Sports coverage 001

Page 1

ON TAP Estancia will be hosting Laguna-Acoma on Friday. Both boys and girls will be participating, with the first tip-off starting at 4 p.m.

SPORTS

Thursday, February 5, 2015 Page 7

WRESTLING

Manzano ‘getting there’ Team takes 170 division at tourney

work to get better.” Travis Decker won every one of his matches, and took the ultimate prize: first place in his division, thanks to a draIain Woessner matic last-second finale where Mountain View Telegraph he flipped his opponent over Manzano participated in and pinned him to the mat in the Albuquerque Metro Wres- an instant with a head and arm tling Championship Jan. 30 toss. The crowd went wild. and 31 and took first place in “I wanted to win it pretty one weight division, 170, and bad,” Decker said after the performed admirably in many match. “But I got to push that others. aside when I wrestle and relax, “We’re getting there,” Coach clear my mind. When I wrestle IAIN WOESSNER/TELEGRAPH Dan Sparago said after the like that, I wrestle my best.” He Isaac Garcia suffered a rough defeat when he went to the mat tournament. “It’s two weeks described the finishing move during the Albuquerque Metro Wrestling Championship, losing until district, we’re going one that he used to win the match by 19 points against St. Pius, but claiming third place overall in day at a time, let’s get there. as a move he’s worked on for his weight division on Jan. 31. We’re gonna work hard and awhile.

“It’s a go-to for me, but it isn’t always the safest go-to,” Decker said. “But in my mind I know the score is close, I need to score quick and I need to score big. If I lose it, at least I tried something.” Decker, who is never without his headphones when not on the mat, seemed almost too relaxed between all of his matches, bobbing his head to his music with an almost sleepy expression on his face. When he started to wrestle, however, he was all business, lashing out with lightning quick reflexes and powerful grabs. Three out of the four matches he wrestled in the

tournament ended with pins. While Decker certainly had a great night, Manzano’s other grapplers put in some sterling performances as well. Isaac A. Garcia got a pin in his first match against La Cueva, and while he was eliminated from the championship bracket, he cleaned house in the consolation bracket, and took fourth in the lightweight division. Luciano Lopez won his first match as well, and was also eliminated in the second. In the consolation round, he won two matches, one by forfeit and one by decision, leading See MANZANO on PAGE 10

PREPS BASKETBALL

MORIARTY HOOPS

A ROUGH ROAD

St. Pius pounds Pintos 69-40 in shooting-spree district opener Iain Woessner Mountain View Telegraph

T

he District 5-5A Moriarty’s boys (3-16) faced St. Pius X (15-3) in their first district basketball game and lost 69-40 Tuesday night. “We can’t let that knock us down,” coach Mike Trujillo said after the match. “We’ve struggled from day one, our district’s tough, our schedule’s tough, we’re young, but we’ve shown some growth in the last month and we can’t let this make us take a step backwards. The big key is that we stick together.” Moriarty started out strong thanks to a powerful opening act orchestrated by Jake Flaming, who led his team in points, putting up 21 over the course of the game, the only one of the Pintos to shoot into the double digits. “It’s almost a fun thing for me,” Flaming said after the game. “I get to help these guys out who haven’t been there before. We get to work on our brotherhood and bonding.” St. Pius took charge after a sluggish beginning, and put up seven points to swiftly tie the game up at the four-minute mark. They continued to dominate, and the first period ended 16-9 in their favor. Flaming put up the points to keep Moriarty playing, but St. Pius had their shots down, and even a push at the end of the second by Pintos Zach Trujillo and Garret Rowland couldn’t tip the odds in their favor. Halftime came in with 23-28 on the board. “They’re a heck of a team, they always are,” Flaming said of St. Pius. “The second half has always been a struggle for us this year, but they couldn’t miss that second half and that really hurt us.” Flaming tried to bring the game back by making a dramatic slam dunk near the start of the third period, but one man cannot a game win, and the Pintos failed to control the ball, fumbling and falling in the face of St. Pius’ expert shots. The momentum was with the Sartans the whole rest of the match, and they dominated in the final period like in all the others, putting up a trio of three-point shots in succession and making every free throw, which amounted to over eight points alone in the final act. The buzzer sounded with great finality, and the game was ended 69-40, another loss for Moriarty. “Right now our district is tough, and we’re kind of caught in a hard road,” Trujillo said. “The rest of the week is another tough two games. There’s no easy one for us, unfortunately. We’re gonna stay positive and stay working hard and hopefully we’ll get a break.”

TELEGRAPH FILE

Freshman Alyssa Adams defends the Moriarty bucket from Bernalillo aggression during a December game. Moriarty has had a string of close games, and may prove to be a wild card in the district tournament.

Teams head to district play with optimism Estancia boys have eight wins; Moriarty girls are 6-13 right now

■■

Iain Woessner Mountain View Telegraph

With high school winter sports there are really two seasons in basketball, and the games that hold more importance are district matchups. How you do in district determines where the district tournament is played, and it is always an advantage to play at home. And how you do in district play will have a bearing on postseason tournaments. Area teams headed into district play this week and all are optimistic that they will be holding trophies aloft by the end of the season.

Estancia

IAIN WOESSNER/TELEGRAPH

Zach Trujillo readies a layup during the district opener between Moriarty and St. Pius X on Feb. 3. Moriarty played hard, but couldn’t overcome the Sartans’ shooting, losing 69-40.

The Estancia boys currently have eight wins and 11 losses, with a single District 6-3A loss thus far against Laguna-Acoma. Still, this team has a full roster that has put up impressive numbers so far this year. Senior Cesar Quintana has scored 49 points this season and 21 rebounds. He’s in second place behind Caleb Ortiz, who has snatched up 54 points this season but his real record is in free throws, where he leads the team with 18 points, compared to Quintana’s five. The second best at the foul line, Herman Ortiz, has made 16 free throws this season. Still, while the numbers are there, the victories are not. A string of embarrassing defeats against Magdalena, Tucumcari and Laguna-Acoma, the latter of which counts as their first district loss, had the team reeling. While they redeemed themselves against East Mountain last week, they have a tough district to beat. “The schedule we played leading up to disSee TEAMS on PAGE 11

Athlete of the Week

LEFT: Jake Flaming puts up a slam dunk in the third period, a highlight for Moriarty, which suffered a loss in its Feb. 3 district opener against St. Pius X 69-40. RIGHT: Jacob Garcia of Moriarty tries to keep the ball away from an aggressive St. Pius X defender on Feb. 3’s district opening match, which the Pintos lost 69-40.

