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What Is Happening at the Pink Church Art Center in Santa Fe Today?

Some cutting a larger-than-life profile in Northern New Mexico; others preferred pursuing their passions backside the scenes.

A few left an educational footprint — teaching a vanishing dialect or, more than indirectly, good sportsmanship and kindness via their actions.

Every bit Santa Fe bids bye to 2021, The New Mexican bids farewell to residents who passed away during the previous twelvemonth and honors their legacies.

Developer's long-stalled projects gain ground

Joe Miller stands on his property off U.Southward. 285 in March 2016. The rancher, farmer and developer died Jan. 4 at age 90.

Joe Miller, 90, Jan. 4

Longtime rancher, farmer and developer Joe Miller was known for his virtually thirty-year battle to develop hundreds of acres between Lamy and Old Las Vegas Highway he had purchased in the 1980s. The proposed project was involved in a series of lawsuits and faced a xiii-twelvemonth water-use moratorium.

Opponents pushed against the thought, saying its "big-box stores" would compete with local businesses.

That was the side of her father the public saw, girl Kathy Miller said. She saw much more.

"He loved to travel," she said. "I would take him on trips all the time to Utah, Wyoming, and he'd desire to keep going. He was very devoted to his God, to his family. He went to St. Anne [Parish in Santa Atomic number 26], a very devout Catholic."

Randy Lutz

Randy Lutz holds opera props.

Randy Lutz, 62, Jan. 12

Randy Lutz's handiwork was visible at most every Santa Fe Opera functioning for 4 decades.

"Randy was many things to those who worked with him," said Paul Horpedahl, the opera's longtime director of product and facilities. "A leader, mentor, craftsman, creative person and counselor."

In 2018, Lutz received a national laurels from the United states of america Institute for Theatre Technology for his professional mentoring.

Forrest Moses

Forrest Moses' paintings are in the New Mexico Museum of Fine art, the Roswell Museum and Art Middle and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston.

Forrest Moses, 86, Jan. 22

Landscape painter Forrest Moses' works were found in a multifariousness of public collections; he had been represented locally past LewAllen Galleries for more than two decades.

The longtime Santa Fe resident'southward paintings are in the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Roswell Museum and Fine art Center and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. Corporate collections include American Phone & Telegraph, General Electric, IBM and United Airlines.

He began painting at age nine in Danville, Va.

LaDonna June Knudson, 81, Feb. 1

LaDonna June Knudson was a longtime Santa Fe resident and hostess at some of the city'south best-known restaurants. For a fourth dimension, she owned Byzantium, an eclectic downtown dress shop, and, for decades, also greeted diners at Steaksmith and The Shed.

Knudson at times worked ii jobs only seemed to take fun through information technology all, said Isabelle Koomoa, owner of the Pink Adobe restaurant, where Knudson was hostess for more than than three decades.

"She was wonderful with people — very, very popular," Koomoa said.

Mike McGonagle Jr.

Mike McGonagle Jr.

Milo 'Mike' McGonagle Jr., ninety, Feb. 8

Banker Mike McGonagle was president and a board member at Offset National Banking company of Santa Fe from 1969-85, and so served equally president of Century Bank from 1992 to 2001. He remained every bit president and CEO of Century Fiscal Services Corp., the bank's holding company, until 2019.

People who worked with McGonagle praised him for being a straight shooter who likewise had a soft spot for residents chasing their dreams, whether it was starting a business or owning a habitation.

Minda McGonagle said her father taught her from an early age that a person's value went far across financial wealth.

"The measure out of who you are is what you do and how you lot are engaged in the customs and how yous are with your family," she said.

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Christine McHorse, a volunteer judging Santa Atomic number 26 Indian Market pottery, examines a pot at El Museo Cultural in August 2008.

Christine McHorse, 72, Feb. 18

For more than than a decade, Christine McHorse made what she called "typical" pottery before irresolute course in the mid-1990s, when she innovated her new approach with micaceous dirt. Though she used a traditional coil-edifice method, the result was nontraditional and eye-grabbing — sleek, spare in beautification, a sculpture equally much as a pot.

"She loved the claiming of information technology," said her hubby, Joel McHorse. "She was always looking to do something different."

Built-in in 1948 to Navajo parents in Morenci, Ariz., McHorse attended schools in the nearby town of Clifton earlier attention the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe in the 1960s.

