured and
trained owners, management and staff of
hospitality facilities in 21 countries and at
notable industry conferences. Contact him
at ian@usawaiter.com or (954) 804-5413.

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 29

With that in mind, it makes perfect


sense that this issues offerings start
with Quarter Celtic Brewpub (1100
San Mateo Blvd. NE), a place Im sure
to frequent, as it offers all the precise
qualities I extolled above.
The warmly appointed interior
design, an expansive patio, boasts
friendly staff and a casual atmosphere.
The semihidden location, inside the
ACE Hardware Courtyard in the spot
previously occupied by Fremonts
Fine Foods, reinforces the relaxed
outdoor seating by providing a
buffer from the bane of patio dining

everywhere: the
stink and roar of
nearby traffic.
It doesnt hurt
that the beer and
food here are excellent as well. Pair the
fish and chips with
a pint of Scottish ale
to really soak in the
Celtic vibe.
Meanwhile,
Firkin Brew House
has quietly opened
at 3351 Columbia
NE. The prohibition-themed joint
has been slinging
brews since Feb. 5,
though they only
just appeared on
my radar. Come on,
guys, hit me up at
the email at the bottom of the column.
In their defense,
the grand opening isnt until March
19, when you can show up in your
best roaring 20s duds for a chance
at winning prizes. Get more info at
trissell.wix.com/thefirkinbrewhouse.
On the horizon, weve got Monks
Lab Brewery, Ale Republic and, oh,
about 238 more breweries set to open
sometime this spring.

Bye-bye, Microbar

On a less cheerful note, Chama


Rivers Downtown Microbar, located
in the Sunshine Theater Building for
the past decade, closed in early March.
What? Why? That place was always
packed. According to Chama River

Bow & Arrow Brewing Co.

President Jim Hargrove, the plan


is to use the bars license for a new
location of its more substantial Draft
Station concept.
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.

The fighting hop-heads

Our citys love of hops is making


waves on the national stage. The word
from the tireless reporters at Darkside
Brew Crew (nmdarksidebrewcrew.
com) is that Turtle Mountains Adrift
IPA, Bosque Brewings Scale Tipper
IPA and Boxing Bears Bear Knuckle
IPA have advanced to Round 4 of
Brewing News National IPA challenge, beating rivals from all over the
country. Check out brewingnews.com
to cheer for our brewing brawlers.

Brew of the fortnight

The beer that tantalized my taste


buds this time around is a rye offering
from Chama River. Smooth and crisp,
with a touch of fruit and a beautiful red luster, Rye-kus is a fine, 6.3
percent ABV beverage for enjoying
a gentle spring breeze on the Chama
River Draft Stations patio (1720
Central Ave. SW). Tip one back to the
memory of the Downtown Microbar.

Kombucha, man

Quarter Celtic Brewpub

A beer class at Quarter Celtic

If youre a fan not only of beer


but all things fermentable, youre

probably already aware of the kombucha craze. This lumpy, slightly bubbly
tea has been ascribed a wide variety of
healing properties by its proponents,
ranging from gastrointestinal relief to,
well, immortality.
The scientific and medical communities havent exactly endorsed these
claims, but you can get a draft pint of
the mystery liquid at Bow & Arrow
Brewing Co. (608 McKnight NW).
Why not? It probably wont kill you.

DIY Dog

Heres some exciting news for


homebrewers. Scotland-based Brew
Dog, perhaps best known for its Punk
IPA, just released every single one of
its beer recipes in a free, open-source
document.
Thats more than 200 beers that you
can start brewing up right away, from
simple pale ales to oak-aged barley
wines. Each recipe has been scaled
down to homebrew proportions, and
the booklet, available for download at
brewdog.com, includes instructions
for all-grain brewing.
Thats it for now, Albuquerque.
Until next time, Ill see you, in spirit if
naught else, at your neighborhood or
backyard taproom.
Ty Bannerman is a beer drinker, co-host
of City on the Edge podcast and author
of Forgotten Albuquerque as well as
a forthcoming memoir. He most recently
served as managing, feature and food
editor at Weekly Alibi.

30 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Pints & Planks Fuses Yoga and Beer

drink

BY rene thompson

Destiny Readies to Rumble

n March 19, Destiny Wrestling Organizations


heavyweight champion, the wickedly scraggly
Johnny K, will defend his title from homegrown
baby-face Thunder at the Westside Community
Center (1250 Isleta Blvd. SW).

ntoxication and exercise dont


necessarily go hand in hand. Yet
a new trend fuses these activities
together in an unlikely way. Its catching on in breweries throughout the
country, including Albuquerque.

Destiny Wrestlings next match, Gimmicks Are Forever,


starts at 7 p.m. on Saturday, March 19, at the
Westside Community Center (1250 Isleta Blvd. SW).
Visit facebook.com/DWOwrestling for more info.

Pints & Planks


Where: Rio Bravo Brewery
1912 Second Street NW
When: Sundays at 11 a.m.
Cost: $5 donation

Rene Thompson

Pints & Planks: Fitness trend brings yoga and beer to a whole new frontier

presently being donated to Animal


Humane New Mexico. Theyre also
hosting a monthly pet adoption event.
Fathergills master plan includes
donating to a number of organizations,
so participants contribute to making
a real impact on a variety of causes in
New Mexico.
The beer and yoga trend runs
$10$15 per class in some other cities,
making Pints & Planks one of the

most reasonable classes offered. After


only a handful of classes, a real sense
of community has already begun to
form, Fathergill says, because the class
genuinely brings people together to
socialize in a different way, one that
was lacking in The Duke City.
The atmosphere is laidback,
whereas some yoga studios could
prove a bit intense or intimidating
for beginners. In a fun, comfortable

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 31

BY TY BANNERMAN

Rio Bravo Brewing Co. (1912


Second Street NW) and YogaZo
teamed up to offer these hybrid yoga
classes every Sunday at 11 a.m. A $5
donation for the Pints & Planks class
comes with a $2 discount from Rio
Bravo on the students first pint.
YogaZo owner/instructor Ashley
Fathergill says that while pairing beer
and yoga might sound strange, people
are beginning to love the idea of doing
yoga while enjoying a brewski on
Sunday mornings.
Part of those $5 donations goes
toward non-profit organizations in
need. Thats the reason I wanted to
do Pints & Planks, says Fathergill,
because I want to start getting non
-profits involved togive back to the
community but also because I want to
have this be a community based event.
Pints & Planks proceeds are

sports

setting, these well-rounded all-level


classes feature themed, upbeat soundtracks. Fathergill encourages everyone
to take beverage breaks aka the beer
pose between yoga poses.
When the class ends at noon, its
business as usual at the Rio Bravo
Brewery when regular patrons are
allowed entry and food trucks begin
filling the street outside. At present,
three instructors rotate classes.
Whether someones a veteran yogi,
a complete beginner or merely a beer
connoisseur, Fathergill says these
classes are designed for all practitioners over age 21. You can do as much
or as little as you want. If people just
want to sit and watch, they can do
that too, Fathergill said.
In the warmer months, Fathergill
plans to hold the event outdoors,
where attendees can enjoy the beer
garden patio and even bring their dog
along. She also hopes to incorporate
the outside class with other events
held at Rio Bravo, adding a raffle for a
free growler during every class which
will include a $5 gift card toward
fill-up.
The minimal class cost boasts the
added bonus of giving back to the
community. The prospect of having
a frosty cold one while stretching
it all out may entice you to try out
Albuquerques newest wellness trend.
You really cant go wrong by trying
out this fitness crazeat least once.
Rene Thompson is a staff reporter for
ABQ Free Press.

