2017 Summer in Santa Fe

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in Santa Fe

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Bienvenidos

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TE L E S TA FE REA

Cornerstones

ELIE WIESEL, 1928-2016

HOME

HOME JULY

Holocaust survivor, Nobel Prize winner who offered voice to persecuted people dies at age 87. NATION & WORLD, A-2

Home & garden

Unheralded American takes down Djokovic Sports, D-1

LOCAL & REGION

Study: New Mexico judiciary lags in racial, ethnic diversity

Inside

30th

WIMBLEDON

‘Messenger to mankind’ never stopped fighting

Earthy elegance near Taos

E G U I D 2016

Taos gallery on the market

Judges often don’t look like the people they serve, group says. PAGE C-1

tour

Locally owned and independeent

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Northern

www.santafenewmexican.com

$1.25

Survivors offer details of attack in Bangladesh

Heinrich prepares bill to help tribes keep artifacts

A CITY VERY DIFFERENT

Standoff ends with at least 28 dead as militants seeking Islamic rule ramp up violence

Measure would prohibit the export of items obtained in violation of federal laws

The Associated Press

DISTRIBUTION OLOCATIONS with Sunday

READERS JA

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Less than 10% loss

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2000

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2010

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Las Soleras

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Santa Fe population change, 2000-2010

AI

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-14%

-4%

ST FRANCIS DR

W ZIA

-9%

R O DE O R D

V E R NO R

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-20%

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-1%

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they serve, group says. PAGE C-1

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Sports, D-1

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Unheralded American takes down Djokovic

Sports, D-1

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84 285

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OLD

6 WIMBLEDON

TARAWA, Kiribati — One clear bright day last winter, a tidal surge swept over an ocean embankment here in the remote, low-lying island country of Kiribati, smashing through the doors and windows of Betio Hospital and spewing sand and debris across its maternity ward. Beero Hosea, 37, a handyman, cut the power and helped carry frightened mothers through the rubble and water to a nearby school.

LTA

By Mike Ives

The New York Times

NATION & WORLD, A-2

San Francisco Street in the 1960s had a variety of shops where locals could

find items they needed. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS PHOTO ARCHIVES NEGATIVE NO. 051359

n some mornings, 70-year-old Gregory Lovato brings a bag of memories with him to breakfast. old-timers SantaThe F eother U rban Areacircled around tables at the McDonald’s on St. Michael’s Drive tease Population him about the stacks of Change Polaroids in the shopping bag at his feet. Lovato likes0 having the photos close 2000 - 201 because they are proof of the past. On a recent morning, he spread themCproudly across A M I N In the the table, like baseball cards from boyhood. O LA cracked and faded photos were men in cow- TIE R R A S boy hats and silver-studded Abelts, saddled LA S C A M horses and pigeons raised in wire cages, baby-blue Cadillacs bought for $125 and children who addressed their elders as Mr. and Mrs. Those were the days, he said. “I miss them a lot,” Lovato 16% said, his eyes behind black DA ALAME aviator glasses. “I feel like W 599 ¬ «599 crying.” ta C AJ A DE L R IO R D

Threatened by sea, islands prep for end Residents of Kiribati urged to move abroad, seek refuge

American Indian tribes long have known that their sacred objects and items of cultural patrimony have been showing up in art galleries, on internet sites and in auction house catalogs — often in Europe — eventually ending up in the hands of wealthy international collectors. In the last year, at least 24 items of Acoma Pueblo cultural patrimony were illegally removed from the reservation Martin and offered for sale, Heinrich according to Gov. Kurt Riley. And as recently as May, the governor was forced to plead with public officials and even call on the people of France to stop the sale of a war shield by a Paris auction house. That time, the item was grudgingly withdrawn from the sale, but sometimes tribal officials are not successful in halting the sale of sacred objects. Sometimes they don’t even know ceremonial items are being offered to the highest bidder. Occasionally, they are forced to buy back their own cultural items. Now the tribes might be getting some help from the federal government. On Tuesday, Democratic U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich of New Mexico plans to introduce a bill to help stop the theft of tribal patrimony. The Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act of 2016 would prohibit the export of items obtained in violation of federal laws, including the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act and the Antiquities Act. The bill would increase penalties from a maximum of five years to a maximum of 10 years for violations of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. The act, passed in 1990, provides a process for museums and federal agencies to return to the tribes any human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects or objects of cultural patrimony and penalizes illegal trafficking in these items. In the U.S., it is illegal to sell ceremonial Native American items. But in other countries, such as France, it is not.