New Mexico's ousted public education secretary defends her performance

Karen Trujillo

Karen Trujillo, 50, Feb. 25

Karen Trujillo was mostly recently superintendent of Las Cruces Public Schools, serving in the latest in a string of education leadership roles.

Trujillo had held her mail since September 2019. Prior to that, she was the state educational activity secretarial assistant for vi months.

Trujillo worked in a variety of roles at New Mexico State University from 2010-18, including a stint as the interim associate dean of research in the Higher of Education.

She also won a seat on the Doña Ana Canton Committee in 2018, holding the mail service for 27 days before she became teaching secretarial assistant.

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Kyle Pacheco plates his Cajun Shrimp Papperdelle Pasta at the SFCC culinary lab in 2018.

Kyle Pacheco, 27, March

Kyle Pacheco constitute his calling in cooking and was a beloved star and graduate of Santa Fe Community Higher'southward culinary arts programme.

He learned how to melt traditional Kewa food from his grandmother and somewhen blended that cognition with the understanding of how to fix more conventional plates.

He won two first-identify awards in the state SkillsUSA cooking contest while he was in higher and two golden medals in regional cooking tournaments for young chefs after higher.

Tom Trowbridge, 62, March viii

Longtime New Mexico newsman Tom Trowbridge led KSFR's news coverage from 2017 until early 2021, when he joined New Mexico News Network.

While at KSFR, Trowbridge won several awards for his reporting.

Longtime New Mexico broadcaster Lorene Mills called Trowbridge an "one-time-schoolhouse journalist" who "worked hard and got the story."

Trowbridge also worked every bit a public information officeholder for the country Department of Education and spent fourth dimension at the Department of Transportation.

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Steve Wimmer made himself function of La Fonda on the Plaza's culture and ambiance with his never-catastrophe quest for information to share with guests.

Steve Wimmer, 73, March 16

Steve Wimmer, a longtime energetic and eccentric concierge at La Fonda on the Plaza, was known for wearing flashy dress, oversized glasses and eye-catching bolo ties while on the job.

"He loved people, he loved being the fixer, he loved being the solver, he loved being the person who could make experiences happen," said Rebecca Mascolo, who worked aslope Wimmer for 6 years at La Fonda.

Wimmer retired from La Fonda in 2015. His love of New Mexico and its culture and traditions was glassy past his continual visits to pueblos, canyons, live theater shows and favorite restaurants over the years.

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Eloisa Block

Eloisa Cake, 89, March 17

Erstwhile colleagues and family members say Eloisa Block gave generations of lawmakers handwritten notes of encouragement and worked behind the scenes to prepare New United mexican states'southward agenda during her 57 years in state government, including more than than 30 as deputy clerk of the House of Representatives.

"I got in that location in 1965 earlier the Roundhouse was even built, and Eloisa Block was already in accuse of a lot," Steven Arias, main clerk of the House from 1983-2014, said of his one-time deputy.

In 1957, she started working in state government as a secretary to Speaker of the House Don Hallam, picking upward on the ins and outs of country politics forth the way.

Eric Talley, 51, March 22

Eric Talley, a Boulder law officer amidst the first to make it at a Colorado store after reports of a shooting, was 1 of ten people killed in the attack.

Albuquerque chaser Mo Chavez, who attended Highland Loftier School with Talley, recalled the fallen officeholder with fondness.

"Eric was just a skilful guy, obviously and unproblematic," Chavez said. "Yous recollect that guy in high school who was simply a solid person, who was a good person? That was Eric."

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Jeff Kahm

Jeff Kahm, 50s, March 26

Jeff Kahm was a renowned painter and professor at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe.

Kahm was born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1968 and moved to Santa Atomic number 26 in the 1990s to study painting and photography at IAIA.

"His feedback was always some of the nigh valuable," said Brian Fleetwood, an assistant professor at IAIA. "At that place are a lot of people who come up in with an ego, and despite his incredible technical ability and his cognition of art history and painting in item, he always came at a critique without a chip on his shoulder that a lot of people bring."

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Marking Basham

Mark Basham, 61, April iv

Sometime metropolis of Santa Fe attorney and Santa Atomic number 26 County probate judge Marker Basham was born in Las Vegas, North.Yard., and moved to Santa Fe with his family every bit a pocket-size kid.