Meanwhile, take-no-prisoners tag team Brute


66 will dish out pain to rivals The Keepers of the
Faith. And you can bet your ass that Hobo Hank
and DWOs Director of Competition Matthew
Roblezs long-standing feud will continue unabated
especially after Roblez arranged for Hank to get
assaulted outside the ring at the last match.
Wait, what? Listen up. If you havent attended
DWOs Albuquerque wrestling matches, youve
honestly been missing one of the most entertaining
shows in town. The bouts offer all the fun of WWEstyle matchs oversized gimmicks and theatrics
without the crass commercialism of Vince McMahons empire.
Best of all, DWO is 100 percent Albuquerque. In
advance of the March 19 bout, ABQ Free Press sat
down with DWO Commissioner Adam Merrick
to talk about the organizations roots and why he
thinks its even better than WWE.
ABQ Free Press: Tell me about Destiny Wrestling
Organization. Where did it come from?
Adam Merrick: Honestly, it was an idea I came up
with in high school. Me and some friends just did it
for fun. We didnt take it seriously at all. Then a few
years later, Id say 2006, I came across some guys
who were really into wrestling. And they were really
passionate about it. They wanted to pursue it and
try and bring it back because Albuquerque has a rich
history with wrestling.
Does it?
There used to be events at the Convention Center
back in the 70s with Ricky Romero. He was really
popular. Unfortunately, those events stopped. Mike
London was a huge promoter here in Albuquerque
during the 70s. This is all stuff we learned along the
way. And we knew there were other fans here because every time we went to a WWE show at the Pit
or the Star Center, there were thousands of people.
So there was a fan base for it already.
Who is we exactly?
That would be myself and three other gentlemen
who were [and are] wrestlers. Thats the DeathRage
Cartel [Josh Pain, Dextor Deranged and Johnny K
Das Boot]; we originally put this together. This is
kind of our baby. I was the one who didnt have
aspirations to wrestle. I was more intrigued with
behind-the-scenes stuff doing whatever I could to
be a part of the show and they were more into the
wrestling part.

What do you find so


compelling about
wrestling?
Its definitely the
stories. In boxing, its
just two guys fighting.
In mixed martial arts,
its just two guys
fighting. Theres no
set-up. With wrestling,
theres a back story to
it. I like how theres
a dramatic reason for
these matches to take
place.
Who are your fans?
We have something
for everyone. Kids
love us. We have
many female fans, as
well. We wanna make
everybody aware that
Nick Cvjetkovich aka Sinn Bodhi once called WWE SmackDown home.
this is something you
can bring your family
Plus these guys are going out there, and theyre
to. Its something different. Its absolutely the oppogiving you 110 percent. Its something that gives us
site of what youll get at an Isotopes or basketball
an edge over WWE, if youre deciding whether to
game. People love it, and people are loud. You saw
watch a TV show or come to a DWO show. I think
people were loud that night [you attended].
its a no-brainer.
Definitely. When you came out in your suit, everyone went a little crazy. And then the guy with the
sunglasses?
Matthew Roblez! Hes our director of competition.
Right! Hes this sort of sleazy cheater. At one point,
he bopped somebody on the head or something
like that, and the crowd was booing like crazy.
Yeah, hes always getting involved. Hes in charge
of the matchmaking at Destiny Wrestling. Hes
been a great asset, plain and simple. As far as the
storytelling side of it, I think hes a great. You saw
how involved he was at Day of Destiny [in October
2015]. He cost Martin Casaus his match, but he got
what was coming to him during that match with
Hobo Hank when the Sheik blinded him with the
fireball. So he can take a beating. I dont like mixing it up with these wrestlers because I know how
ferocious these guys can get, especially in the heat of
battle. So I try to stay away from that stuff. I only get
involved if its really needed.
Why should somebody go see a Destiny Wrestling
event rather than stay home and watching the
WWE on TV?
Getting the interaction with the wrestlers! When
youre watching it on TV, youre not gonna have
John Cena come out and slap your hand while
youre sitting on the couch. At DWO, you get that
interaction. You can say Hey, Johnny K, you suck!
and you might get a reaction from Johnny. Who
knows? You can sit out there and cheer for Dom
Vitalli.
And Dom Vitalli might give you a thumbs up.

Ty Bannerman co-hosts City on the Edge podcast,


freelances for publications like ABQ Free Press and Atlas
Obscura, and authored Forgotten Albuquerque and a
forthcoming memoir. He most recently served as managing, features and food editor at Weekly Alibi.

Above: Local fans can purchase innovative merch, like


wrestler-adorned prayer candles.
Below: DWO ring girls interact with fans.

All photos courtesy of Isaac AlaridPease

film/music

32 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

N.M. Film Focus: Seeing, Being Stars


Foxtrot, starring Tina
Fey and now playing in
theaters nationwide.
Later in March, New
Mexico will be well disguised as an otherworldly
fortress in the widely
anticipated flick Batman
v Superman: Dawn of
Justice. Albuquerque
can also be seen playing
herself in the second season of Better Call Saul,
airing Mondays on AMC
through April 18.

New Mexico is packed to the rafters


with spring productions. The AMC
series Preacher is filming its first
full season in Albuquerque. Television
pilot Midnight Texas, based on a supernatural fiction series, is being shot
alongside the third season of the NBC
medical drama The Night Shift.
In other parts of the Duke City, an
untitled sci-fi series pilot comes to
town in mid-March, and El Rey network series From Dusk Till Dawn
trades its Texas home for the Land of
Enchantment.
Up north in Santa Fe, lawman Walt
Longmire is ready to climb back in
the saddle, and hes not the least bit
lonesome. Later this month, production commences on the fifth season of
the characters namesake series.
A new western series set in the
1800s is also expected to start production in Santa Fe this summer. Sci-fi is
slated to return to the City Different
by summers end, in the form of a
series titled Red Mars. Remember,
our states capital city played host to
the Fox series Cosmos: A Space Time
Odyssey in 2013.

Big-screen dreams

A teen drama known as Star Girl

Homegrown talent

is projected to film in Albuquerque


starting in April. The cruelest month
will also boast Hugh Jackman sightings all over New Mexico. The third
installment of the Wolverine franchise
will be shot here from late April
through the end of July.

Southwest scene
Albuquerque proves a stellar standin for the Middle East in the political
journalism comedy Whiskey Tango

Lakota-Sioux actorprecedent setter-director


Amber Midthunder
recently made national headlines with
the news that she landed a co-starring
role opposite Dan Stevens and Aubrey
Plaza in the FX network series pilot
Legion.
On Oscar night, the world caught
a glimpse of Bosque High School student Forrest Goodluck. Albuquerque
teen Goodlucks role opposite
Leonardo DiCaprio was literally front
and center at the awards ceremony,
as a clip from The Revenant featuring Goodluck played right before

DiCaprio finally nabbed the Best Actor Oscar at the 88th annual Academy
Awards.

Farewell, A&M

For the better part of the past


decade, three Screen Actors Guildfranchised talent agencies have called
our state their home base. On April
4, 2016, just two will exist here. After
years as the head of Santa Fe-based
A&M Talent House, talent agent Jody
Black announced the agencys closure
in late February. The remaining SAGfranchised talent agencies are Mitchell
& Presley Talent Group and The
OAgency.

Film 101

Pro-tip: There is no such thing as a


casting agent. The term is frequently
misused, usually in an attempt to
describe either the position of either
a casting director or a talent agent. A
casting director is hired by productions to cast talent in background
or leading roles. A talent agent
represents contracted clients, namely
actors, in seeking out such roles and
negotiating professional fees.
New Mexico film expert Christa Valdez,
of OneHeadlightInk.com, reports on
movie industry news for ABQ Free Press.

Rock Out with Your Co-op


BY M. BRIANNA STALLINGS

own to drink, jam and stroll? Then


downtown Albuquerque is your
rockin bar-hopping destination. But
what if youre a diehard music fan
whos under 21? There are plenty of
venues with all-ages nights but those
spots also sling booze. Enter The Co-Op,
a new venue entirely devoted to allages shows.
Its housed in the old Freed Company
storefront (415 Central NW), a space
that once traded in exquisite imported
oddities and was also the home of
now-defunct, all-ages Amped Performance Space.
So far, The Co-Op is a hit with young
music lovers. Recently, it was one
of many national stops on the Three
Headed Monstour with Hawthorne
Heights, Mest and The Ataris, and
tickets are already sold out for Young
Americans: An All-Ages Tribute to David Bowie, happening Friday, March
11. Dont despair, though: The Co-Op
still has some great shows coming up.