Wrestling is a challenging sport. It requires mental discipline, physical toughness, and a clear focus. Manzano’s wrestling team has a number of wrestlers who can claim these virtues as their own, but few do so with the style of Travis Decker. Decker, now a senior, was DECKER: the only one of the Monarchs to make it into the finals of the Manzano senior takes Albuquerque Metro Championship, and he took first place first place with perfect flourish. For his winning record, his diligence, and his talent, the Mountain View Telegraph names Travis Decker as our Athlete of the Week.


8

Mountain View Telegraph

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Football has become game of money and scandal

A

nother Super Bowl has come and gone, and while we all looked forward to being bombarded by an endless barrage of manipulative advertisements with some brief pauses for a game of football, I watched the proceedings and saw only that any integrity, any soul, that the game once had was truly dead. Here we have our champions. In one corner, the biggest spender in the league and possibly the history of sport, the Seattle Seahawks, who take defeat in stride, albeit with a few more fisticuffs than usual. In the other corner, we have a team besmirched by a severe controversy — a recent scandal involving cheating! Cheating in the playoffs even, cheating to get into the very game they were now in.

IAIN WOESSNER

Mountain View Telegraph With so heavy and so damning a shadow of doubt over the whole proceedings, surely the Super Bowl would be postponed until an investigaIAIN WOESSNER tion could conclude whether the New England Patriots deserved to be where they were Sunday night. But the advertising space had been purchased months in advance and if they rescheduled the game the NFL and its broadcasting partners would have to pay enormous of Mountain Viewsums Telegraph

Sports in Brief

Youth sports panel Cheer competition Saturday at Expo up and running The Bernalillo County Youth Sports Commission, created last August to support and promote athletic opportunities for children, has hit the ground running. The 19-member Youth Sports Commission, formed in response to a County Commission resolution, will encourage collaboration among area youth sports organizations to improve safety, provide greater access for local children, and enhance the county’s economy. “Studies show that children who participate in sports gain significant longterm benefits that include life skills like teamwork, discipline, sportsmanship, and good habits that promote an active and healthy lifestyle,” says Commission Chair Maggie Hart Stebbins, a former All-American athlete who sponsored the resolution. The commission’s first order of business is to establish an accurate inventory and assessment of the local area sports facilities and the true number of athletes that they serve. The commission is also looking at health and safety concerns that impact the athletes and coaching issues such as training, standardized background checks, and grievance processes.

Mesalands hosts rodeo preview day Mesalands Community College in Tucumcari will have a Rodeo Preview Day on Feb. 13 at 10 a.m. This event is open to all high school juniors and seniors who are interested in competing on the nationally ranked Mesalands Rodeo Team. During the event, students will have the opportunity to meet faculty and staff, tour our campus, learn more about academic programs and participate in a Free Application for Federal Student Aid and scholarship workshop. Lunch will be provided. Students are also welcomed to practice with the Mesalands Rodeo Team and stalls are available if students would like to bring their own horses. For more information about the Mesalands Community College Rodeo Preview Day, please call 575-461-4413, extension 171.

The Spirit of Hope cheer competition will be held Saturday at Expo New Mexico in Albuquerque. The event brings together cheerleaders and drill teams, including elementary through high school teams from throughout the state to compete in several different categories. The New Mexico Activities Association sanctioned event will be held in Tingley Coliseum with doors opening at 9 a.m. and competitions beginning at 10 a.m. Admission is $10 with the exception of children under age 2, who will be admitted free of charge.

Junior wrestlers sign-up ongoing The Moriarty Junior Wrestling program has ongoing registration, according to head coach Andrew Fowner. Fowner said he has more than 50 wrestlers already involved and has increased his coaching staff to nine. For more information or to register, call Fowner at 6157027.

Sportsmanship nominees sought

money to the sponsors who in turn spent enormous sums of money making those pithy commercials featuring puppies that you all loved or hated so much. Cheating is not a big deal in football. Tom Brady is still a champion, the Patriots still won, and not even by their own doing, but by gross incompetence on Seattle’s part, so there we go. Time to recap the season. So we had a player convicted of murder, a player who punched his wife, a player who beat his kids with a stick, a player who faces assault charges, a player who killed his wife and then shot himself in the presence of the coach; it’s been one hell of a season. So now a team that was caught cheating suffers not at all and, in fact, wins the whole game and everyone cheers and everyone cries

and Seattle just got a shade less smug and Boston a shade more. Yet here I sit with a sigh, shaking my head and wondering why. Why it is that in a world where steroids and doping are scandals and Tiger Woods had to hide from the public eye for a few years (and subsequently forget how to play golf) because he was a playboy, why is football still America’s sport? Why is it the one that brings in such huge numbers? Why is it the one sport where integrity doesn’t really matter? There’s absolutely no facade left. You cannot watch the Super Bowl and think that the “game” has anything to do with the zoo you see before you. Yeah, you can say your team won or your team lost, you can talk about the plays called or the plays not called;

you can talk about that crazy interception by Seattle right out the gate where a man broke his wrist to catch a bit of pigskin, or that crazy interception by New England when Seattle threw that idiotic pass, but that’s not what the game is about anymore. The glory is more than fleeting, it’s not even there. It’s about jingles and slogans, it’s about flashy advertisements, nonsensical halftime shows, it’s about money. That’s all it ever was about. There’s no soul to it, there’s no spirit to the game, there’s just a mindless frenzy to consume and conquer. Victory at any price, maybe that’s the American dream, maybe that’s what this game taught us. What else is there to learn? Is this really what we look up to, is this the cultural legacy we’ve built for ourselves? Is this really what

we want for ourselves? I don’t know. All I know is that there’s not a shred of decency left in the sport, and maybe there never really was any. I look back at my previous columns, I think about how many high school kids need surgeries at 16 to fix broken tendons or shattered femurs, who suffer concussions or spinal injury, and I wonder what any of that’s for. Football is a meat grinder. You throw flesh in and money spews out the other end, and far away from the mincing teeth, a fat man in a suit is snatching up as many of those fluttering bills as his thick fingers can hold, stuffing them into his pockets until they are fit to burst, and then he is walking away, leaving behind the mangled remains of youth, glory and sport.