His mother, Judy Basham, was state personnel director nether several governors, and his father, Austin Basham, was the head football motorcoach at Santa Fe High School and later the manager of the land Motor Vehicle Division.

Mark Basham graduated from Santa Fe Loftier, where he was a standout football role player. After graduating from law schoolhouse in 1990, Basham worked as a prosecutor in the Offset Judicial District Chaser'southward Office and then transitioned into individual practice.

He was the urban center attorney from about 1996 to 2000, according to newspaper reports.

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Children'due south theater producer Rebecca Morgan created a world with friendly monsters, confused heroes, adamant lasses, pun-spouting jesters and kings and queens who were not particularly brilliant.

Rebecca Morgan, 69, April v

Rebecca Morgan co-founded Southwest Children'southward Theatre in the mid-1980s. The company produced phase adaptations of fairy tales and comic mysteries featuring child, teen and developed performers until a few years agone.

Morgan taught her students how to enunciate, accept criticism and strive to be better actors so they could get a shot at playing larger, more challenging roles.

"Rebecca demanded nothing brusk of perfection, even from children, because she believed we could practice it. She believed in every single one of us," said Jeni Nelson, one of Morgan's former kid actors.

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Gene Youngblood

Factor Youngblood, 78, Apr 6

Factor Youngblood, a kinesthesia member at the defunct Higher of Santa Fe, also was a motion picture theorist, a writer and an intellectual.

His book Expanded Movie theatre explored culling techniques of filmmaking and accurately looked alee to a time in which video, digital strategies and the internet would play big roles in cinema, communication and interaction.

Expanded Movie theater was rereleased by Fordham Academy Press concluding year, the 50th ceremony of its publication.

What motivates the president?

Mike Schultz

Mike Schultz, 94, Apr 10

Mike Schultz was a retired college professor who built a new community of friends in Santa Fe. Around 2000, he helped organize a weekly Tuesday night men's guild to discuss life before dinner and drinks.

He carried with him memories from encountering a newly liberated concentration army camp in spring 1945. Friends and family members said Schultz didn't speak of his experiences in World State of war II until opening up through therapy and groups of close friends late in life.

Schultz picked upwardly woodworking in his retirement. In his workshop, Schultz worked to perfect crafting wooden rocking chairs.

Mouton

Donald Mouton

Brother Donald Mouton, 85, April 17

Brother Donald Mouton brought Cajun wit and religious expertise to Santa Fe classrooms for nearly half a century.

In 1957, he graduated from the College of Santa Fe, founded by the Christian Brothers every bit St. Michael's College in 1859. He moved to Montreal to study French and earned a Ph.D. in sacred theology from Catholic University in Paris.

He started teaching religious studies at the Higher of Santa Fe in 1971 and was president from 1982-87 before returning to the classroom. During his fourth dimension at the Higher of Santa Fe, he helped perpetuate the myth of Nurse Medina, who according to lore was killed by a patient and haunted the halls equally a headless ghost. The college closed in 2009.

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Fine art Blea

Arthur 'Fine art' Blea, 73, April 22

Arthur "Art" Blea was a well-known figure in the Pojoaque Valley School District; he was superintendent three times between 1991 and 2010 and spent fifty years every bit an educator in Northern New Mexico.

Blea spent 29 years at Pojoaque as an educator and ambassador, ascent to the part of superintendent from 1991-98, so from 2001-05 and 2008-10. He too spent a twelvemonth as the interim superintendent of Española Public Schools from 2012-xiii and worked for that commune from 1972-81 before going to Pojoaque.

Most recently, he was a counselor for Ohkay Owingeh Community Schoolhouse for several years until 2020-21.

He met his wife, Mary Lou Martinez, at New Mexico Highlands University, and they married afterward he returned from a tour of duty during the Vietnam War.

Bill Worrell, 85, Apr 29

Prolific, passionate and genuine, Bill Worrell was a staple of the Santa Fe fine art scene.

He created thousands of sculptures and paintings during his career, but close friend Mary Adams — who owns the gallery in Worrell's name in downtown Santa Fe — said the artist was really a "collector of friends." Sometimes they were customers.

Worrell taught art for many years at North Texas State University (now the University of N Texas), Texas Tech Academy and Odessa College. Merely making art, not teaching it, was his true calling, Adams said.

