Women of Wonder - ABQ Free Press
Transcription
Women of Wonder - ABQ Free Press
VOL II, Issue 16, August 12, 2015 New Mexico’s second-largest newspaper XX-centric Bubonicon Author Mary R. Kowal Joins ‘Women of Wonder’ at Sci-fi Fest Page 17 How Payday Lenders Got Their Way in Santa Fe Page 4 Joe Monahan: List of 2017 Mayoral Hopefuls Grows Page 7 Boyd Standoff Went Badly Right from the Start Page 5 2 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS Redflex Greased its ABQ Deal, Report Finds By abq free press staff C ity auditors found violations of city policy but no criminal wrongdoing in an investigation of Redflex, the company that operated Albuquerque’s redlight and speed cameras from 2004 to 2011. The investigation was requested by City Councilor Dan Lewis after news reports that Redflex had bribed municipal officials around the country to win redlight contracts. In a lawsuit, an executive at Redflex, Aaron Rosenberg, alleged he was a top salesman for five years from 2008 to 2013 and that Redflex has been bribing and giving gifts to city officials throughout the United States, including officials in Chicago, Arizona, Ohio and New Mexico. Six executives have been fired since 2013, with six separate indictments spanning from 2006 to 2015. The investigation by Albuquerque’s internal auditor found that Redflex spent about $1,425 on meals, hotel accommodations and golf equipment benefitting civilian and Albuquerque Police Department employees. Redflex paid for a total of 53 meals for city employees starting in 2003 and bought one city employee $40 worth of golf balls, according to the auditor’s report. Accepting meals or other benefits from a current or potential vendor is a violation of the city’s administrative code, according to the report. “An Albuquerque FBI agent informed us that according to the Chicago office, there were no allegations of bribery or inappropriate gifts in Albuquerque,” Auditor Debra Yoshimura wrote in a report to Lewis early this year. “The FBI agent chacaterized the allegations related to Albuquerque as ‘glad-handing’ activities such as taking people out to lunch or dinner a couple of times.” Albuquerque voters decided to end the red-light cameras in October 2011. City officials concluded that Albuquerque made $7 million from red-light traffic tickets, while Redflex made $18 million. Rio Rancho is the only city in New Mexico still contracted with Redflex. The contract ends in December. compiled By abq free press staff Requests for “pee-proof paint” are going through the roof in San Francisco, where officials are trying to stop public urination with a paint that repels urine. “We are piloting it to see if we can discourage people from peeing at many of our hot spots,” said Public Works Director Mohammed Nuru. The UV-coated paint is hydrophobic, meaning it repels water. Urine actually bounces back at the urinator, splashing pants and shoes. San Francisco got the idea from the German city of Hamburg, which grew weary of smelling like a urinal each morning. “The team that did the testing, they were excited because the liquid bounces back more than we thought it would. Anything we can do to deter people is a good thing,” Nuru told the newspaper SFGate. Quid pro quo How bad is corruption in Greece, stepchild of the European Union? Bribery accounts for 8 percent of the gross domestic product of the country, according to the Brookings Institution. The practice has its roots in the electoral system, where government officials hand out jobs in return for votes. The study found that 27,000 new public-sector jobs were added before one recent election. Now, Greece has a ministry charged with eliminating 25,000 government jobs as part of the country’s plan to get its economy in order. Well off About 71 percent of the 7 billion people on this planet are classified as poor, while 13 percent are middle-class, according to Bloombergview.com. That leaves about 16 percent who are rich. Being poor is defined as getting by on less than $2 a day. Middleclass is defined as living on between $10 and $20 a day. Punished A Florida toll booth attendant was fired after reaching into his own pocket to pay part of the toll for a driver. Vladislav Samsonov, 77, said he made up the difference when he mistakenly charged the driver too little to pass through his booth on the Gasparilla Island Bridge Authority near Boca Grande, Fla. “He broke the rules by putting $5.50 into the Editor: editor@freeabq.com Associate Editor, News: dennis@freeabq.com Associate Editor, Arts: samantha@freeabq.com Advertising: seth@freeabq.com On Twitter: @FreeABQ Editor Dan Vukelich (505) 345-4080. Ext. 800 Associate Editor, News Dennis Domrzalski (505) 306-3260 Associate Editor, Arts Samantha Anne Carrillo (505) 345-4080 ext. 804 Design Terry Kocon, Hannah Reiter, Cathleen Tiefa Photography Mark Bralley, Mark Holm, Juan Antonio Labreche, Liz Lopez, Adria Malcolm Contributors this issue Lisa Barrow, Hugh Elliott, Richard “Bugman” Fagerlund, Gary Glasgow, Ariane Jarocki, Elijah Jensen-Lindsey, Megan Kamerick, Dan Klein, Joe Monahan, Sayrah Namasté, Joseph Sorrentino, M. Brianna Stallings, Rene Thompson, Tom Tomorrow, Efrain Villa, Terry L. Warkentine ABQ Free Press Pulp News Pee perps www.freeabq.com www.abqarts.com cash register from his pocket after he realized he missed a trailer being pulled by a vehicle and wanted his register to balance with the axel counts and was caught on tape putting money from his pocket into the register,” Samsonov’s daughter, Patricia Samsonov Gillis, wrote on Facebook. Samsonov had worked for the toll authority for 29 years. He was popular with customers because he handed out lollipops to children and dog bones to pets, according to USA Today. Vandalized A drunken squirrel caused more than $500 damage to a Worcestershire, England pub, according to the British newspaper the Independent. The owner of the Honeybourne Railway Club said he found glasses and beer bottles broken when he arrived to open up, before he spotted a squirrel stumbling out from under the bar. The owner believes the squirrel somehow opened a beer tap and drank from it before going on its drunken rampage. He chased the squirrel out a restroom window. “It’s safe to say he is now barred for life,” the owner said. Copy Editors Wendy Fox Dial Jim Wagner Sales Representatives (505) 345-4080 Abby Feldman x802 Garrett Ferguson x809 Colandra Gallegos x807 Cory Calamari x810 John Wehner x812 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 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 [ afte r th e n e w s [STAGES] “I showed ‘Jonesy’ a Chatter postcard, and he said, ‘Oh, man, Dude’ – he kept calling me ‘dude’ – ‘Do you know about the parking ramp?’” – Chatter Executive Director Pamela Michaelis on finding an outdoor “auditorium” for Chatter’s Sept. 5 rooftop concert 15 [ARTS] “[Misogyny] is not a new thing, and the reason that we’re seeing all this conversation about it is because it’s something that people are actively fighting against.” – Bubonicon 47 toastmaster, author and puppeteer Mary Robinette Kowal on sexism and harassment in the sci-fi/fantasy community 17 [ARTS] “Gatas y Vatas is going down in Seattle this year, [but] the all-ages music fest featuring solo female performers (including trans and cis women, as well as genderqueer and non-binary folks) hasn’t forgotten its many nuevomexicano fans.” – Lisa Barrow on Gatas y Vatas’ fundraiser Animales Animados: Monsters Under the Bed 18 [FOOD] “Think all-American summer foods: watermelon, barbeque, lemonade ... and macaroni and cheese? If that last one didn’t immediately spring to mind, don’t worry.” – M. Brianna Stallings on the transformative cultural power of the Macaroni and Cheese Festival 18 ] ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 3 [FOOD/DRINK] “Even the toughest of weeks are no match for the Three Sisters, Downtown’s sleeping giant and the HauteSavoie of the High Desert.” – Ariane Jarocki on the second installment of our multi-issue Deep Dish coverage of Albuquerque’s best happy hours 19 [SCREENS] “Can we relate to an animated horse? How about one who was once a household name and lives in a mansion with his entourage? You might be surprised.” – Hugh Elliott on dark, animated Netflix comedy “Bojack Horseman” 22 [STAGES] “All the while, rape culture blames victims, tells women that their worth is 100 percent body-based and cracks jokes about men dropping the soap in prison showers.” – M. Brianna Stallings on YouTube sex educator Laci Green’s visit to UNM to present “Taking Down Rape Culture” 24 [MUSIC] “With the exception of Gregg Araki’s ‘Happy Face’ and Judd Apatow’s ‘Pineapple Express’, stoner movies have been declining ever since Cheech and Chong toked on that Labrador strain. On the other hand, stoner rock has experienced a renaissance of late.” – Samantha Anne Carrillo on Weedeater’s concert at Launchpad 25 on the cover: Author/puppeteer Mary Robinette Kowal. Photo by Rod Searcey. [15] [19] [24] Listen to The Update with Dennis Domrzalski Monday mornings at 8:25. on KANW-FM 89.1 news 4 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS Payday Lenders’ Giving Pays Off at Roundhouse BY RENE THOMPSON AND DAN VUKELICH Spending Wisely I f you wonder why it’s still legal in New Mexico to charge up to 1,000 percent on payday and title loans, a clue lies in the campaign finance records of the Office of Secretary of State. Payday lenders, title loan lenders and other high-interest storefront lending operations or their lobbyists gave state legislators tens of thousands of dollars during the last two election cycles, an ABQ Free Press investigation found. The industry’s apparent payback for that largesse came during this year’s 60-day legislative session when two bills enjoying broad public support to cap interest rates at 36 percent were killed in committee. One bill got a committee hearing in the House of Representatives and then was tabled. The bill in the Senate never got a hearing. The 2015 legislative session was the latest in a string of failures. Former Attorney General Gary King tried to persuade the Legislature starting in 2007 to reduce allowable interest rates. The persistent failure of payday lending reform in New Mexico runs counter to what’s happening elsewhere in the United States as state regulators try to break what is called the “debt trap,” where low-income people take out successive loans to pay off earlier ones – and never get out of debt. Regulators in 13 states recently have reined in exorbitant interest and fees. In North Carolina, a state with a large military presence, lawmakers have banned payday lenders completely. The Department of Defense supports limits on payday lenders because servicemen and women are among the industry’s targets. Before the 2015 session of the New Mexico Legislature, 45 community, social service, religious and service organizations backed payday lending reform or were prepared to testify in favor of capping interest rates at 36 percent, which has been done elsewhere. Four of the state’s largest newspapers editorialized in favor of interest rate caps. But their voices weren’t heard. Reform advocates who went to the Roundhouse to testify in favor of capping interest rates allege that the former chairman of the Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee, Phil Griego of San José, essentially gave the payday industry a veto over the legislation. Griego told both sides that the interest rate cap Campaign finance records show that the payday loan industry gave money to 24 legislators with the power to block payday lending reform during the 2015 Legislature. These included the House and Senate leaders and members of two key committees. bill wouldn’t get a hearing unless reform advocates and industry lobbyists first agreed on a compromise, according to lobbyists for both sides. When the Legislature adjourned its 60-day session, according to reform advocates, the bill was still locked in committee. The power of money The payday loan industry (we use the term in this article to encompass all forms of high-interest storefront lending) was well prepared to defend the revenue stream their storefront offices generate. The industry has been generous. A review of campaign finance records shows that the industry spent $74,675 on the most recent campaigns of 24 key legislators – the top leaders of the Senate and the House and members of the two key committees assigned to hear payday loan bills this year. The debate over the intersection of money and influence in Santa Fe is an old one. Advocates for ethics reform see the appearance of impropriety. Lawmakers see nothing wrong with accepting campaign donations from industries they regulate. Sen. Clemente Sanchez, a Grants Democrat who has received $2,700 from the industry since 2012, said contributions to his campaign do not affect how he votes. Sen. Michael Padilla, an Albuquerque Democrat who has received $2,000 from payday lenders, said, “If someone decided to write a check, that’s one thing; you know I’m not going to send checks back, but that doesn’t mean that I looked for it, because I didn’t.” Another thing the industry had going for it this year was manpower. As many as 23 payday loan industry lobbyists worked the Roundhouse in 2015; Top Payday Loan Donation Recipients Rep. Nate Gentry Sen. Phil Griego Sen. Stuart Ingle $12,950 $11,075 $7,400 House minority leader Corporations Committee chair Senate minority leader $5,250 Senate majority leader $5,100 TOTAL............................................. $74,675 *Sources: New Mexico Secretary of State’s Office, 2012 and 2014 election campaign reports; followthemoney.org on the side for reform, there was one. ABQ Free Press could not put the question of money and influence at the Roundhouse this year to many of the legislative leaders. That’s because calls and emails to the following people who received payday loan donations were not returned over a period of several months: House Speaker Don Tripp, a Socorro Republican; President Pro Tem Papen, a Las Cruces Democrat; House Majority Leader Nate Gentry, an Albuquerque Republican; Rep. Brian Egolf, a Santa Fe Democrat; Senate Majority Leader Michael Sanchez, a Belen Democrat; and Senate Minority Leader Stuart Ingle, a Portales Republican. Tale of two bills Sen. John Sapien Sen. Michael Sanchez Sen. Mary Kay Papen Corporations Committee member Rep. Nate Gentry ....................................... $12,950 Sen. Phil Griego ......................................... $11,075 Sen. Stuart Ingle........................................... $7,400 Sen. John Sapien ......................................... $5,250 Sen. Michael Sanchez................................... $5,100 Sen. Mary Kay Papen................................... $4,350 Sen. William H. Payne.................................. $3,400 Sen. Clemente Sanchez ............................... $2,700 Sen. Sander Rue........................................... $2,700 Sen. William Sharer...................................... $2,650 Rep. Alonzo Baldonado .............................. $2,450 Rep. Nora Espinoza...................................... $2,200 Rep. Yvette Herrell....................................... $2,150 Sen. Michael Padilla..................................... $2,000 Rep. Don Tripp.............................................. $1,750 Sen. Mark Moores........................................ $1,600 Rep. Bob Wooley.......................................... $1,050 Rep. James E. Smith..................................... $1,050 Rep. Mimi Stewart.......................................... $650 Rep. Patricia Caballero.................................... $550 Rep. Sheryl Williams Stapleton...................... $550 Rep. Lee Cotter ............................................... $500 Sen. Brian Egolf............................................... $400 Rep. Deborah Armstrong................................ $200 Senate president pro tem $4,350 While several bills were introduced during the 2015 Legislature to cap rates or change the way payday lenders do business in New Mexico, reform advocates rallied around two identical measures – House Bill 36 and Senate Bill 72. Both were pre-filed – meaning they were introduced before the Legislature convened for its 60-day session on Jan. 20. The bills officially got their committee referrals on Jan. 23, the third day of the Legislature. In the Senate, SB 72, sponsored by Rep. William Soules, a Las Cruces Democrat, was referred by cont. on page 10 NEWS ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 5 Boyd told Cops: ‘I Can’t Walk Away. You Can’t Walk Away’ BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI I t wasn’t long into his three-hour standoff with Albuquerque police that James Boyd seemed to grasp the severity of the dilemma he and the cops were in. What had started off as a minor call about illegal camping had spun irrevocably out of control. Even Boyd’s paranoid schizophrenia, which was on full display that 16th day of March 2014, couldn’t interfere with his intuition of how things had gone and where they were going. In words that now seem hauntingly prophetic, Boyd understood that neither he nor the cops could disengage from their deadly dance. He had committed a felony by pulling two knives on cops and threatening to kill them, and they were obligated to disarm and arrest him. “We’re in a situation,” Boyd told the six or seven officers surrounding him, weapons drawn at a sun-baked, rocky and sparsely vegetated place called U Mound in the Sandia Mountain foothills on the east edge of town. It was just 26 minutes and eight seconds into their dance when Boyd stated what everybody there knew: “I can’t walk away. You can’t walk away.” About four minutes later, one of the officers asked Boyd, who had repeatedly refused to drop or give up his knives, “How are we going to resolve this?” Again, Boyd responded with an intuition that turned out to be eerily accurate: “I don’t know if we can. I think somebody’s going to get hurt, killed.” Boyd was indeed prophetic. He was shot three times by cops and mortally wounded that day. The Albuquerque Police Department was hurt as well, as well, its reputation as a trigger-happy department solidified, thanks to lapel-camera video that was seen worldwide. The two officers who shot Boyd would face charges of second-degree murder, an unprecedented decision for this city. Many times during the three-hour standoff there were points where it could have been prevented from escalating. But for a variety of reasons, those opportunities were missed or refused, and Boyd and the cops danced themselves right into the abyss. ABQ Free Press talked with retired cops and a former prosecutor to see exactly how and when the Boyd confrontation spun out of control and how it might have been prevented or calmed. Not all of our sources agreed with each other on police tactics, which is why the Boyd case has so divided the community. Here’s a breakdown of the major scenes in the Boyd drama. Guns drawn 11 seconds in It was around 4:30 that Sunday afternoon when APD Open Space officers John McDaniel and Patrick Hernandez got a call of someone camping illegally in city open space in the foothills past the end of Copper Avenue. They stopped at the house of nearby resident Alexander Thickstun, a U.S. Air Force captain who had called APD’s nonemergency number to report the illegal camping. Thickstun had been out earlier that day with his two Great Danes and a handgun to investigate the area where he thought a man had been camping. Thickstun told the officers where they could find Boyd. Albuquerque Police Department A series of decisions made by James Boyd and a variety of police officers in the Sandia foothills over a period of hours on March 16, 2014, led to Boyd’s shooting death and charges of second-degree murder against the two police officers who shot him. McDaniel and Hernandez reached Boyd’s site around 4:45 p.m. and found him lying in a makeshift plastic tent. Illegal camping is a misdemeanor, but things escalated immediately. One of Boyd’s hands was outside the tent and the other was inside. McDaniel wanted to see the other hand to make sure it wasn’t holding a weapon. “How’s it going? Albuquerque police,” McDaniel said as he approached Boyd. About six seconds later, McDaniel said to Boyd, “Let’s see your hands.” At 11 seconds in, McDaniel repeated the demand, and he and Hernandez drew their handguns on Boyd. To some former cops, that was the wrong call and escalated a petty misdemeanor call to one where weapons were drawn, putting Boyd on the defensive. Cops should never draw a weapon, which amounts to a show of deadly force, for a misdemeanor, they said. “There is no purpose to draw a weapon on a suspect in a nonviolent crime, said former APD officer Tom Grover. “Drawing a weapon because someone hasn’t shown their hands on an initial approach is completely outside of training. You don’t have any information that he is a suspect in an armed crime.” The preferable way to handle such a situation would have been to tell Boyd in a friendly, nonthreatening manner that camping here was illegal, but that he could move 300 yards east to the national forest to camp. They could then say they’d be back in a few hours and that he better be gone when they returned, some officers said. That’s how those types of calls were and