Doll Skin hails from Arizona; when


this foursome pops into Albuquerque
on Saturday, March 12, the third stop
on their 2016 tour, theyll have played
two shows in their home state, opening
for legendary punk malcontents Dead
Kennedys.
That makes sense; although Doll
Skins members are all teenagers, this
all-female group is as loud, fast and out
of control as their punk elders. Opening
acts include On Your Doorstep, Sheep
as Wolves and the Albuquerque School
of Rock Performance Band. Doors are
at 6:30 p.m., and the show starts at 7.
Tickets are $10 via holdmyticket.com.
On Tuesday, March 22, The Co-Op
welcomes My Body Sings Electric,
a poppy post-hardcore quintet from
Denver whose crisp sound earned them
a Buzzworthy nod from MTV in 2014.
They share the bill with twin sisters
Brooke and Brit of the duo Good Graeff.
Brookes on guitar, Brits in charge of
cello, and both sing. They can trace

Courtesy of artist

Doll Skin members pose for a photo with Dave Grohl.

their roots to busking for tourists in


Sarasota, Fla., but Good Graeff also has
a loyal fanbase in Vietnam where the
sisters both moved to teach English and
offer motorcycle tours.

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 33

Hello, Doris: May-December Romance Spans Generations

BY JEFF BERG

by CHRISTA VALDEZ

High Desert production

film

As ever, doors are at 6:30 p.m., with


music at 7. Ten-dollar tickets are available at holdmyticket.com.
For more information about The
Co-Op, visit facebook.com/coopabq

t age 69, Academy Award-winning actress Sally Field is the


prime theatrical mover in what may
be the indie romance of the year:
Hello: My Name is Doris.
The films titular character is a single
sixty-something living and working
in Manhattan. Her job in a large firms
accounting department is nothing to
write home about. She seems lonely
and goes to therapy but somehow
avoids opening up while not seeming
withdrawn. After a transformative
self-help seminar, Doris finally feels
Hello, My Name is Doris
opens on Friday, March 18,
at Century 14 Downtown in Albuquerque
and the Violet Crown in Santa Fe.
Visit fandango.com for showtimes.

motivated to get what she wants. But


what is that exactly?
Is she content rambling around
the Hoarders set she and her late
mother called home? Her brother
Todd (Stephen Root) and his grating
spouse Cynthia (Wendi McLendonCovey) urge Doris to clean up and sell
the house, perhaps eyeing a percentage. The always whip-smart Tyne
Daly plays Doris loyal work BFF.
Dressed like a colorblind gumdrop,
the otherwise gray mundanity of
Doris existence builds to a crescendo,
and shes overdue some well-deserved excitement. Doris meets the
firms new art director, John Fremont
(Max Greenfield), in a crowded-elevator meet cute. Instantly and thoroughly twitterpated, she has no idea
John is headed to his first day of work
at her office.
A lovestruck Doris manufactures
far-fetched excuses to get closer to
John. His gregarious responses seem
to emanate from kindness, but she
mistakenly reads
them as a reciprocation of romantic interest instead. Never
minding the (age)
gap, Doris becomes
convinced John is
gently pursuing her.
Standout supporting and cameo
roles include Peter
Gallagher, Natasha
Lyonne, Elizabeth
Reaser, Bleachers
frontman Jack

Antonoff, and YouTube


comedy star Anna Akana.
John is naturally flirtatious, leading Doris to fall
further head-over-heels.
After a casual date and
innuendo lost in translation, Field and Fremonts
physical comedy chops
brilliantly illustrate the
absurdity of not just a MayDecember romance but
really any human relationship. When Doris asks John
to re-inflate the ergonomic
ball thats replaced her
office chair, total hilarity
ensues.
Misconstrued cues and
Roadside Attractions
entirely unsubtle clues
prevail throughout. Deceit
Doris Miller (Sally Field) and John Fremont (Max Greenfield) stroll down lovers lane in Hello: My Name is Doris.
urged on by adoration
nearly always proves dandebuted at SXSW in March 2015 and
In a bedazzled nutshell, Doris timegerous. Doris 13-year-old niece helps
was quickly snapped up by Roadside
less love story is worthy of moviegoher make a phony Facebook profile.
Attractions. The quirky romantic
ers ranging from mature to Millennial.
This act proves a major problem later
dramedy won the coveted headliner
Jeff Berg is New Mexicos foremost film
in the game, one that leads Doris to
audience award, so dont be shocked
historian, and he writes about movies for
continue to see Johns intentions as
if much of the blue hair in its theater
ABQ Free Press.
she hopes they are.
audience was achieved with a bottle
Greenfield, star of TV show New
of Manic Panic.
Girl, also had a role in this years
Oscar winner The Big Short.
Greenfield fleshes out the character
of John as a genuinely nice guy who
unintentionally misleads Doris while
deeply involved with a woman closer
to his own age.
Director Michael Showalter based
Doris on a short film directed by
co-screenwriter Laura Terrus, and he
shot the movie in just three weeks.
Showalters usual stomping ground
is TV, including the 2015 miniseries
Wet Hot American Summer and,
more recently, an episode of the hit
Netflix comedy Grace and Frankie.
Hello, My Name is Doris checks
Submit entries to:
AnimalHumaneNM.org
all the requisite boxes for a film thatll
FelineFilms@AnimalHumaneNM.org
rate with adults of all ages. The movie

Submit your purr-fect


cat videos by April 30
Prizes to be awarded at the event:
$250 Best in Show Cash Prize
Gift Baskets for 2nd & 3rd Place

Guidelines available at:


AnimalHumaneNM.org/FelineFilmFestival

Roadside Attractions

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 35


film
The Oscars or: How I Learned to Love Jenny Beavan
by SAMANTHA ANNE CARRILLO

hether consumed sincerely or


ironically, the 88th Academy
Awards proffered quite the spectacle.
Leonardo DiCaprio finally scored one
of those really fancy paperweights.
Host Chris Rock must have felt the
#OscarsSoWhite protest pressure, but
he performed and provoked more
than ably.
For an expanded, link-infused version
of this list, including technical, editing
and documentary Oscar winners, visit
the Film category of our website,
freeabq.com

Assisted by Tracy Morgan and


Whoopi Goldberg, Rock slayed in a
sketch about black character tropes in
film. For me, though, the 2016 Oscars
was all about the convention-defying
red carpet style and unshakeable confidence of Jenny Beavan, who won the
Oscar for best costume design Oscar for
her work on Mad Max: Fury Road.
Unencumbered by 3-inch heels
and strategically placed gaffers tape,
Beavan unabashedly strutted from
the nosebleed section (read: technical award nominee seating), past
A-list actors and directors in all their
smoldering product-placement glory.
Directors seated near the aisle appear

At this years Academy Awards, Leonardo DiCaprio won Best Actor for his role as American frontiersman Hugh Glass in The Revenant.

to visually body-check, giggle and


blanch at Beavans decidedly un-princessy garb; see the Vine that started it
all at bit.ly/BeavenVine.
Beavan audaciously dressed for

2016 Academy Awards Highlights


Best picture: Spotlight
Best actor: Leonardo DiCaprio: The Revenant
Best actress: Brie Larson, Room
Best supporting actor: Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies
Best supporting actress: Alicia Vikander, The Danish
Girl
Best director: Alejandro G. Inarritu, The Revenant
Best original screenplay: Spotlight, by Josh Singer
and Tom McCarthy
Best adapted screenplay: The Big Short, by Charles
Randolph and AdamMcKay
Best foreign-language film: Son of Saul (Hungary)
Best costume design: Mad Max: Fury Road (Jenny
Beavan)
Best production design: Mad Max: Fury Road
(Production design by Colin Gibson; set decoration
by Lisa Thompson)

style and comfort rather than solely


paying tribute to the fairy tale brandapalooza that is the Oscars and related
media coverage. (Thing is, I can never
remember who Leo was wearing.
Funny that!)
Speaking of DiCaprio, Albuquerque
teen actor Forrest Goodluck scored
Oscar screentime when his role opposite this years Best Actor was spotlighted prior to Leos long-awaited win.
Read this issues N.M. Film Focus

column on page 32 to learn more


about homegrown talent being showcased on the screens all over.
2016 Academy Award Highlights
A list of the winners for best, well,
everything, begins here; visit freeabq.
com for the complete, hyperlinked
version.
Samantha Anne Carrillo is a situationist, fourth-wave feminist and managing
editor at ABQ Free Press. Email her at
samantha@freeabq.com

In his role opposite DiCaprio, Albuquerque actor Forrest Goodluck shines as Hugh Glass teenage
son Hawk.

music

36 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

Within Range: March In!