Dance Jacques d'Amboise

Jacques d'Amboise, 2nd from left, hugs a former pupil during the 2018 National Trip the light fantastic Establish alumni homecoming celebration at NDI headquarters in New York.

Jacques d'Amboise, 86, May 2

Longtime New York City ballet dancer and choreographer Jacques d'Amboise — who in 1976 was deemed "an institution" by New York Times dance and theater critic Clive Barnes — left his dance footprints on New United mexican states when he co-founded Santa Fe-headquartered NDI New Mexico in 1994.

"He was the Pied Piper of dance in New United mexican states," said longtime Santa Fean and former real estate agent Pat French, who introduced d'Amboise to former Acequia Madre Unproblematic Schoolhouse Principal Leslie Carpenter around 1990.

That encounter led d'Amboise to kickoff a branch of his National Trip the light fantastic Plant, long anchored in New York Urban center, in Santa Fe. He debuted his first Santa Fe pupil trip the light fantastic toe show, an adaptation of his ain production of Fat City, at that school in 1990.

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Robert 'Bobby' Mogil played the trumpet in both a mariachi band and a Santa Fe jazz ring.

Robert 'Bobby' Mogill, 74, May 20

A friendly and sometimes flamboyant presence at the Legislature, Senate Reader Robert "Bobby" Mogill was known for incorporating humor and a touch of theatrics into his task.

Equally function of his job, he was called upon to read legislative bills, memorials and other documents into the record.

Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, said Mogill carried out his job with "emotion and dedication and real feeling. When we had a certificate memorializing somebody who had died, Bobby would read information technology in such a way that you actually paused and remembered that person."

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Frank DiLuzio

Frank DiLuzio Jr., 66, June 2

Frank DiLuzio Jr.'southward childhood wish came true when when he served as Santa Fe's fire principal from 1994 to 2000 — just a piece of his 20-plus years as a firefighter with the city.

One-time colleagues who worked with DiLuzio during his stint with the department, which began in 1979, recalled a human being of empathy and warmth.

The Los Alamos native is credited with playing a role in getting legislation passed that included firefighters in country presumptive disability laws, which tie a particular occupation with a disease or disease that could be a byproduct of that occupation.

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Lois Rudnick immersed herself in New United mexican states's culture and became a driving force of the Interfaith Coalition for Public Education in Santa Fe.

Lois Rudnick, 76, June vi

Customs activist, author and teacher Lois Rudnick adult an interest in instruction and writing as a teen, husband Steven said. A graduate of both Brown University (American studies) and Tufts University (education), she taught at the University of Massachusetts Boston, where she too chaired the American studies program for 25 years.

Rudnick became fascinated with the life and loves of Mabel Dodge Luhan, the flamboyant writer, arts patron and salon hostess of Taos.

Like Luhan, Rudnick and her husband moved to New Mexico, where Rudnick immersed herself in the culture and became a driving force of the Interfaith Coalition for Public Education in Santa Fe.

Rudnick wrote several books on Luhan, including The Suppressed Memoirs of Mabel Dodge Luhan: Sex, Syphilis and Psychoanalysis in the Making of Modern American Culture.

Los Matachines keep Alcalde tradition alive

Meliton Medina plays the violin to accompany a dance by Los Matachines de Alcalde in 2018.

Meliton Medina, 80, June 10

Meliton Medina spent much of his life dancing and making music for Los Matachines de Alcalde.

The tradition of the matachin dances dates dorsum hundreds of years.

The dance is performed in Hispanic and Native American communities at various times of the yr for different reasons.

Medina was born in the tiny community of La Villita in August 1940. A happy-become-lucky person from the go-go, music and dancing chosen to him at a immature age.

"He played by ear, but he pretty much knew almost it all his life," said Benny Martinez, Medina'due south son-in-law. "He played all kinds of instruments. If it fabricated music, he played it."

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Eddie Padilla, right, with his nephew, Isaiah Padilla, during a Santa Fe Fuego game at Fort Marcy Ballpark. Eddie Padilla died in June. He was 57.

Eddie Padilla, 57, June sixteen

Eddie Padilla was all-time known in Northern New United mexican states as a baseball game umpire but also officiated volleyball, basketball game and football game.

The 1982 Santa Fe High graduate commanded respect from players and coaches in role because he was a former player and bus. He played football and baseball at Santa Fe High, and his baseball exploits earned him a spot at Ranger Junior College in Texas, then St. Mary'due south of the Plains in Dodge City, Kan. At Ranger, he was a teammate of former Boston Red Sox and Colorado Rockies outfielder Ellis Burks.