might still be handled, they said, by officers using their discretion and not going strictly by the book. But there was one thing that prevented that from happening. The officers were dispatched based on a citizen’s call and that citizen expected action, said retired APD officer Mark Bralley. “Telling a guy to leave and that I’d be back in two hours, I might have done that if I had not gotten a call from a citizen. It’s a call from a citizen who expects something to be done, and he got plenty of service that day,” Bralley said. Ill-advised pat down? The next escalation came about 43 seconds into the encounter when McDaniel told Boyd he wanted to pat him down to see if he had weapons. Boyd said to the officers, “Please don’t touch me.” But McDaniel persisted and asked Boyd to turn around. When McDaniel attempted the pat down, Boyd wheeled around and pulled two four-inch-blade pocket knives out of his pockets and held the blades outward in both hands while facing the officers. At that instant, Boyd committed the crime of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon on an officer, and at that point the cops were obligated to arrest him. That attempted pat down was a mistake, some former cops said, for two reasons. It jeopardized the officers’ safety, and most cops know that homeless people in general don’t like to be touched. Most cops who deal with the homeless know they typically are armed for their own protection, usually with box cutters or knives, Grover said. “They don’t have hatchets, machetes, or bazookas,” he said. In general, cops don’t like to touch homeless people either, because, well, they’re walking infestations and germ factories, former cops said, and their clothes are often caked with feces and urine. Boyd could have ended it While McDaniel and Hernandez might have acted too aggressively, the fact that Boyd pulled two knives on them took the situation to a new and dangerous level. The officers then faced a potentially deadly threat, because knives, even ones with fourinch blades, can easily slice through the body armor cops wear. And at 6-foot-2 and 220 pounds, Boyd presented a formidable threat. The officers pointed their weapons directly at Boyd and shouted at him at least a dozen times to drop the knives. Boyd refused, and the situation reached the point of no return. cont. on page 6 NEWS 6 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS boyd, Page 5 Reinforcements arrive To Grover, that was the tipping point for both sides. Any cop listening to his radio heard that a guy had threatened fellow officers with lethal force – a felony – and police started flooding into the area. Dispatch began directing officers to the scene, and 17 more eventually arrived. “That is when the genie is out of the bottle. It’s when the bell is rung, and now you can’t unring it,” Grover said. Standoff and negotiations As more officers arrived, including Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) members, they began negotiating with Boyd. Early on, Boyd identified himself only by the nickname of Ba. His knives were back in his pockets, and he rambled on about his connections with high government officials, including those at the U.S. Department of Defense, and how the world would run out of money in five to six months. “I’ve been calling [APD] about national security,” Boyd said. At one point, he said he would talk only to the New Mexico State Police. A state police officer was dispatched to the scene. There were times when Boyd advanced slightly on the officers, but they repeatedly warned him that he would be shot with a bean bag rifle if he went past a certain point – a large rock nearby. For the most part, Boyd stayed behind the rock. Boyd also seemed to know police protocol. At one point, he warned the officers, “I’m approaching.” Throughout the talks, officers repeatedly told Boyd that he would have to surrender his knives, a proposition that he repeatedly rejected. “You have no business asking me to put my knives down,” he said. Around 29 minutes into the standoff, an officer said to Boyd, “How about we all put down our weapons? We’d have to pat you down.” “You’re not touching my person,” Boyd replied. “That’s what’s going to have to happen,” the officer said. “Wanna bet?” Boyd answered. Boyd’s ‘handlers’ not called Two years before the standoff, APD had assigned two CIT officers to monitor Boyd as part of a department program to keep mentally ill homeless people on their medications and out of trouble. It wasn’t until one hour and twoand-a-half-minutes into the standoff that Boyd gave his name to the officers. That information was radioed to dispatch, but the special prosecutor in the case said there was no evidence that anyone from APD called Boyd’s two CIT officers to come to the scene. Some former officers speculated that had two people been on the scene who knew Boyd and his mental illness well, they might have been able to get him to drop his knives and surrender. No commanders on scene To retired APD sergeant Dan Klein (a columnist for this newspaper), there was a glaring defect in the department’s response to the Boyd situation. No officer above the rank of sergeant – meaning anyone on the APD command staff – was on the scene during the negotiations and when the final plan to subdue and arrest Boyd was hatched and launched. Sergeants, Klein explained, tend to think tactically, while commanders have a more strategic view of critical incidents. Sergeants generally want to end a situation as quickly as possible, while commanders might take more time to develop a plan or let negotiations go on longer. “Many times, sergeants do not have the training to control and command officers from different units, and that is huge,” Klein said. “Sergeants know their five or six people that they work with. When you have a critical incident, you might have 20 or more officers out there.” At critical incidents, there almost always is tension between SWAT team members and negotiators who are talking with, say, a barricaded subject, Klein said. “The negotiators are saying, ‘Give us more time,’ and the SWAT sergeant is saying, ‘It’s getting late, the sun is going down, let’s end this.’ The command staff would be able to listen to both sides and say, ‘I’m going to give the negotiators another hour and SWAT team stand down.’ When there is a plan, the command staff can say, ‘This is a good plan’ or ‘This is a screwed-up plan. Why don’t we hit him with wooden batons (nonlethal rounds similar to rubber bullets) until he gets tired of being hit with wooden batons?’” Even now, 17 months later, it’s not clear exactly who developed the nonlethal plan to subdue Boyd, but it was either SWAT or Repeat Offender Project team members on the scene. Change in personnel, tactics It was around 6 p.m. when APD Officer Keith Sandy arrived on the scene. Sandy was a member of the ROP – Repeat Offender Project – team, a unit that had been created years earlier to go after the worst of the worst. The ROP Team tended to cont. on page 12 COLUMNS ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 7 List of Potential ABQ Mayoral Candidates Growing By JOE MONAHAN I n our last column we noted that speculation over who will seek to become Albuquerque’s next mayor in 2017 has barely risen to the level of a murmur, but there are contenders quietly emerging and some testing of the waters. Names circulating include Democratic City Councilor Ken Sanchez, GOP City Councilor Dan Lewis, GOP Bernalillo County Commissioner Wayne Johnson, former New Mexico Democratic Party Chairman Brian Colon and New Mexico State Auditor Tim Keller. And even though he has said he will not seek a third, four-year term, there’s still talk that Mayor Berry could reverse himself, especially if his chances don’t look good for the 2018 GOP gubernatorial nomination he has an eye on. The chattering class is also enjoying speculating about the future of Gov. Susana Martinez during these lazy days of summer. Much will depend on how she fares in the three years remaining in her second term. She has so far dodged some powerful potential bullets – chief among them the stagnant economy – but Auditor Keller has been holding her feet to the fire with a probe of her taxation and revenue secretary. Second terms often bring that sort of trouble in piles. If she beats the odds and remains popular (both two-term governors who served before her – Gary Johnson and Bill Richardson – finished their tenures with approval ratings in the tank), Dems think she could take a shot at Democratic U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich in 2018. As for the likelihood of her being the GOP vice-presidential choice for the 2016 ticket, that talk has dissipated. Seventeen candidates are seeking the presidential nomination. The VP pick is likely to be one of the 16 losers. Another option for Martinez is getting out of politics and making a lot of money by being appointed to corporate boards, authoring a book and delivering paid speeches. That would be similar to the path taken by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. It’s on the table for Martinez not because of her performance as governor but due to her status as the nation’s first female Hispanic governor. become a big deal, but analysts say that would probably take big money. So far there are no reports of any groups organizing to buy advertising against the one-eighth cent increase in the gross receipts tax. The tax would raise an estimated $17 million a year for 15 years and finance capital improvements at the BioPark, which includes the zoo, Tingley Beach, the botanic garden and the aquarium. Early polling shows the public disposed toward approving the levy but that could change in the face of a negative ad blitz. The turnout for the city election will be an older electorate and weighted toward the conservative side. The opportunity to persuade those voters to turn down a tax increase is there but without vocal opposition, supporters of the increase are confident they will prevail. That little tax increase proposed for the Albuquerque BioPark that city voters will decide in the Oct. 6 election could Joe Monahan is a veteran of New Mexico politics. His daily blog can be found at joemonahan.com Even though he has said he will not seek a third term, there’s still talk that Mayor Berry could reverse himself And what about that proposal on the ballot to amend the City Charter and give the city council confirmation power over the mayor’s selection for police and fire chiefs? After all the turmoil at APD, political pros say this one should be a winner. If it does pass it will be one of the more significant power shifts away from the executive branch and to the council since the modern form of government was ushered in back in 1974. But it could have been worse for future mayors. The original proposal would have given the City Council not only the power to confirm the chiefs but also to fire them. If any of the forthcoming city political questions catches your attention and you’re not registered to vote, you still have time. The last day to register is Sept. 8. Information is on the city clerk’s website or you can call 924-3650. Not that anyone expects a stampede to the polls. The experts say only about 10 percent of the city’s registered voters can be expected to cast ballots in October. There are about 350,000 voters registered, so that would mean a turnout in the neighborhood of 35,000. The Meaning of Best Friends Forever In Rwanda BY EFRAIN VILLA “B ecause you are a good person” was Musa’s answer to most of my questions. “Musa, why are you paying for my beer?” “Musa, why did you jump in front of me when that dog attacked?” “Musa, why do you insist I sleep with your sister?” Generally, I nurture a healthy suspicion of anyone who professes to know I am a good person. I assume these people are either dumb or are swindlers laying the groundwork for the pounce. Even so, I will occasionally fall for scams with the same naiveté of the idiot at a strip club who thinks he has an emotional connection with the dancer giving him a lap dance. I met Musa at a beach in the Rwandan border town of Gisenyi, a village abutting the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Virunga National Park, where the world’s most active volcano threatens to annihilate the region. Another fun fact left out of tourism brochures is that nearby Lake Kivu is prone to limnic eruption in which enormous farts of carbon dioxide burst out of the water and instantaneously suffocate everyone in the area. The noxious vapors can be accompanied by tsunamis that wash away all evidence of Mother Nature’s little burp. And just for added drama, there are guerilla uprisings and child soldiers in the countryside. As he spoke, I tried to assess if his story was part of a long con strategy to eventually hit me up for money These conditions do not dampen the mood here, though. Locals are cheery and, most of the time, the town has the kind of tranquil backdrop one might expect to see in a Corona commercial. So when Musa asked me if we would be best friends forever, even before knowing my name, I reasoned that the locals’ waste-no-time attitude was a byproduct of living on the perpetual verge of apocalypse. “Sure ... let’s be friends until our dying day,” I said, looking up at the ominous, glowing clouds over the volcano. “Or lunchtime. Whichever comes first.” To start off our new friendship, Musa took me to some hot springs. On the way, we encountered a lady gouging out the eyeballs from an animal carcass splayed at her feet. She put down her giant knife, looked up at me, and said something in Kinyarwanda. The only word I understood was “Fanta,” which in these parts can mean a bottled drink, a bribe, a tip, charity, or even a ransom. I turned to Musa to gauge if our exchange with the eye-gouger was friendly. His relaxed demeanor told me it was. I looked at the lady, turned my pockets inside out, and politely said, “No Fanta.” As we walked past her, she mumbled something that made Musa chuckle. “She said you Muzungus these days are more poor than us Africans.” He pointed at my feet. “In Rwanda, only very poor people wear rugabire (shoes made out of tires).” At the hot springs, Musa told me he had recently returned to Gisenyi from Kigali because his Australian girlfriend had cut him off. “When she called my place,” he said, pausing to take a drag of his cigarette, “my friend’s wife answered. By the time I got back from the bathroom, she was yelling that I was a womanizer like all Africans and just using her to pay for my studies. One phone call took my love, my home, and my future.” As he spoke, I tried to assess if his story was part of a long con strategy to eventually hit me up for money. “My room’s small and uncomfortable,” I lied. “Otherwise, I would offer you lodging.” In reality, I was more concerned he might bring bedbugs into my sprawling suite. “Oh, you are a good person to think of troubling yourself,” he said. “I will ask the church people if you can stay in their big, comfortable room with the other Muzungos.” “Missionaries?” I asked. “No thanks, I’ll manage.” When we parted ways later that day, I gave Musa my number and told him to call me the next evening. I planned to be long gone by then. The next day, I was seated in a plane getting ready to take off when my phone rang. “He probably wants money?” I thought. I took a sip of my orange Fanta, inspected my seat for bedbugs, and hit the ignore button on my phone. As we flew over Rwanda, I looked out the window at the lush, green canopy below and tried to remind myself that I was a good person. Reach Efrain Villa through his website, aimlessvagabond.com NEWS 8 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS Teaching Healing Rita Navarrete, a Mexican curandera, or “healer,” perfoms a traditional cleansing ceremony, blowing smoke from burning copal, an incense used in Latin America, on participants in a University of New Mexico class. Organized by Eliseo “Cheo” Torres, UNM Vice President of Student Affairs, the Curandismo classes began 15 years ago and now attract 200 to 250 participants interested in the use of the herbs in healing. “People need something tactile,” said Toñita Gonzalez, a curandera living in Albuquerque who participated. “They watch the smoke, and they can see their problems going to the heavens,” she said. “We’re changing a person’s spiritual and emotional level.” Joseph Sorrentino Featured RENTAL Property 200 Rio Grande, Albuquerque A full-service residential and commercial property management brokerage serving both renters and property owners. 515 CENTRAL AVENUE NE ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO 87196-4249 OFFICE 505-242-0989 FAX 505-242-0969 TOLL FREE 888-248-0969 Email info@maddoxmgmt.com WWW.MADDOXMGMT.COM TOWNHOUSE LOFTS 1/BD 1/BA Recently renovated luxury townhouse apartments in desirable Historic Old Town Albuquerque. Each unit comes with a stunning natural balance of old and contemporary living,exposed adobe walls, brick floors, built-ins, sunny new windows, new stainless steel appliances, front load washer & dryer in the unit, courtyard patio areas, and lovely serene landscaped grounds! Very pet friendly! The Botanical Gardens, Tingly Beach, The ABQ Bio Park, Zoo, Aquarium, ‘Bosque Trails’ are all just around the corner! Tenants pay utilities. 1-year lease. www.MaddoxMgmt.com for more info!! OPINION ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 9 New Thinking at APD Can Fix County’s Low DWI Conviction Rate By dan klein F or decades, Albuquerque residents have complained about dismal drunken driving enforcement – and year after year, tragedy after tragedy, not one of our elected officials has come up with a better way to ensure DWI convictions. A DWI arrest means nothing. The only way to gauge success is how many convictions we get from those arrested. DWI in Albuquerque is like Groundhog Day, the same issue, the same fingerpointing and the same do-nothing from the people we elect or hire to fix this problem. In July, the Albuquerque Journal’s Mike Gallagher exposed how APD Officer Lou Golson had 140 DWI cases dismissed in the six months after he was shot in the line of duty. Golson is a hard-working officer, it’s not his fault these cases were dismissed. It also isn’t the fault of the courts or the District Attorney as they must protect the Constitutional right to a speedy trial in six months or less, according to a New Mexico Supreme Court rule. A comparison of DWI conviction rates for 2014 shows that Bernalillo County had the second-lowest conviction rate in the state. Rio Arriba County had the worst. More than half of the DWI arrests made in Bernalillo County in 2014 were dismissed. That means over a thousand people who were arrested in Bernalillo County in 2014 for DWI had their charges dismissed. They drove away with no conviction. Why? Disband the DWI unit. Don’t stop DWI enforcement, just share the responsibility with all APD officers Ask the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s office – the answer is that police officers don’t show up in court. The Albuquerque Police Department says that cases are dismissed because Metro Court schedules its DWI unit officers to appear in different courtrooms at the same time. Metro Court will tell you that they have to schedule the police officers this way because of the speedy trial rule. And the criminal justice circus in Bernalillo County goes on and on, with the same excuses and finger-pointing that has not produced any better results for decades. We have a conviction rate of 47 percent. As a citizen are you OK with this? Aren’t you tired of the blame game by public officials? If you are, here’s a simple way to stop DWI cases from being dismissed: A comparison of DWI conviction rates for 2014 shows that Bernalillo County had the secondlowest conviction rate in the state. Rio Arriba County had the worst The APD DWI Unit of about 10 officers is involved in 95 percent of all DWI cases. It is impossible to obtain a conviction when you depend on the same 10 officers to handle 95 percent of the workload. They simply cannot be in 10 courtrooms at once. The solution? APD should stop fingerpointing at Metro Court’s scheduling. Years of complaining about Metro Court scheduling has gotten us nowhere. APD must come to the realization that the court is not going to change. APD can fix the problem of cases being dismissed because officers are not in court without Metro Court help. How? Disband the DWI unit. Don’t stop DWI enforcement, just share the responsibility with all APD officers. Every APD officer is certified in DWI enforcement. This is a requirement for becoming a police officer in New Mexico. I propose that every field services officer at APD – and there are more than 400 of them – have a mandatory rotation in DWI roadblocks, which produce the majority of DWI arrests. Every night a DWI roadblock is scheduled, a new group of police officers should be reassigned from their regular duties – for one night – to the DWI roadblock. So, if APD does two roadblocks in one week, a total of 30 officers, or 15 each night, would work roadblocks. This would spread the DWI duty among 400 officers instead of just 10, meaning APD’s 400 officers would only have one DWI case scheduled at a time. I know from experience when the officer is present in Metro