CALENDAr
DEFINITIVE DOZEN

by M. BRIANNA STALLINGS

The Austin Piazzolla Quintet

Argentine musician Astor Piazzolla was a revolutionary composer,


transforming tango into an all-new
genre, nuevo tango, through his
incorporation of jazz and classical
sounds. Piazzolla died in 1992, but

The Austin Piazzolla Quintent

his innovative legacy lives on thanks


to the musical artistry of the Austin
Piazzolla Quintet.
Founded in 2009 in Austin, Texas
by violinist James Anderson, the
quintet also features pianist Jonathan
Geer; Mike Maddux on accordion and
bandoneon; cellist Tony Rogers; and
bassist Pat Harris. These five esteemed
musicians specialize in one-of-a-kind
arrangements of Piazzollas works, as
well as passionate improvisations and
original compositions.
The Quintet released their first
album, 2010s Libertango, to rave
reviews and sold-out performances
around Texas. 2013s Lo Que Vendra
saw the groups audience expand to a
national level.
APQs latest release, fittingly titled
APQ, includes original compositions
by Anderson and Geer, as well as Piazzollas Michelangelo 70, Soledad,
Retrato de Milton, and Kicho.
Revel in the nuevo tango sounds of
the Austin Piazzolla Quintet on Sunday, March 13, at Outpost
Performance Space (210
Yale SE). Doors are at 7
p.m., and the music starts
at 7:30. All ages are welcome. Tickets range from
$15 to $20. Learn more at
outpostspace.org

In the sun with


Silverstein

When you name yourself


after a beloved childrens
book author who also

Silverstein

wrote songs like A Boy Named Sue


Caladh Nua: New Haven for
and had illustrations printed regularly
traditional Irish music
in Playboy, youre bound to have a
Irish musicians Caladh Nua once
lot of diverse influences under your
gave
a lovely live performance of Richown belt.
ard
Thompsons
Beeswing at the
Since its formation in 2000, Canaresplendent
Castle
Gurteen in County
dian post-hardcore band Silverstein
Waterford.
The
band
name means
thats right, named
New
Haven
in Gaelic.
for the
Its
a
fitting
one,
given
late Shel
how
seamlessly
these
Silverfive blend traditional
stein has
Irish music with contemreleased
porary British folk.
a body
The members of
of work
Caladh
Nua all hail from
that deftly
neighboring
southern
maneucounties
in
Ireland.
The
vers from
Courtesy of artist
group
features
five
artists
with
breathhardcore to emo to
heavy metal: from
When Broken Is
Easily Fixed, the groups 2003
debut, to 2015s I Am Alive in
Everything I Touch.
Along the way, Silverstein
has recorded a wide swath of
covers, including OneRepublic,
Green Day, NOFX, Fleetwood
Mac and Kanye West, and
played the Vans Warped Tour
and Australias Soundwave
Festival. Now Silverstein plays
right here in the 505, at Sunshine Theater (120 Central SW)
Courtesy of artist
on Wednesday, March 16.
Caladh
Nua
In keeping with Silversteins
eclectic sensibilities, the band is
touring with an international roster of
taking range and skill: Brian Mooney
fellow heavies including Calis Being
(banjo, bouzouki, whistles); Lisa Butler
As An Ocean; Kentuckians Ema(lead vocals, fiddle); Paddy Tutty (fidrosa; Japanese metalcore screamers
dle, viola, bodhran); Derek Morrissey
Coldrain; and fellow Canucks Rarity.
(button accordion); and Caoimhn
Doors to this 13-plus show open at 6
Fearghail (guitar, flute, vocals). Irish
p.m., and the hardcore sounds kick off
Music Magazine characterizes the Caat 6:30. Tickets are $18. For more info,
ladh Nua sound as solid traditional
visit sunshinetheaterlive.com
music with plenty of flair and lots of
musical imagination.
With influences
ranging from classics
like The Chieftains
and Planxty to
modern counterparts
like Altan, Dan And
Solas, this vibrant ensemble from Irelands
southland is sure to
have you singing
Erin go Bragh! this
Courtesy of artist
St. Patricks season.
Courtesy of artist
Caladh Nua performs
at 3 p.m. on Sunday,
My Gold Mask

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

March 20 at Popejoy Hall, UNM Center for the Arts. Tickets are $36, $46
and $54 via popejoypresents.com.

1 Events: Mind Body Spirit 2016

My Gold Mask

2 Community: The Makerstate

Before their lives in Chicago, My


Gold Mask founding members Gretta
Rochelle and Jack Armondo each
lived in Albuquerque. Neither one
knew that, however, until theyd each
moved on to the Windy City. Its clear
that no matter where they met, the
two were destined to come together to
make music. The pair formed My Gold
Mask shortly after meeting in 2008. Its
eponymous debut album came out the
following year.
Described on AllMusic as fusing
goth pop drama and garage rock energy, My Gold Mask released two
EPs in 2010, then in 2013 brought
in a third member, drummer
James Andrew, in 2013. Second
full-length, Leave Me Midnight,
came out shortly thereafter in the
same year. Now, My Gold Mask
tours in support of their latest
record, Anxious Utopia, released
on March 4 by Moon Sounds.
Rochelle and Armondo drop in
to Low Spirits (2823 Second Street
NW) on Thursday, March 24.
Polished local indie act Great
States opens. With its combination
of lustrous piano, versatile harmonies and creative lyrics on debut
full-length Gatsby, Great States
seems poised to be the Next Big Radio
Thing to come out of Burque.
Doors to this 21-and-up show are at
8 p.m., and the show starts at 9. Ticket
prices arent listed at press time, but
visit lowspiritslive.com to get that info.
M. Brianna Stallings writes so you dont
have to.

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 37

THROUGH MARCH 13

4:30 pm, Free, Santa Fe Farmers Market,


1607 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe

5 Artspree: Painting the Divine:

9 Shows: AlbuqadabraAn Evening

Images of Mary in the New World

New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln


Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 476-5200,
nmhistorymuseum.org

Initiative: 3D Printing & Scanning

11 am, Taylor Ranch Library, 5700 Bogart St


NW, RSVP: 897-8816, abclibrary.org

TUESDAY, MARCH 15
Gem Collection:
Dr. Jeffrey Edward Post

7:30 pm, Outpost Performance Space,


210 Yale Blvd SE, 268-0044, outpostspace.org

7:30 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center,


1025 Broadway Blvd SW, 848-1320,
southbroadwaytickets.com

10 Screens: Only Yesterday

CCA Cinematheque, 1050 Old Pecos Trail,


Santa Fe, (505) 982-1338, ccasantafe.org

MARCH 1213
4 Artspree: Women as Creators &
Keepers of Tradition

MONDAY, MARCH 21

7 pm, New Mexico Natural History Museum,


1801 Mountain Rd NW, nmnaturalhistory.org

11 Word: Slam of Enchantment

7 pm, Tortuga Gallery, 901 Edith Blvd SE,


369-1648, tortugagallery.org

THURSDAY, MARCH 17
7 Shows: One Night of Queen

performed by Gary Mullen &


The Works

Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St


NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org

THROUGH MARCH 25
12 Artspree: Encompass: Harwoods

7:30 pm, Popejoy Hall, UNM Main Campus,


203 Cornell Drive NE, 925-5858, unmtickets.com

8 Eats: Salud y Sabor: Bolivia

5:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center,


1701 4th St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org

CLUBS & PUBS


MARCH 1222
Sunshine Theater
120 Central Ave SW, 764-0249,
sunshinetheaterlive.com
March 12, Cannibal Corpse, Obituary,
Cryptopsy
March 15, Born of Osiris, Veil of Maya,
After the Burial
March 16, Silverstein, Being As An
Ocean, Emarosa
March 21, blessthefall, Miss May I,
The Plot in You
March 22, Fear Factory

MARCH 1225
Launchpad
618 Central Ave SW, 764-8887,
launchpadrocks.com
March 12, Beard Cd Release Show
March 13, Skizzy Mars
March 14, Prayers, Plague Vendor
March 15, New Years Day, Blinddryve
March 16, Koffin Kats, Russian
Girlfriends
March 17, Pouya, Fat Nick and the
Buffet Boys
March 18, Intronaut, Scale the Summit
March 19, Butcher Babies, Anesthesia
March 20, Violent J, Nova Rockafeller
March 21, The Contortionist,
Monuments
March 22, Denzel Curry,
Allan Kingdom
March 23, Secrets, Palisades,
Too Close to Touch
March 25, Ab the Thief, MXM

Low Spirits
2823 2nd St NW, 344-9555,
lowspiritslive.com
March 12, Gilded Cage Burlesk &
Variet presents Sideshow Spectacular
March 13, Possessed by Paul James
March 17, Dilescielo, Zack Freeman,
Esme Olivia

in the

of Magic

3 Shows: Strings n Beats: Shambhavi 6 Word: The United States National


Dandekar, Shakir Khan, Harshad
Kanetkar

List you r

FRIDAY, MARCH 18

25th Anniversary Celebration


The Elementary Students of Escuela
del Sol Montessori
Site Specific Installations: Nanibah
Chacon, Lance Ryan McGoldrick

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.