Later a stint with the Army, Eddie played at New United mexican states Highlands University in the late 1980s and graduated with a bachelor'southward caste in education. He worked in Santa Fe Public Schools' special-needs program for 25 years.

Sparkle Plenty

Sparkle Plenty

Sparkle Plenty, 77, June 19

Sparkle Plenty, a Playboy bunny who made headlines when she entered a hotly contested congressional race in New United mexican states, was born Cheryl Boone and grew up in New Jersey.

Around the time she moved to Santa Fe, she changed her name; Sparkle Plenty is a character from the Dick Tracy detective cartoon.

In 1972, a U.S. Supreme Courtroom determination created doubt over whether New United mexican states could require candidates to pay a $2,500 filing fee to enter congressional and statewide races. The ruling led to a crowded field of candidates, many of them political unknowns, in that year's primary election.

Of the v candidates in the Democratic primary, Plenty finished concluding.

Bob Weil, 87, July ii

Rancher, philanthropist, jazz aficionado and restaurateur 'Bumble Bee Bob' Weil helped kickoff the annual New United mexican states Jazz Festival and played a role in the development of Las Campanas.

For years, Weil and his wife Barbara Jo (BJ) ran four Bumble Bee's Baja Grills in Santa Fe and Albuquerque.

Weil, who loved to cook, was such a jazz fanatic he came upwardly with the idea of offering gratis jazz at his eatery on Saturday nights.

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Victor di Suvero

Victor di Suvero, 94, July 6

Victor di Suvero saw the desert every bit a fertile environs for growing literary endeavors, poetry and love. Information technology's ane reason he named his drove of poetry From the Sea to Santa Atomic number 26.

The longtime city resident, who played a role in creating PEN New United mexican states, the New Mexico Book Association and the Live Poets Society, ran Pennywhistle Press in both San Francisco and Santa Fe. In 2009, Pennywhistle published We Came to Santa Fe, an anthology of short essays by notable Santa Feans who recounted their reasons for moving to the city.

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Ted Swisher, executive director of Santa Iron Habitat for Humanity, outside Habitat ReStore in 2019.

Ted Swisher, 72, July viii

Before he came to Santa Iron in 2006, Ted Swisher was central to the growth of Habitat for Humanity International.

While previously working in Georgia, his first mission involved expanding the number of chapters from 23 when he started to more than 1,700 by the time he left.

He establish his way to New Mexico and concluded upward working for Habitat'due south Santa Fe chapter.

Beneranda Razatos, 87, July 15

Beneranda "Bene" Razatos moved to Santa Atomic number 26 in 1959 to piece of work for the assistants of Gov. John Burroughs in what was and so known as the auditing and gas taxation department. She likewise worked equally a waitress at the long-gone La Conquistadora restaurant downtown.

Over time, she left her government job and began working at the Plaza Café every bit a bookkeeper, waitress, cashier and hostess.

A member of the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, she served as president of the altar social club, sponsoring bake sales to enhance funds for the church.

Brian O'Neill, 56, July 19

Brian O'Neill was a old prep basketball coach, radio broadcaster and manager of the New Mexico Sports Dominance.

He was the boys basketball coach at Cibola from 1992-98, leading the Cougars to the Course 4A land semifinals his final two years. He vacated that mail service to get an assistant autobus with the University of New Mexico in 1999, serving on a staff that helped the Lobos reach the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

O'Neill's voice was familiar to many; he had worked every bit an analyst during live sports broadcasts on KQTM-FM.

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Delilah Medina James

Delilah Medina, 40, July 17

Delilah Medina was a 1999 Mora High Schoolhouse graduate who was a part of the school's lone country girls basketball championship team in 1998; she later on was an assistant passenger vehicle at her alma mater and Peñasco.

Mark Cassidy, the head coach of that state championship team, said Medina was a hard worker on and off the basketball courtroom.

Recently, Medina created traveling basketball social club teams for Mora children, and they went across the land to compete in tournaments.

"I call up she institute her niche with younger kids," Cassidy said. "She was doing the traveling team, taking kids to tournaments all over the place, even Indiana."

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Ed Moreno

Ed Moreno, 67, July 27

Ed Moreno served as a Santa Fe County commissioner for more than three years after winning an open seat in 2016 and resigning in August 2020, citing health reasons.