Court, the case usually ends with a conviction. Dan Klein is a retired Albuquerque police officer. Commemorate the First Transgender Riot And the World’s First True Peace Treaty BY SAYRAH NAMASTé S ay No to Military Recruiters! Military recruiters will be on the UNM campus as the new academic year begins, ironically as part of the annual Safety, Health, and Wellness Day. Each year in response, students and community members oppose the military recruiters, pass out counter-recruitment information and protest their efforts. The event is 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 18 at the University of New Mexico Student Union Building Mall between the SUB and Mesa Vista Hall. Before the Fight for Rights at Stonewall. The local transgender community, including the Transgender Resource Center of New Mexico and Transcending Differences, is marking the anniversary of the first recorded transgender riot in United States history. The Compton’s Cafeteria Riot preceded the more famous 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City by three years. There will be a screening of the documentary: “Screaming Queens: The Riots at Compton’s Cafeteria” with a panel discussion afterwards. You may be surprised when you learn about transgender history and the context in the early gay rights movement. The event starts at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 22 at the Albuquerque Peace & Justice Center, 202 Harvard Dr. S.E. Women’s Equality Day Celebration and Poetry Reading: The event, organized by the Albuquerque chapter of the National Organization of Women to commemorate the day when women’s right to vote was recognized in the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, will be 1:30-4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 22 in Botts Hall of the Special Collections Library, 423 Central Ave. N.E. Almost 100 years later, our mostly male Congress is dismantling women’s rights despite the Equal Rights Amendment, written in 1923, which states “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.” Speakers will share what progress we’ve made toward full equality for women in the U.S. A poetry reading featuring the Albuquerque Word Weavers includes an open microphone, so bring your poems about women’s rights (4 minutes maximum). For more information, contact smrcmd@ hotmail.com. You May Say I’m A Dreamer: The Albuquerque Chapter of Veterans for Peace, along with other organizations, will commemorate the signing of the Kellogg-Briand Pact with a press conference and reception 1 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 27 at the Albuquerque Mennonite Church, 1300 Girard Blvd. N.E. You’ve probably never heard of this astounding treaty which was sponsored by the U.S. and France to renounce war as an instrument of national policy. Signatory nations promised not to use war to resolve “disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them.” The United States, Germany, and France signed the treaty on Aug. 27, 1928, and most other nations signed soon after. Imagine the human suffering that would have been prevented from all of our wars if we had followed this agreement. Environmental Justice Day in the South Valley: Join celebrants from 3 p.m.-7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 29 at the Valle de Oro National Refuge, the first urban wildlife refuge in the Southwest. The newly established Refuge at 7851 South Second St. S.W. is partnering with Los Jardines Institute, a grassroots community organization that fights environmental racism and works to reform chemical policy. There will be music, food, entertainment, and trolley tours of the Refuge, which is restoring the wetlands with native vegetation. Environmentalists at City Council: Climate Change Activists with 350.org are demanding that the Albuquerque City Council vote in favor of Councilor Isaac Benton’s resolution to withdraw the city’s membership from the New Mexico Industrial Energy Consumers in favor of safe, clean, affordable renewable energy. “NMIEC is incapable of representing our best interests because it primarily represents large multi-national corporations,” according to a statement from 350.org. They will make their case at 5 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 17 at the City Council meeting in the Vincent E. Griego Council Chambers, in the basement of 1 Civic Plaza N.W. If you attend, you can sign up to give public comment. If you can’t attend, 350.org is urging people to email City Council at: www.cabq.gov/ council/councilors/contact-all-councilors. Sayrah Namasté is an organizer with the American Friends Service Committee in Albuquerque. NEWS 10 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS the citizen’s Legislature,” she said. “This has been a decade-long if not a hundred-years-long conversation about wanting professional legislators, but people tend to like things the way they are,” Harrison said. “They are just slammed with bills, and they’re only in session for a couple months at most, so that means they’re out in the community the rest of the time.” payday loans, Page 4 Albuquerque’s Premier Facility - for - Mock Trials & Focus Groups • Trial planning and issue spotting, in-house facilitators • Mock jury services • Witness preparation • Simulated court and deliberation venues • Political polling Call 505-263-8425 or email info@trialmetrixNM.com 6608 Gulton Court NE, Alb. 87109 trialmetrixnm.com Senate Majority Leader Michael Sanchez, a Belen Democrat, to the Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee and to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Sanchez received $5,100 from payday lenders, his campaign finance records show. The chairman of the corporations committee, Sen. Phil Griego, was the second leading legislative recipient of payday loan campaign contributions, taking $11,075 from the industry, his campaign finance records show. (Griego, a real estate broker, resigned from the Legislature a week before the end of the 2015 session. He faced a likely censure by his peers over a conflict of interest during the 2014 session.) After this year’s session adjourned, Griego told ABQ Free Press that the complexity and divisiveness of the payday loan interest-cap issue threatened to bog down his committee and endanger passage of other legislation. Griego said he ordered both sides to work out a compromise before he would give the bill a hearing. “What that means is he basically gave the industry veto over this legislation,” said Steve Fischmann of the New Mexico Fair Lending Coalition, a collection of nonprofits, which pushed for the payday loan interest rate cap. “So all the industry had to do was not talk to advocates, and no legislation would ever get to the committee,” Fischmann said. Clemente Sanchez, who assumed the chairmanship of Griego’s committee after Griego’s resignation, said, “The way it works is the chairman of the committee decides what goes on the agenda, and since it was Phil Griego at the time, he never brought it up. Since it’s up to the chairman to put it in the agenda, we never talked about it at all.” Over in the House, HB 36 hardly fared better. HB 36, sponsored by Rep. Gail Chasey, an Albuquerque Democrat, was referred to the House Public Affairs Committee and to the House Ways and Means Committee. The referral to House Ways and Means was unusual because that committee generally hears appropriation bills, tax bills or bills that affect tax revenues or proposed changes in government operations with fiscal impacts. The referral of HB 36 was made by Speaker of the House Don Tripp, a recipient of $1,750 in payday loan campaign donations, according to his campaign finance records. State Rep. Yvette Herrell, an A massive loophole Alamogordo Republican, gave HB 36 a hearing in the House Regulation and Public Affairs Committee but then tabled it for the duration of the session. Herrell received $2,150 in payday loan contributions, her records show. Herrell did not respond to phone calls or emails from ABQ Free Press on why she tabled the bill. A member of Herrell’s committee, Rep. Nora Espinoza, a Roswell Republican, whose records show she received $2,200 in payday loan contributions, said, “After reviewing our records, HB 36 had a hearing on Feb. 2 in an open public meeting but was tabled by the committee after debate.” When the Legislature adjourned on the afternoon of Saturday, March 21, both HB 36 and SB 72 were still in the two committees to which they had been referred 57 days earlier. Unseen forces “It’s clear that the industry and special interests have access and influence that the rest of us don’t have,” said Fischmann, the lending reform advocate. “And what people are doing is legal, but the fact that it’s legal doesn’t mean that it’s not corrupt, because it’s terribly corrupt,” he said. “I’m a former state senator, and I served four years in the New Mexico Senate, so I’ve seen it firsthand,” Fischmann said. Sen. Clemente Sanchez takes issue with that logic. “That’s not why we receive contributions, and there’s no strings attached, so that doesn’t mean I am going to vote with them on anything,” Sanchez said when asked about influence his donors might seek to gain. Viki Harrison, executive director of Common Cause New Mexico, said the influence of money at the Legislature is apparent year in and year out. “That is why we have the lobbyists, the larger corporations and the folks with money that are able to make these kinds of contributions, as opposed to your average citizen, so that’s the nature of the way it is in Santa Fe with ABQ Free Press’ investigation into the payday loan industry’s influence at the 2015 Legislature uncovered a loophole in the secretary of state’s campaign reporting system that allows lobbyists to funnel vast amounts of money to legislators without publicly identifying the source. An example is James “J.D.” Bullington, a lobbyist for FastBucks, a payday lender, as well as 23 other business interests. Records show Bullington has not identified on whose behalf he gave legislators campaign contributions since 2103. Although campaign and lobbyist disclosure laws require that the ultimate source of all lobbyist donations be reported, Bullington’s donations show up in his name only. FastBucks did not file any contribution reports under its own name between 2012 to 2014, according to the secretary of state’s website. A review of reports filed by the legislators shows Bullington gave $21,875 in contributions during the 2013 and 2014 cycles. In an interview, he said some of that originated with FastBucks, but he declined to offer details. The Lobbbyist Regulation Act states that lobbyists must report to the Office of the Secretary of State “the names, addresses and occupations of other contributors and the amounts of their separate political contributions.” Bullington faults the secretary of state’s online lobbyist filing form. “The Secretary of State is going to eventually update the website because we do electronic filing now and there is no box; it says to put who it was made to and the dollar amount, and those are the only two boxes.” Other lobbyists confirmed their belief there is a technical problem with the online filing form. An examination of all of Bullington’s campaign contributions since 2013 to the present shows he has given candidates $130,600 – $28,500 of that to Gov. Susana Martinez in 2013 alone – with no explanation of where the money came from. A spokesman for the Secretary of State’s Office said lobbyists who make cont. on page 11 OPINION/NEWS ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 11 What Lessons Have We Learned Since the Last ‘Bad War’? BY TERRY L. WARKENTINE I need to relate part of my story. Most of the younger generation needs to hear it and many of my generation need to be reminded of it. I am a U.S. Navy veteran of two tours of the Vietnam War. My first tour was as part of the “Brown Water Navy.” I proudly served on swift boats running both coastal patrol and engaging in river warfare. Fewer than 3,500 of us served on swifts during the war. Far fewer remain alive today. Both times I returned to the States after a tour, the reception was far from enthusiastic. People gathered to yell obscenities at us, to throw garbage at us and to call us “baby killers.” Anti-war protests were rampant nationwide. No one, not even my parents, would pat us on the back and say, “well done.” About a year after my separation from the Navy and after time off to accustom myself to civilian life again, I made the decision to return to college. Even in that bastion of higher learning, veterans suffered. Once, while sitting with a friend in a campus coffee shop, she saw one of her friends enter, waved her over, introduced me as a veteran and invited her to join us. The young woman declined, saying all vets were crazy and left. Even my oldest grandson had no idea I was a veteran until, when he was about 16, he saw the front ‘Vietnam Veteran’ car plate I had recently gotten Another time, I was at a private party off campus. I happened to meet an army vet and we got to talking about places we were stationed in ‘Nam. It wasn’t long before the hostess came over and told us both to leave as the other guests did not want to hear us talking about our time in Vietnam. We were not only shunned and disliked, but actually hated as were all things associated with that terrible war. For that reason and others, I simply did not talk about that war. Even my oldest grandson had no idea I was a veteran until, when he was about 16, he saw the front “Vietnam Veteran” car plate I had recently gotten. I was recently reminded of how long ago that all was when a young lady saw the plate and remarked, “You were in Vietnam? That was the ‘bad’ war, wasn’t it?” I replied that I was not aware of any good wars. I came to realize that history had passed many people by. The main thing that kept me going through all that time was the belief that, with all that hatred of the war and those who served in it, quite possibly we would never enter into another useless war and never again would veterans be subjected to such abuse. I was partly right. Too many of our government representatives seek to replace diplomacy with war. War is nothing more than a video game to them The wars came again, way too soon and way too often. Now, though, the public perception of servicemen and women had changed. They are perceived as heroes, maybe because we have a volunteer army now, maybe because of a misplaced sense of vengeance or justice. Don’t get me wrong. I think it’s great that servicemen and women are now thanked for their service. It’s not the heroic, glamorous job that young people are led to believe because of all the video games they’re exposed to. The result from all this, I really fear, is that our nation’s collective psyche has become almost “Sparta” like. We are raising a nation of warriors. Some may think this is not necessarily a bad thing. After all, we do have to protect ourselves from those who want to destroy us. My question is: Why do so many consider us an evil that must be destroyed? Are we better than a nation only of warriors? I continue to hope so, but that hope is fading as too many of our government representatives seek to replace diplomacy with war. War is nothing more than a video game to them. To those who have never experienced the horror of real combat, or have forgotten, or only wish to benefit monetarily from constant war, I say enough. Talk is cheap, yes. But war is way too expensive to allow our nation to survive. Terry L. Warkentine lives in Albuquerque’s Northeast Heights. payday loans, Page 10 campaign donations using a client’s money should report them on another online form. Use of the form would eliminate the appearance that all the money is coming from the lobbyist. Why the form isn’t being used was unclear. The argument The payday loan industry argues that it serves as a lender of last resort for many poor New Mexicans who can’t qualify for conventional loans because of lack of resources or poor credit. Additionally, the industry argues that high interest rates – as high as 1,000 percent with most loans averaging 340 percent – are necessary because of the high loan default rate. Sen. Michael Padilla, who sits on the Senate Corporations Committee, said he supported an interest rate cap, but he thought 36 percent was too low for the industry to make any money. Bullington said trying to set a flat rate cap across the spectrum of payday and title loans is unworkable. “Some companies do underwriting; some have people walking in with minimal credit checks; others do income credit checks; others do long-term loans that are a year or more; and others do very short-term loans,” Bullington said. “So this type of bill doesn’t fit the entire industry very well.” Fischmann sees no redeeming social value in an industry that can legally collect up to 1,000 percent interest. “They’re not here to help anybody; they’re just here to loot poor people. There are all kinds of complicated financial arguments about how [the industry’s argument] is not true, but I think 90 percent of the public wants interest rate caps, because they get it and they know it’s a ripoff,” he said. Payday loan lobbyists Payday lenders hired some of the most experienced lobbyists in New Mexico, including former members of the Legislature, to beat back efforts to cap interest rates during the 2015 Legislature. According to Secretary of State lobbyist registration records, working for them were: Mickey Barnett James “J.D.” Bullington Arthur Hull II Kimberly Legant Vincent Montoya Brent Moore Daniel Najjar Dea Rankin Scott Scanlon Sam Ray Robert Reich Raymond Sanchez Matejka Santillanes David Schmidt Anthony Trujillo Timothy Trujillo Source: loansharkattack.com NEWS 12 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS Newspaper Wins Damages in APD Records Case BY ABQ FREE PRESS STAFF A judge has ordered the City of Albuquerque to pay $50,925 in legal fees over the Albuquerque Police Department’s refusal to give ABQ Free Press a list of its military-style weapons. The order by Bernalillo County District Judge Alan Malott also requires the city to pay $1,426 in costs and $7,500 in damages to the newspaper and independent journalist Peter St. Cyr, who requested the inventory as part of an assignment by the newspaper. The request under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act, or IPRA, was made on Jan. 21, 2014. APD took longer than the allowable 15 days to respond to the request before ultimately denying it. In his order, Malott noted that APD waited until “the eleventh hour” before requesting an extension to consider the records request, before ultimately denying it well after its deadline for responding. APD’s delay “was not reasonable and evidences a disregard of the public policy behind IPRA,” the judge wrote. APD had claimed that the weapons inventory was exempt from disclosure under a provision of the IPRA statute that allows it to withhold documents relating to “emergency security procedures that could be used to facilitate the planning or execution of a terrorist attack.” Malott rejected that argument. The judge ordered that St. Cyr be paid $4,700 in actual damages to compensate him for time spent on the IPRA lawsuit. Another $2,700 will be paid to the plaintiffs for APD’s failure to respond to the newspaper’s request for 27 days after its statutory deadline for doing so. Malott ordered $1,426 be paid to the newspaper to reimburse it for the cost of deposing APD Chief Gorden Eden and former APD records custodian Reynaldo Chavez. Attorneys Colin Hunter and James Dory of the Barnett law firm represented St. Cyr and the newspaper in the case. boyd, Page 6 mount heavily armed assaults on houses where armed and dangerous criminals with violent criminal records were holed up. In recent years, some of the worst abuses by APD involving wrongful use of force were committed by the ROP team. In settlement of a civil-rights investigation of APD by the U.S. Department of Justice, the department disbanded it. Around the time of Sandy’s arrival, members of APD’s SWAT team and other tactical officers also began arriving. Prior to that, all of the officers negotiating with Boyd were field officers – meaning patrol officers, or beat cops – sergeants and CIT officers. At one point, they were pulled back from close contact with Boyd, and the SWAT and tactical officers took their places. Randi McGinn, special prosecutor in the case against Sandy and officer Dominique Perez, told the judge who heard the case against them that it was then that the tone of the standoff changed and became more ominous. The failed plan to subdue The sun set at 7:15 p.m. that day, and some officers apparently were concerned that it would soon be dark. And because of the rough terrain they were in, it wasn’t practical to bring in floodlights to illuminate the area, testimony at the preliminary hearing showed. The plan to get Boyd off the mountain was called a layered, nonlethal plan that involved throwing a flashbang grenade at him, shooting him with a Taser shotgun and having a K-9 police dog attack him. Sandy and Perez, who arrived at the scene at 7:11 p.m., were put in position as lethal backup shooters in case Boyd continued to resist. At 30 seconds past 7:30 p.m., the flashbang grenade was thrown at Boyd, who