Harwood Art Center, 1114 7th St NW,


242-6367, harwoodartcenter.org

March 18, Cactus Tractor,


Ali Holder & Little Brave
March 22, Lollipop records Caravan
Showcase
March 23, Diarrhea Planet, Music Band
March 24, My Gold Mask, Great States
March 25, BloodStone The Art and
Sound of Metal

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

MARCH 1227

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16

artSLAM: The Ultimate


Variety Show

My Fair Lady

Ekachai Jearakul

Rodey Theatre, UNM Main Campus,


203 Cornell Drive, 925-5858,
unmtickets.com

7:30 pm, Keller Hall,


UNM Main Campus,
203 Cornell Drive,
newmexicoclassicalguitarfestival.org

MARCH 1323

3 pm, Tricklock Performance


Laboratory, 110 Gold Ave SW,
254-8393, womenandcreativity.org

7:30 pm, Outpost Performance Space,


210 Yale Blvd SE, 268-0044,
outpostspace.org

Green Velvet

Carl Peterson

THURSDAY, MARCH 17

Part of Bloody Sundays Brunch


and Bloody Mary Bar
11 am, Distillery 365,
2921 Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281,
distillery365.com

Noon, Free, North Valley Library,


7704 2nd St NW, 897-8823,
ampconcerts.org

Sister Bar
407 Central Ave SW, 242-4900,
sisterthebar.com
March 13, Bongzilla, Black Cobra
March 17, EN Young
March 18, Conan w/Serial Hawk,
Sandia Man
March 21, Weedeater, Author
& Punisher, Today is the Day
March 23, Head Wound City

Part of Women & Creativity 2016


7 pm, Keshet Center for the Arts,
4121 Cutler Ave NE, 227-8583,
keshetarts.org

Ekco Poets-Dance and Dancers

9 pm, The Stage,


Santa Ana Star Casino, 54 Jemez
Canyon Dam Rd, Santa Ana Pueblo,
867-0000, santaanastar.com

Jake Shimabukuro

SHOWS

7:30 pm, Albuquerque Academy,


Simms Center for the Performing Arts,
6400 Wyoming Blvd NE,
ampconcerts.org

THROUGH MARCH 19

2nd Annual Rock and Rhythm


Foundation Benefit Concert

The Philadelphia Story

SUNDAY, MARCH 13
The Austin Piazzolla Quintet

Chatter Cabaret:
Rare + Romantic

Shinedown

Frederick Frahm: Neighborhood Concert of Organ Music

Duke City Repertory Theatre, 700 1st St


NW, 797-7081, dukecityrep.com

Tal National
7:30 pm, Skylight, 139 W. San Francisco
St, Santa Fe, (505) 982-0775

Real Women Have Curves

MARCH 1213

Part of Siembra: Latino Theatre Festival


National Hispanic Cultural Center,
1701 4th St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org

AlientoState Street Ballet:


Carmen

THOURGH MARCH 27
West Side Story
Albuquerque Little Theatre, 224
San Pasquale Ave SW, 242-4750,
albuquerquelittletheatre.org

National Hispanic Cultural Center,


1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org

Zuni Olla Maidens


Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org

Eryn Bent

Masterworks Polyphony:
Voices of New Mexico

THROUGH MARCH 20

Julius Caesar

FRIDAY, MARCH 18

Dreamflights

The Vortex Theatre, 2900 Carlisle NE,


247-8600, vortexabq.org

VSA North 4th Theatre, 4904 4th St


NW, vsartsnm.org

Uxia and Narf

7 pm, Distillery 365, 2921


Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281,
distillery365.com

1:30 pm, AirDance ArtSpace,


3030 Isleta Blvd SW, 842-9418,
airdance.org

The Chupacabra Cantina

7 pm, Warehouse 508, 508 1st St NW,


296-2738, warehouse508.org

5 pm, National Hispanic Cultural


Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
chatterabq.org

2 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center,


1025 Broadway Blvd SW, 848-1320,
southbroadwaytickets.com
Inn of the Mountain Gods Resort
& Casino, 287 Carrizo Canyon Rd,
Mescalero, innofthemountaingods.com

Pouya with The Buffet Boys


& Suicide Boys

3 pm, St. Luke Lutheran Church,


9100 Menaul Blvd NE, 323-4343,
nmphil.org

Jackie Greene
Taos Mesa Brewing, 20 ABC Mesa Rd,
El Prado, (575) 758-1900,
taosmesabrewing.com

Mozart & Kurtag


10:30 am, Las Puertas Event Center,
1512 1st St NW, chatterabq.org

TUESDAY, MARCH 15
Pea Feminina: Noche Flamenca!
Part of Women & Creativity 2016
7:30 pm, Las Amapolas,
6909 Menaul NE Ste G,
womenandcreativity.org

7 pm, Cathedral of St John,


318 Silver Ave SW, 821-1956,
polyphonynm.com

The Curtis Institute of Music


Brass Sextet: Music from
Angel Fire
Noon, Free,
New Mexico Museum of Art,
107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe,
(505) 476-5072,
nmartmuseum.org

Uxia and Narf


Noon, Free, Cherry Hills Library,
6901 Barstow St NE, 857-8321,
ampconcerts.org

Randy Houser
8 pm, Inn of the Mountain Gods Resort
& Casino, 287 Carrizo Canyon Rd,
Mescalero, (800) 545-9011,
innofthemountaingods.com

38 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

You Rock, Rock!

BY ARIANE JAROCKI

Flute + Guitar

CALENDAr CALENDAr

10:30 am, Las Puertas Event Center,


1512 1st St NW, chatterabq.org

Lunasa with Tim OBrien


7:30 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central
Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com

DSanti Nava

Max Gomez

7 pm, The Tannex, 1417 4th St SW,


thetannex.com

TUESDAY, MARCH 22

MARCH 18APRIL 10

Vanessa Zamora

The Graduate

MasterworksPolyphony:
Voices of New Mexico

Aux Dog Theatre, 3011 Monte Vista


Blvd NE, 254-7716, auxdog.com

7 pm, San Miguel Chapel,


401 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe,
821-1956, polyphonynm.com

SATURDAY, MARCH 19

The Motet

Calle 66
6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Caf,
2401 12th St NW, 724-3510,
indianpueblo.com/puebloharvestcafe

14th Annual Farfesha Student


Showcase

8 pm, Taos Mesa Brewing,


20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado,
(575) 758-1900, taosmesabrewing.com

NM Philharmonic Classics
Concert: Olga Rocks
Rachmaninoff

7 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center,


1025 Broadway Blvd SW, 848-1320,
farfesha.com

6 pm, Popejoy Hall, UNM Main Campus,


203 Cornell Drive NE, 925-5858,
nmphil.org

Hairspray and Hitmen: A


Tribute to John Waters and
Quentin Tarantino

Saudade
9 pm, Scalo Northern Italian Grill,
3500 Central SE, 255-7871, scalonobhill.com

8 pm, Fire & Ice, 9800 Montgomery


Blvd NE, facebook.com/parisagogo

MARCH 1920

John Gorka
7:30 pm, Historic Old San Ysidro
Church, 966 Old Church Rd,
Corrales, brownpapertickets.com

Kansas
8 pm, Inn of the Mountain Gods
Resort & Casino, 287 Carrizo Canyon
Rd, Mescalero, (800) 545-9011,
innofthemountaingods.com

Ks Choice
7:30 pm, The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing
Company, 37 Fire Place, Santa Fe, (505)
424-3333, ampconcerts.org

Lunasa and Tim OBrien


7:30 pm, Lensic Theater,
211 W. San Francisco, Santa Fe,
(505) 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org