In his resignation letter of the alphabet, Moreno wrote that of all the positions he'd held — he worked for x years as an Associated Press correspondent and also served equally an assistant state commissioner and a legislative analyst — his time on the commission was the most rewarding.

Moreno joined The New Mexican in the early on 1980s. He afterward became the Capitol correspondent for the Associated Press.

John Hayes, 75, July 28

John Hayes was a night owl who loved serving as the Santa Atomic number 26 Opera's midnight-shift watchman.

The longtime Santa Fean, a familiar presence on the local theater and screenwriting scene for decades, landed in Madrid about Santa Atomic number 26 in the belatedly 1980s.

An avid outdoorsman, he had visited the Philmount Sentry Ranch in Northern New Mexico as a Male child Scout and fell in beloved with the region.

On 76th anniversary, Santa Fe honors those who served at Bataan

William Overmier, 98, of Albuquerque, and his wife Ann, greet Gov. Susana Martinez during the almanac anniversary honoring Bataan veterans in 2018 in Santa Fe.

William Overmier, 101, Aug. 2

Earth State of war 2 veteran William "Bill" Overmier survived several years in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.

Past November 1941, Overmier was stationed in the Philippines, where he and his swain soldiers in Bataan battled the Japanese following America'due south entry into the war. He escaped the Bataan Death March by grabbing a seat in i of the last small patrol boats to exit the peninsula for nearby Corregidor in Manila Bay.

Overmier, who worked in the structure concern following his military service, earned a Purple Eye.

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Lorraine Toll celebrate voters' approval of a property tax levy to fund technology programs.

Lorraine Price, 72, August

Whether Lorraine Toll was serving as president or in some other capacity on the Santa Fe schoolhouse board, she adopted a no-nonsense, let's-become-to-the-indicate mental attitude that stressed efficiency.

A Brooklyn native who was African American, Price came of age during the civil rights era of the 1950s and '60s.

During board meetings, she often brought up her experiences marching and protesting on behalf of women, students and minorities.

Cost, who was first elected to the school board in 2013, came to Santa Iron in the mid-1980s. She then worked every bit a teacher, assistant principal and principal at a number of public schools, including Gonzales Community, Capshaw Heart, Piñon Elementary, Santa Atomic number 26 High and Capital High.

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Sculptor Donna Quasthoff shows off pocket-sized examples of her pieces in 2006. The longtime Santa Fe resident died Sept. one at 97.

Donna Quasthoff, 97, Sept. ane

Longtime Santa Fe artist and sculptor Donna Quasthoff created some of the most renowned — and controversial — works in town.

Amid her creations was a statue of Spanish conqueror Don Diego de Vargas that became a symbol in a community conflict over accurate depictions of the region's history. In summertime 2020, city workers removed the statute from Cathedral Park.

Quasthoff also created the statuary plaque pieces on the huge doors of the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi in downtown Santa Fe.

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John Silvery

John Silver, 69, Sept. nine

John Argent's law partner, Joe McClaugherty, said Silver liked his work because it allowed him to pursue two personal goals — "to assistance people and solve problems."

Silver for decades worked in his constabulary office in the downtown Catron Building, also known equally the Silver Edifice. The longtime attorney was not i for undue attention, said his wife, Gloria Silvery.

"He would want to be remembered as a caring Santa Fean, carrying on the family tradition of supporting all the people of New Mexico," she said.

The couple supported numerous local nonprofits and arts organizations and were named Santa Fe Living Treasures in 2008.

Fred Kline, 81, Sept. 11

Fine art dealer, historian and author Fred Kline, credited with finding the model drawing for Leonardo da Vinci's Holy Kid paintings, was known for his attention to item.

He served in the Marine Corps in the early on 1960s and was stationed in Japan and Southeast Asia in the years leading upwardly to the Vietnam War. Friends say he rarely talked nigh that period of his life.

Over time, Kline became known for his ability to uncover and identify "works that are unsigned, that are unknown, that's why they're lost. That's why I'1000 looking for them," he told interviewer Lorene Mills for a 2017 episode of her Report From Santa Fe public broadcasting show.

Alfonso Sanchez, 93, Sept. 20

Alfonso Sanchez was the region'southward tiptop law enforcement official when a band of Spanish-American rebels carried out a encarmine raid at the Rio Arriba County Courthouse in Tierra Amarilla.

