Fall2013

Page 1

LLC

f you drive far enough east of downtown on the San Carlos Apache Reservation, you will find yourself in no-man’sland. As far as the naked eye can see, there are no signs of civilization in sight. Drive even further and you’ll eventually lose cell service. For awhile you can tune into KYAY, San Carlos’ radio station, but eventually that too becomes static, along with every other station on By Jenn Walker the dial. It is both exhilarating and slightly unsettling to head into endless green, counting as few as two other cars within a 45-mile stretch. If you are a hunting guide, however, these are just the kind of conditions you are looking for. (Hunting season just began, after all.) Two world-renowned hunting guides are based right Stevens with his guides and the Friedkins, looking through their scopes at an elk they spotted in the distance. here in Globe and San Carlos. The game in this region is that good. Between Globe and San Carlos you can find mountain lions, bighorn sheep, buffalo, deer, elk, antelope, wild turkey, javelina and a world class population of black bear.

The Woman Who Wears the Dress

Page 8

"More important than the dress is the woman wearing it," says local designer

LLC

By Jenn Walker

By Jenn Walker

If you are acting onstage, and the crotch of your pants suddenly rips, you thank your lucky stars that a costume designer is sitting nearby with a needle and thread in hand. You manage to finish the scene without turning the tear into a conspicuous hole, and then make a beeline backstage where said-designer sews up the problem while you’re still wearing the pants, Diana Tunis shows off one of 43 papier mâché just in time to send you back masks she made for the youth musical program’s adaptation of “The Jungle Book”. on stage. On any given day, the same costume and set designer will take a herd of kids and turn them into sea horses, puff fish, eels, mermaids and octopus legs. A stage becomes an ocean floor speckled with fantastic barnacles constructed from papier mâché, and upside-down bowls strewn with fairy lights become mesmerizing, glowing jelly fish. If ever you are seeking a bit of magic in Globe-Miami, look no further than a summer youth musical. Diana Tunis, Continued on page 38

Calendar of Events

While most fashion designers are dreaming up ways to make jaws drop on the runway, or studying the next big trend, San Carlos designer Selina Curley has another motive. She is trying to keep her culture alive. Across the country, Native American traditions are burning out in the wake of modern mainstream culture. Things are no different at the San Carlos Apache Reservation, where smart phones and Facebook are as common as Sunrise Dances and prayer. Nonetheless, Curley tends to avoid designing modern, body-conscious clothing, regardless of how much more attention it may attract. Marisa standing in an old doorway in Miami.

Selina Curley, Continued on page 36

To ShowLow

To Young Whitewater Rafting Starts Here

288 Roosevelt Dam & lake i v er

The Magic Touch of Diana Tunis

Page 19

Sa lt R

Hunting, Continued on page 32

The Final Salute

Apache Lake

88

77 60

188

Guayo’s On The Trail

Miami

N

Bullion Museum

Besh Ba Gowah

60 70

Globe Historic

Area Maps Centerfold

Pickle Barrel Celebrates 10 Year Anniversary! Page 16

DISCOVER THE GLOBE-MIAMI COMMUNITY ONLINE AT GLOBEMIAMITIMES.COM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Fall2013 by Globe Miami Times - Issuu