was on high ground above the officers. A flashbang grenade is a nonfragmentation explosive device that booms with 178 decibels and creates a flash of light so bright that it generally blinds a subject for 20 to 30 seconds. In 70 percent of the cases in which flashbangs are used, subjects fall to the ground, according to testimony in the preliminary hearing for Sandy and Perez. Right before the plan was put into effect, it appeared that Boyd was willing to leave the mountain and cooperate. “All right, don’t change up the agreement,” Boyd said as Perez and Sandy aimed their rifles at him. “I’m going to try to walk with you.” Boyd then picked up his backpack and other belongings and appeared to be ready to start walking. He had no knives in his hands. Rene Thompson Mourners left a memorial at the spot where James Boyd was killed by Albuquerque police. At that point, an officer said, “Do it,” and the flashbang grenade was thrown toward Boyd. Because the grenade landed near a rock in front of him, which possibly shielded him from the blast and light, Boyd didn’t fall to the ground when it went off. Around the same time, an officer fired a Taser shotgun round at Boyd, and the K-9 dog was set loose toward him. The Taser, which causes muscles to seize up and trigger a bodywide cramp, didn’t affect Boyd, perhaps because he was wearing five layers of clothing – four shirts and a sweat shirt – according to testimony. The K-9 dog didn’t bite Boyd as planned. The dog apparently was affected by the Taser and turned back to its handler, APD Officer Scott Weimerskirch, who ran forward toward Boyd to meet the animal. By this time, Sandy, who was providing lethal cover for Weimerskirch, moved forward as well. After the ineffective grenade, Taser and dog attack, Boyd pulled two knives from his pockets and held them about waist-high in both hands. Officers told him to hit the ground. Boyd started turning to his left – to obey the officers’ orders, the prosecution claimed – when Sandy and Perez fired at him with semi-automatic assault rifles. Sandy was nine to 10 feet away when he shot Boyd, who was hit by three shots in the 1.5 seconds it took the two officers to fire their weapons. “Everything that could go wrong with the plan did go wrong,” Klein said, adding that there was no reason the officers could not have kept talking to Boyd and then shot him with baton rounds if it got too dark. Despite the efforts to negotiate with Boyd and get into his mind, no one could. “Anyone who could have gotten into his head sure would have been welcomed on the hill that night,” Bralley said. Dennis Domrzalski is an associate editor at ABQ Free Press. Reach him at dennis@freeabq.com OPINION Letters To the Editor: Whenever anyone, whether it’s the Rio Grande Foundation or you, makes the claim that nobody rides the city bus, I have to wonder why the No. 66 Central bus is almost always full. But your article focused on how people get to work. Ignoring the fact that to get from home to just about any workplace in Albuquerque on the bus system without taking forever and at great inconvenience either calls for very good luck or very good planning, are we to assume that anyone not going to work is “nobody?” That the lame, the halt, the blind, the elderly, and the nonworking poor are “nobody?” That said, I agree with your opinion of the mayor’s rapid transit plan. He seems to think that making us look as pretty as San Jose, Calif., will make us as prosperous as that Silicon Valley city. Central Avenue is extremely well-served already. What the city bus system really needs is better feeder lines, with fixed schedules, benches at remote bus stops, and those schedules posted at every bus stop. Posted schedules are especially important on those lines that run infrequently and at irregular intervals. This, of course, is expensive, unglamorous, and for the most part, serves those with neither ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 13 money nor power, who cannot be counted on to vote for our mayor. But please, rethink your definition of “nobody.” Those of us who fit that category tend to resent it. — Patricia Mathews To the Editor: The New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy Board has historically treaded lightly on revoking police officer certifications. I am aware of cases where officers staged crime scenes or stole public property, but were allowed to continue to hold their police officer certifications after the NMLEA initially suspended them. The honesty of our police officers is paramount to the effectiveness of our judicial system. Any officer who commits an act or moral turpitude (dishonesty) such as theft or lying should have their certification permanently revoked. — Bill Elliott, via FreeABQ.com ABQ Free Press welcomes letters to the editor and bylined opinion pieces, subject to editing by the newspaper for style and length. Letters may appear in print on the newspaper’s website, www.freeabq.com. Writers should include their full name and a daytime phone number that the newspaper’s editors can use to contact them. Submissions should be sent to editor@freeabq.com PETS 14 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS CALLING ALL PETS Richard Kehl sent us this photo of Frida “staying warm on a nice spring morning.” Send it to petphotos@freeabq.com Include your name, phone number, and your pet’s name, and we’ll try to reserve their spot in the pet parade. We Keep Your Roof Healthy and Watertight Call 505-345-7663 For Your Free Estimate For All your Roofing Needs… K-Ram Roofing is There Before and After The Storm… No Worries We Offer High-Quality Residential Roofing Services: • • • • Roof Repair Roof Installation Roof Replacement Preventative Measures We have been proudly servicing the Albuquerque area for more than 35 years. 3738 Arno Street • Albuquerque, NM 87107 (505) 345-ROOF STAGES ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 15 Chatter Owes Success to Adaptability, Integrity BY MEGAN KAMERICK W hen The Beatles recorded a rooftop concert in London circa 1969, the show became a touchstone in rock history. It also signaled the end of an era. The Fab Four would record only one more album, and the group would disband later that year. When local classical collective Chatter plays the roof of a Downtown Albuquerque parking garage on Saturday, Sept. 5, the recital marks an upswing – rather than a decline – in its musical journey. Chatter’s Sunday concerts debuted in 2008 under the name The Church of Beethoven, and they have flourished. Chatter’s wild success bucks a national trend wherein the percentage of adults attending classical concerts dropped from 11.6 percent in 2002 to 8.8 percent in 2012, according to statistics from the National Endowment for the Arts. Somehow Chatter sells out on Sunday mornings and at its bimonthly evening cabarets at Hotel Andaluz. Chatter also succeeds at presenting contemporary classical works – often a tough sell – alongside more traditional pieces. Add in a spoken word segment, espresso and homemade baked goods, and the hour-long Sunday event is a far cry from a traditional symphony concert. Think Samuel Barber paired with slam poetry. Yes, that actually happened. “We sort of hit a magical sweet spot,” says artistic director David Felberg. “We’re all about accessibility. It’s very easy to go to one of our performances.” Audiences may be savoring lattes or sipping martinis. but that doesn’t means they’re any less respectful, Felberg says. “They’re still quiet when we do our performance,” he notes. “And when I walk onstage, there’s such a great energy in the air. I haven’t found that anywhere.” Associate Artistic Director James Shields believes community is key. “I think the real power of what we do is found in the act of bringing people together to share a common experience,” Shields says. Felberg and Shields recruit local musicians, friends from other places and musicians visiting New Mexico during the Santa Fe Opera season. “We get a great collection of folks who want to play with us and for us,” Felberg says. Poets also love the venue, says Don McIver, who books Chatter’s spoken-word portion. “The audience is there to listen to classical music, so they know how to listen and be super responsive,” McIver says. Chatter’s Sunday morning audiences includes both young and older classical devotees, creative types and career professionals. That’s a combination many classical groups would love to have in their audience and one they often try to attract with limited success. The most notorious pop culture example of this rebranding strategy was Sir Mix-a-Lot performing last year “Baby Got Back” with the Seattle Symphony. “There are organizations who have decided [the] Sir Mix-a-lot [model] is the only way we’ll survive,” says Pamela Michaelis, Chatter’s volunteer executive director. “Let’s bring in that ‘new’ stuff. People will hate it, but maybe it will bring in new people. Then throw in standards, and everybody will be happy. And no one is happy. Because there’s no integrity in that.” The Chatter of today is the confluence of two organizations. Felberg began Chatter: A Chamber Ensemble, in 2002. Chatter member Felix Wurman created Sunday-morning event the Church of Beethoven Chatter Flautist Jesse Tatum of the Santa Fe Opera warms up before a Chatter performance in May 2015. in 2008. Back then, it was so informal that organizers merely passed a basket around to collect donations for the musicians. After Wurman’s death, his sister laid claim to the Church of Beethoven name, forcing the group to rebrand. In 2010, the two organizations merged as Ensemble Music New Mexico. Michaelis is the president of the board of directors. A skilled fundraiser, Michaelis taps corporate sponsors and grants, but donations by individual donors comprise the bulk of Chatter’s funds. The collection baskets are long gone. Tickets are available for purchase online, and ticket sales are 41 percent of the group’s revenue. A phalanx of 26 volunteers puts in about 5,400 hours a year. This allows Chatter to run on a lean annual budget of $223,000; a majority of those operating costs, 72 percent, pay the performing musicians, authors and poets. It’s a new model for doing business because the overhead is low and the organization is adaptable, says Regina Chavez Puccetti, core arts management faculty at the University of New Mexico. “They absolutely understand who their audience is,” Puccetti says. “And their performance venues are a lot smaller and [more] intimate, and people want that.” Occasionally Chatter goes big. In 2014, Chatter achieved a milestone when it attracted 750 people to a concert south of Downtown at the Rail Yards. This was before the Rail Yards Market was open regularly, and Michaelis says the mystique of the beautiful, dilapidated buildings drew a bigger audience. It was an intriguing setting for an evening of classical music – with the sounds of birds flitting in the rafters and an occasional train rolling by. The creative seed of the rooftop concert was planted during that planning process. Michaelis was at the fire marshal’s office when she met “Jonesy.” “I showed him a Chatter postcard,” she says. “He said, ‘Oh man, Dude!’ – he kept calling me Dude – ‘Do you know about the parking ramp?’” It turned out Jonesy’s “ramp” at Copper Avenue and Third Street is ideal for a concert. Michaelis explains that there’s a natural slope, and Hotel Andaluz’ wall allows sound to resonate and bounce off. Another high wall on the Copper Avenue side and The Banque Lofts on the Central Avenue side form a sort of auditorium. And the views across Downtown and out to the Sandia Mountains are pretty spectacular. At the Sept. 5 concert, former Albuquerque Poet Laureate Hakim Bellamy will read text based on a letter from Sam Melville, a principal organizer of the 1971 Attica Prison riot, to the strains of Frederic Rzewski’s “Coming Together.” Other works on the schedule are Thomas Albert’s “A Maze (With Grace)” and John Adams’ “Chamber Symphony.” After the rooftop concert comes another landmark for Chatter: A move to Las Puertas at 1512 First Street NW. Owner Lee Blaugrund has revamped this warehouse as an event space and tango dance studio. For Chatter, Blaugrund is adding a drop-down ceiling, new lighting, a better stage and, naturally, a new coffee bar. Michaelis says The Kosmos has been a great home, but the owners put it on the market last year. In addition, Chatter now sells out every week. “That’s a wonderful problem to have … [but] it means there [are] a lot of people you’re not serving, and that’s not good,” Michaelis says. The first regular Chatter concert in the new space will be Sunday, Sept. 20. Learn more about Chatter at chatterabq.org ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 17 arts ‘Women of Wonder’ Honored at 47th Annual Bubonicon BY RENE THOMPSON B ubonicon, an Albuquerque sci-fi tradition, has been evolving for 47 years. It’s New Mexico’s longest-running sci-fi convention and geek fest, and this year’s gathering happens the last weekend in August. Bubonicon sets itself apart from other such conferences with its laser-like focus on sci-fi and fantasy literature. This year’s con promises three fantastic days and nights of events for sci-fi fans of all stripes. Revolving around the theme “Women of Wonder,” the fest itself celebrates the women of sci-fi and fantasy. This year’s guests of honor are renowned in the sci-fi and fantasy literary genres and include Tamora Pierce and Cat Valente, toastmaster Mary Robinette Kowal and guest artist Ruth Sanderson. Casi Cooper, co-chair of Bubonicon, says there will be a slew of vendors with a number of booksellers and dealers who specialize in local comic books, fantasy art and gaming merch; customized “steam punk” costumes and corsets; and convention swag. All the usual events like gaming tournaments – including a full Catan tourney called the Catan Cup – offer rewards that range from membership in next year’s con to special awards and prizes. Cooper also calls attention to the event’s art show, costume contest and widely acclaimed Green Slime Awards; the “Slime Time Live”-esque mock awards show spotlights badly made science fiction from the past year with ridicule and submersion in green slime. “The Green Slime Awards are held during the costume contest halftime show, so while the judges go off to deliberate,” Cooper says, “our Green Slime Mistress gets up there and talks about the things that didn’t go so well in science-fiction that year – specifically movies that really bombed or books that were really horrible either because [they were] super clichéd or written horribly.” Cooper notes another aspect that sets Bubonicon a head above the rest is the mass autograph session on Saturday, wherein fans can score free autographs and selfies with authors or special guests. There’s a limit of one autograph per person, and there’s no charge if you flash your convention ticket. Several cons charge upwards of $100 for access to signatures and photos with celebrity guests. Bubonicon tries to avoid that at all costs. With authors like New Mexico transplant George R.R. Martin, author of the Game of Thrones series, on the guest list, inclusive access to prime movers and shakers is a nice perk. Courtesy of the author Author and puppeteer Mary Robinette Kowal will serve as toastmaster of the 47th Annual Bubonicon. 47th Annual Bubonicon Fri., Aug. 28 - Sun., Aug. 30. Albuquerque Marriott Uptown 2101 Louisiana NE Tickets: $15 up to $45 for a fullweekend pass purchased at the door. Presale tickets, convention info: bubonicon.com and facebook.com/Bubonicon. “People can bring their previously owned books or books purchased [at the con] and have them autographed for free,” says Cooper. “So, it’s really cool because people can get an [autograph] or picture and chat with somebody they really look up to.” Mary Robinette Kowal, this year’s toastmaster, is an esteemed author with three Hugo awards under her belt and numerous other nominations for her anthologized short stories and novels. Kowal’s latest short story collection “Word Puppets” publishes Nov. 19. Artist Howard Lyon’s “Word Puppets” cover art draws the eye with vibrant colors and eerie scenery, projecting a melancholy tone inspired by its contents. When ABQ Free Press spoke to Kowal by phone she expressed excitement about her honorary Bubonicon position. Kowal is not only a writer; she’s also an accomplished professional puppeteer and has worked on Jim Henson productions like “Sesame Street” and “Elmo in Grouchland.” Kowal is currently hard at work on the Jim Henson Company’s Diversity Puppeteer Training Initiative Workshop. The workshop’s goal is to make puppeteering more accessible and inclusive for all cultures and backgrounds. “[The Jim Henson Company] looked at their cast realized they were all white guys,” says Kowal, “and they needed not to be. So basically they’ve brought on a bunch of people of color and women, and it really is great.” Kowal’s catalog includes the Glamourist Histories series, the sort of magical adventures that might have resulted if Jane Austen walked on the grimmer side of the Regency. Kowal revealed that the inspiration for this series originated with topics Austen herself wrote about like slavery and exploitation. In the Glamourist Histories series, Kowal sheds new light on these historical and contemporary issues with a clear, modern message about greed and venality. “One of the things I enjoy about historical fiction is that it allows us to talk about contemporary issues in ways that don’t immediately cause readers to become completely desensitized,” says Kowal. “We talk about how it’s this beautiful and lovely period in history with magnificent dresses, but we forget that it was all built upon slavery.” Kowal notes that Jane Austen used many references to and commentary on slavery in her novels. “That is exactly why I wrote this book. ... For Austen’s contemporaries all the excerpts she put in [were] apparent; but to people now, it seems as if she doesn’t touch it. So I wanted to write a book that was as clear to a modern reader about [these] topics … as it would have once been heard.” On advice to aspiring writers, Kowal says what worked for her was cont. on page 26 ARTS 18 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS FOR RENTALS of motion picture and consumer video, gear, cameras and audio Field & Frame FOR NEW MEXICAN FILMAKERS Rental-Retail Camera, Sound, Expendables, DSLR Bodies, Lenses, Matte Boxes, Filters, Batteries, CF and SD Cards, Cables, Mics, HDMI -SDI Connectors, Gaffers and Camera Tape, Rain Covers, Blue and Green Screens 107 TULANE DR SE 505.265.5678 Matters of the Art: Spirited Animals, the Pueblo and Earth BY LISA BARROW Cirque du vata Even though Gatas y Vatas is going down in Seattle this year, the all-ages music fest featuring solo female performers (including trans and cis women, as well as genderqueer and non-binary folks) hasn’t forgotten the many nuevomexicano fans it spent its first five years cultivating. An upcoming benefit event embraces all the joyous experimentalism and performative magic you’ve come to expect from this bleeding-edge cultural force. On Sunday, Aug. 16, fans old and new can head to Tiguex Park (1800 Mountain NW) for Animales Animados: Monsters Under the Bed. While many of the hipper musical events around town plant their feet firmly in the old-enough-to-drink realm, one aspect of this partnership between the artists of Gatas y Vatas and Animales Animados is an openness to performers all along the age spectrum. Kicking off at 4:30 p.m., the show spotlights aerial dance from local sirens of the somatic arts AirDance New Mexico. Not only are AirDance New Mexico’s adult and junior companies joining forces for this benefit event, but the emerging musicians themselves are comprised of girls and women. The otherworldly Lady Uranium, for example, takes the stage with 10-year-old A.L.A.S. to soundtrack airdancer Joanna Furgal and her 15-year-old partner Layla Getz. The musical lineup also includes exquisite Burqueña powerhouses Lilah Rose, Bigawatt, Floozy, Wychdokta, Star Canyon and Anna Mall. Funds raised from the $10 suggested donation go to support the continuing evolution of Gatas y Vatas. For more information, visit gatasyvatas.com or the event page at on.fb.me/1Ixy6PF. Pueblo passion “A special note to young people” at the front of “Laguna Pueblo: A Photographic History” (UNM Press, hardcover, $39.95) attests, “You are composed of parts from each of your ancestors / To know who you are, you must know who they were / To know where you are going, you must know where they have been.” The pages that follow present these ideas in tangible form. The authors, renowned photographer Lee Marmon and his longtime FIELDANDFRAME@YAHOO.COM friend Tom Corbett, have produced a sumptuous volume of black-and-white photography, Marmon family lore and oral histories of the Laguna people with the long view in mind. Perhaps no other published history of a Southwestern pueblo rivals “Laguna Pueblo” for its historical scope, social breadth and sheer visual grace. Touching on everything from the arrival of the railroad in the 1880s to the shifting attitudes about uranium mining on tribal lands to biographical anecdotes about individual pueblo personalities, Marmon and Corbett’s book lays open the human heart of