Sanchez, who was commune attorney of Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties, was non at the courthouse in Tierra Amarilla when the raiders arrived.

He won his first political office in 1962 as a fellow member of the land House of Representatives. He served just three days of the 1963 legislative session before then-Gov. Jack Campbell appointed Sanchez as district attorney.

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Joe Jordan-Berenis, executive manager of the Interfaith Community Shelter at Pete's Place, speaks with Ramon Vasquez, a volunteer and resident, outside the shelter in February. 'You can't help everybody, but you lot can assist all those that can exist helped,' Jordan-Berenis said.

Joe Jordan-Berenis, 75, October. 3

Interfaith Community Shelter Director Joe Jordan-Berenis operated the shelter — as well called Pete's Place — for nearly seven years before retiring in April and moving to Rhinebeck, N.Y.

Hashemite kingdom of jordan-Berenis' career serving individuals experiencing homelessness began at an agency that grew out of the Woodstock Festival in New York in 1969, according to an announcement the shelter released when he retired. He joined Family of Woodstock in 1980, serving as a counselor program managing director and, ultimately, the organization's executive director.

He one time said the Family of Woodstock was based on a philosophy of beingness nonjudgmental and nondirective, "significant you don't tell people what to do, y'all offer them choices, and they determine." He brought that philosophy with him to the Interfaith shelter.

Imogene Hughes, 89, October. four

Imogene Hughes frequently would drive onto her Bonanza Creek Ranch due south of Santa Atomic number 26 while a production was filming, with her hair immaculately set up and her attire appropriately Southwestern and outdoorsy.

In 2018, she was inducted into the New Mexico Film and Television Hall of Fame for her work building the movie manufacture inside the state.

Hughes told The New Mexican in a 2011 interview she decided to make a new start when she turned 50 and moved to New Mexico, where her parents had once lived.

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John Paul LeDoux at the summit of St. Paul's Cathedral in London in 2007.

John Paul LeDoux, 51, Oct. 19

John Paul LeDoux helped keep New Mexican Spanish live as the dialect dwindled amid a tidal wave of English.

LeDoux, a longtime Spanish professor at Santa Iron Community College and a Nambé resident, was praised for leaving a learning legacy.

"He mentored so many other people who would become colleagues at schools all over the place," said Santa Iron Community College academic adviser Jonathan Harrell.

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William C. 'Neb' Carson

Beak Carson, 92, Oct. 30

William C. "Nib" Carson and his married woman, Georgia, moved to Santa Fe in 1992 and founded a volunteer reading program chosen the Salazar Partnership, which eventually helped provide books and other needs for Salazar and Agua Fría unproblematic schools. The system then became office of Communities In Schools of New Mexico.

His daughters, Chapin Carson of New York City and Laura Banes of Baltimore, said their father's career included running the education segmentation of Bell & Howell in the Chicago area. Then he endemic and oversaw trade schools, including schools for mechanics in Detroit and for wellness intendance technicians in Minneapolis.

As a boy, Bill Carson came to beloved New Mexico while attending a summer campsite in Los Alamos, his daughters said.

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Todd Bailey

Todd Bailey, 49, Oct. 31

Hobbs News-Sun editor and one-time Santa Atomic number 26 New Mexican reporter Todd Bailey was remembered every bit a positive, generous presence in newsrooms, where he spent much of his working life.

Bailey covered sports for The New Mexican from 2002-03, then worked in the paper'due south apportionment and sales departments before rejoining the newsroom as a neighborhood news editor and writer from 2007-08.

"Pecos fans loved him," New Mexican sports writer James Barron said. "They really had an item at their concession stand up named after him. It was a chile cheese hotdog called The Bailey … that was created just for him."

He also helped guide young journalists in producing The New Mexican's weekly Generation Next teen section.

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Elaine Anaya

Elaine Anaya, 78, November. 9

Elaine Anaya served every bit New United mexican states'southward first lady in the early on and mid-1980s, while her hubby, Toney, was governor, and used the role to promote museums and early on didactics.

"She was very quiet, very calm. She had a certain demeanor about her that was disarming, but she set the rules down, and I followed them," Toney Anaya said.

Carol Luna-Anderson, manager of the Life Link Preparation Institute, said Elaine Anaya advocated for those who were homeless, struggling with behavioral wellness problems, or victims of domestic violence or human trafficking.