How Love Wins


2 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 4th St SW, 506-9038,
theperformers.org

TCMG presents Into the Light


Harwood Museum of Art,
238 Ledoux St, Taos, (575) 758-9826,
taoschambermusicgroup.org

Tewa Dancers (Ohkay Owingeh)


Noon, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org

Part of Latin Diva Concert Series


7:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural
Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org

THURSDAY, MARCH 24
Buika
Part of Chispa
7:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural
Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org

globalFEST On the Road:


Creole Carnival
7:30 pm, Lensic Theater,
211 W. San Francisco, Santa Fe,
(505) 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org

FRIDAY, MARCH 25
Live Stand up Comedy: Keith
Brekenridge, Rachel Hroncich,
T-Gram

9 pm, The Stage at Santa Ana Star


Casino, 54 Jemez Canyon Dam Rd,
Santa Ana Pueblo, redfishent.com
6pm, New Mexico Museum of Art,
107 W. Palace Ave, Santa Fe,
(505) 476-5072, nmartmuseum.org

10th Annual Moustachio


Bashio
8:30 pm, El Rey Theater,
622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com

New Mexico Actors Showcase


3 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center,
1025 Broadway Blvd SW, 848-1320,
southbroadwaytickets.com

Stratus Phear
6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Caf,
2401 12th St NW, 724-3510,
indianpueblo.com/puebloharvestcafe

Tabularasa
8 pm, Taos Mesa Brewing,
20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado,
(575) 758-1900, taosmesabrewing.com

The Temporary Tattoos

Quietly Kept
7 pm, Distillery 365,
2921 Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281,
distillery365.com

Raven and the Sweet Potato


Pie Band
6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Caf,
2401 12th St NW, 724-3510,
indianpueblo.com/puebloharvestcafe

Thriftworks
Sister Bar, 407 Central Ave,
facebook.com/digitaldesert.events

MARCH 25APRIL 10
The Quality of Life
Keshet Center for the Arts, 4121 Cutler
Ave NE, 227-8583, motherroad.org

MARCH 25APRIL 17
Caesars Blood
The Adobe Theater, 9813 4th Street
NW, 898-9222, adobetheater.org

Terra Nova

SUNDAY, MARCH 20
Caladh Nua

SATURDAY, MARCH 26
Bloodstone
5 pm, Burts Tiki Lounge, 313 Gold Ave SW

Expo New Mexico, 300 San Pedro Dr NE,


222-9700, riograndefestivals.com

MARCH 1325

THROUGH MARCH 31

10 am, Mamas Minerals,


800 20th St NW, RSVP: 266-8443,
mamasminerals.com

CCA Cinematheque

Southern Slam Dancers (Zuni)


Noon, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,
indianpueblo.org

SUNDAY, MARCH 27
David Crosby

Part of Bloody Sundays Brunch and


Bloody Mary Bar, 11 am, Distillery 365,
2921 Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281,
distillery365.com

Women & Creativity 2016

1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe,


(505) 982-1338, ccasantafe.org
March 13, Wedding Song
March 16, Au Revoirs Les Enfants
Starts March 18, River of Fundament
March 20, Les Heritiers
Starts March 25, Embrace of the
Serpent

Various locations, Albuquerque,


womenandcreativity.org

THROUGH MARCH 20

MARCH 1819

A French Film Mini-Fest:


Santa Fe Jewish Film Festival
Various locations, Santa Fe,
santafejff.org

THROUGH JULY 31
IAIA Student Filmmaker
Showcase
Institute of American Indian Arts,
83 Avan Nu Po Rd, Santa Fe, iaia.edu

SATURDAY, MARCH 12
A Thousand Voices
3 pm, Free, Indian Pueblo Cultural
Center, 2401 12th St NW,
843-7270, indianpueblo.org

MARCH 2627

Peri Pakroo

8 pm, Route 66 Casino,


14500 Central Ave SW, 352-7866,
rt66casino.com

Kids Future Paleontologist


Class

KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW,


768-3544, kimotickets.com

Max Graham
The Pink Floyd Experience

Rio Grande Arts & Crafts


FestivalSpring Show

MARCH 1720

Guild Cinema, 3405 Central Ave NE,


255-1848, guildcinema.com
9 pm, El Rey Theater,
622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com

March 1824, Awakening in Taos:


The Mabel Dodge Luhan Story,
Creative Control
March 2531, Mountain Men

6 pm, Marble Brewery Westside,


5740 Night Whisper Rd NW,
508-4368, marblebrewery.com

7:30 pm, Lensic Theater,


211 W. San Francisco, Santa Fe,
(505) 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org

The Vortex Theatre, 2900 Carlisle NE,


247-8600, vortexabq.org

3 pm, Popejoy Hall, UNM Main Campus,


203 Cornell Drive NE, 925-5858,
unmtickets.com

Popejoy Hall, UNM Main Campus, 203


Cornell Drive NE, 925-5858, nmphil.org

Willy Sucre and Friends: Trios


for Piano, Violin and Viola

Rudest Priest, Absolutely Not,


The Baby Magic

Treasures of the Earth 2016


Expo New Mexico, 300 San Pedro NE, 222-9700, agmc.info
Fri-Sat, 10 a.m.6 p.m., Sunday, 10 a.m.5 p.m.

Cirque de la Symphonie
Deorro

MONDAY, MARCH 21

he Albuquerque Gem & Mineral Club hosts Treasures of


the Earth, the 47th annual AGMC show, at Expo New
Mexico (300 San Pedro SE), on the weekend of Friday, March
18, through Sunday, March 20.
This event has been running nearly five decades, and it
features more than 50 rock and mineral dealers hawking
everything from amethyst cathedrals to zebra rocks. The
kids can bring mystery rocks for the club to ID. Three silent
auctions are held per day.
The AGMC will also be joined by the New Mexico Bureau
of Geology & Mineral Resources, who will offer educational
displays, maps, books and guidebooks to attendees.
Learn more at agmc.info

9 pm, Effex Nightclub, 420 Central SW,


842-8870, effexabq.com

Part of Bloody Sundays Brunch


& Bloody Mary Bar.11 am, Distillery
365, 2921 Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281,
distillery365.com

3 pm, Las Placitas Presbyterian Church,


7 Paseo de San Antonio, Placitas,
867-8080, placitasartistsseries.org

Brooklyn Hard Bodies


Male Revue

Movies & Meaning:


A Dream Space

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23
A Night of Generation Justice

SATURDAY, MARCH 12
ShamRock Fest 2016
11 am, Anderson Abruzzo Balloon
Museum, 9201 Balloon Museum Dr NE,
768-6020, balloonmuseum.com

Kicker Arenacross and


Freestyle Motocross Show
Santa Ana Star Center,
3001 Civic Center Circle NE,
891-7300, santaanastarcenter.com

MARCH 1820
Treasures of the Earth 2016
Gem and Mineral Show
10 am, Expo New Mexico, Creative
Arts Center, 300 San Pedro Dr NE,
222-9700, exponm.com

SATURDAY, MARCH 26
23rd Annual Csar Chvez Day

10 am, Free, meet at Central and 1st


by Century Theater, 289-0586
7 pm, Lloyd Shaw Dance Center,
5506 Coal Ave SE, 299-0332,
abqfolkdance.org

Saturday Night Swing Dance

Basic Necklace & Earring


Making Class

OUTDOORS

1 pm, Free, Mamas Minerals,


800 20th St NW, RSVP: 266-8443,
mamasminerals.com

ENROLLMENT NOW OPEN

Parenting Class
10:15 am, donation, Bodys Peace
Place for Kids, 333 W. Cordova Rd,
Santa Fe, (203) 788-1993,
peaceplaceforkids.com

Trans + Queer Thrive Education


Conference
8:30 am, Dane Smith Hall,
UNM Main Campus, more info/RSVP:
facebook.com/tqthriveconference

ONGOING

1 pm, New Mexico Veterans Memorial,


1100 Louisiana Blvd SE, 256-2042,
nmvetsmemorial.org

MARCH 2627

2ND WEDNESDAYS

Rio Rancho Home &


Remodeling Show

Drinking Liberally
Albuquerque Chapter

Korean War Veterans


Open Meeting

Las Huertas Farmer Training


and Incubator Program
Rio Grande Community Farm,
916-1078, riograndefarm.org

SATURDAY, MARCH 12
Home Composting Basics
Noon, Free, Manzano Mesa
Multigenerational Center,
501 Elizabeth St SE, RSVP: 275-8731,
register@nm composters.org