the six villages that comprise Laguna Pueblo. Embroider your life with a texture of fascinating stories well told when Marmon and Corbett discuss their seminal collaboration at Bookworks (4022 Rio Grande NW) on Saturday, Aug. 22, at 3 p.m. For more information, visit bkwrks. com or call 344-8139. Earth shattering A slew of new exhibitions at Downtown gallery 516 ARTS offer up art and artists as a means to close the chasm cont. on page 21 Say (Mac and) Cheese! BY M. Brianna Stallings T hink all-American summer foods: watermelon, barbeque, lemonade ... and macaroni and cheese? If that last one didn’t immediately spring to mind, don’t worry. As delicious as mac and cheese undoubtedly is, it’s not exactly high on the list of dinner fun in the summertime. But guess what? The Macaroni and Cheese Fest arrives soon in Albuquerque to change all that. Starting at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 22, hungry 505 folks are invited to sample gourmet takes on this beloved comfort food from a variety of local chefs. Food and drink samples will be provided by more than 40 restaurants, wineries and breweries like Gold Street Caffè, Canteen Brewhouse, and St. Clair Winery & Bistro. Curious about the menu? Standouts include: • Applewood Smoked Chicken Mac & Cheese (Chef Knoulan, Ponderosa Winery) • Braised Brisket Mac & Cheese (Chef Pedro, Kasey’s Steakhouse) • Cocoa Butter Lobster Mac & Cheese (Chef Esperanza, Route 66 Buffet) • Green Chile Bacon Mac & Cheese (Chefs of Bravo! Cucina Italiana) • White Truffle Mac & Cheese (Chef David, Soul & Vine) Once you’ve had your fill, vote for your favorites, Dana Robinson and the top three chefs win prizes and a 3-foottall fork trophy. Sweets and artisanal goodies will also be available. The admission may seem pricey, but your $45 ticket actually gets you a lot. Savor unlimited mac & cheese samples and vote for your faves; quaff half-ounce booze tastings galore (beer, wine and liquor available); play beer pong or croquet, listen to music from the Fabulous Martini-Tones; and park for free. Leave the kids and pets with a sitter for this 21-plus food fest; bring your ID, sunscreen, lawn chairs and blankets. Anyone under 21 will not be admitted. The Macaroni & Cheese Festival is co-presented by American General Media and St. Clair Winery and Bistro. Proceeds benefit the New Mexico Cancer Center Foundation, which helps families pay for day-to-day cancer treatment costs. Call 768-6020 or visit themacandcheesefest.com for more info. The Macaroni and Cheese Festival Saturday, Aug. 22, from 1 to 5 p.m. Anderson-Abruzzo Albuquerque International Balloon Museum 9201 Balloon Museum Dr NE Tickets: $45 FOOD/DRINK ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 19 Deep Dish: The Happiest of Hours, Part 2 BY ARIANE JAROCKI T he second installment of our Albuquerque happy hour coverage reveals an extraordinary trinity of joy purveyors. Even the toughest of weeks are no match for the Three Sisters, a sleeping giant and the Haute-Savoie of the High Desert. Flower Celebration Salad, which is a bed of carrot greens, watercress and arugula crowned with edible flowers – including pansies, nasturtium, and squash blossoms – and an artful drizzle of prickly pear vinaigrette. The result is perfectly sweet yet earthy greens. Someone whisked a Tri-color Tomato Caprese Salad and Vietnamese Hand Rolls by, and I envied a neighboring party from a distance. Savoy Wine Bar & Grill Pueblo Harvest Café 2401 12th Street NW bit.ly/puebloharvest 724-3510, indianpueblo.org/visit/café Party on the Patio on Thursday, Friday and Saturday Every week from Thursday through Saturday, Pueblo Harvest Café showcases local musicians, creating an immersive “getaway” at their Party on the Patio. Ten bucks grants you access to drink specials and an all-you-can-eat pizza bar on the patio; the Ancestral Pueblo-meets-modern minimalism-meets-Pueblo Revival ambience is exemplified on the patio by the contrast of latilla ceiling and geometric skylights. The pizza is baked right then and there in an horno, a beehive-shaped, outdoor adobe oven of Native American invention. As far as toppings go, your regularly scheduled vegetarian and carnivorous heart’s desires are here. My Top 2 topping combos were sun dried tomato, olive and pepperoni with a cream sauce; and pesto, red onion, and black olives with a tomato sauce. If you’re not an anchovy person, be advised that they’re in the mix, so keep your wits about you. It is entirely possible to mistake these potent tiny, briny fishes for say, a mushroom. Servers snake gracefully through a gauntlet of tables to take your drink order. I went with a Lemon Ginny, which combines simple syrup, Sanpellegrino Limonata, gin and mint. There are a bevy of alcoholic options ranging from margaritas to beer flights. If you’re living la vida gluten-free, the rotating appetizer menu may be more your speed. It evolves every three weeks, and that keeps the flavor palate fresh and creative. I savored the Try the Musubi, a savory Hawaiian treat. Teriyaki Spam is placed on sticky rice, and the whole shebang is then wrapped in nori aka seaweed. It’s a salty, hearty combo that proves an unexpectedly satisfying snack. Adieux 420 Central SW adieuxabq.com 243-0028 Happy hour daily This café is Downtown’s sleeping giant. Adieux has a friendly, laidback vibe. It’s the sort of joint where you meet friends for lunch or a round of post-work, pre-dinner spirits. A spectrum of fine liquors is displayed for your perusal. The bartender can whip you up anything from classics like gimlets and manhattans to brandnew, experimental specials. Lately Chef Thomas Groff has been brewing tinctures to promote their forthcoming seasonal drink menu. Happy hour at Adieux happens every day from 4 to 6 p.m. Adieux’s menu may be experiencing its best incarnation yet. Staples like Frito pies, rice bowls, and tacos are still around. Pro-tip: The carnitas sells out quickly, so plan accordingly. My faves are the Pully, a pulled-pork BBQ sandwich heaped with coleslaw, and the Banh Mi sandwich that pairs mushroom pate with pork loin. A superb vegetarian choice is the Bulbasaur sandwich, a marinated-andgrilled eggplant accented by green harissa, pickled beets, spinach and garlic mayonnaise. Traditionally made from African red peppers, Adieux’s harissa is a reimagined spread composed of green chiles, jalapenos and cilantro. All sandwiches are now served on house-baked bread. Landing somewhere between bolillo and baguette, the bread is a crispy, chewy masterpiece. Feeling adventurous? 10601 Montgomery NE savoyabq.com 294-9463 Happy hour daily This Northeast Heights staple hosts a brilliant, early happy hour. Every day from 3 to 6 p.m., there’s something for all tastes on special. Tuesday’s happy hour options include margaritas and martinis built for two and a Scotch Spirit Flight. I found the “Two for Tuesdays” title and description – “All night specials on selected appetizers, desserts and cocktails” – misleading. I read that as “buy one, get one free,” but it’s actually two items paired on one plate for a very low price, which is still a fantastic deal. The star of the show was the Slider Duo with chicken. The grilled chicken breast duo is topped with caramelized onions and paired with a mound of parmesan-truffle fries. The chicken was moist and tender, but the fries really hogged the spotlight. They’re reminiscent of the fries at thoroughly missed eatery La Provence. Spicy, smoky house-made ketchup adds another shouldn’t-miss dimension to the starchy bliss. The “Two for” menu has an oyster special and Crispy Mahi-mahi Tacos. Since Mahi-mahi is my Number 1, I dove right in. I was vaguely disappointed by the overpowering breading. I refocused my attention and palate on the Spanish Red Sangria’s bouquet of apple, cinnamon and citrus. My final happy hour order was the Fontina Fondue drizzled with balsamic vinegar, and it left me with an authentic half-smile. FOOD 20 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS House of Pho Sates ‘Hot Tooth’ By Ariane Jarocki H ouse of Pho (4565 San Mateo NE, Suite A) is nestled in Montgomery Plaza among outlet retailers such as Ross and Burlington Coat Factory. The new Vietnamese restaurant is quickly gaining a reputation as a hidden gem. Housed in the old Ahmo’s Gyros space, House of Pho specializes in broth-based rice noodle soup pho (pronounced “fuh”). The joint also offers standards such as spring rolls, bún cha (grilled pork with rice vermicelli) and com dia at reasonable prices that accommodate spontaneous culinary adventure. Staffers are friendly, personable and happy to offer menu advice; that’s a real boon for pho newbies. My Vietnamese romance began with the soup and has progressed to a fairly inclusive range. Into heat? Try the Hot & Spicy Beef Noodle Soup. I love spicy food. I was advised to try it mild, and I’m glad I did. If your food is never spicy enough, you might try the full-strength version. This graceful soup floats chewy udon noodles, buttery Wagyu beef shank and Vietnamese ham in a lemongrass beef broth. Jalapeños and red cabbage accompany the traditional pho add-ons: basil, lime and bean sprouts. The broth’s flavor was never overpowered by heat. Awash in food-joy, the spice was a delight for the senses. I dabbed sweat from my brow, and the staff knowingly refilled my water. I’m not a glutton for punishment; let’s just say I have a “hot tooth.” To ensure my judgment wasn’t compromised by an adrenaline rush, I returned to House of Pho. This time, I ordered Tofu Spring Rolls. I usually find these spring rolls lackluster. To be honest, they often seem like nothing more than an afterthought vegetarian option. These spring rolls are a home run for everyone from vegans to omnivores. Sliced tofu is fried crispy before it’s wrapped with vermicelli, lettuce and mint. House of Pho is also a peanut-free restaurant, so instead of the traditional peanut sauce, they serve a divine, homemade hoisin-based sauce. The juxtaposition of crisp tofu, ultra-fresh greens and sticky vermicelli creates a complex taste and texture combination that’s completed by the umami dipping sauce. For the meat-eating contingent, I heartily recommend the Grilled Pork Rice Plate. Thinly sliced pork is served atop steamed rice with lettuce, cucumbers, tomato and a vinegary-sweet dipping sauce. The marination results in a pleasant, smoky undertone. The meat is lean, gristle-free and low in calories without a discernible loss of flavor. Other menu highlights include House of Pho the Spicy Stir-fried Curry Lemongrass Chicken, Rice 4565 San Mateo NE, Suite A Vermicelli with Grilled 872-2430 Shrimp & Egg Rolls and bit.ly/houseofphoABQ French Roasted Coffee with Condensed Milk. House of Pho Pho Tai with Slices of Eye Round Steak DUKE CITY BINGO We play bingo EVERY DAY and EVERY NIGHT CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED ATM EXTENDED PARKING • SECURITY OFFICERS • ALL AGES CAN PLAY • CLEAN BUILDING • SMOKING/NON-SMOKING AVAILABLE HIGH-DEFINITION MONITORS PACKS FOR ANY BUDGET OR FAMILY BUDGET WE PAY UP TO $300,000 MONTHLY IN “CASH PRIZES” ALL PROCEEDS GO BACK TO SUPPORT LOCAL NON-PROFITS • EACH SPEEDY PAYS $100 • TWO $1000 COVER ALLS EACH DAY • DOORS OPEN AT 11am • DAY SESSION STARTS AT 12:30pm, NIGHT AT 7pm DUKECITYBINGO.NET • 505.293.5676 • 11342 LEXINGTON NE, ABQ NM 87123 ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 21 screens Feminist Thriller Makes Its Presence ‘Felt’ BY SAMANTHA ANNE CARRILLO Y ou’ve never seen anything like feminist psychological thriller “Felt” on the silver screen. Director Jason Banker (“Toad Road”) and artist Amy Everson co-wrote the film’s narrative, drawing on Everson’s real-life experience and her provocative art. The premise is that protagonist Amy (played by Everson) is living a “fucking nightmare.” The audience isn’t privy to the gory details, but Amy’s introductory narration reveals that she relives this trauma every waking moment and in recurring nightmares. For survivors of sexual assault, post-traumatic stress disorder aka PTSD can take many behavioral forms. Amy’s unresolved anger, hypervigilance and dissociation serve as everyday reminders of what happened to her. Art-house sensibilities, including subversive cinematography, dioramas and surreal scenarios, abound in “Felt,” but the realism of the film’s dialogue and character development keeps the work from feeling like an overzealous thesis project. Perhaps Banker’s background in documentary filmmaking can be credited with balancing stylistic and semantic concerns with such grace. An OKCupid date goes horribly wrong when Amy’s would-be suitor opens with a tasteless rant about roofies; the romantic frat boy likens date rape-drugs like Rohypnol to “the bar Santa Claus,” “mansplaining” that getting roofied is just an excuse women use for sleeping with several guys in one night. When Amy recoils, he notes he’s just being honest. “You’re honestly a dick,” notes Amy. This interaction is emblematic of Amy’s typical experience with guys. But everything changes when she meets Kenny (Kentucker Audley). It’s not love at first sight. In fact, Amy and a pal offer Kenny a ride and then kick him out of their car. But then Amy runs into him at work. Her suitably eccentric day job involves dancing around in a chicken costume to advertise hot Amplify Releasing Amy models her third-wave feminist superhero costume. wings. “Eat my meat,” our heroine squawks. But this meet-cute is the start of a seemingly beautiful romance. Amy might have found the perfect guy. He may not understand why his girlfriend is dressing up in weird, phallus-inclusive costumes but he listens when she tries to explain. He throws her a vagina-themed birthday party. Is Kenny too good to be true? Some reviewers have noted that the work’s hysterical ending seems like a foregone conclusion. I disagree, and the finale of “Felt” was the only part I found genuinely “disturbing.” A little – or a lot – of gore is fine with me, but I became so invested in Amy’s phenomenally fleshed-out character that I expected more from her … and for her. You’ve never seen anything like this at your local cineplex, but I’m cautiously optimistic that the future promises more “Felt”-like chick flicks. paintings, sculpture, photography and wearable art, its contemporary artists grapple with the difficulty of change. “Bleed,” a work in oil, colored pencil and Sharpie on “shotgunned plywood” by Lee Lee, is a gorgeous example. Nina Montenegro’s “Last Drops of Lake Mead from Souvenirs of the Anthropocene,” a collection of found objects, and Wendy Mason’s “Fragrance of 2009,” which employs a potato and a perfume pump, go for the jugular with wry humor. “Warm and Fuzzy,” in the project room, corrals 3Dprinted, responsive objects created by Mark Lee Koven into an opportunity to explore data with senses other than your eyes. All three exhibitions open Saturday, Aug. 29, from 6 to 8 p.m. at 516 ARTS (516 Central SW), and run through Oct. 31. View the program guide and other deets at 516arts.org or call 242-1445. The gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. Just around the corner, Central Features (109 Fifth Street SW) is getting in on the “HABITAT” action with a “Knew Normal” satellite exhibition. It also opens on Samantha Anne Carrillo is a devout Situationist, a third-wave feminist and an associate editor at ABQ Free Press. Email her at samantha@freeabq.com matters of the art, Page 18 between the reality of global climate change – so often overwhelming when we actually pause to mull it over – and our personal or communal ability to take action. “Addressing the challenges before us all will take a wealth of creativity and collaboration,” says executive director Suzanne Sbarge in the program guide for “HABITAT: Exploring Climate Change Through Art,” “for which the arts provide a fertile platform.” “Off the Charts” offers representations of where we are. Some pieces, like the lushly colored “Jerry’s Map” by Jerry Gretzinger and “transscape 1” by Jane Lackey, made with paint, tape and thread on kozo paper, do so in the form of familiar maps turned on their heads. Others, like, Nathalie Miebach’s sculpture and threedimensional musical expression, “The Fifteen Ships of Georges Banks,” entangles meteorological data about Hurricane Noel with an old sea shanty and materials like wood and rope. “Knew Normal” conflates the environment of self with the environment at large. Through drawings, Aug. 29, but only runs until Oct. 3. “Control Room” confronts the $8.33 billion “nuclear renaissance” of Waynesboro, Ga. in the face of our troubling history of nuclear meltdowns. “Regeneration,” featuring the work of Nina Montenegro, includes map weavings, cyanotype portraits of life re-emerging from cracked earth in Western American landscapes and wax tree rubbings juxtaposed with fingerprints. Central Features is open Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call 243-3390 or visit centralfeatures.com to learn more. Lisa Barrow is a member of the Dirt City writers collective, tweets with exceeding irregularity @OhLisaBarrow and most recently served as arts and lit editor and web editor at the Weekly Alibi. 22 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS SCREENS Standing Room Only: Betting on a Dark Horse BY HUGH ELLIOTT L et’s take a moment to salute the great American tradition that was once Saturday morning cartoons. When I was a kid, Friday was pizza night so Saturday morning meant a slice of cold, leftover pizza that I’d carry along to the living room and watch my favorite shows. My parents slept in and since I was lucky enough to be an only child, I was King of the Schedule. While I loved classics like “The Jetsons,” my favorites were more serious and adventurous and included “Jonny Quest.” I dreamt that one day, I too would be whisked away to be raised in exotic locales by a handsome doctor. Oh well. The heady combination of a lack of parental control and improbable fantasy still fuels the allure of cartoons for many people. Even as we grew older and “cartoons” became “animated shows,” we recall that buzz. Many people still think animation is mostly for kids. After all, you’re watching a genre that forces you to accept a reality composed of colored blobs, such as Marge Simpson’s towering blue beehive. My animated favorites as an adult, like “King of the Hill,” “Bob’s Burgers” and “Archer,” are sharp and funny and remind me that silly isn’t such a bad thing. Then there’s the Netflix series “Bojack Horseman.” Netflix recently released the second season of this odd, biting and sometimes disturbing animated series about a faded television star from the ‘90s who happens to be a horse. Bojack isn’t a lives-in-a-stable horse like Mr. Ed. Voiced by Will Arnett (“Arrested Development”), Bojack is an upright-walking, talking horse actor who once starred in the popular ‘90s sitcom “Horsin’ Around.” That show was about three human orphans who move into Bojack’s home and the wackiness that ensues. Think “Full House” with more hay for dinner. Here, however, Bojack isn’t the only animal with anthropomorphic cred. The whole series features various animals inhabiting different Netflix walks of life – from Bojack Horseman (Will Arnett) and his ex-girlfriend/agent Carolyn (Amy Sedaris) share a bittersweet moment. Bojack’s feline agent/ ex-girfriend Princess Bad”), Patton Oswalt, Stephen Colbert, instead delving deeper than you think Carolyn (voiced by the Kristen Schaal (“Flight of the Conanimation can go. In Season 2, the always eclectic Amy Sedaris) to his cords”), Stanley Tucci (“The Lovely series tackles the Bill Cosby scandal acting rival Mr. Peanutbutter, a Yellow Bones”), Olivia Wilde (“House, M.D.”), with a beloved late-night talk show Lab voiced by Paul F. Tompkins. In J. K. Simmons (“Law & Order”), Maria host named Hank Hippopopalaus Bojack’s world, animals and humans Bamford (“Adventure Time”), Wendy (a hippopotamus, natch) who’s been interact in an egalitarian manner, Malick (“Frasier”), Lisa Kudrow accused of sexual assault by multiple and they pretty much do everything (“Friends”), Alan Arkin (“Glengarry women. The show explicitly confronts together – and I do mean everything, Glen Ross”), Anjelica Huston (“The the way fame blinds the public and although thankfully we’re spared Royal Tenenbaums”), Paul McCartney feeds the victim-blaming rallying cry. some details. The scenario is delivered (The Beatles), Daniel Radcliffe (“Harry The fact that this show is a “cartoon” without explanation. The animals’ Potter”) and on and on. It’s amazing that stars talking animals partially involvement is highlighted to comic they got all these people to work on obscures just how on-point its critique effect with an arachnid movie director this niche, oddball show; it also makes of media complicity in protecting stars named “Quentin Tarantulino,” a film for a great, post-show guessing game from reality is. It’s truly must-see TV, studio called Parrotmount and an and Googling session. as few shows of any kind are willing airline company known as Pandam. It is also incredibly appropriate that to be so brutal these days. All characters, both animal and so many famous actors contribute, as If you haven’t already, binge-watch human, are voiced by a roll call of wellone of the show’s primary themes is the first season of “Bojack Horseman” known actors. Aside from Sedaris and the confabulated reality of show busibefore starting Season 2. That will bring Arnett, there’s Aaron Paul (“Breaking ness and “Hollywoo,” so called when you up to speed on the series’ weird, a celebrity (guess who!) stole the “D” hallucinogenic vibe. You’ll snicker and from the hillside signage. Once a bona smirk as you get to know the characters. fide star, Bojack’s career peaked when Season 2 will make you laugh, some“Horsin’ Around” was a hit. Fifteen times loudly and uncontrollably, but years later, he’s desperately clinging you’ll also be struck by how “Bojack” to his B-list status and is rapidly being perfectly illustrates that nagging inner forced to confront a world that has voice compelling us to chase the carrot largely forgotten his minimal appeal dangling in front of us.” I vaguely recall and talent. Arnett is often cast as a being a carefree kid eating leftover world-weary character on the grift so pizza and watching my cartoons alone. his voice fits perfectly here. Bojack is “Bojack Horseman” walks us through still semi-famous but mainly hears learning to let go of the past by instead tourists shouting “Say your catchanimating a world that, despite its phrase!” – if they recognize him at essential absurdity, depicts reality more all – and the show gallops along with than it does fantasy. his midlife identity crisis. Can we relate to an animated horse? “Bojack Horseman” is available to How about one who was once a stream anytime on Netflix. household name and lives in a mansion with his entourage? You might Hugh Elliott is a writer and artist living be surprised. “Bojack Horseman” in California who rarely uses his Twitter avoids cheap shots and easy laughs, handle @wehogayman SCREENS ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 23 Film Capsules that centers on a megavillain, his minions and three orphans named Margo, Edith and Agnes. “Minions” itself is a prequel-slash-spinoff. Is it a metaphor for evolution or devolution? Sandra Bullock, Jon Hamm and Geoffrey Rush contribute vocal talent. 