"She represented all strata of populations here," Luna-Anderson said.

Dave Hickey, 82, Nov. 12

Santa Fe art critic Dave Hickey's books The Invisible Dragon: Essays on Dazzler (1993) and Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Republic (1997) won him legions of fans.

In 2001, the MacArthur Foundation awarded him a "genius" grant for his body of piece of work. He was inducted into the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame in 2003 and won a Peabody Award for a 2006 documentary about Andy Warhol.

Hickey came to Santa Fe in 2010 and accepted a position at the University of New Mexico.

DeAnna Autumn Foliage Suazo, 29, Nov. xiii

DeAnna Autumn Leaf Suazo, the daughter of artists Geraldine Tso and Gary David Suazo, was considered a ascension star in the contemporary Native American fine art community when she constitute slain at Taos Pueblo. Her longtime boyfriend has been charged in her expiry.

She began making art at an early age. She said her piece of work stemmed from ledger fine art, created past Plains Indians. The fine art grade is rooted in pictographic imagery created on buffalo skins and other materials.

Suazo exhibited her artwork at the Southwest Clan for Indian Arts' annual Indian Market for more than a decade and was likewise a featured artist at many national fine art markets.

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Don Ortiz Sr.

Don Ortiz Sr., 87, December. 13

Broker, stockbroker, father and political ally Don Ortiz Sr. exuded a paternal strength that made him a strong mentor, said attorney Marty Esquivel, who credits Ortiz with helping him get through police school.

He was the son of Frank S. Ortiz, who served as Santa Fe mayor from 1948-52. Don Ortiz Sr. became agile in the Democratic Party and became well-acquainted with Govs. David Cargo, Bruce King and Bill Richardson, Esquivel said.

At Ortiz's request, the state's first active solar energy bank was installed in the mid-1970s at Southwest National Bank at St. Francis Boulevard and San Mateo Drive.

Mario Rascon, 34, Dec. 14

Nancy Ruiz considered what to tell her child following her father's unexpected and untimely passing, less than two weeks before Christmas Solar day.

"I thought of telling my daughter her daddy was away, working in another identify. Only I couldn't practice that," she said about her husband. "She will have questions anytime. For now, I told her, 'Your daddy's non going to be here anymore. He'southward with Jesus, watching over united states of america.' "

Family members recalled Rascon every bit a adept human who took care of his family.

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David Soveranez, a football and basketball official for 45 years, died December. 21 at the age of 76.

David Soveranez, 76, Dec. 21

David Soveranez, who served as a basketball and football official for 45 years, was known for his placidity simply affable personality and his dedication to his craft.

Mark Salazar, who called many basketball games with Soveranez, said the Santa Atomic number 26 High graduate ever offered communication and guidance to officials at every plow.

Greg Sandoval, a 20-year football referee and an banana boys basketball autobus at Santa Fe High, said he marveled at how Soveranez could defuse a tense situation without losing his temper.

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The Fuego's William 'Freezy' Smalls, left, speaks with director Bill Moore during a 2014 game at Fort Marcy Ballpark.

Bill Moore, 76, Dec. 28

Bill Moore was hired as the manager of the Pecos League's Santa Atomic number 26 Fuego in the team's inaugural flavour in 2012 and finished his career as the winningest skipper in league history with 274 victories with five teams over eight seasons.

A Navy veteran who spoke his mind, he became the face of the Fuego during the team's kickoff flavor. He showed his fiery side 1 night at Fort Marcy Ballpark when he was ejected from a game, found a bucket of baseballs in the dugout and dumped the contents on home plate.

The first four seasons of Fuego baseball game were essentially the gold age of the Pecos League. Santa Fe was the marquee club in what was and so a New Mexico-based league as the Fuego drew the largest crowds and sold the most trade.

Information technology peaked in 2014 when Moore skippered the team to the league title.

The following writers contributed to this report: James Barron, Phill Casaus, Robert Nott, Jessica Pollard, Rick Ruggles, Milan Simonich, Teya Vitu and Scott Wyland at The New Mexican; Rick Romancito for The Taos News; and Sam Metz with the Associated Printing.

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Source: https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/a-look-back-at-new-mexicans-who-died-in-2021/article_5bca176e-4260-11ec-b05b-4ba31f9d0995.html