SUNDAY, MARCH 13
Geology Hike
11 am, Cerrillos Hills State Park,
37 Main St, Cerrillos, NM,
(505) 474-0196, cerrilloshills.org

SATURDAY, MARCH 19
Home Composting Basics
10 am, Free, Albuquerque Garden
Center, 10120 Lomas Blvd NE,
296-6020,
RSVP: register@nmcomposters.org

Santa Ana Star Center,


3001 Civic Center Circle NE,
891-7300, santaanastarcenter.com

6 pm, ONiells NE Heights,


3301 Juan Tabo Blvd NE, 264-1368,
drinkingliberally.org

EATS

THURSDAY, MARCH 24

APRIL 1517

WEDNESDAYS

Fastball

New Mexico International


Auto Show

ABQ Jazz Trio Open Jam

24th Annual Chocolate


Fantasy: Cosmic Soire

Part of NM PBS Community Cinema


7 pm, Free, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central
Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com

7 pm, KiMo Theatre,


423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544,
kimotickets.com

FRIDAY, MARCH 25

Albuquerque Convention Center,


401 2nd St SW, 768-4575,
nmautoshow.com

Nobhillis100.com/events

SCREENS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30

MARCH 1227

La Montaita Co-ops Earth Fest

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

5 pm, Free, Lizard Tail Brewing,


9800 Montgomery Ave NE,
lizardtailbrewing.com/home

6:30 pm, Sandia Casino,


30 Rainbow Rd, 796-7500,
sandiacasino.com

1ST AND 3RD THURSDAYS

SUNDAY, MARCH 19

Drinking LiberallyCedar
Crest Chapter

Meow Wolf Ascends

BY ARIANE JAROCKI

International Folk Dancing

SATURDAY, MARCH 19

7 pm, Sandia Resort & Casino, 30


Rainbow Rd NE, 873-8084, abqpride.com

10:30 am, Las Puertas Event Center,


1512 1st St NW, chatterabq.org

Southwest Chocolate &


Coffee Fest

Caity Kennedy

Aspen Eyes concept art

hen buildings are abandoned, they often decay until


theyre bulldozed to house a used car lot or strip
mall. The old Silva Lanes in Santa Fe has been spared that
fatelocal art collective Meow Wolf has breathed new life
into the space.
With the help of investors like Game of Thrones author
George R.R. Martin, you can choose your own adventure at
Meow Wolfs new art space. It begins with The House of
Eternal Return, a full-scale model of a Victorian home
belonging to a Southern family. From there, it could go any
fantastical place, even an aspen grove thatll stare right back
at you.
This magical, interactive space opens the weekend of March
18 with a gala, concerts and other cool events. For more info
on opening weekend goings on, see our rundown in Matters
of the Art, page 26, or visit meowwolf.com
Meow Wolf: House of Eternal Return
1352 Rufina Circle, Santa Fe, NM, (505) 395-6369,
meowwolf.com
WedSun, 10 a.m.8 p.m., later FriSat

2ND SATURDAYS

MARCH 1324

Los Ranchos Growers Market

Collected Works Santa Fe

10 am, 6718 Rio Grande Blvd NW,


farmersmarketsnm.org

202 Galisteo St, Santa Fe,


(505) 988-4226,
collectedworksbookstore.com
March 13, BooksigningDouglas
Atwill & Walter Cooper
March15, J. Michael Orenduff, The Pot
Thief Who Studied Georgia OKeeffe
March 16, Sedena & George Cappannelli,
The Best is Yet to BeHow to Age
Wisely and Fall in Love with Your
Life...Again
March 19, Patricia J. Conoway, Listening with My Eyes: An Abused Horse, a
Mother with Alzheimers
March 24, James R Scarantino, The
Drum Within

SATURDAYS
Santa Fe Farmers Market:
Railyard

5 pm, Greenside Caf,


12165 NM-14, Cedar Crest,
264-1368, drinkingliberally.org

10 am, Expo New Mexico,


300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700,
exponm.com

Nobhillis100.com/events

THURSDAYS

ONGOING

8 am, 1607 Paseo de Peralta at


Guadalupe, Santa Fe,
farmersmarketsnm.org

7:30 pm, KiMo Theatre,


423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544,
kimotickets.com

COMMUNITY

Latin Gold: Salsa Lessons


& Dancing

TUESDAYS

SUNDAYS

Truckin Tuesdays

Pints & Planks Yoga Class

THURSDAY, MARCH 31

Conquer Anger

Punks Dead: SLC Punk 2

Silver Ochre: Who Are US 2016


Observations from the 21st
Century American Road

Nob Hill is 100 Unleashed:


Pet Parade and Fair

THROUGH MARCH
Thursdays, 7 pm, Kadampa Meditation
Center, 142 Monroe St NE, 292-5293,
mediationinnewmexico.org

7 pm, Guild Cinema,


3405 Central Ave NE, 255-1848,
silverorchre.com

THROUGH APRIL

FRIDAY, APRIL 1

New Mexico Veterans Memorial,


1100 Louisiana Blvd SE, 256-2042,
nmvetsmemorial.org

Dial M For Murder


KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW,
768-3544, kimotickets.com

Volunteers needed for NM


Veterans Museum

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

EVENTS

Basic Necklace & Earring


Making Class

MARCH 1231

THROUGH MARCH 13

Jean Cocteau Cinema

Baca Rodeo Series

Noon, Free, Mamas Minerals,


800 20th St NW, RSVP: 266-8443,
mamasminerals.com

418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe,


(505) 466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com
March 1217, 17th Annual International Animation Show of Shows, Ran
March 1516, Psycho Pass: The Movie

Downtown Walking Tours with


Albuquerque Historical Society

7:15 pm, Rhythm Dance Company,


3808A Central Ave SE, 250-6146,
abqswing.com

The Qs OUTstanding Awards

SUNDAY, APRIL 17

3405 Central Ave NE, 255-1848,


guildcinema.com
March 1213, Triplets of Belleville
March 1214, Embrace of the
Serpent, Sembene
March 1517, Gabo, Janis: Little Girl
Blue
March 1819, The Hunger
March 1821, Creative Control,
The Club
March 19, The Messenger
March 20, Still Dreaming
March 2224, Ingrid BergmanIn
Her Own Words
March 2527, Sin Fronteras Film
Festival 2016

1 pm, Loma Colorado Main Library,


755 Loma Colorado Blvd NE,
Rio Rancho, RSVP: 891-5013x3033,
riorancholibraries.org

2ND TUESDAYS

Part of Hitchcock Hits


KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW,
768-3544, kimotickets.com

Guild Cinema

AARP Smart Driver Course

10:30 am, National Hispanic Cultural


Center, 1701 4th St SW, 724-4771,
nhccnm.org

Strangers on a Train (1951)

Solo Violin and Voices

TUESDAY, MARCH 15

SATURDAYS

ABQ FREE PRESS March 9, 2016 39

Southwest Event Center Arena,


24 Dalies Rd, Los Lunas,
southwesteventcenter.com

How to Become an Addiction


Counselor in New Mexico
10 am, Free, UNM Continuing Education
Building, 1634 University Blvd NE,
277-0077, RSVP: ce.unm.edu

8 pm, Free, Q Bar-Hotel Albuquerque,


800 Rio Grande Blvd NW, 225-5928,
qbarabq.com

1ST SATURDAYS
The Organ Transplant
Awareness Program of
New Mexico
10:30 am, Erna Fergusson Library,
3700 San Mateo Blvd NE,
more info: 344-0512

2ND & 4TH SATURDAYS


Coder Dojo
10 am, ages 717, Quelab,
680 Haines Ave NW,
coderdojoabq.github.io

3RD SATURDAYS
Lyme Get Together
12, Free, location varies,
more info: 304-9411

11 am, Civic Plaza, 1 Civic Plaza NW,


3rd St NW and Marquette Ave NW,
albuquerquecc.com

WEDNESDAYS
Red Willow Farmers Market
10 am, 885 Star Rd, Taos Pueblo,
farmersmarketsnm.org