91 minutes. Rated PG MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION Amnesiac BY SAMANTHA ANNE CARRILLO COMING SOON AMNESIAC Was the 1990 filmic adaptation of Stephen King’s novel “Misery” too nuanced for your discerning taste in obsession and torture-themed movies? If so, Michael Polish’s “Amnesiac” is your dream come true. Featuring Polish’s wife Kate Bosworth as “Woman” and rising horror star Wes Bentley as “Man,” there’s no subtlety to speak of. Can Bosworth summon Kathy Bateswith-a-sledgehammer gravitas? There’s only one way to find out. 90 minutes. Unrated (Opens Friday 8/14) FELT Read our Review on page 21. 79 minutes. Unrated (Opens Friday 8/14) Guild Cinema Fri-Sun 8:30 p.m. STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON Seminal West Coast rap crew N.W.A. (an acroynm for “Niggaz Wit Attitude”) gets the biopic treatment in F. Gary Gray’s much-buzzed about feature film “Straight Outta Compton.” O’Shea Jackson, Jr. plays his real-life father, Ice Cube. Fresh-faced versions of Dr. Dre, Eazy-E, MC Ren and DJ Yella round out the thespians who depict the gangstas of a band once known as the “world’s most dangerous group.” 147 minutes. Rated R (Opens Friday 8/14) STILL PLAYING AMY Chanteuse Amy Winehouse was born, she lived and she died. In between days, her prodigious talent as a singer became apparent. As she began to explore her gifts, addiction descended like a hurricane. Asif Kapadia’s documentary relies heavily on archival recordings of Amy on Amy. Like the lady herself, the result is astonishingly beautiful and ultimately tragic. 128 minutes. Rated R ANT MAN Marvel reaches toward self-referential humor only to come up with an at-oncemuddled-by-detail-and-confused-in-tone clunker. A guy (Michael Douglas) gets hold of a suit that shrinks him to – wait for it – the size of an ant. Naturally, hijinks involving high-stakes theft and geopolitics ensue. Douglas and cast members including Paul Rudd, T.I., John Slattery and Bobby Cannavale do their utmost to urge the plot forward. 117 minutes. Rated PG-13 INSIDE OUT Pixar creates an authentically human simulacra of the real world. It exists in the mind of a distraught adolescent named Riley. Emotions are personified, just like they sometimes are here on Earth. Joy (Amy Poehler) smiles beatifically. Disgust (Mindy Kaling) rolls her eyes at something Anger (Lewis Black) says. When onscreen and anthropomorphic, sentiment proves unexpectedly compelling. Take note, “real world.” 94 minutes. Rated PG JURASSIC WORLD Where’s Jeff Goldblum when you need him? Probably curled up with Hal Hartley’s latest script. Truth be told, his absence doesn’t hurt this film. Jurassic World is really a spectacular coming-out party for Chris Pratt’s muscles. At this point in the franchise, reiterations of and variations on previous themes are getting pretty bitey. Like some genetically engineered dinosaurs. 123 minutes. Rated PG-13 MINIONS If you have young children, you can probably skip this review. The “minion” originates from “Despicable Me.” This is some sort of children’s film franchise The fifth film in the M:I series finds Impossible Mission Force leader Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) no longer an unofficial part of the U.S. government, but he’s still out there doing secret agent things. Incoming CIA Chief Alan Hunley (Alec Baldwin), former IMF colleagues Brandt (Jeremy Renner) and Benji (Simon Pegg) and British agent/frenemy Isla Faust (Rebecca Ferguson) add interest to two hours and 11 minutes of fights, crashes, fireballs and beatings. 131 minutes. Rated PG-13 MR. HOLMES More recently acquainted with Robert Downey, Jr.’s brand of methodical, substance-abusing detective? This is altogether different but succeeds on its terms. Sherlock Holmes (Ian McKellen) spends his golden years solving mysteries, especially those that confounded him the first time around. Surprise! The master sleuth refuses to retire, instead revisiting a perplexing case from the past. Laura Linney costars. 104 minutes. Rated PG TERMINATOR GENISYS Arnold is back, and he kills. More specifically, the latest film in the Terminator franchise proves that the past is always fertile ground for the future. The Terminator has aged, there is an alternative timeline to reckon with, and the Earth and its human inhabitants may still be doomed. Tune in this week for the stunning coup de grace. 126 minutes. Rated PG-13 TRAINWRECK Amy Schumer and Judd Apatow team up to bring the romantic life of substance-friendly, commitment-phobic journalist Amy (played by Schumer) to the big screen. Amy is assigned a feature on golden boy/sports surgeon Aaron (Bill Hader), and the polar opposites fall hard for each other. But as many a Facebook relationship status proclaims, “it’s complicated.” Tilda Swinton plays Amy’s listicle-loving editor a Maxim-esque men’s magazine, and LeBron James portrays Aaron’s “Downton Abbey”obsessed BFF. 124 minutes. Rated R STAGES 24 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS Taking Down Rape Culture with Laci Green BY M. BRIANNA STALLINGS You didn’t say yes, but you didn’t say no either. Look at what you’re wearing. What’d you think would happen? He’s famous, so of course he had a lot of sex ... but rape? I don’t think so. H ow many times in casual con versation have we all heard – or even said – these things? An honest acknowledgment would tell us “too often.” A brutally honest one would remind us that such ideas are reflective of rape culture. It’s a world in which we pretend that sexual violence isn’t pervasive, and that it isn’t perpetuated by heteronormative notions of insatiable male sexuality and/or perpetual female sexual availability. All the while, rape culture blames victims, tells women that their worth is 100 percent body-based and cracks jokes about men dropping the soap in prison showers. One of the most common sites of sexual assault is the college campus. Statistics show that one in four female students and one in six male students are sexually violated while attending university. And while drugs, alcohol and peer pressure all exacerbate an already alarming situation, so too does silence. That’s why the University of New Mexico is seeking to open up a campus-wide conversation about sex, respect, consent and boundaries. And what better way to talk about sex with incoming iPhone Generation freshmen than by bringing one of their most popular vloggers online? The UNM Women’s Resource Center, in conjunction with LoboRESPECT, the Dean of Students Office, Residence Life and ASUNM Special Events, presents YouTube personality Laci Green, creator of online sex ed series “Sex Plus.” The tremendously popular show reaches 5 million young adults every month, in over 125 countries. An outspoken sex-positive feminist, Green’s videos are incisive, direct and engaging. In addition, Green is also the host of “MTV Braless,” a YouTube series presented by MTV that takes a look at sexual representations in pop culture. Twenty-five-year-old Green will share her presentation “Taking Down Rape Culture” in the UNM Student Union Building on Thursday Aug. 20, at 7:30 p.m. Although Green was unavailable for interviews, three representatives from the Women’s Resource Center had plenty of time to talk with ABQ Free Press about Laci Green, as well as the rise in campus-wide initiatives to raise awareness about student sexual health. We sat down with Caitlin Henke, program specialist; Angela Catena, Center counselor and graduate program assistant with the Gendered Violence Program; and Mallory Christensen, student office assistant. ABQ Free Press: Why is it important to have Laci Green speak at UNM? Caitlin Henke: We as a team have been working a lot to address this issue on campus. Angela worked to create a program to train incoming Laci Green YouTube star Laci Green visits UNM to raise awareness about rape culture. students through orientation. Students went wild over it. So we were thinking about this in terms of welcoming students back: how do we get them engaged? We thought this was a really good way. There’s a lot of efforts in the first weeks of school, and we needed a big, high-profile one. Angela Catena: Laci was on our radar for a while. We’d had some talks about two years ago about bringing her here, but we just didn’t have time to do it then. So recently, with more University collaboration, we were able to reach out to our partners and say, “We want to do this. Will you help us make it happen?” and everyone was on board. Do you think that collaboration with different campus departments has led to an increased respect for these ideas in everyday campus life? Catena: For a long time I think the responsibility fell on the Women’s Resource Center, but we were also the ones who were bringing up the conversation. Now people are happy to join us at the table and ask what can be done. In terms of student involvement, it’s always been there but the efforts have just been with smaller groups of students trying to do it on their own. Now it’s more of a collaborative effort. This is one of the first times I’ve seen students get this much support from administration. What can you tell our readers about Laci’s presentation on rape culture? Henke: Based on other universities, we know that this presentation has been really well received. She has an inviting style which is important for this topic. She doesn’t shy away from talking about things that are emotionally charged, but she does it in a way that everyone is still able to participate. She makes people want to listen to her. Catena: Laci’s direct but not in an offensive way. I love that about her. She does throw her opinion in there, but not in a way that’s imposing it on anyone else. Then, once Laci leaves, we have continued curriculum just to get the point across. We know that a one-time shot isn’t going to be effective in terms of providing this information. Marjorie Christensen: As a young, traditional college student, someone like Laci makes you want to listen. She’s calling us out on things that we didn’t realize we were participating in. That’s what we want to do with this: make people listen. And after Laci [leaves], we want to keep people talking, as well. M. Brianna Stallings writes so you don’t have to. Taking Down Rape Culture: A Presentation by Laci Green Thursday Aug. 20, 7:30 p.m. UNM Student Union Building Tickets: Free for UNM students, staff and faculty with ID. $10 general admission tickets for the public available online at unmtickets.com For more info, call the Women’s Resource Center at 277-3716. music ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 25 Within Range: On Killah Priest, Purity Ring & Prayers BY SAMANTHA ANNE CARRILLO C areful readers may have noticed a perceptible shift in the coverage dates of my biweekly Within Range column. It’s a (literally) forward-thinking move to focus more heavily on coverage of the week after publication and beyond. The logic behind this strategy is that regular readers of ABQ Free Press will have access to concert deets before any other local newspaper’s audience. You’ll be one of the first to know there’s a noteworthy show happening in Albuquerque. The mission of our music section is to deliver diverse, relevant interviews, previews and reviews of local and touring artists and bands, upcoming concerts and new releases. If you’re the spontaneous type, follow us at facebook.com/ABQFreePress and instagram.com/abqfreepress for up-todate and last-minute reminders of shows we covered and those we couldn’t make space for in our print edition. We write this paper for you, the reader, and we want to know what you think. Is our hiphop coverage lacking? Do you crave more shoegaze news? Want deeper insight into the history of traditional nuevomexicano music? How do you feel about playlists? Email me at samantha@freeabq.com. Let’s take that first-week leap forward together – past Modest Mouse at Expo New Mexico (300 San Pedro NE) on Tuesday, Aug. 18, and several other worthwhile concerts – to Friday, Aug. 21, when Killah Priest brings his Gordian lyricism and star-studded production cred to Launchpad (618 Central SW). This 21-plus show is the perfect concert to attend with that extended family member who decries all rap and hip-hop as mindless glorification of thug life. On his 2013 double-album “The Psychic World of Walter Reed,” Priest requires a lot from his listeners. If fans want to fully “get” his poetry, a working knowledge of the Bible, ancient history and astronomy couldn’t hurt. The beat starts at 9 p.m., and presale tickets are $15. On Saturday, Aug. 22, at the El Rey Theater (622 Central SW), Irish electro godhead Sian brings his brand of classic, modern techno to town on the “Anthracite” album tour. His latest, 23-track release “Anthracite” dropped on his wildly popular (read: Top Five) techno label Octopus Recordings on Aug. 3. From spaced-out grooves and vicious basslines to dance floor-ready bangers, local techno-philes aged 21 and over can trip out on Sian’s eclectic inspirations – like entomology, cosmology and marine biology – in the so-called flesh starting at 9 p.m. Eight bucks gets you in. Speaking of the El Rey, it’s my duty to ensure synthpop wunderkind Purity Ring’s concert at the El Rey on Friday, Sept. 4, is also on your radar. That 18-plus show starts at 8 p.m., and tickets range from $24 to $29. Let’s face it: With the notable exception of Gregg Araki’s “Happy Face” and Judd Apatow’s “Pineapple Express,” stoner movies have been declining ever since Cheech and Chong toked on that Labrador strain. On the other, roach clip-clutching hand, stoner rock has experienced a renaissance of late. Take your inner stoner-hesher out for a night on the town on Wednesday, Aug. 25. That’s when North Carolinian threesome Weedeater blows their secondhand smoke all over the Launchpad (618 Central SW). The joint lights up at 9 p.m., and tickets to this 21-plus bass-fetishizing recital are $10. Local rock gods Black Maria warm up the crowd with Taser-like intensity and their signature, mighty Marshall stacks. On Thursday, Aug. 27, O.G. “American Idol” victor/pop-rock star Kelly Clarkson visits Isleta Amphitheatre (5601 University SE) along with Texan a capella group Pentatonix. Like Clarkson, aca-quintet Pentatonix rose to prominence after winning a reality TV/talent contest, NBC’s “The Sing-Off.” Clarkson’s latest single “Invincible” finds the soprano embracing her popular roots after experimenting with a more hard-rocking vibe and then shattering the glass ceiling of Christmas Muzak with her platinum-selling holiday full-length “Wrapped in Red.” If you’re unfamiliar with San Diego cholo-goth act Prayers, there’s no time like the present to make the virtual acquaintance of this gangbanger-turneddarkwave icon. Prayers’ prime mover Leafar Seyer aka Rafael Reyes was born in Cotija, Michoacán but moved to the ocean-side city early on. Seyer spent time as a member of the Sherman Grant Hill Park 27 gang and was incarcerated twice on assault charges. He credits his jail time with giving him the opportunity to plan a way out of street life. Always a fan of goth-rock and darkwave, Seyer coined the term “cholo-goth” as a way of describing the output of his much buzzed-out duo Prayers. Sink your bejeweled vampire grill into the music video for “Young Gods” at bit.ly/YoungGodsvid. Then bring your 13-year-old cousin to see Prayers at Launchpad (618 Central SW) on Sunday, Aug. 30. The synths come alive at 8 p.m., and tickets are $15. arts 26 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS women of wonder, Page 17 30 Years w Mexico For Over Proudly Serving Ne Specializing in Custom Driveshafts A+ Rating (505) 247-0736 417 Summer Avenue NW albuquerquedriveshaft.com Reach Albuquerque’s most informed audience the realization that even as a writer, she represents an audience. Writing that resonates with her is likely also something her audience wants to read. Speaking to the vastness of the genre, Kowal says, “The thing about fiction is that if you don’t want to write something that someone else has already written, you don’t have to. They may use the same ingredients as you, but they’re going to deliver something completely different – a different perspective. So it’s like saying ‘I don’t want to build a house because someone has already used that type of wood.’” Science fiction and fantasy, gaming, cosplay and even literature have all earned bad reps in regard to how women are treated in these communities; but Kowal believes the community is fighting back against harassment and objectification of women, and this treatment will eventually be phased out – as many other types of discrimination have been in the past. “This is not a new thing,” says Kowal, “and the reason that we’re seeing all this conversation about it is because it’s something people are actively fighting against. [Those who are] invested in the idea that women are somehow lesser creatures are being very vocal because the majority of people are telling them that they’re full of shit.” Kowal notes that catcalling and harassment have been around since the inception of the genre. What’s changed, she says, is the fact that the community is calling them out on it. “That type of behavior is no longer acceptable, and the community is no longer allowing it, so that’s why people hear them complaining about it,” says Kowal. “They’re complaining because they’re being shut down. The thing that frustrates me with questions like this is that it’s not particular to science fiction and fantasy by a long shot. But with my career, things would [probably] be very different for me if I were a guy – or if I had chosen to use a male pen name.” Women in the sci-fi community have faced a lot of harassment in their struggle for equality. Bubonicon thoughtfully addresses that fact with this year’s theme. Bubonicon: Women of Wonder will pay tribute to women for their remarkable creative achievements and the uphill battle to make those achievements a reality in a male-dominated industry. Rene Thompson is an ABQ Free Press staff writer. To Advertise: Contact Cory Calamari (505) 345-4080, Ext. 803 cory@freeabq.com living ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 27 Bugman: The Three Ws of Uninvited Visitors BY RICHARD ‘BUGMAN’ FAGERLUND T Clear away debris both inside and outside your house. Such piles serve as excellent hiding places for cockroaches, scorpions and centipedes. Stacks of firewood attract black widows so stack your stash away from your house, preferably in a heavily sunlit area. Drape some black plastic over it, and the sun’s heat and dark plastic will heat things up, discouraging anything from hiding in the firewood. Trees are lovely, but when branches graze your roof or the sides of your house, that allows acrobat ants, odorous house ants and carpenter ants access to your quarters. The best solution is to trim offending limbs back, especially during the warmer months. Sweep or vacuum spiderwebs inside and outside your home. These procedures will help keep pests at a minimum and will not endanger your family, your pets or your environment as generic spraying of pesticides does. he three Ws of insect invasion are: wet, warm weather. The W3 formula holds up, and it’s bringing the bugs out ... on the town. Their invasion of our personal space raises the issue of pesticide use. Pesticide use is sometimes necessary. Used sparingly and with focus, they’re a mixed blessing. Some pest control companies’ standard operating procedure is still broadcast-spraying without considering – much less analyzing – what they’re killing. Without a target pest, indiscriminate spraying is like ecological carpet-bombing. Before resorting to toxic measures, try these simple, nontoxic DIYs for handling uninvited insect visitors. Getting past the doorman In my pest consultation practice, a building’s points of entry are frequently the first items I assess and address. That usually means targeting pesticide use directly in cracks, crevices and voids where pests live. That’s how it should be done. Some product labels advise spraying baseboards and other areas. That’s only called for if your home or business is literally infested; then, spraying baseboards may actually kill the target pest. Generically spraying pesticides is never a good idea. Folks with small children or pets are justified in worrying about the potential for negative physical and neurological effects when kids, dogs and cats stumble on to pesticides and their residue. At the outside Some pest companies spray pesticides around the perimeter of homes, purportedly to control cockroaches, ants, spiders and other pests. Unless there’s an actual infestation, what really happens is that these treatments may dispatch the occasional cockroach or cricket, but they’re equally likely to kill off praying mantis, honeybees and other beneficial insects. A host of other insects that aren’t pests will die, and these insects may then be eaten by birds, which may then be poisoned. And so on. That’s not pest control – it’s pollution. These breathtaking summer thunderstorms result in rain that washes pesticides into earth, where their environmental detriment only increases. When a company treats your home, they should inspect first – finding, treating and sealing off any cracks, crevices or voids where roaches or other pests can hide. If there are no such crevices, pests can’t get in, so why needlessly harm the ecological balance? WikimediaCommons Beyond greenwashing, on pestproofing For good reason, the practice of routinely spraying baseboards seems to be largely coming to an end. Environmentally conscious companies no longer do it. The main reason for spraying baseboards is killing time so customers believe they’re getting their moneys’ worth. Progressive companies will first inspect your home inside and out, looking for infestations and conditions conducive to them – then only treating areas that actually harbor pests or provide a safe haven. When choosing a pest control partner, find one that sprays as a last resort. Empower yourself by pestproofing your own home. Install door sweeps on all outside doors that need them. Here’s a foolproof test: If you can slide a piece of paper underneath a door, it needs a sweep. By their very nature, garage doors rarely close that tightly, so put food-grade diatomaceous earth aka D.E. in corners near the entrance. Any insects and other arthropods that sneak in will walk through the D.E. It isn’t a pesticide, and exterminates by abrading insects’ exoskeletons, causing moisture loss and ultimately, death by dehydration. Food grade D.E. is commonly used for grain storage and hydroponic gardening and in toothpaste, water filters and facial scrubs. With the exception of extended, concentrated inhalation of calcinated or crystalline silica – which has largely fallen out of favor in comparison to amorphous silica – D.E. is safe to have around kids and pets. Richard “Bugman” Fagerlund is an Earth-friendly pest consultant. Email any pest questions to askthebugman2013@gmail.com, and visit his website, askthebugman.com, to learn more about nontoxic pest control solutions. Have your kids ever wanted to be apart of a performing dance team but the cost is holding you back? Reignite Studios now has affordable dance teams coached by an award–winning coach. Auditions for the team are Saturday, Aug. 15, from 1 - 5 pm at Reignite Studios 3824 B Hawkins Street NE Albuquerque, NM 87109 Mandatory parent meeting must be attended by dancer’s parent or legal guardian on Saturday, Aug 15, 12 - 1 pm The team will perform in ballet, tap, jazz, POM, and much more! Team costs are only $80 per month. CALENDAr 28 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS DEFINITIVE DOZEN AUGUST 12-27 Artward Bound: Lotería Fest! 1 Featuring the Art of John Picacio! Jean Cocteau Gallery, 418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 13 Fundraisers: Live Music Series at 2 The County Line to benefit Meals on Wheels: The Porter Draw 3 Sister Bar, 407 Central Ave SW, of Medieval and Traditional Ballads: Scott and Johanna HongellDarsee Part of Saturday Sunset Series 7 pm, Elena Gallegos Picnic Area, 452-5200, cabq.gov/parksandrecreation The Dirty Bourbon 9800 Montgomery Blvd NW, 296-2726, dirtybourbon.com August 12, Live Band Karaoke!! August 13-15, Asphalt Cowboys August 19, Live Band Karaoke!! August 20-22, Jackson Tillman August 26, Live Band Karaoke!! August 27, Laura Wash Band Launchpad 618 Central Ave SW, 764-8887, launchpadrocks.com August 12, Regicide, Destroy to Recreate August 13, Rudest Priest, Weedrat, Constant Harmony August 14, Texas Hippie, Coalition, Red Sky Mary August 15, Russian Girlfriends “Record” Release Show August 16, The Atlas Moth, Vattnet Viskar August 17, Butcher Babies, Anesthesia August 20, Behind the Mirror, Torn Between Worlds August 21, Killah Priest, Bandit Lordz, Benny Browncoat August 22, Concepto Tambor, Reviva August 23, Authority Zero, Counterpunch August 24, The Aristocrats, Travis Larson Band August 25, Weedeater, Black Maria, Sandia Man August 26, The Acacia Strain, Vale of Miscreation August 27, Eagles of Death Metal 11 Outdoors: African Violet Show and Sale THURSDAY, AUGUST 27 12 Talks: Stories of the Middle Rio Grande: Alameda SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 4 Music/Family: An Evening AUGUST 12-27 7 am, Historic Plaza, Santa Fe, swaia.org/ Indian_Market ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden, 2601 Central Ave NW, 764-6200, abqbiopark.com 7 pm, Marble Brewery, 111 Marble Ave, 243-2739, marblebrewery.com SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 407 Central Ave SW, 242-4900, sisterthebar.com August 12, Circuit Des Yeux, Marisa Anderson, Chicharra August 13, Low Life-Vids ‘n’ Vinyl August 16, Glenn Miller Orchestra August 20, Thieves and Gypsys, Red Francis, Holy Glories 10 Fairs: Santa Fe Indian Market 7 Music: Pherkad 242-4900, sisterthebar.com Sister Bar The Guild Cinema, 3405 Central Ave NE, 255-1848; guildcinema.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 20 Music: Flava D AUGUST 12-20 AUGUST 17-23 in the Thing from Another World”: Invasion Double Feature Part of Siembra, Latino Theatre Festival National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 476-5072, nmartmuseum.org FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 CLUBS & PUBS 9 Screens: “The Blob” and “The 5 Performances: Aye, No! 6 Screens: Native Cinema Showcase 7 pm, The County Line BBQ 9600 Tramway Blvd NE, 856-7477, countyline.com List you r AUGUST 22-23 THROUGH AUGUST 16 8 Performances: Caught in The Act: A Benefit for New Mexico AIDS Services 7 pm, Free, Bachechi Open Space, 9521 Rio Grande NE, RSVP: 314-0398, bernco. gov/community-services e vent ABQ Free Press calendar Email even t info, inclu ding event nam e, date, tim e, address an d contact p hone number or website, to calendar@ free one month abq.com in advance of publicatio n. 8 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com, thedolls.org AUGUST 13-22 Low Spirits 2823 Second St NW, 344-9555 lowspiritslive.com August 13, Merican Slang, Daddy Long Loin August 14, The Lowlights, Sad Baby Wolf, Train Conductor August 17, Rocky Votolato, Dave Hause, Chris Farren August 20, Aburly Q Burlesque and Slideshow Spectacular August 21, Joseph General, I.Conscious August 22, Red Elvises, Cowboys & Indian AUGUST 13-27 Zinc Cellar Bar MUSIC THURSDAY, AUGUST 13 Alejandro Pais Iriart’s Flamenco Jazz Project & Brain Wingard 7:30 pm, Outpost Performance Space, 210 Yale Blvd SE, 268-0044, outpostspace.org American Rhapsody Part of Chatter Concert Series 6 pm, Free, Albuquerque Museum of Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd NW, 242-4600, cabq.gov/museum Billy Bob Thornton and the Boxmasters 7:30 pm, Skylight, 139 W San Francisco St, Santa Fe, (505) 982-0775, skylightsantafe.com 3009 Central Ave NE, 254-9462, zincabq.com August 13, Shane August 15, Alex Maryol August 16, 11 am, Jack Hansen August 18, Robby Overfield August 20, Zoltan Orkestar August 22, Hello Dollface August 23, Dan Dowling August 25, Bosque Blues August 27, You Knew Me When Breaking Blue AUGUST 14-31 FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 Sneakerz Sports Grille Lil Durk, Gun Play, Hypo Carlito 4100 San Mateo Blvd NE, 837-1708, sneakerzsportsbar.com August 14, 6 pm, Fun Addicts Band August 14, 9 pm, Karaoke August 15, 7 pm, Primal Panic Bands August 21, 6 pm, Smoke and Honey Band August 21, 9 pm, Karaoke August 22, 8 am, Brandon’s Cause Fundraising Tourney August 22, 9 pm, Quizzling Band August 31, 11 am, CNM Volleyball Class AUGUST 19-27 Marble Brewery 111 Marble Ave NW, 243-2739, marblebrewery.com August 19, Robby Overfield August 22, Green Billies August 27, Moon Hat Part of Summer Nights Concert Schedule 6 pm, ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden, 2601 Central Ave NW, 764-6200, abqbiopark.com Swag Part of Party on the Patio 6 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Pueblo Harvest Café, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org 7 pm, El Rey Theater, 622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com Blues Under the Stars: Ladies Sing the Blues 7 pm, Albuquerque Museum of Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd NW, 243-7255, cabq.gov/museum The Gruve 9 pm, Free, Lounge 54, Santa Ana Star Casino, 54 Jemez Canyon Dam Rd, Santa Ana Pueblo, 867-0000, santaanastar.com Hillary Smith & Chris Dracup 5:30 pm, Prairie Star Restaurant and Wine Bar, 288 Prairie Star Rd, Santa Ana Pueblo, 867-3327, mynewmexicogolf.com/prairiestar_home Joseph General Modest Mouse Part of Party on the Patio 6 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Pueblo Harvest Café, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org 7 pm, Expo New Mexico, Villa Hispana, 300 San Pedro Dr NE, 222-9700, ticketmaster.com Todd Tijerina 7 pm, Free, Historic Old Town, Rio Grande Blvd & Central Ave NW, 768-2000 SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 The Blunns 5:30 pm, Vernon’s Speakeasy, 6855 Fourth St NW, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, 341-0831, thehiddensteakhouse.com Peter Chase 2 pm, Cherry Hills Library, 6901 Barstow St NE, 857-8321, abclibrary.org Raven & The Sweet Potato Pie Band Part of Party on the Patio 6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Café, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19 Los Van Van 7:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, ampconcerts.org Snow tha Product, Audio Push 7 pm, Sunshine Theater, 120 Central Ave SW, 764-0249, sunshinetheaterlive.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 20 Blu Sol Part of Party on the Patio 6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Café, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org Cactus Tractor SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 Part of Summer Nights Concert Schedule 6 pm, ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden, 2601 Central Ave NW, 764-6200, abqbiopark.com Asleep at the Wheel Los Unusual Suspects 7:30 pm, Dirty Bourbon, 9800 Montgomery Blvd NE, 296-2726, dirtybourbon.com Part of Thirsty Thursdays Music Series 4 pm, Balloon Fiesta Event Center, 9401 Balloon Museum Dr NW, 768-6062, cabq.gov Chatter Sunday: Conor Hanick + Metronomes 10:30 am, Kosmos Performance Space at the Factory on 5th, 1715 Fifth St NW, chatterabq.org Gregg Daigle Band 7 pm, Arte de Placitas, 221 Hwy 165, Placitas, 867-5383, artedeplacitas.com Martin Sexton 6 pm, Free, Santa Fe Railyard Plaza, 740 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, ampconcerts.org TUESDAY, AUGUST 18 Dirty Head, The Expendables, Katastro 7 pm, Sunshine Theater, 120 Central Ave SW, 764-0249, sunshinetheaterlive.com Voorhees & Kulasighe & JQ Whitcomb’s Woody Shaw Project Part of Summer Thursday Jazz Nights 7:30 pm, Outpost Performance Space, 210 Yale Blvd SE, 268-0044 FRIDAY, AUGUST 21 David & Co 9 pm, Lounge 54, Santa Ana Star Casino, 54 Jemez Canyon Dam Rd, Santa Ana Pueblo, 867-0000, santaanastar.com Jeez LaWeez 5:30 pm, Prairie Star Restaurant and Wine Bar, 288 Prairie Star Rd, Santa Ana Pueblo, 867-3327, mynewmexicogolf.com/prairiestar_home CALENDAr Latin Night Part of Summertime in Old Town 6 pm, Free, Historic Old Town, Rio Grande Blvd & Central Ave NW, 768-2000, cabq.gov/culturalservices PandaMonium IV feat JAUZ 8 pm, El Rey Theater, 622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com Soul Kitchen 6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Café, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org Tinariwen THURSDAY, AUGUST 27 TUESDAY, AUGUST 25 AUGUST 14-21 SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 Jazz a la Carte Sublime with Rome CCA Cinematheque Made on Route 66 Part of Summer Nights Concert Schedule 6 pm, ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden, 2601 Central Ave NW, 764-6200, abqbiopark.com Isleta Resort & Casino, 11000 Broadway SE, 724-3800, isleta.com 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, (505) 982-1338, ccasantafe.org Starts August 14, “Best of Enemies” Starts August 21, “The Look of Silence” Starts August 21, “People Places Things” 10:30 am, Free, Special Collections Library, 423 Central NE, 848-1376 abclibrary.org Joanie & Combo Special 6 pm, Pueblo Harvest Café, 2401 12th St NW, 724-3510, indianpueblo.com/puebloharvestcafe Rio Gumbo Taos Mesa Brewing, 20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado, (575) 758-1900, taosmesabrewing.com Part of Thirsty Thursdays Music Series 4 pm, Balloon Fiesta Event Center, 9401 Balloon Museum Dr NW, 768-6062, cabq.gov SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 PERFORMANCES Dar Williams 8 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center, 1025 Broadway Blvd SW, ampconcerts.org Ijah 6 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org Javier Ortega 3 pm, Main Library, 501 Copper Ave NW, 768-5170, abclibrary.org/mainlibrary Nimbus Part of Saturday Sunset Series 7 pm, Elena Gallegos Picnic Area, 452-5200, cabq.gov The Pjudys 2 pm, Cherry Hills Library, 6901 Barstow St NE, 857-8321, abclibrary.org Red Wine featuring La La & The Hubcaps Part of Chispa New Mexico Music Series 7:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org Sian 9 pm, Stereo Bar, 622 Central Ave SW, elreyabq.com Sons of the Rio Grande Part of Chuckwagon Dinner & Music Series 6 pm, Wildlife West Nature Park, 87 N. Frontage Rd, Edgewood, (505) 281-7665, wildlifewest.org Tal Burdine Part of Art in the Afternoon 2 pm, Albuquerque Museum of Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd NW, 242-4600, cabq.gov/museum Taos Blues Fest 2 pm, Taos Mesa Brewing, 20 ABC Mesa Rd, El Prado, (575) 758-1900, mollydogproductions.org/events/taosbluesfest Westside Summerfest: George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic THURSDAY, AUGUST 13 Skillet Inn of the Mountain Gods Resort & Casino, 287 Carrizo Canyon Rd, Mescalero, (800) 545-9011, ticketmaster.com, innofthemountaingods.com THROUGH AUGUST 16 The Real Thing The Vortex Theatre, 2900 Carlisle NE, 247-8600, vortexabq.org THROUGH AUGUST 23 Love in the DMZ Sol Acting Academy, 5500 San Mateo Blvd NE Ste 114, 881-0975, solacting.com Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com August 14, “The Falling,” “Jellyfish Eyes” August 21, “Big Significant Things,” “The Tribe” THURSDAY, AUGUST 13 Shane Kraig Parker: Ultimate Tribute to Elvis 8 pm, Route 66 Casino, 14500 Central Ave SW, 352-7866, rt66casino.com Sheraton Albuquerque Uptown, 2600 Louisiana Blvd NE, 377-9593, foulplaycafe.com THROUGH AUGUST 30 Picnic The Adobe Theater, 9813 Fourth Street NW, 898-9222, adobetheater.org THROUGH SEPTEMBER 13 Albuquerque Little Theatre, 224 San Pasquale Ave SW, 242-4750, albuquerquelittletheatre.org Roust the House Teen Performance Night SCREENS 7:30 pm, Outpost Performance Space, 210 Yale Blvd SE, 268-0044, outpostspace.org AUGUST 12-23 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19 Los Van Van National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, tickets: ampconcerts.org FRIDAY, AUGUST 21 Gipsy Kings 8 pm, Route 66 Casino, 14500 Central Ave SW, 352-7866, rt66casino.com Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 Dar Williams 8 pm, South Broadway Cultural Center, 1025 Broadway Blvd SW, ampconcerts.org Part of Movie on the Field 8 pm, Free, UNM, Johnson Field, 1 University Dr, unm.edu TUESDAY, AUGUST 19 Arsenic and Old Lace 7:30 pm, Hiland Theater, 4800 Central Ave SE, 872-1800, ndi-nm.org Avengers 2 Finding Nemo Buffalo Thunder, 20 Buffalo Thunder Trail, Santa Fe, (505) 455-5555, buffalothunderresort.com 10th Annual DXS Dance Xperience SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 2 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com Los Lobos AUGUST 14-15 6 pm, Free, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, safeteen.net FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 The Goonies Isleta Resort & Casino, 11000 Broadway SE, 724-3800, isleta.com Pregnant: Preventing Teen Pregnancy Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival Murder at the Abilene Saloon Dierks Bentley, Kip Moore, Maddie and Tae & Canaan Smith 6:30 pm, Lockheed Martin Dynatheater, New Mexico Museum of Natural History, 1801 Mountain Rd NW, 841-2816, dynasummermovies.brownpapertickets.com THROUGH AUGUST 24 THROUGH AUGUST 29 Skylight, 139 W San Francisco St, Santa Fe, (505) 982-0775, skylightsantafe.com Maleficent 3D Part of Great Westerns 7 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com Chris Cope Big Thunder Dancers (Hopi/Cochiti) 6 pm, Free, Santa Fe Railyard Plaza, 740 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, ampconcerts.org Isleta Resort & Casino, 11000 Broadway SE, 724-3800, isleta.com FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 SUNDAY, AUGUST 23 Red Elvises Kelly Clarkson with Pentatonix Part of Movies on the Plaza 8:10 pm, Civic Plaza, 1 Civic Plaza NW, Third St NW and Marquette Ave NW, albuquerquecc.com AUGUST 21-23 10:30 am, Kosmos Performance Space at the Factory on 5th, 1715 Fifth St NW, chatterabq.org THURSDAY, AUGUST 27 Various locations in Santa Fe and Albuquerque, (505) 983-2075, santafechambermusic.com 5 pm, Free, Cottonwood Dr and Ellison Dr NW, 768-3556, cabq.gov Chatter Sunday: Brahms Piano Quartet ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 29 Fathom Events at selected movie theaters, fathomevents.com August 12, “Unity”: Make the Connection August 16 & 19, “Grease” Sing-A-Long August 23, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive AUGUST 12-27 The Guild Cinema 3405 Central Ave NE, 255-1848; guildcinema.com August 12-13, “A Poem is a Naked Person”: The Leon Russell documentary August 12-13, “The Wrecking Crew” August 14, Stand Up Comedy Live with Aarona Lopez! August 14-16, “Felt” August 14-16, “The Tribe” August 15, “The Nightmare”: A documentary/horror film on sleep paralysis August 17-20, “La Sapienza” August 17-20, “The World of Apu” August 21-22, “Redeemer” August 21-24, “The Wanted 18” August 21-24, “White Lies” August 25-27, “Gemma Bovery” August 25-27, “The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed out the Window and Disappeared” Part of Railyard Park Movie Series 8 pm, Free, Santa Fe Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, ampconcerts.org Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959) Part of Sci-Fi Second Takes KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com Pulp Fiction 7 pm, Distillery 365, 2921 Stanford Dr NE, 221-6281, distillery365.com The Enforcer The Dark Knight Rises Part of The Dark Knight Series KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com Frontera! Revolt and Rebellion on the Rio Grande: Screening and Talk 5:30 pm, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, 2401 12th St NW, 843-7270, indianpueblo.org FRIDAY, AUGUST 21 Ghostbusters 8:10 pm, Free, Civic Plaza, 1 Civic Plaza NW, Third St NW and Marquette Ave NW, albuquerquecc.com Juke Box Sunday Night BY M. BRIANNA STALLINGS From our street signs indicating pre1937 Route 66 to our greasers and swing dance aficionados, Burque’s cultural consciousness is more than a little fixated on days of yore. Luckily the legacy of Glenn Miller, one of the 20th century’s most beloved bandleaders, is still going strong. Experience the world famous Glenn Miller Orchestra at Sister at 7 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 16. Midwest native Miller – who traded his father’s gift of a mandolin for a horn as a boy – launched his legendary orchestra in 1938. The band released classics like “Tuxedo Junction,” “In the Mood” and “Chattanooga Choo Choo.” Miller went MIA in 1944, and the band regrouped under lead tenor saxophonist Tex Beneke. The Orchestra’s current incarnation was formed in 1956. Current bandleader Nick Hilscher took over in 2012. As tempting as it is to bring the kids, this is strictly a grown-up (21+) affair. The Glenn Miller Orchestra The Glenn Miller Orchestra Sunday, Aug. 16, 7 p.m. Sister, 407 Central NW, Tickets: $15 , sisterthebar.com CALENDAr 30 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 Wall-E 6:30 pm, Lockheed Martin Dynatheater, New Mexico Museum of Natural History, 1801 Mountain Rd NW, 841-2816, dynasummermovies.brownpapertickets.com For Those About to Rock BY M. BRIANNA STALLINGS Just as there’s no chicken in Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup, there’s no actual death metal in Eagles of Death Metal. But there is a lot of sweat, guitar and balls-to-the-wall rawk – just as you’d expect from a group co-founded by Josh Homme (Kyuss, Queens of the Stone Age). Alongside skinny mustachioed former South Carolinian Jesse Hughes, Homme launched Eagles of Death Metal in 1998 in Palm Desert, Calif., around the time Homme was working on “Desert Sessions Vols. 3 & 4.” Since then, EoDM has released three albums, and their fourth, the invitingly titled “Zipper Down,” drops in October. Homme may or may not be on board for the band’s show on Thursday, Aug. 27, at Launchpad – he’s also doing stuff with his many other bands – but fans are still guaranteed a loud, fast and out-of-control show. SUNDAY, AUGUST 23 Firefox 2 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26 Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid Part of Great Westerns Series 7 pm, KiMo Theatre, 423 Central Ave NW, 768-3544, kimotickets.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 27 AlleLuia! The Devil’s Carnival 7:30 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org FAIRS, FESTIVALS & FIESTAS AUGUST 15-16 Wildlife West Harvest Festival 10 am, Wildlife West Nature Park, 87 N Frontage Rd, Edgewood, 281-7655, wildlifewest.org SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 Santa Fe National Cemetery World War II Ceremony 1 pm, Santa Fe National Cemetery, 501 N Guadalupe St, Santa Fe, cem.va.gov, RSVP: (505) 988-6400 Eagles of Death Metal 9:30 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 27 Launchpad 618 Central SW Tickets: $15 launchpadrocks.com AUGUST 20-21 AUGUST 21-23 Old Friends, New Faces Artist Showcase Viva II to benefit El Ranchito de los Niños Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, 704 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, (505) 982-4636, wheelwright.org Valencia County Fairgrounds, 10 I-25 Business Loop, Belen, vivalanm.com AUGUST 22-23 Portal Artisans Celebration 10 am, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 476-5072, nmartmuseum.org AUGUST 27-29 New Mexico Responsible Gaming Association Conference Isleta Casino, 11000 Broadway Blvd SE, isletacasino.com FAMILY AUGUST 13-27 NM Black Expo Multiple locations, Albuquerque,More info: oaaa.state.nm.us/black-expo.aspx Bookworks 4022 Rio Grande NW, 344-8139, bkwrks.com August 13, 10:30 am, Story Time! Something’s Fishy August 15, 10:30 am, Diorama City! August 15, 4:30 pm, Teen Book Club: “Me, Earl and the Dying Girl” August 19, 4:30 pm, American Girl Book Club August 20, 10:30 am, Story Time Gets Artsy! August 26, 2:30 pm, Magic Treehouse Book Club August 27, 10:30 am, Ahoy! Story Time! THURSDAY, AUGUST 13 Back-to-School Fun Fest 1 pm, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, 217 Johnson St, Santa Fe, (505) 946-1000, okeeffemuseum.org SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 Gustave Baumann in New Mexico: Puppet Show and Gallery Talk 1 pm, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe, (505) 476-5072, nmartmuseum.org Hands-on History 9 am, El Rancho de las Golondrinas, 334 Los Pinos Rd, Santa Fe, (505) 471-2261, golondrinas.org FRIDAY, AUGUST 21 Aquarium Overnight 6:30 pm, ABQ BioPark Aquarium, 2601 Central Ave NW, RSVP: 768-2000, abqbiopark.com SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 Explora Parent’s Night Out: Colors 5:30 pm, Explora, 1701 Mountain Rd NW, RSVP: 224-8341, explora.us IPL PHOTOFACIAL FOR FACE AND NECK Regular $399 special $170. Including free facial plus aromatherapy. BUY TWO FILLERS, RECEIVE 3RD FREE BUY 30 UNITS OF BOTOX, RECEIVE 10 UNITS FREE 6341 Riverside Plaza Ln NW, Ste A 505-503-7381 Freyaslair.com SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 Tuesdays, 9 am, Explora, 1701 Mountain Rd NW, 224-8300, explora.us THROUGH AUGUST 16 Here Comes the Storyteller! Saturdays & Sundays, 7 pm, Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, 704 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, (505) 982-4636, wheelwright.org THROUGH AUGUST 23 Family Music and Movies Sundays under the Stars Free, 6 pm: music, sunset: movie Inn of the Mountain Gods, front lawn, 287 Carrizo Canyon Rd, Mescalero, (800) 545-9011, innofthemountaingods.com August 16, Birch Street, Mega Mind August 23, Broxton, Bears COMMUNITY SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 New Approach with Panpastel and Clayboard: Jessica Chao 1:30 pm, Free, Artisan-Santa Fe, 2601 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, RSVP: (505) 954-4179, artisan-santafe.com My Paper Portrait; Freehand Silhouette Paper Portraits: Kevin Overhulser 2015 Night Under the Stars Gala 6 pm, Paa-Ko Ridge Golf Club, 1 Clubhouse Dr, Sandia Park, (505) 281-7400, eastmountainhigh.net 8 am, Presbyterian Rust Medical Center, 2400 Unser Blvd SE, Rio Rancho, (888) 465-1482, juliettefoundation.org 4 pm, Civic Plaza, SW Section, 1 Civic Plaza NW, Third St NW and Marquette Ave NW, albuquerquecc.com AUGUST 15-16 THURSDAYS New Mexico Outdoor Expo Gateway Growers Market Shooting Range Park, 16001 Shooting Range Access Rd, wildlife.state.nm.us 5 pm, 100 Isleta Blvd SW, 217-2484 SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 3 pm, Morningside Park, Lead Ave SE & Morningside Dr SE Back to School Pool Party Summer Soiree to benefit La Mesa neighborhood 5 pm, Los Padillas Aquatic Center, Isleta Blvd SW, backtoschoolnmas.eventbrite.com 6 pm, La Mesa Presbyterian Church, 7401 Copper Ave NE Wilderness First Aid: An Overview TUESDAY, AUGUST 25 MONDAY, AUGUST 24 Dance Class: Casino/Cuban-Style Salsa and Rueda de Casino Inaugural Albuquerque Golf Charity Invitational 9 am, Open Space Visitor Center, 6500 Coors Blvd NW, RSVP: 452-5222, cabq.gov/openspace 1:30 pm, Free, Artisan-Santa Fe, 2601 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, RSVP: (505) 954-4179, artisan-santafe.com 6 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org FUNDRAISERS FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 UV Splash by Color Dash 5k to benefit PB&J Family Services 7:30 pm, Anderson Abruzzo Balloon Museum, 9201 Balloon Museum Dr NE, newcolordash5k.ticketmob.com SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 Dog Wash: Babes and Bullies, Viva 10 am, Pet Food Gone Wild, 2415 Southern Blvd SE, Rio Rancho, thebabesandbullies.com Noon, Albuquerque Country Club, 601 Laguna Blvd SW, (626) 354-1655, albuquerquecountryclub.org SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 3rd Annual WinWin Art Lottery: Tamarind Institute Tickets on sale now 4 pm, Tamarind Institute, 2500 Central Ave SE, 277-3901, tamarind.unm.edu OUTDOORS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12 Composting with Worms (Vermicomposting) 10 am, Bear Canyon Senior Center, Room 5, 4645 Pitt NE, RSVP: 767-5959 or register@nmcomposters.org Sunset Market Nob Hill Growers Market FRIDAYS Los Poblanos Friday Farm Stand 3 pm, 4803 Rio Grande Blvd NW, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, lospoblanos.com SATURDAYS YogaRitas Armijo Village Growers’ Market 10 am, El Pinto Restaurant, 10500 Fourth St NW, 898-1771 8 am, Isleta Blvd and Arenal Rd SW Downtown Growers’ Market TUESDAY, AUGUST 18 8 am, Robinson Park, Eighth and Central, downtowngrowers.com August 15, Kids Cook! August 22, Wagogo Bosque Moonlight Hikes 7 pm, Tingley Café Train Station, Tingley Beach, cabq.gov, RSVP: 848-7180 SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 The Dirty Dash New Mexico 9 am, Wildlife West Nature Park, 87 N Frontage Rd, Edgewood, thedirtydash.com Landscape Irrigation and Drip Irrigation 9 am, Free, CNM Workforce Training Center, 5600 Eagle Rock NE, Room 101, 888-1772 SUNDAY, AUGUST 23 Composting Workshop 9 am, Open Space Visitor Center, 6500 Coors Blvd NW, Bring gloves, hats, etc, RSVP: 452-5222, cabq.gov/openspace Tomato Fiesta 11 am, Albuquerque Garden Center, 10120 Lomas Blvd NE, 296-6020, albuquerquegardencenter.org TUESDAY, AUGUST 25 Night Walks at the Botanic Garden 6:30 pm, ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden, 2601 Central Ave NW, RSVP: 848-7180, cabq.gov THROUGH SEPTEMBER 13 Monarch: Orange Takes Flight Santa Fe Botanical Garden, 715 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, (505) 471-9103, santafebotanicalgarden.org Part of the “Summer of Color” all around Santa Fe Edgewood Farmers’ Market 3 pm, Tractor Supply Company, 8 Marietta Ct, Edgewood, (505) 269-1577 Los Ranchos Growers’ Market 7 am, 8528 Rio Grande Blvd NW, 344-1023, losranchosgrowersmarket.com Santa Fe Farmers Market 8 am, 1607 Paseo De Peralta, Santa Fe, santafefarmersmarket.com South Valley Growers’ Market 8 am, 3907 Isleta Blvd SW, 877-4044 SUNDAYS Corrales Growers Market 9 am, Corrales Rd south of Post Office, Corrales, corralesgrowersmarket.com Mile-Hi Farmers’ Market 11 am, Alvarado Park, Alvarado Dr NE & Hannett Ave NE Crossword Puzzle appears on page 32 S N I T Toddler Time 5:30 pm, Embassy Suites Hotel, 1000 Woodward Pl NE, 245-7100, kennelkompadres.org Run for Vision 2015 D O N E 6 pm, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org 3 pm, 12224 N. Hwy 14, Cedar Crest, (505) 269-1577 S A S S Sundays, 10 am, Bachechi Open Space, 9521 Rio Grande Blvd NW, 314-0398, bernco.gov/openspace Mayor and First Lady’s Dog Ball 2015 Cedar Crest Farmers’ Market 2 pm, Taylor Ranch Library, 5700 Bogart NW, RSVP: 897-8816 or register@nmcomposters.org U L N A Sunday Family Fun Dance Class: Casino/Cuban-Style Salsa and Rueda de Casino SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 WEDNESDAYS Home Composting Basics E L I E T A E T TUESDAY, AUGUST 18 6 pm, Sister Bar, 407 Central Ave SW, 242-4900, sisterthebar.com 8 am, 1607 Paseo De Peralta, Santa Fe, santafefarmersmarket.com D A I C E R R E E S S E A S P P Y 6 pm, Esperanza Bicycle Safety Education Center, 5600 Esperanza Dr NW, 224-6668, cabq.gov Get Your Geek On! for Project Pinball Charity 2pm, Taylor Ranch Library, 5700 Bogart St NW, RSVP: 897-8818 or register@nmcomposters.org Santa Fe Farmers Market D O F E A S A Women’s Bicycle Clinic Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, 704 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, (505) 982-4636, wheelwright.org Bucket Composting — Bokashi Method T A W S Noon, Free, RSVP and more info: Diane 304-9411 40th Annual Benefit Auction at the Wheelwright Museum SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 I C E D Lyme Get Together: New Mexico Lyme Disease Support AUGUST 20-21 S E N D Wednesday, 9:30 am and 11 am, Anderson Abruzzo Balloon Museum, 9201 Balloon Museum Dr NE, 7686020, balloonmuseum.com Noon, Albuquerque Museum of Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd NW, 242-4600, cabq.gov/museum 3 pm, Albuquerque Academy, 6400 Wyoming Blvd NE, abqnemarket.org G E C K O Stories in the Sky with Laurie Magovern Community Day: Neighborhood Albuquerque Northeast Farmers’ & Artisans Market P S R E E T Y S T S U R P A A L S Y A K I S E T L O Y D O L E E D M Second and fourth Saturdays, 10 am, ages 7-17, Quelab, 680 Haines Ave NW, coderdojoabq.github.io 10 am, Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm, 4803 Rio Grande Blvd NW, 344-9297, lospoblanos.com S I D E Coder Dojo TUESDAYS 5 pm, La Fonda on the Plaza, La Terraza, 100 E San Francisco, Santa Fe, (505) 424-5730, iaia.edu/support 6 pm, Albuquerque Square Dance Center, 4915 Hawkins NE, 271-0548, usadancenm.org T A U N T ONGOING MARKETS Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm Tour C O K E I X R I S I T M A L M I S E G E S Lunar Monday 7 pm, Free, New Mexico Natural History Museum, 1801 Mountain Rd NW, nmnaturalhistory.org FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 Native Arts Unbound: Dinner and Auction to benefit IAIA A G E S P U S H E L S E S P E A F E S P S H E T A K E W O R L E G O T I S M MONDAY, AUGUST 24 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19 Ballroom Dancing S T O A 10:30 am, Free, National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 Fourth St SW, 724-4771, nhccnm.org SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 E N O L Jugamos Juntos: Cuentos en la Cocina R A G S CALENDAr ABQ FREE PRESS • August 12, 2015 • 31 CLASSIFIEDS/CROSSWORD 32 • August 12, 2015 • ABQ FREE PRESS classifieds “It’s a Snap!” by Myles Mellor and Sally York real estate Maddox Management LLC Offers All of the following rentals; for More information or a showing Call (505) 242-0989 WINROCK VILLAS 2/BD 2/BA 1100/SF Utilities Included! $1200/MO $1100/ DD 1601 Pennsylvania NE N4 Available Now! Schedule with Broker No Pets Please! Tenant pays all utilities. $995/MO $800/DD 3904 Ladera NW Schedule with current tenants Available September HOUSES FOR RENT UNFURNISHED (Listed by Price) RIO GRANDE TOWNHOUSE LOFTS 1/BD 1/BA 1000/S Each unit comes with a stunning natural balance of old and contemporary living, exposed adobe walls, brick floors, built-ins, sunny windows, stainless steel appliances, front load washer & dryer in the unit, courtyard patio areas, and lovely serene landscaped grounds! Very pet friendly! No Smoking! Tenants pay ALL utilities. 1-year lease! $1195/MO $900/DD 200 Rio Grande SW 202, 203, 205, 208, 211 Available Now! Schedule with Broker NE HEIGHTS CONDO - 2/BD 1/BA 860/SF 1/CG PRIVATE CTYD Updated living kitchen breakfast bar & it opens to private courtyard, perfect for grilling & chilling! Small Pet Negotiable! NO Smoking! 1-year lease, tenant pays Gas & Electric utilities! Juan Tabo & Menaul $800/MO $700/DD 12004 Stilwell NE D Available Now! PARK PLAZA CORNER CONDO 2/BD 2/BA 850/SF 8TH FLOOR corner spacious open living/dining updated kitchen with granite counters, oodles of cabinets, loads of closet space! All utilities included plus onsite library, workout room, heart shaped pool, recreation area, cable too, plus gated covered parking & monitored secure intercom entry! No Pets, No Smoking Please! $1395/MO $1300/DD 1331 Park SW 803 Available Now! EAST DOWNTOWN ARNO LOFTS CITY 2/BD 2/BA 1500/SF Luxury 2nd floor corner loft in EDO Huning’s Highland Historic District! Open living, dining & kitchen, w/stainless appliances, dishwasher & washer/dryer included, custom California Closets, stained concrete floors, sliding doors open to fabulous views, elevator, security voice entry, & common area with pool. Tenants pay electric only! No Smoking, No Pets Please! $1395/MO $900/ DD 400 Central SE 201 Schedule with Broker Available August RIO GRANDE TOWNHOUSE LOFTS 2/BD 1/BA 1150/SF unit comes with a stunning natural balance of old and contemporary living, exposed adobe walls, brick floors, built-ins, sunny windows, stainless steel appliances, front load washer & dryer in the unit, courtyard patio areas, and lovely serene landscaped grounds! Very pet friendly! Tenants all utilities. 1-year lease! $1350/MO $900/DD 200 Rio Grande SW 201 Available Now! Schedule with Broker PUEBLO STYLE TOWNHOUSE 2/BD 2/STORY 2/BA 2/CG 1700/SF privacy courtyard entry, vaulted ceilings open living, Kiva fireplace, kitchen with ceramic tile, laundry, loft perfect for office. French doors, skylights. Tenant pays all utilities! Pets Negotiable! $1275/MO $1000/DD 4928 Oso Grande Ct NE Schedule with current tenants Available September OLD TOWN 2/BD 1.5/BA $1250/MO $1000/DD Tenants pay all utilities! No Smoking! No Pets! 2444 Pueblo Bonito Ct NW Available Now! CITY MARKET LOFTS 1/BD 1/BA 880/SF Luxury 3rd floor loft in EDO Huning’s Highland Historic District! Washer/dryer included. No Pets! No Smoking! All electric! Tenants pay electric! $1050/MO $900/DD 401 Central NE Apt 303 Available Now! Schedule with Broker AHS GYM LOFT EDO/ CORNER 1/BD 1/BA 980SF open floor plan with high ceilings, raised platform bedroom area at one end, aseparate bathroom, closet, hallway on the other end. Corner unit facing the internal courtyard, fitted blinds on windows all along two walls for loads of natural light, light open kitchen, island counter divider, stainless appliances, light stained wood cabinets, refrigerator, stove, microwave, & dishwasher. Laundry room, trash and recycling all inside the building. Tenant pays electric only. No Pets, NO Smoking please! $1025/MO 850/DD 300 Tijeras NE 201 Schedule with Broker AHS GYM LOFT EDO 1/BD 1/BA 752/ SF Desirable Gym Loft, open floor plan with high ceilings, raised platform bedroom area at one end, a separate bathroom, closet, hallway on the other end. Light open kitchen, island counter divider, stainless appliances, light stained wood cabinets, refrigerator, stove. Laundry room, trash, and recycling all inside the building. Tenant pays electric only! No Pets, NO Smoking please! $990/MO $800DD 300 Tijeras NE 205 Available Now! Schedule with broker NW LADERA GOLF COURSE 2/BD 2/ BA 1250/SF 2/CG open living, vaulted ceilings, fireplace, washer, dryer hookups, huge master. No Smoking, APARTMENTS FOR RENT UNFURNISHED (Listed by Price) NE HEIGHTS APARTMENTS 2/BD 1/BA800/SF washer/dryer hook ups! Tenants pay Gas & Electric! Pet Negotiable! No Smoking! $675/MO $600/DD 12016 Indian School NE #1 Available Now! NE HEIGHTS APARTMENTS 2/BD 1/ BA washer/dryer hook ups! Tenants pay Gas & Electric! No Dogs! No Smoking! $675/MO $600/DD 12024 Indian School NE 3 Available Now! UNM/CNM EFFICIENCY FREE UTILITIES FREE PARKING 1/BA 400+ SF efficiency apartment. Kitchen, full bath, hardwood floors fenced grounds, & parking off alley! No Smoking No Pets Please! $525/MO $300/DD 1816 Lead SE 3 Available Now! DOWNTOWN STUDIO APARTMENT Charming clean 298/SF one room efficiency attached apartment with kitchen and full bath, hardwood floors small courtyard and parking off alley. NO Pets, NO Smoking please! Tenants pay Gas & Electric. $495/MO $300/ DD 1200.5 Park SW Available Now! LEGAL NOTICES Keep Your Family and Property Safe! Home Bundles Home Security 24/7/365 monitoring. $1400 FREE Security Equipment. No Installation Fees. Starting at $19.99/mo. Call 1-800-621-9263 Sell your structured settlement or annuity Payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-603-0176 NOW HIRING NM State Fair Security Officers Apply online at www.securitasjobs.com Select > Albuquerque/NM State Fair Across 1. Middle ___ 5.Federal org. 9.June honorees 13. Pull partner 14. ___ Boothe Luce 15. Clickable image 16. “Someone ___” (2006 movie) 17. Attack 18. Swiss painter Hans 19. Site of illicit bar for the leisure class? 22. Jam 23. Deodorant brand 24. Second sight 27. Unburdened 29. Out of style 32. Taiwanese girl group 33. Chesterfield, e.g. 36. Sparsely populated North Dakota city 37. Simply relax? 42. Contemptible one 43. “The Open Window” writer 44. Factor XI (abbr.) 45. OK, in a way 47. Undertake, “out” "It'swith a Snap!" 49. Az ___, R&B group NOW OFFERING UP TO $450 IN BONUSES! $350 Bonus* for Level 3 Security Officers $100 Additional Bonus* *Bonuses are paid upon completion of the assignment. Work Requirements and conditions of bonus payouts will be provided during interview. Apply online, www.securitasjobs.com or come to our office and apply: 4100 Osuna Rd NE Suite 100 Albuquerque, NM 87109 505-341-2041 Monday-Friday 8am-5pm EOE/AAP M/F/D/V * Temporary Positions May Lead to Permanent Event Staffing Down 1.Primatologist’s study 2.Mouthful 3.Cigarette brand 4.Bundle 5.Long bone 6.Back talk 7.Hunts 8.Establishes 9.Diacritical marks 10. Israeli port city 11. Fully cooked 12. Agitated state by Myles Mellor and Sally York 14. Live peacefully together 20. White wine aperitif 21. Start of a refrain 24. Jolting therapy, for short 25. Wrap 26. Black tea 28. Buck passers? 30. Mawkish 31. A-list 34. J.F.K. overseer 35. Says “When?” 38. Poisoning from tainted grain 39. Mosque officials 40. Gave way 41. Bother, with at 46. Feudal sovereigns 48. Excessively 51. Jeer 53. Ptychozoon 54. Musical pieces 55. Carbon compound 56. Ancient colonnade 57. Fries, maybe 58. Posited Big Bang substance 59. E-mail, e.g. 60. ___ coffee 61. Hebrew letters Answers on page 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 24 25 26 27 28 33 38 55 30 31 34 35 12 36 40 41 43 44 46 50 54 29 39 42 45 11 23 32 37 10 21 22 Securitas Security Services is now hiring temporary security officers for the upcoming New Mexico State Fair, September 10-20, 2015. Employees must be available to work shifts September 10-20! Up to $450 in special bonuses will be paid to qualified applicants. All are welcome to apply – Priority will be given to security officers holding active New Mexico Level 1 or Level 3 Guard Licenses. $250 Bonus* for Level 1 & 2 Security Officers from Philly 50. Bypass 52. Journal 54. A soft touch brings relief? 62. Mythological ferryman 63. Cunning 64. Popular Serbian folk singer 65. Gunks 66. Broke off 67. Experienced 68. Brickbat 69. Check 70. Reno calculation 47 51 56 48 52 57 49 53 58 59 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 60 61
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