COMING UP Basketball n Estancia’s boys will host Laguna-Acoma on Friday for a 6:30 p.m. bout. Then on Tuesday they will be traveling to Bosque to face their team at 7 p.m. The Bears will have a make-up game against NACA — which was cancelled due to weather — on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. n Estancia’s girls will host Laguna-Acoma on Friday at 4 p.m. They will go away to Bosque for a 5:30 p.m. game on Tuesday. n Moriarty’s boys have an away game against Grants on Friday at 7 p.m. They will be hosting Albuquerque Academy on Tuesday at 7 p.m. as well.

Moriarty’s girls will host Grants on Friday at 7 p.m. They will be traveling away n

to Albuquerque Academy on Tuesday for a 7 p.m. duel. n Manzano’s boys will be facing La Cueva on Wednesday at 7 p.m. This will be a home game.

Manzano’s girls travel to La Cueva on Tuesday for a 7 p.m. clash. n

n Mountainair’s boys will host Menaul on Thursday at 7 p.m. They will be hosting Tierra Encantada on Saturday at 1 p.m. n Mountainair’s girls will host Menaul on Thursday at 5:30 p.m.

East Mountain’s girls will journey to Portales on Friday to play a district match. Times have not been announced for this event. n

Wrestling n Manzano will be hosting Cibola for a wrestling meet on Friday at 7 p.m.

Swim/Dive n Manzano’s swim team will be participating in a meet at Rio Rancho High School on Saturday at 10 a.m.

n East Mountain’s boys will be traveling to Portales on Friday for a district game at 7 p.m. Then they will host the New Mexico Military Institute in another district match on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

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Mountain View Telegraph Legals

A copy of the adopted ordinance is available for inspection at the City Clerk’s office 201 Broadway Street, Moriarty, New Mexico during regular business hours.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Legals

q q (505) 843-9440

WITNESS my hand and the seal of the District Court of Torrance County, New Mexico on January 28, 2015.

ager, 505-384-4270. Estancia Valley Solid Waste Authority Danette Cabber, Office Manager

DISTRICT COURT CLERK Mountain View Telegraph: February 5, 2015. NOTICE OF PUBLIC INPUT (NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING) The Town of Edgewood Governing Body has scheduled "Public Input" during the Regular Council Meeting of February 18, 2015 @ 6:30 P.M. at the Edgewood Community Center, #12 E. Frontage Road to consider adoption of: A. Amendment to Ordinance No. 2010-01- An Ordinance Providing for Connection to Wastewater Facilities of the Edgewood Sewer District; Providing for Procedures & Policies for Obtaining Wastewater Service; Providing that Certain Exception there shall be no Subdividing of Real Property or the Construction of Certain Buildings within Incorporated Edgewood without a prior request to Edgewood Sewer District for Sewer Service; Providing for Wastewater Facilities; Providing for Construction of Wastewater Facilities; Providing for the Construction of Wastewater Extensions, Providing for Service Commitments; Providing for Connection Fee Payment; Expenditures & Refunds; Providing for Design & Construction Standards; Providing for Penalty for Violations. B. Amendment to the Town of Edgewood Zone Map. (The Official Map). During the Meeting, citizens will be given the opportunity to comment on the Master Plan. The Governing Body will also accept written comments if received before the hearing. Please send comments to: Town of Edgewood, P.O. Box 3610, Edgewood, NM 87015. If you have any questions, please call Steve Shepherd, Administrator at (505) 286-4518. Mountain View Telegraph: January 29 and February 5, 2015 The Village of Tijeras approved adoption of the Ordinance #160 Business Registration Fees at its Council Meeting on January 26, 2015. A copy of the Ordinance is available to view at Village Hall, 12 Camino Municipal, Tijeras, NM 87059 Mountain View Telegraph: February 5, 2015

Legals

By /s/ Thomas Wilson Deputy Mountain View Telegraph: February 5, 12 & 19, 2015 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF TORRANCE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. D-722-CV-2014-00125 U.S. BANK, N.A. as Trustee for Manufactured Housing Contract Senior/Subordinate Pass-Through Certificate Trust 1995-6, Plaintiff, vs. BENITO B. CHAVEZ, aka BEN CHAVEZ, and if married, JANE DOE CHAVEZ (true name unknown), his spouse; BEVERLY A. CHAVEZ, aka BEVERLY CHAVEZ, and if married, JOHN DOE A (true name unknown), her spouse; and TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO, Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF SUIT THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS JOHN D. BELL AND BARBARA BELL You are hereby notified that Plaintiff Suburban Mortgage Company of New Mexico, a New Mexico corporation (hereinafter "Suburban") has filed a Complaint for Foreclosure of Mortgage and Judgment on Promissory Note (hereinafter, the "Complaint") against you in the aboveentitled and numbered lawsuit in the above-designated Court. The general object of the action is to foreclose a lien held by the Plaintiff (Suburban) and for other appropriate relief regarding the below described property located in Torrance County, New Mexico: The Real Property is located at 548 Lexco Road, Moriarty, New Mexico, 87035 and more particularly described as: Parcel designate "B", being situate within the South Half (S1/2) of Section Thirty-Two (32), Township Nine (9) North, Range Eight (8) East, N.M.P.M., as the same is shown and designated on that certain Plat entitled "Claim of Exemption Plat, Parcels A and B, Lands of John and Barbara Bell", prepared by Anthony L. Harris, N.M.P.S. #11463, dated June 21, 2004, filed for record on July 12, 2004 at 1:15 o’clock, P.M., as document number 2043030, and filed in Cabinet E, Slide 242, Plat records of Torrance county, New Mexico. together with all structures and improvement located thereon. If you do not file a responsive pleading or motion within thirty (30) days of the date of the first publication of this Notice, a Judgment will be entered against you by default, and the relief prayed for in the Complaint will be granted. The name and address of the attorneys for Suburban are as follows: Katherine A. Lynch, Esq. Moses, Dunn, Farmer & Tuthill, P.C. P.O. Box 27047 Albuquerque, NM 87125-7047

RYAN VEITZ/DONNA GLOVER Petitioners, vs. FAITH DOLLHOPF/ROBERT BRASHER Respondents. AMENDED NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION STATE OF NEW MEXICO to the above-named Respondent (s), Greetings: You re hereby notified that the above-named Petitioner has filed a civil action against you in the above entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof being: PETITION FOR ORDER APPOINTING KINSHIP GUARDIAN

By: Ashley Padilla Deputy Clerk

Mountain View Telegraph: January 22 & 29 and February 5 & 12, 2015

Mountain View Telegraph: January 22 & 29 and February 5, 2015

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF TORRANCE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

and all improvements, including, but not limited to, the manufactured home attached thereto and more particularly described as a 1996 Redman Homes; VIN No. 12523873AB.

THE FOREGOING SALE will be made to satisfy a judgment rendered by the above Court in the above entitled and numbered cause on January 14, 2015, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above described property. The Plaintiff’s Judgment, which includes interest and costs, is $53,573.92 and the same bears interest at 9.25% per annum from January 1, 2015, to the date of sale. The Plaintiff and/or its assignees has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one month right of redemption.

JOHN D. BELL; BARBARA BELL; BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. and THE ESTANCIA VALLEY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY; Defendants.

No. DM 2014-1697

Lot Seven-B (7-B) of the Replat of Lot Seven of VISTA DEL SOL SUBDIVISION, Town of Tajique Grant, Section 11, Township 6 North, Range 6 East of the New Mexico Principal Meridian, as the same is shown and designated on the Plat filed for record on July 20, 1994, in Cabinet C, slide 91, as document number 6064, Plat Records of Torrance County, New Mexico,

Case No. 00127

vs.

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF BERNALILLO SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

Unless you enter your appearance in siad cause on or before the 2nd day of March, 2015 a judgement by default will be entered against you.

If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control,

SUBURBAN MORTGAGE COMPANY OF NEW MEXICO, a New Mexico corporation, Plaintiff,

Mountain View Telegraph: February 5, 2015

judgment amount and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its in rem judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. The Court’s decree, having duly appointed its Special Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of sale, first to the costs of sale and the Special Master’s fees, then to pay the above-described in rem judgment, interest, and costs of sale, and to pay unto the registry of the Court any balance remaining to satisfy future adjudication of priority mortgage holders; NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the lands and improvements described above for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the in rem judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorney’s fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a reasonable receiver and Special Master’s fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the in rem judgment due is $76,501.74, plus interest to and including date of sale of $2,376.54, for a total in rem judgment plus interest of $78,878.28. Sale is subject to the entry of an in rem order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. Witness my hand this 12th day of January, 2015.

NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on February 18, 2015, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the Neil Mertz Judicial Complex, 903 North 5th Street, Estancia, New Mexico, sell all the right, title and interest of the above-named Defendants in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 65A Camino Del Norte, which may also be known as 65 Camino Del Norte, Tajique, and is situate in Torrance County, New Mexico, and is particularly described as follows:

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF TORRANCE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT D-722-CV-2014-

Legals

Legals

/s/ Stella Chavez Stella Chavez, Special Master New Mexico Abstract Co. PO Box 408 Estancia, NM 87016 (505) 384-5000 Mountain View Telegraph: January 22 & 29 and February 5 & 12, 2015 LEGAL NOTICE REQUEST FOR BIDS The Estancia Valley Solid Waste Authority is requesting sealed bids for price agreements for various repair and fabrication services to include (1) automotive, diesel and heavy equipment maintenance, repair, and fabrication work; (2) truck scale maintenance; (3) electrical repair and installation, (4) plumbing repair and installation, and (5) litter cleanup. Bids for price agreements will be opened and read publicly at 11 AM Tuesday, February 17, at the EVSWA Main Office, 515 Allen Street, Estancia, New Mexico 87016. For bid specifications, bid forms, and information, contact Danette Cabber, EVSWA Office Man-

Ryan Veitz/Donna Glover 2112 Moon St. NE, #118 Albuquerque, NM 87112 WITNESS the Honorable Elizabeth E. Whitefield, District Judge of the Second Judicial District Court of the State of New Mexico, and the seal of the District Court of Bernalillo County, this 14th day of January, 2015. GREGORY T. IRELAND CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF TORRANCE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-722-CV-2014-00015

/s/Jennifer A. Taylor JENNIFER A. TAYLOR, Special Master PO Box 91988 Albuquerque, NM 87199 Telephone: (505) 433-4576 Facsimile: (505) 433-4577 E-mail: sales@ancillaryls.com

No. D-722-CV-2014-00099 JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff,

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO WACHOVIA BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR GSMPS 2004-1, Plaintiff,

vs.

vs.

NOTICE OF SUIT TO: LAWRENCE SEYMOUR AKA LAWRENCE P. SEYMOUR, You are hereby notified that a civil action has been filed against you in the District Court of Torrance County, New Mexico, by Plaintiff, JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, in which Plaintiff prays for foreclosure on its Note and Mortgage on real property located in Torrance County, New Mexico, as described in the claim in said cause against Defendants named above, that the said real property be sold according to law and practice of this Court to pay the lien of the Plaintiff, and that the interest of the Defendants, and each of them, and all persons claiming under or through them and all other persons bound by these proceedings be barred and foreclosed of all rights, interest of claims to said real property, and for such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper. The property involved is the real estate and improvements located at 25 Belgian Road, Moriarty, New Mexico 87035, and more particularly described as:

RON L. ALSBAUGH, A/K/A RONALD L. ALSBAUGH, A/K/A RONALD LEE ALSBAUGH, ROGER TAUL, A/K/A ROGER D. TAUL, SHANE J. PHEGLEY, COLLETTE J. GARLAND, TORRANCE COUNTY TREASURER AND GREEN TREE FINANCIAL SERVICES, CORP., Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that on February 26, 2015, at the hour of 2:00 pm the undersigned Special Master, or her designee, will, at the front entrance of the Estancia District Courthouse, at Seventh Judicial District Court - Estancia, Civil Division, 903 N. 5th Street, Estancia, NM 87016, sell all of the rights, title and interest of the above-named Defendants, in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 75 Morning Glory LN, Moriarity, New Mexico 87035 (if there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control), and is more particularly described as follows: Tract designated "B-2-A" being a portion of Tract B-2 situate within the Northwest Quarter (NW ¼) of Section Twenty-three (23), Township Eight (8) North, Range Eight (8) East, N.M.P.M., as the same is shown and designated on that certain Plat entitled "Lands of Billy Z. Jones", prepared by Timothy Ray Oden, N.M.P.S. #8667 on May 15, 1996, filed for record on August 26, 1996 at 2:33 o’clock, P.M., as Document Number 9618428, and filed in Cabinet "C", Slide 368, Plat Records of Torrance County, New Mexico, including a 1987 CAME, VIN number 50106472, and any and all improvements, fixtures, and attachments. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to a one (1) month right of redemption by the Defendant(s) upon entry of an order approving sale. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy an in rem foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on December 22, 2014, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff’s in rem judgment is $76,501.74, and the same bears interest at the rate of 7% per annum, which accrues at the rate of $14.67 per diem, commencing on September 18, 2014, with the Court reserving entry of final in rem judgment against said Defendant Ron L. Alsbaugh, a/k/a Ronald L. Alsbaugh, a/k/a Ronald Lee Alsbaugh for the amount due after foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney’s fees, plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. The Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale all of its in rem

IAIN WOESSNER/TELEGRAPH

Carver Dumas endures a painful arm lock as he grapples with an opponent during the Albuquerque Metro Wrestling Championship on January 31. Dumas took third in the 182 weight division.

LAWRENCE SEYMOUR AKA LAWRENCE P. SEYMOUR AND JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Defendants.

Lot numbered Nineteen (19) of Unit numbered Six (6) of SWEETWATER HILLS, a subdivision as the same is shown and designated on the plat(s) of said subdivision filed in the office of the Clerk of Torrance County, New Mexico, including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes. If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. You are further notified that unless you enter or cause to be entered your appearance or file responsive pleadings or motions in said cause within thirty (30) days of the third consecutive publication of this Notice of Suit, judgment will be rendered in said cause against you and each of you by default, and the relief prayed for will be granted. The name of the attorneys for JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association is Rose L. Brand & Associates, P.C., 7430 Washington Street, NE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109, Telephone: (505) 8333036. BY ORDER OF the Honorable Matthew G. Reynolds, District Judge of the Seventh Judicial District Court of the State of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Torrance County, entered on January 7, 2015 Date: January 7, 2015 By:/s/ Laura Pugatch CLERK OF THE COURT Mountain View Telegraph: January 22 & 29 and February 5, 2015

JV Wrestler Jose Miera tries to stay in the ring while his opponent pushes him outwards at the Albuquerque Metro Wrestling Championship meet on Jan. 30.

MANZANO SQUAD ‘GETTING THERE’ from PAGE 7

a match 7-2 after a long and arduous struggle. “(I’m) tired and excited,” Lopez said after the match. “I’d wrestled him before and he spinned me all the other times. He was strong upperbody, but if I stayed lower than him, wrestled my match and controlled him, I’d win.” Lopez wouldn’t place in his division, being felled by a pin in the semi-finals of the consolation bracket. David Stoltzfus took third in the 160-pound division, after getting a bye in the first round. He won the quarterfinals with a pin, and faced down with a Valley Viking in the semifinals. It was a drawn out match, and Stoltzfus worked his way out of a number of painful holds while they battled. For a moment, it looked like Stoltzfus was going to win the match, getting atop his opponent, but the Viking pulled a reversal and got away. There were no points on the board by the end of the second round. The points didn’t really matter, though, as in the third round the Viking took Stoltzfus by surprise and pinned him for the win. “I was expecting a really tough match,” Stoltzfus said after the match. “I knew I needed to keep good position-

Brandon Bernal catches his opponent in a grab during the Albuquerque Metro Wrestling Championship meet on Jan 30. Bernal would place fourth in his weight division overall. ing if I wanted to win. In the last round, I let my positioning go and he capitalized on it.” Carver Dumas made it to third place in the 182-pound weight division. Isidro Gar-

cia placed third as well in the 120-pound division. The remaining Manzano wrestlers did not place. The district tournament is slated to be held on Feb. 14.

inclement weather. They were triumphant, 59-12.

pair of losses this week, the first to Tularosa who bested them 75-38 and next to Ruidoso, who dominated 58-20.

ROUNDUP District play is underway, and here we have this week’s roundup, checking in to see how our teams are doing at the cusp of the final stretch of the season.

Basketball n Estancia’s boys were cruelly crushed Tuesday night when they faced down Socorro, 60-28. n Estancia’s girls had a game with NACA on Tuesday , a rescheduled match due to

n Moriarty’s girls faced St. Pius X in an away game on Feb. 3 and played hard, but had to swallow a 67-47 loss for their first district game. n Manzano’s boys took on Highland on Jan. 30 and fought a close game, going into overtime and succumbing to a single-point loss, 44-45. n

East Mountain’s girls had a

n East Mountain’s boys won in their district opener against Ruidoso, going into overtime and triumphing 94-88. Coach Joshua Griñe said of the game: “Our guys battled and never gave up. All of those little details that we work on in practice and program building played out last night.”

Police Report The Torrance County Sheriff’s Department reports the following arrests: Jan. 22: n Amber Padilla, 24, of Edgewood was arrested by Moriarty police on an adult probation arrest order. Jan. 23: n David Sisneros, 26, of Moriarty was arrested by Torrance County deputies on an adult probation arrest order. Jan. 25: n Matthew Shed, 22, of Tijeras

was arrested by Torrance County deputies on suspicion of assault against a household member and a Bernalillo County warrant for failure to appear. Jan. 26: n Jacob Gutierrez, 29, of Estancia was arrested by Estancia police on an adult probation arrest order. Jan. 28: n Christine S. Falconer, 25, of Estancia was arrested by Estancia police on suspicion of two counts of abandonment/abuse of a child.

Feb. 2: Jose Campos-Vargas, 24, of Moriarty was arrested by Moriarty police on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Feb. 3: n Eric D. Childers, 31, of Mountainair was arrested by Torrance County deputies on suspicion of driving with a revoked license. n Reanetta Quintana, 37, of Tajique was arrested by Torrance County deputies on a Torrance County warrant for failure to appear and failure to comply with conditions of the court. n


Thursday, February 5, 2015 11

Mountain View Telegraph

Teams head to district play with optimism from PAGE 7

trict was probably one of the toughest in the state,” Estancia Coach Leslie Gatzambide said in a phone interview. “Playing Magdalena, Santa Fe, Tucumcari, Santa Rosa … that’s probably one of the toughest stretches I’ve ever played. I’m optimistically confident we’re gonna put it together.” Other teams in district 6-3A include Laguna-Acoma, Cuba and the Native American Community Academy.

Moriarty Moriarty’s girls are 6-13 right now and have had a turbulent season, but Coach Joe Bailey said he isn’t terribly concerned with their current record. “I’m confident, we’re 0-0 like everybody else is,” Bailey said in a phone interview, moments before he was to board the bus headed to the Fighting Pintos’ first District 5-5A game against St. Pius X on Tuesday. “We’ve lost a lot of close games. Those close games we’ve lost have nothing to do with district play right now. Looking at records, we’re all about even going into district play.” Mor ia r ty’s key players include Alyssa Adams, who leads the team in scoring; Emily Gonzales who leads with assists; and Rosie Garza leading the team with rebounds. Key games early in the season include ay victory over Taos, 45-37, and an even tighter 49-46 win against Magdalena. Close games have been something of an enduring anchor around the team’s neck, a challenge that Coach Bailey admits they haven’t yet bested. “We’re still facing those challenges: to win close games,” Bailey said. “We’ve had at least five three-point losses. That has been very frustrating.” District 5-5A includes Moriarty, St. Pius, Albuquerque Academy and Grants.

East Mountain East Mountain’s girls have had a tough season. Their

TELEGRAPH FILE

East Mountain’s Mallory Stoff tries to edge out a determined Mustang offensive headed by Taylor Gikas, background, and Tayler Anaya. The Lady Timberwolves have endured a number of setbacks and injuries this season, but remain optimistic facing district play. Yvette Vallejos plays tenacious defense, according to Warren, and is averaging six points, two rebounds, and two steals per game. Sophomore RaeAnna VanDemark averages six points, three rebounds, and two steals and Ryann Warren, also a sophomore, has six points, and seven rebounds. The highest record on the team is lofted by Chenoa Crites, who has scored 111 points this season, the most of anyone on the team according to MaxPreps. The East Mountain boys haven’t fared much better than the girls, going into district play 5-13. However, this record may not be of big concern to boys Coach Joshua Griñe, who explained about his approach to the season and to coaching via email. “From day one last summer we have built our program on ‘the process,’ ” he said. “All success is a process, we know

the process, we understand the process and we will stick with the process. We want to peak at the right time and be fresh this month to make this last push and I think we have designed our practice plans and game schedule to help us peak now in February and March.” The Timberwolf boys are certainly not lacking for talent. The breakout stat king is Tyler Pennington who has had three double-doubles in the last three games. Against Estancia he broke the East Mountain school record with 23 rebounds, according to Griñe. Still, Pennington lags behind returning All-District player Derrick Merkey, who averages 4.1 assists a game and has put up 166 points this season. Key victories for the Timberwolves this season have included their devastating rout of Dexter’s Demons in January, and their miraculous come-

TORRANCE COUNTY REPUBLICAN PARTY meets the second Thursday of the month at 7 p.m. at the County Courthouse. All welcome. 384-0176.

Thursday of each month at 6 p.m. at Jerry’s Ancient Cities on U.S. 60 in Mountainair. Web site: www.manzanomountaingunclub.org.

AABC YOUTH BASEBALL meets the first Wednesday and the third Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Moriarty Community Center. 384-2924.

CEDAR CREST CHAPTER OF DRINKING LIBERALLY meets every first and third Thursdays of each month at the GreenSide Cafe from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The group is comprised of likeminded liberals and progressives who enjoy gabbing about politics, travel, movies, and just about anything else. For more information, go to livingliberally. org/drinking/chapters/NM/ cedarcrest or call Dwight Miller at 281-3655.

EAST MOUNTAIN SUN CHASERS RV Club meets the third Saturday of each month at different locations, with campouts during the summer. New members welcome. 281-7229 or 604-8032.

Sundays

NICOTINE ANONYMOUS meets 1:30 p.m. every Saturday at Jo’s Chameleon Cafe at 5 Kuhn Road in Tijeras. Call Tamara at 2860973 for information.

ALATEEN meets Sundays at 4 p.m. at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church on Old Route 66, mile west of N.M. 344 in Edgewood. 867-5096.

ESTANCIA VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO ASSOCIATION meets the second Saturday of each month at the TA Truck Stop in Moriarty at 9 a.m. Meet earlier for breakfast. For more info, call Ed at 384-2707.

TORRANCE COUNTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY meets the third Sunday of each month at 2 p.m. unless it falls on a holiday. For locations of meetings, look for flyers posted at the Torrance County Courthouse, The Old Mill, The El Comedor de Anayas, El Cafecito, Ancient Cities Cafe, The Sign Source and Ray’s One Stop, or go online to www.dpnm. net.

record is 4-13 going into the District 4-4A play, and they’ve endured many challenges, not the least of which was never having a consistent starting lineup. Coach Hobert Warren explained the issues via email. “We have not had the same starting lineup for more than three games in a row and it is not going to change heading into district play,” he said. “The team lost one starter for the remainder of the season during Christmas break due to an ankle injury, another missed a few games after a head injury, and last Thursday our best player went down with a knee injury.” If there was any silver lining to this, he added, it was that it has given the freshmen time to play and sharpen up their game, specifically Mia Santistevan, Audrey Heffelinger and Gina Sanchez. Still, the team has some power ful players. Junior

TELEGRAPH FILE

Timberwolf Noah Mortimer checks a Dexter defender during a January match between the two rival teams. back against Bosque, which ended in overtime after the team had to claw back from a 16-point deficit. The Timberwolves lost a key player, Kevin Valencia, earlier in the season, which forced a shift of their roster, giving more sophomores and freshmen playing time. “This journey is nothing but positive,” Griñe said. “Nobody gets to see how hard these

young men work each day and they bought into what we are building here, so it’s all positive. Our district is open for the taking and I think we are right there with the other teams in our district.” Other teams in District 4-4A are Ruidoso and Portales.

at 11 a.m. on the second Saturday of each month. The post is located on N.M. 41 south of Moriarty at mile marker 22. 832-0730.

6:30 p.m. at First Choice Medical Clinic, N.M. 344 and Venus Road in Edgewood. 281-3406.

Next week the Telegraph look into the Mountainair teams, Manzano, Estancia’s girls and Moriarty’s boys.

Weekly Calendar Thursdays AA meets Monday through Friday at noon at the Mountainside Methodist Church on N.M. 14 in Cedar Crest. 350-1619. AA meets Thursdays at 7 p.m. in the rectory of Sts. Pete and Paul Catholic Church in Estancia. Spanish, English and bilingual. 384-3038. AA meeting from 11 a.m. to noon every Tuesday and Thursday at Torrance County Counseling, Route 66 Shopping Center in Moriarty. 463-4204 or 832-9135. AA meeting every Tuesday and Thursday at 7 a.m. at Good Shepherd Lutheran in Edgewood. 266-1900. AL-ANON meets Thursday evenings at 7 p.m. at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, #5 Entrada Del Norte in Edgewood. 262-2177. BOY SCOUT TROOP 614 meets every Thursday at Edgewood Elementary School. 281-4323. MOTHERS OF PRESCHOOLERS (MOPS) meets the first and third Thursday each month from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the Mountain Valley Church, 5 Dinkle Road, Edgewood. 903-7083 or 281-3348. EDGEWOOD VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT holds EMS training sessions on the first Thursday at 7 p.m. Business meeting second Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Main Station. 281-4697. EDGEWOOD LIONS CLUB meets the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Masonic Lodge on Old Route 66. 281-5491. ESTANCIA PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION meets the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Estancia town hall. TORRANCE COUNTY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY meets the third Thursday of the month at 3 p.m. at the Solid Waste office, 515 Allen St. in Estancia. 384-4270. ESTANCIA BASIN WATER PLANNING COMMITTEE meets the third Thursday of each month at 9 a.m. at the County Courthouse. SENIOR CITIZEN’S LUNCHEON hosted by First Baptist Church of Estancia, fourth Thursday of each month, 11:30 a.m. Free monthly event includes a delicious meal, live entertainment, a brief word from the pastor and door prizes. Everyone welcome. 384-2286.

MOUNTAINAIR VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS meet for a business meeting the second Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the fire station. A training meeting is held the third Thursday of the month. MORIARTY LODGERS’ TAX ADVISORY BOARD meets the third Thursday of each month at 6 p.m. at the Moriarty Civic Center, located at 202 Broadway S. Deadline to be included on the agenda is 5 p.m. on the first Thursday of the month. For more information, please call the City Clerk’s Office at 832-4406. EAST MOUNTAIN TOASTMASTERS meets the every Thursday at 6 p.m. at Pool Pro, 2401 Old Route 66 in Edgewood. Visitors are welcome. 321-9590. SUBSTANCE ABUSE Prevention Task Force meets the third Thursday of each month at 2:30 p.m. alternating monthly between Moriarty and Estancia. 832-4495. AA meets Tuesday and Thursdays at 7 p.m. at the Moriarty Church of Christ, Irene Avenue at Eunice Street. 832-6430. WESTERNERS 4-H CLUB meets the first Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Moriarty Community Center. 384-2372. DESPERADOES 4-H CLUB meets the second Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Moriarty Community Center. 384-2372. MOUNTAINAIR ROTARY CLUB meets on Thursdays at noon at Jerry’s Ancient Cities Cafe. EAST MOUNTAIN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE meets the first Thursday of each month at 11:30 a.m. at Los Vecinos Community Center. Call 281-1999 for more information. HUMANITY QUILTERS meets Thursdays from 9 a.m. to noon at Vista Grande Community Center in Sandia Park. No experience necessary. No children, please. 293-0581. BIG HORN GUN CLUB meets the first Thursday of the month at 7 p.m. at the Edgewood Community Center. 281-8678. THE MANZANO MOUNTAIN GUN CLUB meets the third

KXNM COMMUNITY RADIO FOUNDATION board of directors meets the first Thursday of every month at 2 p.m. at the station located just south of the Torrance County dispatch center in McIntosh, www.kxnm.org. A COURSE IN MIRACLES study group meets every Thursday at 6 p.m. Call 505-286-1543 for information.

Fridays AL-ANON meets Fridays at 10 a.m. at Mountainside United Methodist Church, 4 Penny Lane in Cedar Crest. EAST MOUNTAINS AND ESTANCIA VALLEY MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP meets the second Friday of each month from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Valley View Christian Church on Christian Way in Edgewood. 281-0996.

THE EAST MOUNTAIN Interagency Fire Protection Association meets the second Saturday of every month from 9 a.m. to noon at the Village of Tijeras Fire Department. The public is invited to attend. THE LADIES AUXILIARY TO VETERANS OF FOREIGN WAR Post 3370 meets on the second Saturday of each month at 1 p.m. For more information, call 832-0730. THE MCINTOSH SENIOR CENTER CLUB holds a game night on the last Saturday of every month from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Donations, local musicians and volunteers are welcome. The center is located at 16 East Willow Lake Road in McIntosh. 384-2636.

AA meets Mondays at 7:30 p.m. and Fridays at 7:30 p.m. at Summers Bail Bonds building in Estancia. 384-3038.

THE MCINTOSH SENIOR CENTER CLUB holds a fundraising dinner on the third Saturday of every month from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Cost for adults is $6, children ages 10 and under are $3. Come listen to Christian and popular music while you dine. The center is located at 16 East Willow Lake Road in McIntosh. 384-2636.

AA meets Tuesdays from 5:30 p.m. to 6:25 p.m. for book study, and 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and Fridays at 6:30 p.m. at the Mountainair Methodist Church. 847-0226. English and Spanish.

VFW POST 3370 holds steak and fish nights from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. on the first and third Saturday of the month. The post is located on N.M. 41 south of Moriarty at mile marker 22. 832-0730.

Saturdays

THE EAST MOUNTAIN BREAKFAST CLUB is a new social networking group for East Mountains residents. We meet the first Saturday of the month from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at various locations. Come out, meet your neighbors, share your ideas and enjoy a good meal. There are no dues. For detail email EMBC@ comcast.net or leave a message at 717-7551 and we’ll contact you.

AA meets Monday through Friday at noon at the Mountainside Methodist Church on N.M. 14 in Cedar Crest. 350-1619.

AA meets Mondays and Wednesdays in Edgewood at 7 p.m. at Christ Unity Church on Dinkle Road, Fridays at 7 p.m. at Valley View Christian Church and Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. at Holy Cross Episcopal. 384-2834. AA meets each Saturday at noon at the Mountainside United Methodist Church in Cedar Crest, 4 Penny Lane. 350-1619.

VFW POST 3370 holds its monthly membership meeting

AA meets Sundays at 7 p.m. at the Holy Child Catholic Church in Tijeras. 281-0726. VALLEY GIRLS AA Women’s meeting at 7 p.m. each Monday at the McIntosh Senior Center. 832-9414. SEX ADDICTS ANONYMOUS meets every Sunday at Unity Church in Edgewood from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. 750-7545. CARNUEL MUTUAL DOMESTIC WATER AND WASTEWATER CONSUMERS ASSOCIATION board of directors meets the third Sunday of each month at 10:30 a.m. at the Canon de Carnue Land Grant Hall on Old Route 66 in Carnuel. THE MCINTOSH SENIOR CENTER CLUB holds a fundraising brunch on the first Sunday of every month from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost for adults is $6, children ages 10 and under are $3. The center is located at 16 East Willow Lake Road in McIntosh. 384-2636.

Mondays EDGEWOOD PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION meets the first and third Monday of the month at 6 p.m. at the Edgewood Community Center. AA meets Mondays and Wednesdays in Edgewood at 7 p.m. at Christ Unity Church on Dinkle Road, Fridays at 7 p.m. at Valley View Christian Church and Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. at Holy Cross Episcopal. 384-2834. AA meets Monday through Friday at noon at the Mountainside Methodist Church on N.M. 14 in Cedar Crest. 350-1619. HEPATITIS C AWARENESS and Support meeting on the third Monday of every month, 5:30 to

ESTANCIA TOWN BOARD OF TRUSTEES meets the first and third Monday of each month at 6:15 p.m. in the Town Hall, Sixth and Williams. AA meets Mondays at 7:30 p.m. and Fridays at 7:30 p.m. at the Summers Bail Bonds Building in Estancia. 384-3038. ESTANCIA ROTARY CLUB meets every Monday at noon at the superintendent’s office on the west side of the Estancia Municipal Schools campus. AMERICAN LEGION POST 22 meets the second Monday of the month at 7:30 p.m. at 676 Hwy. 55. Call 384-2833. American Legion Auxiliary Post meets the second Monday at 7 p.m. For specific meeting place each month, call 384-2892. New members welcome. MORIARTY GARDEN CLUB meets the fourth Monday of every month at the Moriarty Community Library at 5 p.m. 832-4558. MORIARTY ROTARY CLUB meets every Monday at 6 p.m. at Shorty’s BBQ. TIJERAS VILLAGE COUNCIL meets the second and third Mondays of each month at 6 p.m. at City Hall. TIJERAS PLANNING & ZONING COMMISSION meets the first Monday of each month at 6 p.m. at City Hall. GRANDPARENTS RAISING GRANDCHILDREN support groups meets the second and fourth Monday of each month at Los Vecinos Community Center from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Free childcare available. 243-2551. WILLARD VILLAGE COUNCIL meets the second Monday of every month at 5:30 p.m. at Village Hall. 384-2874. WORD CIRCLE Share your story. A peer-group for creative writers led by local freelancer and certified workshop facilitator Karen Lehmann. Monday mornings, 9 a.m. Free. Call 505-507-0008 for details. WILDE BUNCH SQUARE DANCE CLUB, New Mexico’s only LGBT square dance club, meets every Monday from 7-9 p.m. at the Albuquerque Square Dance Center at 4909 Hawkins NE. First month free, and then $10 per month afterwards. Call Bill at 505-410-6299 or go online to www.wildebunch.org for info. See WEEKLY on PAGE 12


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