After decades of demographic shifts, tourist-filled downtown is shadow of what some residents remember

By Dan Schwartz The New Mexican

YUC C A S T

Please see ATTACK, Page A-9

By Anne Constable The New Mexican

H A R D S AVE

in the Community

DHAKA, Bangladesh — The hostages were given a test: recite verses from the Quran, or be punished, according to a witness. Those who passed were allowed to eat. Those who failed were tortured and slain. The dramatic, 10-hour hostage crisis that gripped Bangladesh’s diplomatic zone ended Saturday morning with at least 28 dead, including six of the attackers, as commandos raided the popular restaurant where heavily armed attackers were holding dozens of foreigners and Bangladeshis prisoner while hurling bombs and engaging in a gunbattle with security forces. The victims included 20 hostages, mostly foreigners, and two Bangladeshi police officers. The attack marks an escalation in militant violence that has hit the traditionally moderate Muslim-majority nation with increasing frequency in recent months, with the extremists demanding the secular government set up Islamic rule. Most

International Folk Art Market

Official Summer Guide

HW

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, city of Santa Fe

1

Please see KEEP, Page A-8

OPERA REVIEW

California dreaming at SFO Racette’s Minnie is a tough, tender heroine

known for his perennial blockbusters La bohème, Tosca and Madama Butterfly. The company mounted Fanciulla in 1991 and revived that production in 1995, but this quintessential music drama about the American West has been otherwise absent from the local stage. It’s no use pretending that Puccini’s histrionic horse opera

is a better stage work than it is. Maybe decades of Hollywood Westerns have conditioned us to expect a plot less cluttered than what he was served by his librettists, Carlo Zangarini and Guelfo Civinini, who derived their text from David Belasco’s play The Girl of the Golden West.

SEASON LONG

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Heinrich CITY VERY prepares FFERENT bill to help

Heinrich prepares bill to help tribes keep artifacts

tribes keep artifacts

Measure would prohibit the export of items obtained in violation of federal laws

Calendar A-2

By James M. Keller The New Mexican

The Santa Fe Opera opened its 60th season Friday night with Giacomo Puccini’s La Fanciulla del West, a relative rarity from the composer better

Comics Inside

Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com

Family C-9

Local & Region C-1

Lotteries A-2

Mary Ann Baca, 58, June 29 Toni L. Chapman, 98, Santa Fe, June 30 Carolyn Ewing Cobelo, June 15 Donald C. Duran, 77, Santa Fe, June 21 Thomas Joseph Halpin, June 29

Opinions B-1

Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010 News tips: 986-3035

Patricia Racette in a scene from La Fanciulla del West.

Please see SFO, Page A-9

Obituaries

Santa Fe Wine Festival

Food, music, and arts and crafts at El Rancho de las Golondrinas, 334 Los Pinos Road, noon to 6 p.m., $13 general admission; $5 ages 13-20; ages 12 and under no charge; free bus rides from Santa Fe Place mall; more information: 505-471-2261 or golondrinas.org.

Classifieds E-7

Real Estate E-1

COURTESY KEN HOWARD/THE SANTA FE OPERA

Henry L. Holmberg, 95, April 6 Jason Ribas, June 23 Xavier U. Rodriguez, June 27 Lysbeth Kaye Stone, 84, June 26 Gloria Marie Wellman, 85, June 22

Today

PAGES C-2, C-3

PAGE D-6

Sports D-1

Partly sunny. High 88, low 56.

NorthernNorthern

Time Out C-8

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM

167th year, No. 185 Publication No. 596-440

By Anne Constable

BIS

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www.pasatiempomagazine.com

The New Mexican

American Indian tribes long have known that their sacred objects and items of cultural patrimony have been showing up in art galleries, on internet sites and in auction house catalogs — often in Europe — eventually ending up in the hands of wealthy international collectors. In the last year, at least 24 items of Acoma Pueblo cultural patrimony were illegally removed from the reservation Martin and offered for sale, Heinrich according to Gov. Kurt Riley. And as recently as May, the governor was forced to plead with public officials and even call on the people of France to stop the sale of a war shield by a Paris auction house. That time, the item was grudgingly withdrawn from the sale, but sometimes tribal officials are not successful in halting the sale of sacred objects. Sometimes they don’t even know ceremonial items are being offered to the highest bidder. Occasionally, they are forced to buy back their own cultural items. Now the tribes might be getting some help from the federal government. On Tuesday, Democratic U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich of New Mexico plans to introduce a bill to help stop the theft of tribal patrimony. The Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act of 2016 would prohibit the export of items obtained in violation of federal laws, including the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act and the Antiquities Act. The bill would increase penalties from a maximum of five years to a maximum of 10 years for violations of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. The act, passed in 1990, provides a process for museums and federal agencies to return to the tribes any human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects or objects of cultural patrimony and penalizes illegal trafficking in these items. In the U.S., it is illegal to sell ceremonial Native American items. But in other countries, such as France, it is not.

s, After decades of demographic shifts, tourist-filled downtown is shadow of what some residents remember