Talin Market Food Truck


Round Up
11 am, 88 Louisiana Blvd SE

FRIDAYS
ABQ Food Fridays
4 pm, Civic Plaza, SW Section,
1 Civic Plaza NW,
3rd St NW and Marquette Ave NW,
civicplazapresents.com

Coffee Education and Tasting


6:30 pm, Prosum Roasters,
3228 Los Arboles Ave NE Ste 100,
379-5136, prosumroasters.com

11 am, donation,
Rio Bravo Brewing Company, (937)
671-8917,
riobravobrewing.com

WORD
MARCH 1322
Bookworks
4022 Rio Grande NW, 344-8139,
bkwrks.com
March 13, Derek Cressman,
When Money Talks
March 17, J. Michael Orenduff,
The Pot Thief Who Studied
Georgia OKeeffe
March 19, Richard William Smith,
The Moor, the Mason and the Alien:
A Call to Action
March 20, Paul Secord, Bandelier
National Monument
March 22, James Scarantino,
The Drum Within

Puzzle on page 40

40 March 9, 2016 ABQ FREE PRESS

calendar
THROUGH MAY 3

IAIA Library Readings


Various dates and times, Institute of American
Indian Arts, 83 Avan Nu Po Rd, Santa Fe, iaia.edu

SATURDAY, MARCH 12
The Literary History of Poets in Placitas:
Larry Goodell & John Roche
11 am, Placitas Community Library,
453 Hwy 165, 867-3355, placitaslibrary.com

Lucy Lewis: Celebrating the Legacy

ARTSPREE
SUNDAY, MARCH 13
A View in the Collection: Pablita,
Helen & Margarete
1 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,
2401 12th St NW, 843-7270,indianpueblo.org

FRIDAY, MARCH 18
Meow Wolf! House of Eternal Return:
Public Opening

1 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center,


2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org

Meow Wolf!, 1352 Rufina Cir, Santa Fe,


(505) 395-6369, meowwolf.com

SUNDAY, MARCH 13

MARCH 1831

StorytimeWhat Makes a Snowflake:


Ross Van Dusen
2:30 pm, Page One Books, 5850 Eubank Blvd NE
Ste B-41, 294-2026, page1book.com

MONDAY, MARCH 14

RSVP: James Joseph


The Small Engine Gallery,
1413 4th St SW, thesmallenginegallery.com

MARCH 18MAY 20
WOMAN

The Art of Zuni: Bronwyn Fox and


Robin Dunlap

Edition One Gallery, 1036 Canyon Rd,


Santa Fe, (505) 570-5385, editionone.gallery

2 pm, Wheelwright Library, 704 Camino Lejo,


Santa Fe, (505) 982-4636, wheelwright.org

SUNDAY, MARCH 20

TUESDAY, MARCH 15
Your Dazzling Brain presentation
by UNM Researchers
6:45 pm, Albuquerque Academy, Simms Center
for the Performing Arts, 6400 Wyoming Blvd NE,
272-8085, RSVP: aa.edu

SATURDAY, MARCH 19
Made in Albuquerque FIlms: Jeff Berg
10:30 am, Special Collections Library, 423 Central
NE, 848-1376 abclibrary.org

Making Micaceous Clay: Shari Holmes


2 pm, Genuine Southwest Arts & Gifts,
1919 Old Town Rd NW, Ste 2,
243-1410, genuinesouthwest.com

OKeeffe Close Up and Faraway:


Deborah Blanche
7 pm, Historic Old San Ysidro Church, 966 Old
Church Rd, Corrales, corraleshistory.org

Silk Stockings: Susi Wolf Storyteller


7 pm, Tortuga Gallery,
901 Edith Blvd SE, 369-1648, tortugagallery.org

Imaginary Friends and Fools:


Artist Talks
3 pm, Tortuga Gallery, 901 Edith Blvd SE,
369-1648, tortugagallery.org

Placitas Artists Series February


Visual Artist Reception
2 pm, Las Placitas Presbyterian Church,
7 Paseo de San Antonio, Placitas,
867-8080, placitasartistsseries.org

Ryan Singer & Liz Wallace Gallery


Reception
5 pm, Free, Jean Cocteau Art Gallery,
418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe,
(415) 517-9782, jeancocteaucinema.com

MARCH 20SEPTEMBER 15
Landscape of an Artist-Living Treasure:
Dan Namingha
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture,
710 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, (505) 476-1269,
indianartsandculture.org

ONGOING

Spains Contribution to the American


Revolution: Dr. Thomas Chavez

THROUGH MARCH 12

2 pm, Placitas Community Library,


453 Hwy 165, 867-3355, placitaslibrary.com

Peters Projects, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe,


(505) 954-5800, petersprojects.com

Under a Triumphant Sky, a Bike Across


America Story: Steve Garufi

Failure of Modernity: Kent Monkman

THROUGH MARCH 19

1 pm, Taylor Ranch Library, 5700 Bogart St NW,


897-8816, abclibrary.org

Sacred Realm: Blessing & Good Fortune


Across Asia

SUNDAY, MARCH 20

Museum of International Folk Art, 706 Camino Lejo,


Santa Fe, (505) 476-1200, internationalfolkart.org

Three Promises for Jane


A True Story of Madness and
Redemption: AJ Liese

THROUGH MARCH 20

3 pm, Page One Books,


5850 Eubank Blvd NE Ste B-41,
294-2026, page1book.com

New Mexico Museum of Art,


107 W. Palace Ave, Santa Fe,
(505) 476-5072, nmartmuseum.org

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23

THROUGH MARCH 31

Gabrielle Walker with Chris Williams

Taylor Oliver

Part of In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom lecture series


7 pm, Lensic Theater, 211 W. San Francisco,
Santa Fe, (505) 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org

Jean Cocteau Cinema,


418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 466-5528,
jeancocteaucinema.com

ONGOING

THROUGH APRIL 18

1ST WEDNESDAYS
Poetry and Beer
7 pm, Tractor Brewing Wells Park,
1800 4th St NW, 243-6752, getplowed.com

WEDNESDAYS
Crazy Wisdom Poetry
4 pm, Free, OffCenter Arts, 808 Park Ave SW,
247-1172, offcenterarts.org

Crossword

Gustave Baumann and New Mexico

From Cubes to Cutouts:


Alejandro Moralez & Nacho Jaramillo
KiMo Gallery, KiMo Theatre,
423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com

THROUGH APRIL 20
Aesthetic Empathy
Holocaust & Intolerance Museum of New Mexico,
616 Central Ave SW,
331-0036, nmholocaustmuseum.org

by Myles Mellor

Across
1. Pretense
4. Chips ___
8. Like some kitchens
13. Vamps accessory
14. Narthex neighbor
15. Unite
16. They were intro-
duced by Sohmer &
Co. in 1884
19. Out
20. Cousin of a canvas
back
21. Big bang producer
22. Appropriate
23. Computer instruc
tions
25. Web page
27. Money transferring
systems
31. Uneven
34. Stumblebum
36. Most immense
37. In a pompous style
41. Pull back
42. Heater
43. Kind of skin
44. Some painted
vessels
45. New couple
48. Frilly hat of long ago

52. Itinerant, British var.


56. Fox competitor
59. Expression of pride?
60. Baroque
61. Military approaches
64. Hindu wives
65. They may be wild
66. Consult
67. Fur capitalist
68. ___ Who
69. Much spam
Down
1. Old Jewish scholars
2. Go downhill, maybe
3. Put off, as a motion
4. Measure for
Measure villain
5. Dwell
6. Female gametes
7. Fiddler on the
Roof role
8. Afterword
9. C.S.A. state
10. TV control
11. Desktop feature
12. Birth place
15. Debate (with)
17. Sure
18. Datebook abbr.
23. Kind of ticket

24. Omen
26. Drudge
28. No longer working:
Abbr.
29. Cold capital
30. Eye problem
31. Brute
32. Didnt stand pat
33. Freshwater fish
35. Radiohead tune
36. Stalk
38. Cliffs pal on
Cheers
39. Chaos
40. Bon mot
46. Means of escape
47. Like some vases
49. Big cheese
50. Dude
51. Pointer
53. Bangladesh dough
54. Charger
55. Toadies replies
56. Old Mogul capital
57. Support group?
58. Jargon
60. Camp Swampy dog
62. Liberal leader?
63. Spa sound
Answers on page 39

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi