Cenizo Journal Summer 2018 | Page 7

C enizo N ot es by Carolyn Brown Zniewski, Publisher and Danielle Gallo, Editor-in-Chief W ith this issue we have some big changes happening. Lou Pauls is riding off into the sun- set. She has been our business manager since January 2013. I’d like to thank her for the five years of keeping our finances rolling. Rani Birchfield has been Advertising Editor for sever- al years now and she is moving up to Associate editor. Danielle Gallo has been Editor for five years and will now be Editor-in-chief and in addition to editing she will do advertising and the lion’s share of business. Wendy Lynn Wright will continue doing all the Art and Design, Maya Brown Zniewski will still be our Web Master and I will continue as Publisher. Some of our email addresses have changed so check them out. We will still be the same Cenizo Journal of the Big Bend. No change there! Our cover and Photo Essay in this issue are all about the sky. It’s high summer here and the days are long and the nights are shorter and our darkness is filled with the most incredible stars. I love to lie on my back on the earth and look up at that amazing celestial firmament, letting all the tiresome worries of 21st century America dissolve into the eternal energy of the universe. I hope you will get out there, too, and appreci- ate the best the Big Bend has to offer. Again, our apologies to our contributor, Jeremy Gonzalez. Please watch for future contri- butions from Jeremy and read his work in the Fort Stockston Pioneer where he is Managing Editor. I don’t usually think of the summer as a sea- son of changes. The soft, humid mornings, blazing days and mild evenings that stretch seemingly to infinity fol- low one after the other in a stately progression that seems to last a good nine months. Change in the Big Bend summertime comes from the human side of the equation, as Nature languid- ly plods along. This year, the human changes here in the Trans-Pecos are rapidly piling up. With the indefinite closing of Balmorhea due to structur- al damage, a summer tradition as old as human habitation falls by the wayside. All we can do is hope the spring will be strong enough to survive the march of human progress. The loss of our scholarly gentleman and dear friend, Jim Glendinning, is perhaps simply the normal march of the generations, the passing of a torch from the old guard to the new, and yet I can’t envision the Big Bend without him. It’s hard to imagine a voice as gentle, humorous, loving and mischievous as his emerging to fill the void he leaves behind. I believe that change is good, even if the process is a little disturbing. Change causes us to contract for a moment, to contort as though to duck a blow. But those are the movements that make us strong, and flexible, as individuals and communities. While the seasons roll predictably through their quiet paces, enjoy this issue of the Cenizo, and the shifting human tapestry it chronicles. AYN FOUNDATION (DAS MAXIMUM) ANDY WARHOL MARIA ZERRES “The Last Supper” “September Eleven” Brite Building 107-109 N Highland, Marfa Open weekends noon to 5 pm For hours, please call: 432.729.3315 or visit www.aynfoundation.com A magical oasis in the Chihuahuan Desert of Texas Off the Pinto Canyon Rd near Ruidosa rustic lodging camping reservations required 432.229.4165 chinatihotsprings.net Dan and Dianna Burbach, Managers Radio f or a Wide Range Serving F ar W es t T e x as a t 9 3.5 FM Bec ome a member a t www . marf apublicr adio . or g or 1-800-90 3-KR T S Published by Cenizo Journal LLC P.O. Box 2025, Alpine, Texas 79831 www.cenizojournal.com CE N IZ O J OU RN AL S TA F F PUBLISHER Carolyn Brown Zniewski [email protected] EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Danielle Gallo [email protected] WEB MANAGER Maya Brown Zniewski [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITOR Rani Birchfield [email protected] DESIGN/PRODUCTION Wendy Lynn Wright [email protected] Cenizo Third Quarter 2018 7