§ ¨¦

ANTA D S

O

YUC C A S T

Pasapick

Index

Measure would prohibit the export of items obtained in violation of federal laws

By Anne Constable The New Mexican

American Indian tribes long have known that their sacred objects and items of cultural patrimony have been showing up in art galleries, on internet sites and in auction house catalogs — often in Europe — eventually ending up in the hands of wealthy international collectors. In the last year, at leastSan 24 items of Street in the 1960s had Francisco Acomaa Pueblo varietyculof shops where locals could find itemswere they needed. PALACE OF THE tural patrimony GOVERNORS illegally removedPHOTO ARCHIVES NEGATIVE NO. 051359 from the reservation Martin and offered for sale, Heinrich according to Gov. Kurt Riley. And as recently as May, the governor was forced to plead with public officials and even call on the people of France to stop the sale of a war shield by a Paris auction house. That time, the item was grudgingly 84 withdrawn from 285 the sale, but sometimes tribal officials are not successful in halting the sale of sacred objects. Sometimes they don’t even know ceremonial orthwest No Hyde Parrk items 599 are ¬ «599 being offered to the highestEstates Quadrant Q bidder. Occasionally, they are forced to -6% 10% buy back their own cultural items. RK Now -2% the tribes might be getting some help from the federal government. On Santa FeH population Tuesday, Democratic U.S. Sen. Martin E O D E P E R change, 2000-2010 P A S of New A Mexico plans to introHeinrich -21% duce a billDowntown to-40% help stop the theft ofRtribal D N YO patrimony. -3% CAN -2% The Safeguard -11%Objects of Pat-14% Tribal ST RD DA S rimony Act of 2016 would prohibit the ILLO -2% export of items obtained in violation of CERR-2% -4% including the Native Amerfederal laws, ` ican Graves Protection and Repatriation ^ -13% Act, the Archaeological Resources Pro^` ^`S IR ING O -20% RD tection Act and the Antiquities Act. would increase penalties from -10% RD The bill18% W ZIA -9% a maximum of five years to a maximum of RD 10 years for violations of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation 2% % By 2010 Act. ThePercentage act, passed inchange 1990, provides a census tract RD § and federal agencies ¦25 process for museums ¨ 25 enter 25 Population center 10%-50% loss FE to return to the tribes any human remains, Less than 10% loss funerary objects, sacred objects or objects 1990 L No change of cultural patrimony and penalizes illegal 2000 trafficking in theseLess items. than 10% gain In the U.S., it is 10%-50% illegal to gain sell ceremo- 2010 nial Native American items. But in other thanit100% gain countries, such asMore France, is not. TR

AI

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Source: U.S. Census Bureau, city of Santa Fe

1

Fisherman Kaitara Kautu’s home flooded during last year’s king tide on the island of South Tarawa in Kiribati. The fate of the Pacific island nation is so precarious in the face of climate change that the government is effectively planning its own demise. JOSH HANER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

HW

Please see KEEP, Page A-8

1

EXTRA EXTRA COPIES COPIES in theinCommunity the Community

DISTRIBUTION DISTRIBUTION LOCATIONS LOCATIONS

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SEASON SEASON 75% LONG LONGattending of visitors were SHELF-LIFE SHELF-LIFE from outside Santa Fe!

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ming at SFO

Henry TodayL. Holmberg, 95, April 6 Jason Ribas, June 23 Partly Xavier sunny. U. Rodriguez, June 27 Lysbeth High 88, Kaye Stone, 84, June 26 Gloria low 56.Marie Wellman, 85, June 22 PAGES PAGE D-6 C-2, C-3

Sports D-1 167th year, No. 185

Today Partly sunny. High 88, low 56. PAGE D-6

Time Out C-8 167th year, No. 185 Publication No. 596-440

SPENT IN SANTA FE OUTSIDE of the Market!

Publishes Sunday, May 21

Publishes Sunday, July 9

Space Res./Copy Due Wednesday, April 26

Space Res./Copy Due Friday, June 16

Spanish Market

Indian Market

Exclusive partner with Spanish Colonial Arts Society providing their Official Market Guide

SANTA FE

$100

SANTA FE

$26

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IMPACTS SANTA FE’S ECONOMY

GO TO ARTISTS ATTRACTS

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Publishes Sunday, July 23 Space Res./Copy Due Wednesday, July 5

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BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM Publication No. 596-440

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M

L

is a better stage work than it is. l blockMaybe decades of Hollywood ca and Westerns have conditioned us to comexpect a plot less cluttered than a in 1991 what he was served by his libretction tists, Carlo Zangarini and Guelfo sential Civinini, who derived their text Amerifrom David Belasco’s play The erwise Girl of the Golden West. age. that in a scene from La Fanciulla del West. Patricia Racette in a scene from La Fanciulla del West. acette eN opera HOWARD/THE SANTA FE Please OPERA see SFO, Page A-9 COURTESY KEN HOWARD/THE SANTA FE OPERA

berg, 95, April 6 Obituaries une 23 Mary Ann Baca, 58, June 29 iguez, June 27 Toni L. Chapman, 98, Santa Fe, June 30 Stone, 84, June 26 Carolyn Ewing Cobelo, June 15 Wellman, 85, June 22 Donald C. Duran, 77, Santa Fe, June 21 Thomas Joseph Halpin, June 29

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Publishes Sunday, August 13 Space Res./Copy Due Friday, July 14

advertising@sfnewmexican.com

3/27/17


in Santa Fe

Don’t miss your chance to be a part of these exclusive publications this season!

Bienvenidos

International Folk Art Market

Official Summer Guide

Official Guide

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2016 Summer Guide for Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico

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Publishes Sunday, May 21

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GUSTAVO VICTOR GOLER 2016 Master’s Award for Lifetime Achievement

Inside Front Cover . . . . . . . $3888

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3/27/17


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