Cardinals knock out Dodgers, advance to World Series Sports, B-1
Locally owned and independent
Saturday, October 19, 2013
www.santafenewmexican.com 75¢
King releases mental health audit, but blacks out details
A century of tradition Knights of Columbus celebrates 100 years in Santa Fe. PAge A-6
AG: Releasing all information could jeopardize investigation By Steve Terrell
New details on Sandy Hook
The New Mexican
Attorney General Gary King, right before the end of the business day Friday, released part of an audit by a Boston company that had led to a
Upcoming state police report to provide more insight into shooter’s actions. PAge A-4
shakeup in the state mental health system. The report confirmed that a criminal investigation into Medicaid billing fraud is ongoing. But virtually all specific information about the 15 New Mexico providers that were audited in search of possible financial fraud was blacked out in the audit pages released Friday. In a state court filing, King said releasing the rest of the
Please see AUDIT, Page A-5
Gary King
A fashion capital?
High court set to hear case on gay marriage
Santa Fe Fashion Week: Organizer touts growing event, but critics say runway show lacks local designers
N.M. justices to rule on statewide legalization By Barry Massey
The Associated Press
Linda Siegle and her partner of 22 years were first in line when the Santa Fe County clerk started to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples in late August. Now, she’s waiting to see whether the New Mexico Supreme Court will legalize gay marriage in all of the state’s 33 counties. Eight counties currently allow it. The five-member high court is scheduled to hear oral arguments Wednesday in a case that could resolve an issue that’s historically stalled in the Democraticcontrolled Legislature. New Mexico law doesn’t explicitly authorize or prohibit gay marriage, but lawmakers have refused to ban it or allow for domestic partnerships. The court agreed to take the case after New Mexico’s county clerks asked the justices to clarify the law and decide whether a decision by a state district judge in Albuquerque was correct. That judge ruled in a lawsuit against two counties that it was unconstitutional to deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples. The Supreme Court’s decision would apply statewide. The justices could rule immediately or take the case under consideration and issue a decision later. “As of today, we all believe that we are officially and legally married and eligible for all of those federal benefits and responsibilities,” said Siegle, a lobbyist in Santa Fe for Equality New Mexico, a gay rights group. Legal marriage entitles gay couples to benefits like joint tax-filing status and Social Security survivor benefits. Gay marriage became a hot-button issue two months ago, when the Doña Ana County clerk decided independently to grant marriage licenses to gay couples. Seven other counties followed. Some took the step voluntarily and some, such as Santa Fe County, faced court orders after
Please see MARRIAge, Page A-4
Stephen Cuomo, shown at the Toni & Guy Salon and Academy in Albuquerque on Thursday, is the organizer of Santa Fe Fashion Week — an event planned later this month in Pojoaque that includes few Santa Fe designers. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Montana designer Celeste Sotola, whose work is shown here, said she has many clients in the Santa Fe area and hopes to meet some of them in person during the upcoming Santa Fe Fashion Week event, which will be held Oct. 24-27 at Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino.
By Phaedra Haywood
The New Mexican
R
unway show? Check. VIP meet and greet? Check. After-party hosted by a celebrity DJ? Check. The Santa Fe Fashion Week event taking place at the Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino later this month promises to include all this and more. One thing the show lacks, however, is a strong Santa Fe presence. Though the city name is in the title, and news releases tout the city’s “artistic tradition,” only a few Santa Fe designers (most of whom are students) will show their collections in the runway show, which event founder Stephen Cuomo esti-
COURTESY PHOTO
Union leader cites complaint from mayoral contender in returning ’12 boys club award PAC probe creates rift between Abeyta, Hendry By Daniel J. Chacón
The New Mexican
Things are getting personal in the Santa Fe mayor’s race. Three days after mayoral candidate Roman “Tiger” Abeyta filed a complaint against union leader Jon Hendry, Hendry said he was returning an award that Abeyta gave him as executive director of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Fe.
Index
Calendar A-2
Roman Abeyta
Jon Hendry
“I don’t want to fight with Roman,” Hendry said Friday. “If I want to fight with somebody, I want to fight with somebody who actually
Classifieds B-6
Comics B-12
Lotteries A-2
has a chance of winning the mayor’s race.” Abeyta asked the executive council of the AFL-CIO on Tuesday to investigate Hendry, who is the president of the New Mexico Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO. Abeyta wants the international federation of labor unions to investigate Hendry’s involvement in the mayor’s race, including his ties to a political action committee doing opposition research on mayoral candidates. In an email to Abeyta, Hendry
mated will include more than 14 designers and last more than three hours. The show’s “celebrity designer,” Celeste Sotola, calls Montana home. The show’s “featured designer,” Meredith Lockart, is based in Kansas. The principal sponsor of the event, Savvy Boutique, is an Albuquerque shop that opened in January. The volunteer models were recruited in Albuquerque. Hair and makeup will be done by students from the Toni & Guy Salon and Academy located in Albuquerque. The lineup also includes designers from Colorado, Arizona and Mexico. The Albuquerque founder of the event,
Police notes A-10
Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com
Sports B-1
Today
Pasapick
Plenty of sunshine High 60, low 32. PAge A-12
www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Santa Fe Pro Musica Tchaikovsky Serenade, featuring flutist Carol Redman, 6 p.m., St. Francis Auditorium, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave. $20-$65, 988-4640, santafepromusica.com or ticketssantafe.org, -988-1234, encore Sunday. More events in Calendar, Page A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Please see COMPLAINT, Page A-5
Opinions A-11
Please see FASHION, Page A-4
Time Out B-11
Life & Science A-9
Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010
Scholarship changes spur protest at UNM Hispanic groups to meet with UNM officials in protest of aid rule changes, which they say will harm minority students. PAge A-6
Obituaries
Oct. 6 Stephen E. Case, Jack Sinclair 59, Santa Fe, PAge A-10
Two sections, 24 pages TV Book, 32 pages 164th year, No. 292 Publication No. 596-440
A-2
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
NATION&WORLD
MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000
s +28.00 15,399.65 s +12.50 1,114.77
In brief
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Rep. Bill Young of Florida, the senior Republican in the U.S. House and a defense hawk who was influential on military spending during his 43 years in Washington, died Friday. He was 82. His chief of staff, Harry Glenn, said in an email that Young died at 6:50 p.m. at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., where he had been for nearly two weeks with back problems that stemmed from a 1970 small plane crash. The email included a statement from Young’s family, saying relatives were with Young when he died from complications related to a chronic injury. On Oct. 9, from his hospital bed, Young announced that his current 22nd term would be his last and he wouldn’t seek re-election in 2014. The congressman was a longtime member of the House Appropriations Committee, where he focused on military spending. He and his wife frequently visited ailing service members at hospitals in the Washington area. First elected to the House in 1970, Young was one of the strongest supporters in Congress of defense. So he made headlines in 2012 when he said the United States should withdraw its forces from Afghanistan. Young told The Associated Press at the time that “we’re killing kids who don’t need to die,” and reflected the growing weariness with a conflict that had dragged on for more than a decade.
FBI probes laser attacks on planes NEW YORK — The FBI announced Friday it has assigned its Joint Terrorism Task Force to lead a probe of laser attacks on the cockpits of two planes approaching LaGuardia Airport this week, inviting help from the public as well to fight a growing threat against the nation’s air transportation. “The FBI is asking anyone with information about any of these dangerous laser incidents to pick up the phone and call us,” George Venizelos, head of the FBI’s New York office, said in a release. “Our paramount concern is the safety of aircraft passengers and crew.” The announcement came along with a report that laser attacks against inbound flights at New York airports have increased 17 percent so far this year, a rising threat because lasers can temporarily or permanently blind a pilot and crew, the FBI said. The FBI said Friday a reward is available for anyone providing information leading to arrests in the Tuesday evening attacks. The FBI said the first attack occurred when a Shuttle America cockpit was illuminated by a green laser on its final approach to LaGuardia at 7:35 p.m. Tuesday. The FBI said the crew reported that the laser appeared to originate about a half mile west of the New York Botani-
House leader knew how to negotiate By Alan Fram and Nicholas K. Geranios The Associated Press
BART STRIKE LEAVES BAY AREA COMMUTERS ADRIFT
Commuters wait to board a ferry bound for San Francisco on Friday in Oakland, Calif. Bay Area rapid transit authorities and striking workers both made offers late Friday they said had a single aim — get stationary trains that move 400,000 commuters on any given workday back on track. After a sluggish morning commute that drew regionwide gripes, BART general manager Grace Crunican said they had reached out to the mediator. San Francisco Bay Area rapid transit workers are on strike for the second time since July, scrambling the morning commute for hundreds of thousands of workers who were up before dawn to clog highways, swarm buses and shiver on ferry decks as they found alternative ways to the office. Six months of on-again, off-again negotiations have brought agreement on key issues such as raises, health care and pensions. But there remained a snarl Friday: a package of work rules involving when schedules are posted, whether workers can file for overtime when they’ve been out sick, and how paychecks are delivered. The strike could drag through the weekend and into next work week, although both sides indicated interest in finding a solution. MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cal Garden in the Bronx, striking the plane when it was 2,000 feet above ground, about six miles from the runway. The second incident occurred three hours later when a private aircraft reported a green laser two miles southwest of LaGuardia at 10:37 p.m. as it headed eastbound over the Triborough Bridge. The FBI said the laser originated near the intersection of Broadway and Steinway Street in Queens. No injuries were reported in either incident, though the FBI noted that several commercial pilots earlier this year suffered significant injuries including a burnt retina. The probe is being led by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force, which includes more than 50 local, state and federal agencies.
Norwegian-Somali ID’d as mall attacker NAIROBI, Kenya — Quiet and respectful at the mosque as a boy, Hassan Abdi Dhuhulow later became angry and radicalized, people in the coastal town in Norway where he grew up said Friday of the Somali native — the first Westgate Mall attacker to be identified. Security camera images show the
Contact us Locally owned and independent, serving New Mexico for 164 years Robin Martin
Owner
Ray Rivera
Editor
Al Waldron
Operations Director
Mike Reichard Circulation Director
William A. Simmons
986-3010 1-800-873-3372
circulation@sfnewmexican.com
Tamara Hand
Classified line ads
Michael Campbell
Technology Director
Tom Cross Group Controller
986-3000 1-800-873-3362
classad@sfnewmexican.com
Browse or place ads at sfnmclassifieds.com Fax: 984-1785 Billing: 995-3869
Obituaries 986-3000
classad@sfnewmexican.com After 5 p.m. death notices: 986-3035
Secretary/ Treasurer
Advertising
To reach us
advertising@sfnewmexican.com
Printed on recycled paper
995-3852 1-800-873-3362
The Santa Fe New Mexican P.O. Box 2048 Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 Main switchboard: 983-3303
replaced an implanted defibrillator near his heart in 2007. The device can detect irregular heartbeats and control them with electrical jolts. Cheney says that he and his doctor, cardiologist Jonathan Reiner, turned off the device’s wireless function in case a terrorist tried to send his heart a fatal shock. Years later, Cheney watched an episode of the Showtime series Homeland in which such a scenario was part of the plot.
Public White House tours resume Nov. 5
WASHINGTON — Public tours of the White House, canceled earlier this year because of budget cuts, are resuming next month on a limited basis, officials said Friday. The self-guided tours of the ground floor, first floor and East Wing of the WASHINGTON — Former Vice White House are to resume Nov. 5 President Dick Cheney says he and continue through Jan. 15. Tours once feared that terrorists could use will be allowed an average of three the electrical device that had been days a week, down from five, said the implanted near his heart to kill him and had his doctor disable its wireless Secret Service. Separately, the White House said function. its gardens and grounds will be open Cheney has a history of heart to the public on the weekend of Oct. trouble, suffering the first of five heart 26-27. The White House scrapped the attacks at age 37. He underwent a tours after mandatory budget cuts heart transplant last year at age 71. took effect in March. In an interview with CBS’ 60 The Associated Press Minutes, Cheney says doctors
Cheney heart device a terrorist target?
UNIQUE THIS WEEK
Home delivery
Ginny Sohn
Advertising Director
23-year-old and three other gunmen firing coldly on shoppers as they made their way along store aisles after storming the upscale mall four weeks ago Saturday. Until recently, investigators had referred to the attackers only by the colors of their shirts. However, two officials in Nairobi, one Western and one Kenyan, confirmed Friday that one of the gunmen had been identified as Dhuhulow. The suspect’s 26-year-old sister, reached in the southern Norwegian town of Larvik, said his family was unaware of any role he may have played in the four-day siege that killed at least 67 people.
WASHINGTON Tall and courtly, Tom Foley served 30 years in the House when partisan confrontation was less rancorous than today and Democrats had dominated for decades. He crowned his long political career by becoming speaker, only to be toppled when Republicans seized control of Congress in 1994, turned out by angry voters with little taste for incumbents. Foley, the first speaker to be booted from office by his constituents since the Civil War, died Friday at the age of 84 of complications from a stroke, according to his wife, Heather. “America has lost a legend of the United States Congress,” President Barack Obama said in a statement Friday, adding, “Tom’s straightforward approach helped him find common ground with members of both parties.” Foley, who grew up in a politically active family in Spokane, Wash., represented that agriculture-heavy area for 15 terms in the House, including more than five years in the speaker’s chair. In that job, he was third in line of succession to the presidency and was the first speaker from west of the Rocky Mountains. As speaker, he was an active negotiator in the 1990 budget talks that led to President George H.W. Bush breaking his pledge to never agree to raise taxes, an episode that played a role in Bush’s 1992 defeat. Also in 1990, Foley let the House vote on a resolution authorizing Bush to use force against Iraq for its invasion of Kuwait. Foley also was at the helm when, in 1992, revelations that many lawmakers had been allowed to overdraw their checking accounts at the House bank provoked a wave of anger against incumbents. Foley was defeated in 1994 by 4,000 votes by Spokane attorney George Nethercutt, a Republican who supported term limits, which the speaker fought. Foley later served as U.S. ambassador to Japan for four years in the Clinton administration. Cornell Clayton, director of the Foley Institute for Public Policy at Washington State University, said that growing up during the Depression and World War II made Foley part of a generation that worked in a more bipartisan manner.
Calendar Daily and Sunday: $51.25, 3 months EZpay: $12.95 per month Weekend paper: $41.55, 3 months If your paper is not delivered by 6 a.m., please report by 10 a.m. to Circulation at 986-3010 or 1-800-873-3372.
Publisher
s +51.13 3,914.28 s +11.35 1,744.50
TOM FOLEY, 1929-2013
Florida U.S. Rep. Bill Young dies at 82
The Santa Fe New Mexican
NASDAQ COMPOSITE STANDARD & POOR’S 500
Fax: 984-1785 Legal ads: 986-3000
Newsroom 986-3035
Please recycle
News tips 986-3035 newsroom@sfnewmexican.com Business news: 986-3034 Capitol Bureau: 986-3037 City desk: 986-3035
Pasatiempo: 995-3839 Sports: 986-3045, 1-800-743-1186
PUBLICATION NO. 596-440 PUBLISHED DAILY AND PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT ONE NEW MEXICAN PLAZA, SANTA FE, NM. POSTMASTER: SEND ALL ADDRESS CHANGES TO CIRCULATION, P.O. BOX 2048, SANTA FE, NM 87504
Letters to the editor
©2013 THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN ISSN-1938-4068
P.O. Box 2048, Santa Fe, N.M., 87504-2048
986-3063 letters@sfnewmexican.com
Online 986-3076
Saturday, Oct. 19 COLOMBIA: ISLA PROVIDENCIA: Slide presentation by Paul Hoffman, 5 p.m. 839 Paseo de Peralta. FREE FLU SHOT CLINIC BY CHRISTUS, ST. VINCENT: From 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., Adult Flu Shots are at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. There are two driveup services available for the entire family. Camino Entrada Pediatrics Clinic, 2590 Camino Entrada or Arroyo Chamiso Pediatrics, 2025 South Galisteo. Visit stvin.org or call 9133361. MOTHERHOOD OUT LOUD: Staged reading by For Giving Productions theater company against a backdrop of TV and stage illustrations by George Wachsteter, 6 p.m., 203 W. Water St. MUSICFEST: Local music students perform in support of Santa Fe Public Schools music education programs, noon parade, 1-3 p.m. gallery concerts; visit sfpsmusicfest.org or call 467-2513. REALITY? WHAT’S SO GOOD ABOUT REALITY, ANYWAY?: A darma talk by Ray Olsen, 5:30-6:30 p.m., 1404 Cerro Gordo Road. ROBERT MAYER: The local author reads from and sign copies of Eyes, 3 p.m.
Tom Foley
As speaker of the House, the Democrat was known as an active negotiator.
Lotteries 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101, Sanbusco Market Center. SUKI JOHN: The author discusses and signs copies of Contemporary Dance in Cuba, 4 p.m. 202 Galisteo St. VISUAL ARTS TALKS: Visual Thinking in a Changing World, by Tim Mullane, 4 p.m.; From Raymond Jonson to Kiki Smith: The UNM Art Museum’s Permanent Collection at Fifty Years, by Lisa Tamiris Becker, 5 p.m., reception follows. 725 Canyon Road.
NIGHTLIFE Saturday, Oct. 19 CAFÉ CAFÉ: Guitarist Michael Tait Tafoya. 500 Sandoval St. CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Rio, Brazilian style jazz, 7:30 p.m.close,. 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Singer/songwriter Liv Lombardi, 5:30-7:30 p.m. no cover. Sean Healen Band, folksy rock ’n’ roll, 8:30 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: C.S. Rockshow with Don Curry, Pete Springer, and Ron Crowder, 9 p.m. 808 Canyon Road. HOTEL SANTA FE: Ronald Roybal, flute and classical Spanish guitar. 1501 Paseo de Peralta. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: R&B band the Pleasure Pilots, 8 p.m.-close, no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St.
LOW ‘N’ SLOW LOWRIDER BAR AT HOTEL CHIMAYÓ: Rolling Stones tribute band Little Leroy and His Pack of Lies, 9 p.m., no cover. MOLLY’S KITCHEN & LOUNGE: CD-release party of Ben Wright’s One on the Way, with DJs Erin E and Feathericci, 9 p.m., 1611 Calle Lorca. SECOND STREET BREWERY: Hot Club of Santa Fe, Gypsy jazz, 6-9 p.m., 1814 Second St. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Austinbased alt-country duo John Dee Graham and Mike June, 7-10 p.m., 607 Paseo de Peralta. THE MINE SHAFT TAVERN: Jim & Tim, soulful blues on the deck, 3-7 p.m.; Connie Long & Fast Patsy, Janis Joplin meets Patsy Cline, 7 p.m. 2846 N.M. 14. VANESSIE: Pianists Doug Montgomery, 6-8 p.m.; John Randal, 8 p.m.-close, no cover. 427 W. Water St. ZIA DINER: Swing Soleil, Gypsy jazz and swing, 6:308:30 p.m. no cover. 326 S. Guadalupe St. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.
Roadrunner 8–18–21–29–33 Top prize: $560,000
Pick 3 9–5–4 Top prize: $500
Mega Millions 5–20–45–48–56 MB 1 Megaplier 4 Top prize: $55 million
Corrections A story on Page C-1 in the Oct. 18, 2013, edition incorrectly reported that the Hondo Volunteer Fire Department’s open house event on Saturday, Oct. 19, would be held from 8 to 10 a.m. The event will be held from 8 a.m. to noon at the department’s main station, 21 Seton Village Road.
uuu The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.
NATION
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-3
Homeland Security pick hints at Obama’s priority shift Agency may be switching focus from immigration to potential attacks
than $45 billion and a staff of hundreds of thousands of civilian, law enforcement and military personnel. On any given day, the By Alicia A. Caldwell job includes making The Associated Press decisions about disaster relief, distribution WASHINGTON — President Barack Jeh Johnson of a shrinking grants Obama’s nominee to run the sprawlbudget, which immiing Homeland Security Department grants living in the United States illehas been lauded as a forceful coungally to deport and how to protect pasterterrorism thinker on what he has senger jets from would-be terrorists. described as the “hot battlefield” overJohnson, a onetime assistant U.S. seas. Now Jeh Johnson will be turning attorney in New York, would inherit his gaze more toward American soil. a department whose public face in Johnson, who pronounces his first recent years has been associated with name “Jay,” is a multimillionaire former immigration. But that’s an area he has Pentagon lawyer who has defended little experience with, so his nominathe administration’s targeted killings tion could suggest the agency will of U.S. citizens overseas as well as the move more to a focus on protecting the role of the U.S. spy court and crackhomeland from attack. downs to keep government secrets. Matt Fishbein, who worked with If confirmed by the Senate, he would Johnson in a private law firm in the manage a department with more than early 1980s and served on a New York 20 different agencies, a budget of more City bar panel while the nominee was
chairman in the late ’90s, says Johnson is a good choice. “Ultimately, he’s responsible for security in this age of terrorism,” said Fishbein, a Debevoise & Plimpton law firm partner in New York. “I imagine that means every single day coming across his desk is going to be very scary information that he’s going to have to sort out and see if there’s a basis for it. You need to secure and protect the country while not overstepping the bounds, violating civil liberties. It’s a tough job.” Johnson has made clear his support for using done strikes to kill enemy combatants, including U.S. citizens overseas. He has also said that he considers “lone wolf” terrorists to be a law-enforcement problem, not enemy combatants who should be targeted in military strikes. Homeland Security is almost never the lead law-enforcement agency in domestic terror cases. It includes Customs and Border Protection, whose primary mission is preventing terror-
Bill aims to take debt limit off table obvious way out,” she said. “America is so bruised by this.” Boxer’s bill, the USA AAA WASHINGTON — After the Credit Restoration Act, is actucountry flirted with an unprec- ally based on a Republican idea: edented default on its obligaSenate Minority Leader Mitch tions this week for the second McConnell proposed it as part of time in three years, Sen. Barbara the 2011 Budget Control Act. The Boxer is pushing a proposal to Kentucky Republican, usually eliminate the debt limit as a bar- one of President Barack Obama’s gaining chip. most outspoken critics, helped A bill by Boxer, a California broker a compromise this week Democrat, would allow the to end a 16-day government shutpresident to request a debt-limit down and raise the debt limit. increase, and only a veto-proof But the deal only extends majority in both houses of Con- the U.S. Treasury’s borrowing gress could stop it. The measure authority through early February, would allow members of Conand just the possibility that the gress to voice their disapproval country could near default again and tell their constituents they risks U.S. creditworthiness. voted against the debt-limit hike. “If anyone thinks this brinksBoxer’s bill hasn’t attracted manship is helping the nation, any co-sponsors yet. The White just look at the ratings agenHouse says the authority to cies,” Boxer said. raise the debt limit rests with Fitch Ratings on Tuesday Congress. But the public is run- put the U.S. on “rating watch ning out of patience. Congress negative,” a step toward a credit is about as unpopular as it’s ever downgrade. The disarray in been. Business and world leadCongress “dents confidence in ers worry that the fiscal fights the effectiveness of the U.S. government and political institucould send the U.S. and global tions, and in the coherence and economies into a tailspin. credibility of economic policy,” In an interview, Boxer said Fitch wrote. Standard & Poor’s her bill is a solution. “It is the By Curtis Tate
McClatchy Washington Bureau
Brian McPartlon Roofing LLC. National Roofing Contractor of the year Roofing Contractor magazine 505-982-6256 • www.mcpartlonroofing.com
©2013 Raymond James & Associates, Inc. member New York Stock Exchange/SIPC
SOUTHWEST PLASTERING COMPANY,
INC.
MAINTAIN YOUR ROOF & STUCCO
Over 30 years experience in roof repair
Michael A. Roybal
505-438-6599
www.southwestplasteringcompany.com
took away the country’s coveted Triple-A rating during the last debt-limit crisis. G. William Hoagland, a senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center who participated in several budget deals in the 1980s and 1990s as a Republican Senate aide, said he’d prefer that Congress repeal the debt-limit law. But since that isn’t likely, he said, Boxer’s plan could work. “I think that makes good sense,” Hoagland said. “It’s a good way to get it out of the debate.” Boxer said her bill creates a more predictable and expedited process for increasing the debt limit. “I think it’s fair to all branches,” she said. “I would hope that it would be embraced.”
year of the horse pens Sanbusco Center • 989-4742 www.santafepens.com
ists from coming into the country. DHS also has a presence on the FBI-led joint terrorism task forces around the country, with agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Secret Service. Johnson’s experience in dealing with overseas actions and counterterror decisions may also be helpful for a department still trying to define its role in the fight against terrorism. Homeland Security has a growing footprint around the world. If confirmed, Johnson would take over an agency with numerous highlevel vacancies, including the deputy secretary. When Janet Napolitano left to take over as president of the University of California in September, one-third of the heads of key agencies and divisions were filled with acting officials or had been vacant for months. Obama has nominated several people to key positions, including general counsel. His pick to be the department’s No. 2, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director
Alejandro Mayorkas, is the subject of an internal investigation, and his nomination has been stalled. Johnson is a 1979 graduate of Morehouse College and a 1982 graduate of Columbia Law School. After leaving the administration in 2012, he returned to private practice. According to the website of his law firm, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, his civil and criminal clients have included Citigroup, Salomon Smith Barney, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Gillette. Johnson earned more than $2.6 million from his partnership at that law firm, according to 2009 government financial disclosure documents. During the 2008 presidential campaign, Johnson donated more than $33,000 to Obama’s campaign, federal records show. He was also a supporter of Hillary Rodham Clinton, having contributed $2,300 to her presidential primary campaign in July 2008. He’s also given $5,000 to the New Jersey Democratic Party and $1,000 to Democrats nationwide, as well as to several congressional candidates.
1O%Off! Palatial Leather • ADDITIONAL •
Sunday has JOBS
Now Makes an
Now servicing all makes & models 2 years or 24,000 mile warranty on parts & labor.
der! Special Or & k c to S In
HURRY LIMITED TIME ONLY!
of Santa Fe
FINE FURNITURE
MATTRESSES • UPHOLSTERY • PATIO FURNITURE
504 W. Cordova Rd., Santa Fe • Just up from Trader Joe’s • 982-5555 Mon, Fri, & Sat 9-7, Tues-Thur 9-6, Sun 1 1-6 • leishmansofsantafe.com
A-4
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
New details emerge on Sandy Hook shooting Soon-to-be-released police report to provide insight into shooter’s actions, officials say By Dave Altimari and Steven Goode
The Hartford Courant
HARTFORD, Conn. — Investigators who entered Adam Lanza’s home after he shot and killed 20 first-graders and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012, found his bed neatly made. An armoire held five matching tan-colored shirts with five pairs of khaki pants. Black garbage bags sealed with duct tape covered the bedroom windows. An empty cereal bowl rested on the desktop near damaged computer parts in the adjacent second-floor room in the home he shared with his mother, Nancy Lanza. He had removed the hard drives from his computers, then opened the metal containers to get at the discs, which store data. He scratched a “W” through the discs, before trying to smash them with a barbell. Lanza’s online activity, including his interaction with online users about guns, video games and computers, has become an area of investigation for authorities attempting to determine why he shot his mother to death before shooting his way through the school. A long-awaited state police report is due soon, but the Hartford Courant has learned through law enforcement sources details that provide a clearer picture of what happened at Lanza’s home and in Sandy Hook Elementary
School. Police investigators concluded Nancy Lanza had been shot four times in the same spot. The .22-caliber rifle Adam Lanza used was pressed directly Adam Lanza against her forehead and found at her bedside. The shades were still drawn in her bedroom, leading police to believe she was killed sometime before dawn. Lanza drove to the school, where he killed 20 first-graders and six adults. The lone survivor from teacher Lauren Rousseau’s class was shielded from the gunman because she was hidden in one of the corners of the classroom’s tiny bathroom. Among the other revelations, sources said, is that a school secretary and nurse remained in a closet in Principal Dawn Hochsprung’s office for several hours even while state police officials — unaware that anyone was in the room — used the office as a command center. The room had not been cleared by SWAT teams. Hochsprung was one of the adults killed. State police trying to determine Lanza’s path through the school initially believed that he entered Rousseau’s room first and then backtracked to teacher Victoria Soto’s first-grade classroom. But some of the surviving children from Soto’s class told investigators they didn’t hear gunshots until Lanza came in their room, casting doubt on the original theory. The FBI is assisting the state police on tracking Lanza’s movements using sophisticated sound technology. Sources said the secretary in the main
A police cruiser sits in the driveway of Nancy Lanza’s home in Newtown, Conn., on Dec. 18, 2012. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
office did not hang up the phone after calling 911, and federal authorities are trying to use the sounds recorded through that open landline to help chart Lanza’s movements in hopes of better understanding his actions. When the shooting started, school janitor Rick Thorne ran through the school warning teachers to close their doors and then used a master key to lock many of the doors for them. The state police SWAT team that was clearing the school after the shooting had to get the key from Thorne to open some of the rooms. The key was so worn from use that morning it snapped in one of the doors. A source with knowledge of the probe said that when Lanza drove to the Sandy Hook Elementary School, he parked his car in a way that could have set him up to ambush responding police officers. He parked with the
passenger’s side facing a small brick wall near the front entrance. His shotgun was left leaning against the passenger’s side door. The spot gave him potentially a perfect line of sight to shoot at unsuspecting police driving down the long driveway, around a curve and into his line of fire. It also provided him cover since the school and woods were behind him. By examining evidence at the scene, a source said, investigators determined Lanza fired eight shots through the front glass to kill Hochsprung and school psychologist Mary Scherlach, who ran out of a room to the left of Hochsprung’s office. Police believe Lanza also fired one round from his pistol in the hallway but they are unsure why. He killed himself with a second shot from the pistol. When Lanza entered Soto’s room
Fashion: Galleries to host trunk shows for designers Continued from Page A-1 Stephen Cuomo, said the fashion week — now in its second year — is gathering momentum, and he hopes that 20 years from now, it will be a major economic driver for the area and put Santa Fe on the fashion map. Showing from Santa Fe will be local tailor and designer Ezra Estes — who also heads the Santa Fe Community College’s fashion design program — and two or three students from the program. Half a dozen Santa Fe galleries will host trunk shows for visiting designers during a “Shop and Stroll” event on Thursday before the show officially begins. “I dunno, I can’t speak on their behalf,” Cuomo said when asked why the event doesn’t include more designers from Santa Fe. “Just not a lot of New Mexico designers have come forward. There is not enough local designers that were willing to pay the fee to be in such a show. There are a lot of moving parts,” he said. “But it would be a shame not to have a Santa Fe Fashion Week because there wasn’t enough designers to partake. I’m looking at this as a 20- to 30-year project. Something we can grow into.” Cuomo said he did approach recent Project Runway runner-up Patricia Michaels, who is from Taos Pueblo, but he said she wanted too much money to be involved. Michaels said Friday, however, that Cuomo never called her about the event, and that they never discussed price. In a follow-up telephone call, Cuomo said he spoke to an associate of Michaels about the matter but not directly to the designer. Most of the Santa Fe fashion industry people The New Mexican spoke to about the event said they had never heard about show, or that they had heard mentions of it, but only in passing. “I hadn’t heard about it until you told me,” said Dena Ross, owner of Mira boutique on Marcy Street. “So I have no thought on it. It think it’s a great idea. It’s lovely that it’s at Buffalo Thunder. But if it’s about Santa Fe, it would be better if it was at the [Santa Fe Community] Convention Center.” “I heard something about it, but nobody has approached me about it,” said Magita Story, whose line Elven Velvet is carried in several Santa Fe shops. Lily Falk, who owns Lily of the West Boutique and Gallery on East Palace Avenue, said she heard something about the event last year, but she has never been invited. Two other designers — who didn’t want to give their names because they didn’t want to damage relationships within the local fashion community — said they had heard about the show, but they chose not to participate for other reasons, including the fact that Cuomo was the subject of a 2011 rape accusation. A 23-year-old aspiring model reported to police in September 2011 that she went to Cuomo’s Albuquerque home one evening so he could help her with poses, and the then 48-year-old promoter forced himself upon her. Cuomo was arrested in the case but was not indicted, and the charges against him were dismissed for lack of evidence, according to court files. Cuomo claims he was falsely accused and bemoaned the fact that the accusation continues to plague him, but he said he didn’t do anything wrong and is proud of the fact that he was able to weather that storm and continue on with his dream of creating a Santa Fe Fashion Week. The two designers who asked to remain anonymous — one of whom worked with Cuomo on a previous show — said events organized by Cuomo have been “cheesy and amateurish” and seemed to be aimed mostly at “selling drinks” at the venues where they were held as opposed to seriously representing fashion. Patricia Michaels said she worked with Cuomo on fashion events twice in the past two years — once in Albuquerque and once in Santa Fe —
Santa Fe Fashion Week A multiday event Oct. 24-27, including runway shows, a designer meet and greet and an after-party will be held at Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino, 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail.
Schedule Thursday: 5-8 p.m., Four Canyon Road galleries will host trunk shows presented by visiting designers. Friday: VIP reception with designers at 7 p.m., followed by runway show at 8:30 p.m. and after-party. Saturday: VIP reception with designer at 7 p.m., followed by runway show at 8:30 p.m. and after-party. Cost: General admission, $27.33; VIP admission, $108.48 More information: Visit www.santafe fashionweek.com
because she wanted to be supportive. Both times, she said, she agreed to participate for no compensation apart from being paid for gas and one meal during the event. Both times Cuomo failed to reimburse her, she said. Michaels said Cuomo also failed to deliver on his promise to provide photographs taken during one of the events. But Cuomo said he never agreed to pay expenses or provide the photos to Michaels. Despite some misgivings about Cuomo, others in the fashion industry said they support the idea of a fashion week in Santa Fe and would like to see the event succeed. “I’m pretty sure it will be good,” Michaels said of the upcoming event. “If he has designers who have their heart in the show, I’m pretty sure it will be fabulous. God bless their hearts. But I can’t trust something that nothing came from.” Dawn Bacon — former head the fashion design program at the community college who now owns a private business called the Santa Fe School of Fashion Design — said the idea of a Santa Fe Fashion Week is interesting and could benefit hotels and restaurants, but from what she has heard, the current incarnation of the event doesn’t offer designers the caliber of exposure and opportunity other shows do for the same price. “Typically, if you are going to be in a show, you are getting showroom space or booth space,” she said. Buyers and media representatives also are usually in attendance, she said. “It’s a way to get yourself to the retail market for consumers to find you and purchase your goods. That should be the end point of fashion week. If you aren’t getting the end result, is it really a fashion week?” Cuomo said a buyer from the boutique at Isleta Resort and Casino plans to attend the event, as does a buyer from a manufacturing firm, which he could not name. He also noted that the show’s sponsor, Savvy, is a boutique that could possibly make purchases from the designers, but he could not name any other buyers that are expected to attend. Most designers featured in the show are paying between $500 and $1,500 — depending on how many events they’ll participate in over the four days — to be in the show. All the models and hair and makeup artists working the show are volunteers, but Cuomo said it will still cost him about $10,000 to rent the space, provide food for VIP events and maintain Santa Fe Fashion Week’s online presence. One of the new releases on the event’s Web page noted that “partial proceeds” would be donated to the Santa Fe Community College fashion design program. But Cuomo said Thursday that the information was from last year’s show, which lost money. Any profit made this year, he said, will go to him. On Friday, the statement about the proceeds no longer appeared on the Web page.
Just not a lot of New “ Mexico designers have
come forward. There is not enough local designers that were willing to pay the fee to be in such a show. There are a lot of moving parts.” Stephen Cuomo, Santa Fe Fashion Week founder Cuomo said he’s producing a half-hour television piece about the show, which he will make available to public access channels around the country. Cuomo said about 25 percent of the designers featured in the event will show “Western” themed clothing, and another 25 percent will show garments with a “Native American” flair. The remainder will be a “nice mix,” including swimsuits from the Las Vegas, Nev.-based company Syrup Swimwear. Cuomo — who was born in New York but moved to Rio Rancho with his family at the age of 12 — lived in Las Vegas, where he worked as stock broker for Merrill Lynch, for more than a decade before returning to New Mexico about five years ago. Immediately after returning to New Mexico, Cuomo began promoting after-hours mixers and networking events (some of which included fashion shows) under the name Buzz Networking, which, he said, is how he met many of the fashion industry people who are helping put together Santa Fe Fashion Week. Cuomo said last year’s event drew about 125 people the first night, which was disheartening, but about 500 people came the next night. Crystal Vickers — a handbag and accessories designer who works under the name Crystal Rose — who participated in the event last year, said it helped boost her business. Vickers, who got a student designer spot last year, said she didn’t make a lot of direct sales at the event but did make connections she feels moved her career in the right direction. “I made great contacts from there, and Stephen has been a great help,” she said, adding that Cuomo connected her with a manufacturer for her faux-fur handbag line, currently carried in two Santa Fe shops. Vickers said she plants to participate in the show next year, when she has a new line to show. Designer Meredith Lockart, who also participated last year, had positive things to say about the event as well. “I didn’t write orders directly from that,” Lockart said. “But I did get new interest from customers after that. It was a great experience — the people we got to meet, the photographers we got to work with and just in general contacts. That, plus Santa Fe is just a fabulous place to go.” Lockart said a group of her friends, some of whom are in the fashion business, plan to make attending the show an excuse for a “girls weekend out.” Designer Celeste Sotola — who owned a gallery in Chicago, designed hats that earned her a solo show in Paris and sells her Western wear-inspired designs for as much as $6,500 — said even if young designers don’t participate in the show, seeing how designers such as herself make money from their creativity can help them. “Santa Fe Fashion Week brings them an opportunity to see work in progress and a working model of what they can imagine their business can be like,” she said. “It seems like a natural fit for Santa Fe. Next year, it could get bigger and next year bigger. Someone has already planted a seed, and it’s starting to poke out of the ground.”
he turned to his left and immediately fired at Soto, who was standing toward the back of the room near the window. Police believe some of those bullets went into the parking lot, striking some of the cars. Through interviews with surviving children, sources said, investigators learned that some of Soto’s students were holding hands in the far right corner near the chalkboard, away from Lanza’s initial line of fire. When Lanza stopped firing because his gun jammed, student Jesse Lewis yelled for kids to run. Lewis was shot to death. Six of the children ran past Lanza to safety. While the roles of Newtown officers have been documented in national media reports, new details also have emerged about state troopers’ actions. Several troopers from Troop A rushed to the school, including the barracks commander Michael Hoffbauer, Sgt. William Cario and members of the narcotics task force who were arriving at the troop for a case meeting. Two troopers, Carlos Guerra and William Cornoyer, were driving on Interstate 84 transporting a prisoner to New Haven, when they diverted to the school. Two members of the SWAT team formed impromptu search teams to make sure there wasn’t a second shooter, ultimately discovering Kaitlin Roig and her first-grade class locked in a bathroom. Guerra and Cario ran into Rousseau’s room and found the children in the bathroom. Cario carried one of the children out of the school to a waiting cruiser, which whisked her away to Danbury Hospital. The child died there.
Marriage: Over 1,000 licenses issued Continued from Page A-1 same-sex couples who had been denied marriage licenses filed lawsuits. More than 1,000 licenses have been issued so far. “This case obviously is part of a tremendous national momentum that is continuing to grow,” said Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, which is representing some of the same-sex couples involved in the New Mexico case. Thirteen other states and the District of Columbia allow for same-sex marriage, either through court rulings, legislation or voter referendums. In New Jersey, the state’s highest court ruled unanimously Friday to uphold an order to allow same-sex marriages. In New Mexico, the law isn’t explicit on gay marriage. But nearly two dozen current and former legislators told the high court in written arguments that state law bans it. The group is made up of Republicans and former Democratic House Speaker Gene Samberson. They point out that state statutes contain a marriage license application with sections for male and female applicants and that there are other provisions in law referring to “husband” and “wife.” One of those former legislators, Albuquerque lawyer Paul Becht, said the case will challenge the high court because it’s “composed essentially of social liberals.” “So the question here then is the Supreme Court going to impose its will, notwithstanding the will of the Legislature, or not,” Becht said. The National Center for Lesbian Rights, American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico and others say the state constitution’s equal protection guarantees should guide the high court. “New Mexico law already strongly prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and generally requires equal treatment of same-sex couples and their families,” Minter said. “So it is the next logical stop to hold that, yes, it also requires full equality when it comes to marriage.”
From left, Liz Stefanics and her partner, Linda Siegle, were the first gay couple to receive a marriage license in August from Santa Fe County Clerk Geraldine Salazar. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-5
Complaint: Hendry honored for helping club with commercials Continued from Page A-1 said he was “truly sorry” he didn’t meet Abeyta’s high standards and that he respected Abeyta’s request for an investigation into his personal support for another mayoral candidate, Javier Gonzales. “It is with great regret I am returning … my ‘Shining Star of Santa Fe 2012’ award you so graciously presented me at your awards banquet last year for my contributions and fund raising on behalf of the Boys and Girls Club of Santa Fe,” Hendry wrote in the email. Abeyta said Friday afternoon he had
not yet read Hendry’s email. “I’m at a loss for words because I’m just hearing it for the first time,” he said. “It’s unfortunate that he feels that he has to return his award Javier because this is about Gonzales the mayor’s race and not the Boys & Girls Club or anything like that.” Abeyta said Hendry received the award because he is the business agent of a film technicians union that helped the Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Fe
Audit: King wants a judge to look at review Continued from Page A-1
with commercials. “It’s unfortunate because that’s a whole separate thing than running for mayor,” Abeyta said. Hendry, who copied the president and CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of America on the email, said he would continue to support the organization. “I can’t think of something that’s more important for the children of Santa Fe,” Hendry said. “I hope I didn’t disappoint the children in the way I disappointed Roman.” Until Friday, Hendry was listed as the chairman and treasurer of the Progressive Santa Fe Political Action
Travel Bug
findings, PCG identified a few common themes across many Slideshow: information could jeopardize of the 15 providers reviewed,” the investigation. the audit said. “Non-compliance The redacted audit was with many New Mexico state released in response to a lawsuit rules and regulations was comfiled by the New Mexico Foun- mon.” dation for Open Government. However, a list of those comSaturday, August 24 at 5 pm The New Mexican received a mon problems was blacked out copy in response to a request in the redacted version. The mass games are a one under the state Inspection of The audit said each of the Public Records Act. The news providers had its own section in the world performance. organization New Mexico in the audit spelling out specific In-Depth and the Las Cruces Think Circus Soleil and findings. However, none of Sun-News also are asking state these sections was included in the Nuremberg Rally judges to release the audit the Friday release. report to the public. turbocharged. Then there For months, the state Human “The version released today is Services Department and is the country, and a still significantly redacted, and Gov. Susana Martinez said FOG will continue its efforts to auditors uncovered $33.8 milclosely guided tour which obtain release of the full report,” lion in Medicaid overpayments the organization said in a news will bring back memories between 2009 and 2012. That’s release. more than 13 percent of the of the days of Stalin and “The [attorney general] and total payments the providers [Human Services Department] Mao. received from Medicaid, a govcontinue, however, to withhold ernment insurance program for the specific, detailed findings the poor and disabled that is the PCG [Public Consulting managed by the state. Travel presentations most Saturdays at 5pm. Group] audit report made conGoogle ‘Travel Bug Events’ for full schedule. Human Services Department cerning each of the 15 providSecretary Sidonie Squier reiterers subject to the audit,” King ated to a reporter last month said in his response to the FOG that the audit did uncover finansuit. “Those findings identify cial abuse and that the attorney witnesses, specific compliance general will substantiate that. issues, and the specific method“I’m confident that they will,” ology by which the audit inves- Squier told the New Mexico tigated potential issues, includWatchdog online news site after ing possible Medicaid fraud.” appearing before the Legislative The Human Services Depart- Finance Committee. “I know ment suspended the Medicaid what’s in the audit.” funding for the providers after “We got referrals from Optum the February 2013 audit comHealth, and we read them and Angela Ortiz Flores LISW missioned by the state and looked at them,” Squier said. Individual/Family therapist Optum Health, the company “They had in [the audit] cred2074 Galisteo St., Ste. B-5, under contract to provide ible allegations. That doesn’t Santa Fe, NM 87505 behavioral health services in mean all 15 [providers] were New Mexico. The state mainknowingly involved in fraud. Angela Ortiz LISW BarryFlores Kentopp tained the audit uncovered But we are required to give that 2074 Galisteo St., Ste. B-5, www.visalusofnm.bodybyvi.com “credible allegations of fraud.” to the attorney general to invesOnly one of the providers Santa Fe,470-3811 NM 87505 (505) tigate.” had its funding completely The documents also have restored, while several others been withheld from the behavBrian McPartlon Roofing were forced out of business. ioral health administrators. 39 Bisbee Ct, #7 Santa Fe, NM, 87508 Their caseloads of some 30,000 Several have complained that t replace your (505) 982-6256 www.mcpartlonroofing.com/ patients were taken over by they have lost their livelihoods Arizona providers, contracted and have been tarred as fraud by the state to continue services perpetrators without being able FURNITURE during the investigation. to defend themselves. 1735 Central Ave, Los Alamos, NM 87544 Some of the pages released In his response Friday, King www.cbfox.com • (505) 662-2864 Friday also identified specific asked for a judge to review the areas that had come to the complete audit privately and attention of the state from a then determine if releasing preliminary review. Those additional sections or pages is 100 S Federal Pl, Santa Fe, NM 87501 included: appropriate. centurynetbank.com • (505) 995-1200 u Cross-billing services to “The withheld portions of the multiple locations and double audit are precisely that — evicharging for services. dence in connection with the Cos Bar u “Upcoding,” or charging criminal investigation that the 128 W. Water St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 for more intense work than was AG received from an outside www.cosbar.com • (505) 984-2676 provided to patients. source. … The substance of the u Excessive billing for psydocument contains confidential chosocial rehabilitation sersources, methods, information David Richard Gallery vices. and evidence received or com544 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 u Excessive hours billed for piled in connection with a crimwww.DavidRichardGallery.com • (505) 983-9555 some patients per day. inal investigation. To require u Forging clinical records to public disclosure of that inforincorporate more billing and mation would fatally undermine Eden Medi Spa treatment time than provided. the law-enforcement exception, 405 Kiva Court, Santa Fe, NM 87505 u Excessive out-of-home as it would unduly interfere placement services. edenmedispa.com • (505) 988-3772 with the ongoing criminal invesAnother part of the overall tigation,” King said. Authentic audit was the Information TechKing has not said when he Spanish Cuisine nology/Billing System review. expects the investigation to be 213 Washington Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 But these findings were comfinished. www.elmeson-santafe.com • (505) 983-6756 pletely blacked out in the version of the audit released by the Contact Steve Terrell at attorney general. sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Georgia O’Keeffe Museum “While each provider is Read his political blog at 217 Johnson St, Santa Fe, NM 87501 unique with respect to clinical roundhouseroundup.com. www.okeeffemuseum.org • (505) 946-1000
Committee. After The New Mexican reported that the PAC had hired a political operative to dig up dirt on candidates, Hendry said he had resigned from the PAC and joined Gonzales’ campaign steering committee. On Wednesday, Gonzales said in an email to supporters that Hendry had stepped down from the committee. The PAC filed an amended statement of organization Friday with the City Clerk’s Office listing Sandy Buffett as the new chairwoman and Todd Lopez as the new treasurer. PAC Director Sandra Wechsler said Buffett is a
(505) 992-0418
839 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, NM 87501
7:30-5:30 Mon-Sat; 11-4 Sunday
longtime leader in the conservation movement. “Progressive Santa Fe is an independent organization that cares about elevating progressive issues and voices,” Wechsler said in an email. In addition to Abeyta and Gonzales, the other mayoral candidates are City Councilors Patti Bushee, Bill Dimas and Rebecca Wurzburger, neighborhood activist Margaret Josina Campos, and Motel 6 night auditor Michael D’Anna. The election is March 4. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@sfnewmexican.com.
An independent locally owned travel specialty store. International & local maps, guides, travel accessories, globes, flags, GPS and a full espresso bar.
Mass games and mass thought.
NIGERIAN DANCER Photo credit: Bobbie Sum
berg
LINK TO THESE BUSINESSES
A page of a behavioral health audit report released Friday by Attorney General Gary King is entirely blacked out. King said information from the report was redacted because releasing the information would jeopardize an ongoing investigation into potential Medicaid fraud. STEVE TERRELL THE NEW MEXICAN
The Golden Eye
115 Don Gaspar Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.goldeneyesantafe.com • (505) 984-0040
Indian Arts and Culture
710 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, NM 87505 indianartsandculture.org • (505)-476-1250
International Folk Art Museum
706 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, NM 87505 internationalfolkart.org • (505) 476-1200 KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY SANTA FE
130 Lincoln Ave., Ste. K, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.kwsantafenm.com/ • (505) 983-5151
Lannan Foundation
313 Read Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.lannan.org • (505) 986-8160
NM History Museum
113 Lincoln Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 nmhistorymuseum.org • (505) 476-5200
NM Art Museum
107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe, NM 87501 nmartmuseum.org • (505)-476-5072
Positive Energy
801 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505 positiveenergysolar.com • (505) 428-0069
Quail Run
3101 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.quailrunsantafe.org • (505) 986-2200
Rio Grande School
715 Camino Cabra, Santa Fe, NM 87505 riograndeschool.org • (505) 983-1621
Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association
1409 Luisa Street, Suite A, Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.sfahba.com • (505) 982-1774
Santa Fe Culinary Academy
112 W San Francisco St #300, Santa Fe, NM 87501 santafeculinaryacademy.com • (505) 983-7445
2414 Cerrillos Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.santaferestore.org • (505) 473-1114
Southwest Care Center
649 Harkle Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505 southwestcare.org • (505) 989-8200
SW Ear, Nose and Throat
1620 Hospital Dr., Santa Fe, NM 87505 swentnm.com • (505) 629-0612
Teca Tu A Paws-Worthy Emporium
500 Montezuma Avenue – in Sanbusco Market Center, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.tecatu.com • (505) 982-9374
Theater Grottesco
theatergrottesco.org • (505) 474-8400
435 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.zanebennettgallery.com • (505) 982-8111
James Chrobocinski
Broker/Owner 433 Paseo de Peralta, Suite 2, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.ziarealtygroup.com • (505) 662-8899
A-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
LOCAL NEWS
SAN MIGUEL COUNTY
Crusade to ban fracking UNM changes spur protest gains steam
Hispanic groups say scholarship program’s new standards will harm minority students By Uriel Garcia
The New Mexican
The president of The University of New Mexico will be meeting with a Hispanic community leader after disagreement over a scholarship program for incoming freshmen. The dispute comes after UNM announced changes this week to its supplementary scholarships for incoming freshmen who qualify for the New Mexico Legislative Lottery Scholarship program. The League of United Latin American Citizens said the changes will unfairly affect minority students. The group, along with the New Mexico Hispanic Roundtable, called for the resignation of the school’s provost, Chaouki Abdallah, as well as Terry Babbitt, the associate vice president
for enrollment management. Ralph Arellanes, the leader of both groups, said he has agreed to meet with UNM President Robert Frank on Monday to discuss how the changes will make it harder for minority and low-income students to obtain a college degree. Frank, who asked for the meeting with Arellanes, said he supports both Abdallah and Babbit, but “we recognize that our communication about this restructuring of the scholarship program was not as clear as it needed to be.” Arellanes said the school wasn’t transparent to the community when it made the changes in the scholarship program. Under the new plan, incoming freshmen will need a high school grade-point average of at least 3.0 and an ACT score of at least
23 in order to get the $1,500 scholarship — up from $1,000. The new guidelines were intended for freshmen entering the school in fall 2014. However, as a way to transition to the new standards, UMN decided to allow 2014 freshmen with a 2.5 GPA to still qualify for a $1,000 scholarship. Then UNM plans to raise the GPA requirement to 3.0 in 2015 to give students and families enough time to prepare for the new requirements. The bridge scholarship program is for students’ first semester, until the lottery scholarship program, which covers up to eight semesters, kicks in for qualifying students in their second semester. Currently, in order to get a state lottery scholarship, a student must maintain a 2.5 GPA throughout college. In a letter to Frank, Arellanes called UNM’s changes “an elitist attempt at kicking out those that are the most vulnerable in our state.”
But school officials said the changes were made with the best intention of student success. “Out primary goal with these changes is to retain support and access for students to attend UNM who are prepared, not encourage those who are most likely to have challenges to attend for one or two semesters and potentially leave school with thousands in debt and no prospect of attaining a lottery scholarship,” Babbitt said. According to UNM’s website, of the students who enroll with a high school GPA lower than 3.0, only 30 percent graduate within six years. In contrast, 51 percent of students with a GPA higher than 3.0 graduate within six years. In 2011, out of the 266 students with less than a 3.0 high school GPA who received the bridge scholarship, 73 percent didn’t qualify for the lottery scholarship, according the school’s website.
Knights of Columbus celebrates 100 years of service in Santa Fe LEFT: Knights of Columbus in plumed captain’s hats await the beginning of a ceremony at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. BELOW: Although there are no known photographs of the original charter members of Santa Fe’s first council of the Knights of Columbus from 1913, some of the Santa Fe members are believed to be standing in the back of this photograph, taken in 1928 at the inauguration of a new council in Dawson, a coal-mining town near Raton. COURTESY PHOTOS
A century
of tradition By Tom Sharpe
The New Mexican
if you go
he rising sun flickered through the yellowing trees in downtown Santa Fe as six members of Santa Fe Council 1707 of the Knights of Columbus dug into their chile and eggs at the Plaza Cafe. The leadership group had been meeting there for breakfast each Thursday morning to plan a Mass and enchilada dinner to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Knights in Santa Fe on Saturday, Oct. 19. The chapter was founded on this date in 1913 by 64 local Roman Catholic men. One of the charter members, José D. Sena, had tried to start a Santa Fe council in the waning years of the 19th century, but had been blocked by the archbishop at the time. Prior to the turn of the 20th century, says a pamphlet published in 1952, “religious leaders, not only in New Mexico, but elsewhere, were not completely sold on the idea of a secret order of Catholic men, not subject to the control of the church.” No photographs exist of the original council in Santa Fe, but the founders are believed to have worn top hats at formal occasions, rather than the plumed “captain’s hats” they wear today, along with dark suits, white gloves, red capes, white sashes and ceremonial swords. The group who gathered at the Plaza Cafe on a recent Thursday morning looked like regular guys you might meet at other men’s clubs like Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis, the American Legion, the Fraternal Order of Eagles, the Fraternal Order of Police, even the Knights of Columbus’ historical nemesis, the Masons and their Knights Templar order. The first to arrive for breakfast were Council 1707’s financial secretary Mike Specht, a driver for United Parcel Service; treasurer
What: Special Mass commemorating the 100th anniversary of Santa Fe Council 1707 of the Knights of Columbus. When: 5:15 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19 Where: Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, 131 Cathedral Place What: Enchilada dinner to celebrate the anniversary. When: 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19 Where: Gymnasium of Cristo Rey Church, 1120 Canyon Road Tickets: Available at the door; $15 for one, $25 for two, children 12 or under free
T
Robert Quintana, a clerk for the Corporations Bureau of the Secretary of State’s Office, and Grand Knight Stephen Hauf, a special education, environmental science and botany teacher at Santa Fe High School. They were soon joined by Santiago DeLora, a branch manager for Bank of America; Damian Hawkins, who does marketing and advertising for a dietary product; and Patrick Sanchez, an engineer on disability. The Rev. Daniel Gutierrez, council chaplain, and Peter Ives, a city councilor, usually attend, but both were out of town on that particular Thursday. Like other fraternal organizations, the Knights of Columbus uses esoteric titles, medals and rites, and raises money for charities like the Special Olympics via a springtime “Tootsie Roll Campaign.” Early on, Council 1707 had a lodge behind the Palace of the Governors, but it has had no permanent home in recent decades. Instead, it holds its monthly membership meetings at Crispin Hall at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, where it is based.
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com
While many of those other fraternal organizations have gotten smaller, the Knights of Columbus appears to be growing. Today, Santa Fe has five councils of some 60 members each. There is at least one associated with each Catholic parish. One reason for that is that the Knights of Columbus is a mutualbenefit society that provides life insurance. Hauf, who joined in 2004, recalled that when he was a child, his godfather died of cancer at a young age, and Hauf’s father, a lawyer, handled the disposition of the estate. “I can remember my father saying, ‘Thank God for the Knights of Columbus,’ because the insurance really did take care of his family,” he said. “I was always interested in what they did, how they functioned, so when Mike [Specht] came around looking for new members, I said, ‘Oh, I’ll check it out.’ That’s why I’m here.” The Knights of Columbus was founded in New Haven, Conn., in 1882, by a Roman Catholic priest, the Rev. Michael McGivney, as a mutual-benefit society for recent immigrants. It is named for Christopher Columbus who, arguably, led the first European immigrants to the New World. By the time “Columbianism” reached New Mexico in 1902, it had become more of a bulwark against the anticlerical insurgency in Mexico, as well as an alternative to Freemasonry that had been condemned by the Vatican as a secret society. By midcentury, the Knights of Columbus became active in several church-and-state controversies. In 1951, it began a national campaign to add the words “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance — adopted in 1954. Some councils have pushed to put monuments to the Ten Commandments in courthouses or other public property. No other Knights of Columbus cause is better known than its opposition to abortion through church-sponsored prayer vigils, protests and the march to the Capitol for the opening of the Legislature each January. “Officially, we take no position on any political issue,” Hauf said. “But in terms of issues that relate to the moral commitment of the Catholic Church, we’re very supportive. We believe that all life is sacred from conception to natural death. … We pray that women would choose life rather than choose abortion.”
More than 60 people demonstrate in Las Vegas, N.M., to push for tough measures against practice By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
Miguel Pacheco says there are two good reasons San Miguel County ought to ban hydraulic fracturing outright as neighboring Mora County did, or restrict it so that oil-and-gas developers are discouraged. “We do not have the water, to begin with,” Pacheco, of Las Vegas, N.M., said in a phone interview. “Las Vegas and San Miguel County have been on water restrictions for years. We haven’t been able to water our trees, gardens, yards for years.” “The second thing is the quality of water. Hydraulic fracturing is very toxic,” said Pacheco, a few hours before federAl he was scheduled to moderexemptions ate an anti-fracking demonstration Friday afternoon in The oil and gas the town’s historic downtown industry enjoys plaza. exemptions from More than 60 people provisions in the folbraved cold temperatures for lowing seven federal laws: the two-hour event, he said u Comprehensive later. “It went excellent.” Environmental Hydraulic fracking, popuResponse, Compenlarly called fracking, uses sation and Liability high-pressure fluids through Act well bore holes to force u Resource Conserfractures in shale and other vation and Recovery rock formations, allowing Act oil and gas trapped in the u Safe Drinking rock to flow out. Combined Water Act with new techniques for u Clean Water Act u Clean Air Act horizontal drilling, fracku National Environing is credited with opening mental Policy Act up vast amounts of oil and u Toxic Release gas reserves in areas once Inventory under the thought too marginal to drill. Emergency PlanIndustry advocates say frackning and Community ing is safe. Right-to-Know Act But opponents across the (Some states, includUnited States and worldwide ing New Mexico, say there’s too much risk to now required limited water supplies and the envitoxic release reportronment from fracking fluids, ing from oil and gas developers). especially when oil and gas companies aren’t required to disclose the chemicals used. San Miguel County residents are continuing to push for a ban on fracking as their County Commission considers a draft land development ordinance that sets aside the eastern part of the county for oil and gas development. The proposed ordinance creates a special development overlay on 1,782 square miles of the county, allowing oil and gas developers to apply for drilling permits in areas within the north and west escarpment of the Canadian River. Molly Smollett, who along with Pacheco are members of the advocacy group Committee for Clean Air, Water and Earth, said 2,200 people have signed a petition asking the county commissioners to extend a moratorium on oil and gas drilling and fracking until “it can be proven safe, which it can’t.” Pacheco said he got involved with protesting against fracking six years ago, when he met Kathleen Dudley, an anti-fracking activist who helped marshal support among her Mora County neighbors for a ban. “I realized a lot of people didn’t know about fracking and what it meant,” he said. “I decided I better spread the word in San Miguel County.” He studied up on hydraulic fracking and lobbied the Las Vegas City Council, County Commission and local legislators about the potential dangers. Both Mora and San Miguel learned something by watching Santa Fe County’s fight against oil and gas drilling in 2007 and 2008. Santa Fe County didn’t ban fracking, but crafted a highly restrictive ordinance with plenty of hoops a developer has to jump through in order to drill. Mora County commissioners, in a 2-1 vote, approved an ordinance banning fracking based on the community’s right to clean air and water. It was the first county in the nation to pass a so-called “community rights” ordinance, based on similar resolutions passed by towns. The commissioners are still waiting for a legal challenge to the ordinance, and several attorneys have offered to represent them if it happens. San Miguel County hired Robert Freilich, the attorney who helped craft Santa Fe’s ordinance. But Pacheco, Smollett and others are worried the 116-page ordinance isn’t tough enough on hydraulic fracturing. The Independent Petroleum Association of New Mexico in January called on ranchers and business people to speak up on the benefits of oil and gas to the county’s coffers. The organization said that if San Miguel adopts something like Santa Fe did, there will effectively be three “no-drill” counties. Pacheco would be happy for that to happen. “I would love to see San Miguel County ban hydraulic fracturing,” Pacheco said. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @ stacimatlock.
for more informAtion u A 2009 report from the analytical group Headwaters Economics, examines “Fossil Fuel Extraction as a County Economic Development Strategy,” including information on San Miguel County: http://headwaterseconomics.org/pubs/ energy/HeadwatersEconomics_EnergyFocusing. pdf u The draft San Miguel County Land Development Ordinance amended to regulate oil and gas drilling is at http://www.smcounty.net/
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
LOCAL & REGION
A-7
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Bizarre death viewed as God’s wrath In brief
Santa Fe Stables. The Horse Shelter, which rescues neglected and abused horses, The Center for Therapeutic Riding of New Mexico, the investigative group Animals’ Angels, veterinarian Pam Spatz and others will have information booths in front of Santa Fe Mayor David Coss the bandstand. Tlingit artist will deliver his final State of the City address at 5 p.m. Tues- Celeste Worl will DJ the event from noon to 2 p.m. day at the Santa Fe CommuFrom 2 to 6 p.m. there will be nity Convention Center. a reception with food and bevThe event is open to the erages at the DueWest Gallery public. next to the Lensic Performing A reception to “salute and Arts Center. show appreciation for city workers” will follow the mayor’s speech. Progress Now and IATSE Local 480 are hosting the reception.
I
n the summer of 1760, the bishop of Durango, Pedro Tamarón, traveled up the Camino Real to inspect the churches and missions of New Mexico. This province had no bishop of its own, and so was dependent upon Durango for such services as only that highranking prelate could perform. Tamarón kept a detailed log of his trip, Marc describing the condiSimmons tion of the Trail Dust Catholic church in each Spanish settlement and Indian pueblo. He also related memorable experiences. One of those that occurred at Pecos Pueblo proved extraordinary and left a deep impression upon the bishop. “On May 29, 1760, I went to the village of the Pecos Indians,” he wrote. “They received me with demonstrations of rejoicing, coming out on horseback.” During his inspection of the mission, Tamarón indicates that he was accompanied by soldiers, New Mexico’s head of the Franciscan Order and by a personal servant, “a Spanishspeaking and civilized negro who excited the imagination of the Indians.” A few weeks later, the bishop completed his work and returned home. The following autumn, he received an astonishing report of an event that had transpired after his appearance at Pecos. The entire pueblo had participated in a burlesque re-creation of Bishop Tamarón’s official visitation. As he was told, the originator of this theatrical performance was one of the pueblo’s leaders, a man named Agustín Guichí. This fellow, Tamarón recorded, made himself a bishop by designing and sewing pontifical vestments and donning a fake mitre (the distinctive pointed hat of bishops). The mitre was constructed of
Coss to deliver State of the City
Man charged in puppy death
Horse riders seek equine respect
Ruins of the old mission church at Pecos Pueblo. Agustín Guichí, a pueblo leader, created a three-day parody of a visit by Bishop Pedro Tamarón in 1760, posing as the bishop. Immediately after the festivities, Guichí suffered a fatal bear attack. His remains were buried under the floor of the mission. COURTESY OF MARC SIMMONS
thin parchment and colored with white clay. Agustín also fashioned an appropriate cloak and improvised a pastoral crosier, resembling a shepherd’s staff, that is emblematic of the bishop’s office. All dressed up, he climbed on a burro and rode into the pueblo to be greeted by the entire population. With him were an Indian dressed in a Franciscan habit and another who had been painted black to portray Tamarón’s negro servant. In the village plaza, all the women were kneeling in two rows. The make-believe bishop went down both lines, blessing each individual. Next, to the sound of a muffle drum, he marched to an arbor made of evergreens and there ordered the people to approach him and be confirmed. Each Indian came and knelt before Agustín, who “confirmed” him by making the sign of the cross on the forehead with water. This mock ceremony took several hours. Afterward, a feast was served, and Indian dancing concluded
the daylong series of staged events. According to Bishop Tamarón: “On the next day, the diversion and festivities continued, beginning with a Mass which Agustín pretended to say in the same arbor. During it he distributed pieces of tortillas in imitation of communion.” The rest of the second day was spent in dancing and other amusements, as was a third day in which in Tamarón’s words “brought these disorders and entertainments to an end.” Early on the fourth day, Agustín left the village and went to tend his cornfield a mile away. In the evening, he sat down to rest and view his ripening crop. Without warning, a bear attacked him from behind, clawing off his scalp where the mitre had rested and chewing off the hand that had held the crosier. Agustín was found near death and carried to his house. The missionary was summoned and administered the last rites. The victim then asked to speak to his eldest son, alone. To him, he confessed: “My boy. I
have committed a great sin and God has punished me for it.” Then he died. No one in the pueblo doubted that Agustín, with his last breath, spoke the truth. One of the Indians had gone out to track the bear and found that it had come directly from the mountains, attacked Guichí then left at once without raiding the cornfield as bears always did in September. The meaning of this was obvious to the Indians. The Pecos padre certified that he buried Agustín Guichí under the floor of the mission church on Sept. 21, 1760. As for Bishop Tamarón, he firmly believed that the Lord of Heaven had willed this punishment for Agustín, to serve as a warning to others, since the circumstances surrounding the death could not be attributed to coincidences. Now in semi-retirement, author Marc Simmons wrote a weekly history column for more than 35 years. The New Mexican is publishing reprints from among the more than 1,800 columns he produced during his career.
Horse advocates and equestrians will gather Saturday in the Santa Fe Plaza beginning at 11 a.m. for horse visits, music and information about challenges facing horses around the United States, including horse slaughter. Advocates have been fighting to prevent a horse slaughter facility from opening in Southern New Mexico. They’re also looking for solutions to the growing number of abused and abandoned horses and the roundup of wild horses on public lands. Saturday’s event, called Thundering Hooves, begins with a group of horse riders who will ride from Fort Marcy Park to the Plaza beginning at 10:45 a.m. The group is lead by Karen and Olivia Hardy of
ALBUQUERQUE — An Albuquerque man accused of squeezing a puppy to death after he caught it chewing his couch has been charged with extreme animal cruelty. KOAT-TV reported Friday that 45-year-old Marshall Aragon was turned in by his own family after the 3-month-old Chihuahua died. Police say Aragon told them he grabbed the puppy by the neck, and squeezed it until it stopped moving. Police say Aragon attacked the puppy because it had been chewing on his couch. Aragon told police he has anger issues. Staff and wire reports
Travel Bug North Korea Chet White
Sat October 26 5 pm
Spanish - French - Italian 839 Paseo de Peralta
PILOT, LAMY & SAILOR IN STORE DEMO AND SALE! SAT. OCT 26TH
Conversational Classes 992-0418
Sanbusco Center 989-4742
www.santafepens.com
GORMAN ElectricalServices Services Electrical Electrical Repair Surge Protection & Grounding Building Trust in Santa Fe for 15 years.
505-989-3564
www.Gormanlightning.com
Glitches prompt New Mexico to delay media campaign for health network ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico is postponing a media push for its health insurance exchange while glitches in the federal system are worked out. TV commercials and other paid advertising are ready to go, but they’re on hold, said Robin Hunn, a spokeswoman for the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange. Other states that had planned to use Twitter and
Facebook to advertise health exchanges are scaling back media campaigns, as well. Federal health officials have been working around the clock to fix technology glitches plaguing the website where U.S. citizens can obtain health insurance under the federal law. New Mexico took a hybrid approach to the online marketplace — implementing a
state-run computer system to sign up small businesses but initially relying on a federal website to handle individuals. Hunn said more than 670 businesses have set up accounts, but she’s unsure how many New Mexicans have tried to enroll in individual plans. The state site had recorded more than 45,650 unique visits since Oct. 6.
e!! It’s Her
Sat. October 19th 9 to 6 Sun. October 20th 12 to 6
The Associated Press
Utah rock toppling could bring charges By Michelle L. Price
New Mexico’s Medicaid program has great news to share, including a new name— Centennial Care!
The Associated Press
SALT LAKE CITY — Authorities are mulling whether to press charges against a Boy Scouts leader who purposely knocked over an ancient Utah desert rock formation and against the two men who cheered him on after they posted video of the incident online. Two of the men, who were leading a group of teenage Boy Scouts on a trip, said the top of the rock formation was loose and they feared it was dangerous. “This is about saving lives,” Dave Hall, who shot the video, told The Associated Press on Friday. “One rock at a time.” The rock formation at Goblin Valley State Park is about 170 million years old, Utah State Parks spokesman Eugene Swalberg said. The central Utah park is dotted with thousands of the eerie, mushroom-shaped sandstone formations. In a video shot last Friday and posted on Facebook, Glenn Taylor of Highland can be seen wedging himself between a formation and a boulder to knock a large rock off the formation’s top. Taylor and his two companions can then be seen cheering, high-fiving and dancing. “This is highly, highly inappropriate,” Swalberg told the Salt Lake Tribune. “This is not what you do at state parks. It’s disturbing and upsetting.” Hall, who also is a scoutmaster from Highland, said some of their Scouts were jumping on the structures and they noticed
Native Americans in CoLTS will be required to be in Centennial Care. All other Native Americans can choose to be in Centennial Care if they want.
This frame grab from a video taken by Dave Hall shows a Boy Scouts leader looking over an ancient Utah desert rock formation at Goblin Valley State Park, which he later knocked down. Authorities are mulling whether to press charges against the leader and the two men who cheered him on after they posted video of the incident online. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
a large boulder atop one of them was loose. “My conscience won’t let me walk away knowing that kids could die,” Hall said. While safety was their motivation, Hall said, they reacted with high-fives and cheers in the video because of the adrenaline that came with what he described as a “crazy, exciting moment.” Boy Scouts of America spokesman Deron Smith confirmed the men are members of the organization, and condemned their actions. He said in a statement that the organization is “shocked and disappointed by this reprehensible behavior” and is reviewing the
matter to see if action needs to be taken. Swalberg said State Parks authorities are conducting a criminal investigation. The Emery County Attorney’s Office also is reviewing the incident to determine if charges should be filed. Hall said the men now realize they should have contacted park rangers. He said they are sorry for the damage they caused and for any embarrassment they brought to the Boy Scouts. But, Hall added, “One more rock falling to the ground is not going to destroy the beauty of the park. Eventually, the erosion brings all of them down.”
NTENNIALCARE Quality Care for New Mexico Come learn about exciting changes to improve healthcare coverage for New Mexicans at an educational event near you.
For more information and a complete listing of events, call 1-888-997-2583 or visit us on the web at www.CentennialCare.net
Faith & Worship
A-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
These houses of worship invite you to join them
BAPTIST First Baptist Church of Santa Fe
First Baptist Church of Santa Fe, 1605 Old Pecos Trail. Come join us this Sunday! 9:15 a.m. – Bible Study for all ages; 10:30 a.m. – Worship Service (interpreted for deaf). Wednesday – 6:15 p.m. – Bible Study/Prayer Meeting led by Pastor Lee H erring; Adult Choir Rehearsal; 6:30 p.m. – “Ignite” for Youth. Childcare available for all services. For more information, please call the church office at 983-9141, 8:30 – 4:00, Monday - Friday, or visit our website www.fbcsantafe.com.
BUDDHIST
Monday- Thursday Morning Prayer 6 a.m.; Women’s Ministry: Monthly on 4th Saturday, 9- 11 a.m.; Missions: Palomas, Mexico, monthly, second weekend; Youth: Amped- 6 p.m. Fridays; Consumed- Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; Singles (30+) meet monthly, 1st & 3rd Tuesday at 6 p.m.; Mid-week Spanish Service, Wednesday at 6 p.m.; Homeless Ministry, monthly 3rd Saturday; Mid-Week Prayer: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. Information: 505-982-2080. www.thelightatmissionviejo.org
CHrISTIAN SCIeNCe First Church of Christ Scientist, Santa Fe
Temple Beth Shalom
is a handicap accessible, welcoming Reform Jewish Congregation with a great religious school and preschool (www.preschool.sftbs.org). Friday services begin at 6:30pm. Saturday mornings, enjoy bagels, lox, and Torah study, at 9:15. Stay for morning services at 10:30. Monday Morning Minyan with Aaron Wolf is at 8:00am in the Upper Sanctuary. Saturday, October 26, Richard Cook, Anna Rayne-Levi, Lisa Salopek, Barbara Sinkula, and Jim Sturrock will be called to the Torah as Adult B’nai Mitzvah. Start saving your shekels! Our Thanksgivukkah Bazaar is on Sunday, November 10, 10-2. TBS is located at 205 E. Barcelona Road, 9821376, www.sftbs.org.
LUTHerAN
a direct relationship with the love and wisdom of Christ Sophia .We have a variety of offerings that people from all backgrounds are welcome to attend. This includes Mystical Sunday Service at 9:30am each week, Introduction to Meditation & Mysticism on Tuesdays at 7:30pm, Meditation & Healing classes on Thursdays at 7:30pm, and Conscious Movie Nights on Fridays at 7:30pm. For more information, please visit our website at www. SantaFe.CentersOfLight.org or call Adele Photine at 505 467-8336.
OrTHODOX Holy Trinity Orthodox Church
We invite all to come and experience the mystery and beauty of the Eastern Orthodox Christian Prajna Zendo Church! Our Services include Great Vespers LUTHERFEST OCT.26 SAT.10AM - 2PM Meditation, Koan Study, Private Interviews with Saturday at 5:30 pm, Matins on Sunday at 8:15 am, BRATWURST UND SAUERKRAUT KOSHER HOT qualified Zen teachers. Retreats, Classes, Zen Book and the main Sunday service, the Divine Liturgy, DOGS, HOME MADE APPLESAUCE, BAKE SALE, Study, Dharma Talks and more Prajna Zendo is at 9:30 am. Classes: Our Thoughts Determine our PUMPKIN SMASHING CONTEST, TEXAS 42 committed to its members and all beginners and DOMINOS, PET RESCUE ADOPTIONS, UFF DA BAND Lives, Wednesdays at 11 am. What is the Mystical practitioners who walk through its doors. Based UND DANCING, MEET MARTIN LUTHER! ART Eastern Church? Saturday October, 5 at 4 pm. on the lineage of Hakuyu Taizen Maezumi Roshi. BOOTHS, KNITTING SALES AND INSTRUCTION. The Spirituality of the Eastern Church, Saturday, Upcoming one-day retreat (Zazenkai): October 27. Sunday services 8 & 10, Bible Study 9am. Coffee and October 12 at 4 pm. A Tour and Explanation of the Sunday service, zazen and dharma talk at 9:00 a.m. refreshments. 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 983-9461 Church Iconography, Saturday, October 19 at 4 Tuesday evening zazen at 7 p.m. Tuesday through pm. Fr. John Bethancourt, pastor 231 E Cordova Sunday morning zazen at 6 a.m. Call 660-3045 for Immanuel Lutheran Church Road 983-5826. www.holytrinitysantafe.org. Email: more information. 5 Camino Potrillo, Lamy, 15 FrJohnB@aol. (LCMS) minutes from Santa Fe just off Hwy 285 next door to Sunday Schedule: 9:30AM Divine Service, 10:30AM Eldorado. www.prajnazendo.org Sunday School and Bible Studies All are welcome. Lutherans believe that the Lord God honors those Thubten Norbu Ling who are persistent in prayer. We trust in the promise Christ Church Santa Fe (PCA) Buddhist Center Our Presbyterian church is at Don Gaspar and of God: “The LORD upholds all those who fall; and Thubten Norbu Ling provides education and practice First Christian Church lifts up all who are bowed down.” (Ps. 145). Immanuel Cordova Road. Our focus is on the historical truths of Jesus Christ, His Love and Redemptive Church (1938 -2013) celebrates it 75th anniversary in Tibetan Buddhism following the tradition of His of Santa Fe this year. Join us. ILC is located just west to the New Grace... and our contemporary response. Sunday Holiness the Dalai Lama and in accord with the First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Santa Mexico Children’s Museum which is at the corner of services are 9:00 and 10:45 am (childcare provided). lineage teachings of Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Fe, 645 Webber Street, worships at 10:30 on Sunday Old Pecos Trail and East Barcelona Road. 983-7568 Zopa Rinpoche. Classes are offered to all levels Children and Youth Ministry activities also available. mornings. We are an open and affirming congregation www.ilc-sfnm.org of western students seeking a path to personal Call us at (505)982-8817 or visit our website at clarity and well-being, and are generally held on with communion open to all who wish to partake. christchurchsantafe.org for more information. Sunday morning and on Wednesday and Thursday Viento de Gracia (Disciples of Christ) meets in the First Presbyterian Church evenings. Practices and meditations are offered on same building with services in Spanish on Sundays Tuesday evenings, and on weekend mornings. Our St. John’s United Methodist (PCUSA) 5 p.m. and Thursdays at 7 p.m. All are welcome. resident teachers are Geshe Thubten Sherab and Sunday, October 12 - Find a warm and welcoming at Festival of the Church worship services at 8:30 and Located two blocks south of the state capital Don Handrick. 1807 Second Street, #35. For more St. John’s UMC. Pastor Greg Kennedy continues the 11:00 a.m. in the sanctuary, led by the Rev. Dr. Harry building. We support global hunger relief through information visit our website www.tnlsf.org or call October Preaching Series with “Augmented Reality Eberts III, celebrating the ways we are generous 505-660-7056 Week of Compassion, Christian Ministry through the - What is the role of the Bible in your life?” at both within the church. Classes and fellowship for all ages 8:30 and 11am worship services. Fellowship time at Disciples of Christ, and local hunger relief through between services. Adults should fasten their seatbelts 9:30am for conversation, coffee, and tea with Sunday Food for Santa Fe. We can be found on the web at for the Bible 101 class that continues traveling from Classes for all ages at 10am. Sunday morning classes www.santafedisciples.org Genesis to Revelation in six weeks with the Rev. The Church of Antioch for adults: Connections360 is a new class focusing on Richard Rowe. Morning Prayer Wednesdays at 7:00 contemporary Christian issues with a Bible verse and at Santa Fe current Christian issue from WiredWord.com. (meet a.m. TGIF Concerts every Friday at 5:30 p.m. Located We are a Community of Faith in the Catholic Tradition downtown at 208 Grant Ave. More information www. in Room 16/Nursery Wing) Carol Schwendimann (non-Roman), offering the Sacraments within a Holy Family episcopal Church leads the Nephesh class (Room 116) in discussion of fpcsantafe.org or 982-8544. context of personal freedom, loving acceptance, the sermon given on November 24, 1963 at the North 10A Bisbee Court, www.holyfamilysantafe.org. A service and mysticism. All are welcome to join us Westminster Presbyterian Haven Methodist Church in Dallas, TX. This sermon in God’s house to receive the Body of Christ every family oriented church with a special mission to has been widely reprinted and discussed in the years (PCUSA) Sunday at 8:45 a.m. in the Loretto Chapel, 207 Old ASD Spectrum Children. Sundays: 10:30 Eucharist A Multi-cultural Faith Community NE corner of St. Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM. Pastor, Most Rev. Daniel with Choir Practice starting at 9:45, Tuesdays: 10am following the Kennedy assassination. The Chapel is now open daily during church hours: Monday Prayer Francis Dr. & West Manhattan Sermon Title: “A New Dangaran, D.Min. (505-983-9003). Associate Pastor, Prayer Shawl Ministry (come to learn or come to Service from 6 - 6:30pm, and Wednesday Prayer Rev. Mother Carol Calvert. Pastor Emeritus, Most Voice in the Land” Rev. Dr. Barbara Boyd, preaching create) Thursdays: 12:15pm Noonday Prayer or Service with Holy Communion from 5:45-6:15pm Rev. Richard Gundrey. Come home to God, who has Scripture: John 15:12-17 & 1 Samuel 16:6-13 Eucharist. A sensory break room is available during with Pastor Greg Kennedy. On the web at www. always loved and respected you. All are welcome! Music by Grace Nadell & Maya Chavez with solos sfstjohnsumc.org, on Facebook, and by phone 982all services. Please contact us at (505) 424-0095 or by Elizabeth Roghair ALL ARE WELCOME PEACE, 5397 Step-by-Step Bible Group JOY & BLESSINGS UNTOLD for singles; married; email us at holyfamilysantafe@gmail.com. Our church is designed to support the practice of Christian healing. Services consist of readings from the King James Bible and Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. Sunday service/Sunday School/Child care at 10:00 a.m. Doctrine of Atonement and Probation After Death are upcoming Bible Lessons for October 20 and 27. Wednesday meetings at 12:10 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Readings are on a timely topic followed by sharing healings attesting to the practical presence of God in our life. The noon meeting is informal. Bring your lunch and friends. Please join us! 323 East Cordova Road. www.christiansciencesantafe.org
Christ Lutheran Church (eLCA)
PreSBYTerIAN
DISCIPLeS OF CHrIST
MeTHODIST
CATHOLIC
ePISCOPAL
You are invited to a complete course on bible study called “Understanding the Scriptures”. St. Anne’s bible study Step By Step Bible Group belongs to you as a member of the body of Jesus Christ and members of The Church. All are welcome. Come join us. May God bless you all. (Thursdays in Santa Fe) from 6:00 p.m - 8:00 p.m. at St. Anne’s Church School Building – 511 Alicia St. More information, Call Sixto Martinez: 4700913 or Paul Martinez: 470-4971 or find us online www.stepbystepbg.net
CeNTerS FOr SPIrITUAL LIvING Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living
We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, creativity and service. Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s. All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when Live Video Streaming starts at www.santafecsl.org. Music: Lisa Carman. Message: “The Power of Silence” by Rev. Bernardo Monserrat. Information on workshops, classes, concerts, rentals, past lectures videos available at www.santafecsl.org - www.facebook.com/ SantaFeCSL - 505-983-5022.
everyday Center For Spiritual Living
C’mon people now smile on your brother. Come out to Everyday Center where we love one another right now. Sunday Celebration Service 10am; Sunday Meditation 9:30am. Childcare now available for Sunday Celebration. Visit us at www.everydaycsl. org for more information. We are located at 2544 Camino Edward Ortiz Suite B (across from the UPS Distribution Center). Wildly Thriving Relationships for Couples & Singles. Join the dynamic duo of soul-mates John & Kelly Field, Science of Mind Practitioners from CSL Aspen, on a journey to Absolute Love. This interactive and experiential workshop will guide you to live from your essence, which is pure love and compassion, and activate thriving romantic relationships and vitally open relationships with everyone that are warm, intimate, and joyous. Sat. 10/26, 9am-4pm ($60); Sun.10/27, 1pm-4pm ($30); both days $75.
CHrISTIAN The Light at Mission viejo
Sunday Service 10:30; Men’s Prayer Ministry:
Church of the Holy Faith
We welcome all people into an ever-deepening relationship with Jesus Christ our Lord. Sundays: 7:30 Spoken Eucharist; 8:30 and 11 Choral Eucharist. Adult Forum 9:50- 10:35. Tuesdays at 6 p.m., Taizé Eucharist with prayers for healing; Wednesdays and Thursdays, Eucharist at 12:10 p.m. Evening Prayer weekdays, 4:30 p.m. Children’s Chapel for 3 ½ - 11 years Sunday at 8:30 and Tuesday afternoons at 4:005:15 seasonally. HF Youth Group meets for pizza and study on first and third Sundays at 12:30. Mid Singles Lunch and activities Second Sunday of each Month. Call 982 4447. A nursery is available Sundays from 8:30-12:30, and Tuesday for Taizé. Downtown at 311 E. Palace Avenue, (505)982-4447. www. holyfaithchurchsf.org
St. Bede’s episcopal Church
St. Bede’s is a Christ-centered servant community rooted in Holy Scripture, tradition and reason as practiced by the Episcopal Church, located at 1601 S. St. Francis Drive. Holy Eucharist on Sunday October 13, 2013, at 8:00 and 10:30 am in English and 7:00 p.m. in Spanish. Bilingual activities for children at 6:45 p.m. The 9:15 a.m. Forum this Sunday will feature Mother Madelynn speaking on the warm clothing drive for needy children in the Chama area. For more information visit www. stbedesantafe.org or call 982-1133. The Episcopal Church welcomes you. La Iglesia Episcopal les da la bienvenida.
NON-DeNOMINATIONAL
eckankar
Religion of the Light and Sound of God, offers ways to grow spiritually through one’s own personal inner and outer experience. For people of all beliefs, Eckankar holds a monthly worship service and community HU chants in Eldorado and Santa Fe. Worship services include a brief singing of the universal word HU to open the heart and an open discussion where we can learn from each other’s insights. The next worship service will take place on October 20, 10:30 a.m. at the Santa Fe Women’s Club. The topic will be “Light and Sound, the Wonders of God.” For information, see www.eckankar.org or call 800-876-6704.
screaming babies; rebelling teens; under 30, over 60; seekers; doubters; poor as church mice; rich as Croesus; slackers; workaholics; can’t sing; no habla ingles; tourists; bleeding hearts; … AND YOU! Contact us at 505-983-8939 (Tues-Fri, 9-1) or wpcsantafe@ gmail.com
UNITArIAN UNIverSALIST UU Congregation of Santa Fe
107 W. Barcelona (corner with Galisteo) OCTOBER 20th: A Celebration of Friendship Gail Marriner, Community Svc Awd to Craig Barnes, *Winter Schedule Sept-May: Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. with nursery care available at both services and faith development classes for children and youth held The Celebration concurrently with the second service; classes are a Sunday Service Different! Now in our 22nd year cooperative ventures taught in a compassionate, as the “Bring Your Own God” church. We are a lively, loving, eclectic, creative, spontaneous, always welcoming environment *Everyone welcome *UU interesting spiritual community. Our service is truly Women’s Federation Program and Luncheon: Third Saturday Sept.-May *More info: 505-982-9674 and new and different every week, because it’s created http://www.uusantafe.org/ *We nurture hearts and by members of our community who come forward minds, practice beloved community and work for to lead the various parts of the service. It allows for synchronicity to strike frequently in a most delightful justice.* way. 10:30am, NEA-NM bldg., 2007 Botulph Rd., enter around back. The speaker for Sunday, Oct. 20 is Andi Sutherland, “Tapping into Abundance.” Special music by Shelley Campbell. www.thecelebration.org, 6990023.
UNITeD CHUrCH OF CHrIST
Unity Santa Fe
Are you looking to connect with an inclusive, spiritual (not religious) CommUnity? Come join us tomorrow Sunday for our 10:30am service, which features music, meditation, fellowship, fun and illuminating topics. Rev. Brendalyn’s message “The Temple of the Living God” will support you in understanding that there is only one body: Godgoverned, God-maintained, and subject only to the laws of God. Also on Sunday, The Aramaic Lord’s Prayer, A Living Workshop with Virginia Ellen, 1-3pm, $20. Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way North side of 599 Bypass @ Camino de los Montoyas. (2.4 miles from 84/285, 8.4 miles from Airport Rd.) ALL are honored and welcome.
The United Church of Santa Fe
“The Quality of Mercy.” United continues its series on Jesus’ odd blessings known as the “Beatitudes,” in both the 8:30 Communion and 11:00 “Rejoice and Respond,” led by Rev. Talitha Arnold and Rev. Brandon Johnson. with Pianist Jacquelyn Helin, D.M.A., the 8:30 Early Choir (led by Dr. Helin) and the 11:00 Sanctuary Choir, led by Karen Marrolli, D.M.A. Congregation Beit Tikva Children’s Ministry and Young Adventurers (6th/7th Located at 2230 Old Pecos Trail, our Synagogue grade) also at 11:00. Adult Forum (9:45): “Community follows progressive Reform Judaism led by Solar Project” with Esha Chiocchio, Climate Rabbi Martin Levy and Cantor Michael Linder. Solutions Coordinator for the SF Watershed. Youth Continuing this Saturday morning at 9:15am, Confirmation and Children’s Music and Games also at 9:45. Childcare throughout the morning. Tuesday: Rabbi Levy leads our Shabbat Torah discussion on 12:00 Pretty Good Guys. Wed. 7:00 am Doubting Genesis. On Wednesday, October 16 at 7:30pm, Thomas. Thursday: 1:00 United Artists. Friday: 5:30 Santa Fe Center of Light Rabbi is teaching the adult study class on Rashi The Santa Fe Center of Light is a Mystical Christian Halloween Party for Families and Friends. “Love God. and Maimonides. On Saturday, October 19th, we community and school dedicated to consciousness, Love Neighbor. Love Creation!” That’s our mission at celebrate our “Autumn Leaves” Gala Reception at the United Church of Santa Fe, an open and affirming spiritual growth, and empowerment. Much like 8pm. We continue our regular Shabbat evening United Church of Christ. All welcome! Check out our spiritual communities that mystics such as St. services at 7:30pm. For additional information, website at unitedchurchofsantafe.org or call us at Francis and Paramahansa Yogananda created, the call us at 505-820-2991 or visit our website at http:// Santa Fe Center of Light is a shining warm place 988-3295 for more information. 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (corner of St. Michael’s Drive). for people searching for inner truth, meaning, and www.beittikvasantafe.org/.
JeWISH
For information about listing your organizations, service information & special events, call Keyana at 995-3818 or email kdeaguero@sfnewmexican.com
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
LIFE&SCIENCE
Health Science Environment
Taft’s portly dilemma
President’s weight problems helped usher in modern obesity care
W
Costume contact lenses could pose dangers Wearing cosmetic contact lenses might seem like a nice way to finish off a good Halloween costume, but they can cause serious eye injury, according to an association of ophthalmologists. Non-prescription contacts have been illegal since 2005 because they are considered medical devices, but are still available in some stores and online, and customers seeking to augment their holiday outfits. Wearing them can result in permanent vision loss, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology. They may not be manufactured to meet federal health and safety standards, the group says, and cause cuts and sores in the protective layer of the iris and pupil or bacterial infections. That could necessitate surgery or vision loss. “What happens to people’s eyes after just one evening of wearing non-prescription costume contact lenses is tragic,” said Dr. Thomas Steinemann, professor of ophthalmology at MetroHealth Medical Center and
Director says skeleton offers evidence of Old Testament flood The Associated Press
The Associated Press
In brief
Creation Museum puts own spin on dinosaur fossil By Dylan Lovan
By Lauran Neergaard
WASHINGTON ay before Weight Watchers or The Biggest Loser, a president known for his girth was helping to usher in a modern approach to treating obesity. Got a nagging doctor? The 27th president, William H. Taft did, way back in the early 1900s. A medical historian has analyzed letters between the two, complete with food diaries and daily weigh-ins surely recognizable to many of today’s dieters. Have a problem with yo-yo dieting and weight gain? Yep, Taft did, too. A recent report offers a rare peek at the history of obesity, through the experiences of one of the first American public figures to struggle openly with weight — and how a doctor aided in an era when physician treatment of obesity was just emerging. Taft’s “rise to political power coincided with this change in medical thinking, which led to the first celebrity weight loss patient,” said Deborah Levine, an assistant professor at Rhode Island’s Providence College. Her report, part of research for a book about the course of obesity in the U.S., appeared Monday in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. Sports fans might recognize Taft as the latest addition to the Washington Nationals’ racing presidents. History buffs know he’s the only president-turned-Supreme Court chief justice. But he’s also remembered as the president whose weight, at times well over 300 pounds, made headlines. Taft hired British dieting expert Nathaniel Yorke-Davies in 1905, four years before becoming president. Then 314 pounds, Taft was worried about heartburn and other health problems — he was famously fatigued, presumably from obesity-caused sleep apnea — and possibly also about his career, Levine wrote. The candid exchanges between doctor and patient highlight the ups and down of weight loss. “I feel in excellent condition. I used to suffer from acidity of stomach, and I suppose that was due to overloading it,” Taft wrote at one point. Dusting off those archives is important to remind people that obesity isn’t some scary new 21st-century problem, said Dr. Scott Kahan of George Washington University and the STOP Obesity Alliance. Yes, obesity rates have surged to epidemic levels over the past few decades. But waistlines actually began to expand in the mid-19th century, as food became easier to cultivate and distribute, Kahan said. Diet books and pamphlets began flourishing. Where women’s corsets offered some tightening, Levine says obesity belts were developed for men. Even then it was clear there was no quick fix. And if you think high-calorie restaurant food is only a recent problem, well, Taft wrote a relative that all the formal dinners required in politics sabotaged his efforts. In his first year with Yorke-Davies, Taft lost 59 pounds, Levine found, only to regain it. Only after leaving the White House did Taft shed significant weight and keep it off, with help from a different doctor, she noted. “It’s really, really hard to lose weight and keep it off. If it wasn’t, we’d all be
A-9
Former President and U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Howard Taft, above, in 1930, and far left, with Justice Louis Brandeis in 1929, struggled for years with his weight condition, topping the scales at 304 pounds in 1905. Taft, the nation’s 27th president, hired a dieting expert, but only became successful at keeping weight off after leaving the White House.
PETERSBURG, Ky. — A Kentucky museum that tells a Bible-based history of the world says it has acquired the fossil of a large dinosaur predator similar to a Tyrannosaurus rex that offers evidence of the Old Testament worldwide flood. The museum said in a written statement Friday that the Allosaurus probably stood about 10 feet tall and 30 feet long, and was a meat-eater. The skeleton, nicknamed “Ebenezer,” includes a skull with 53 teeth and will go on display in an exhibit next year. “For decades I’ve walked through many leading secular museums, like the Smithsonian in Washington, and have seen their impressive dinosaur skeletons, but they were used for evolution,” said Ken Ham, cofounder of the Answers in Genesis ministry, which operates the museum. “Now we have one of that class for our museum.” The museum’s religious exhibits are often at odds with evolution science, which asserts that the earth is billions of years old and the age of dinosaurs and humans was separated by tens of millions of years. The well-preserved condition of the Allosaurus is evidence that it died during a worldwide flood as described in the Bible’s Old Testament, Andrew Snelling, a geologist at the Creation Museum, said in the statement. Snelling said the fossil’s intact skeleton is proof of an extremely rapid burial, “which is a confirmation of the global catastrophe of a flood a few thousand years ago.” Similar fossils are on display at the University of Wyoming’s Geology Museum and at the Museum of the Rockies in Montana. The Wyoming Museum says the Allosaurus was the most common large carnivore in North America during the late Jurassic period about 150 million years ago. “The Creation Museum has asserted the specimen to be evidence of Noah’s flood without any actual research,” said Dan Phelps, president of the Kentucky Paleontological Society, said in an email Friday. “Real vertebrate paleontologists study the surrounding sediments and the geological context of their finds,” he added. “Of course since the Creation Museum doesn’t do scientific research, all [it] really has done is obtain a nice display trophy.” Phelps said he was concerned the museum would not let vertebrate paleontologists study the specimen. The Creation Museum’s fossil was donated by the Elizabeth Streb Peroutka Foundation of Maryland. Workers at the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky., in August restore the skull of an Allosaurus, a meat-eating predator similar to the Tyrannosaurus rex. A donor gave the fossil to the Biblebased museum and it is set to go on display next year.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS
thin,” said Kahan, who was struck by similaritiesbetween Taft’s struggles and many weight-loss efforts today. “We recognize this problem as a disease, and yet at the same time we expect people to just be able to manage it once we write down a diet for them.” Today, doctors know that for someone who’s obese, shedding even 5 percent to 10 percent of the original weight can improve health, he added. Yorke-Davies had written a popular diet book, Foods for the Fat: A Treatise on
Corpulency and a Dietary for its Cure. He and Taft had a long-distance relationship. The doctor mailed a three-page list of allowed and forbidden foods — heavy on lean meats and reducing sugar, almost a prelude to the Atkins diet. Taft was to weigh himself daily and mail a weekly report. Levine compared the handwritten weighins and the typed letters to the doctor. Sometimes Taft cheated. And Yorke-Davies nagged, politely, but a lot. One month the doctor fussed that Taft’s weight loss was only 9 pounds, not the intended 14. When Taft slacked off, the doctor wrote that he’d heard “you are much stouter than you were a few months ago.” Levine concludes that some core practices — close doctor-patient communication, tracking weight and food diaries — still are in use. The challenge is to find a balance between helpful advice and nagging, said Dr. Mladen Golubic of the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute. Some of the clinic’s patients opt for daily, personalized emails to track their progress. “You don’t want to be harsh,” Golubic said. But “you need to nudge them.”
Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland and a spokesperson for the American Academy of Ophthalmology. For more information, go to geteyesmart. org.
and slow the progression of the disease. For more information about the screening, or to learn more about programs at for treating this condition, please contact Mary Ellen Kaye at 913-5549.
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com
Food-service inspections
Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center has hired Dr. Olga Andreyeva as a hospitalist. Andreyeva earned a Doctor of Medicine degree at Kazan State Medical University in Russia. She completed a Cardiology Fellowship at City Cardiology Center in Kazan, Russia. Then she completed an Dr. Olga Internal Medicine Residency at St. Vincent’s Medi- Andreyeva cal Center in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Andreyeva joins Christus from Mercy Internal Medicine Associates at Mercy Medical Center in Springfield, Massachusetts where she practiced as a hospitalist for six years.
For the period ending Oct. 16. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 827-1820 FOOD ON PURPOSE, 35 Bisbee Court. Approved for permit. INN AND SPA AT LORETTO, 211 Old Santa Fe Trail. Cited for low-risk violation for cracking and peeling walls, some walls are not nonabsorbant. MASA SUSHI, 927 W. Alameda St. No violations. LONE BUTTE GENERAL STORE, 3185 N.M. 14. Cited for high-risk violations for lack of paper towels at hand-wash station, lack of soap at hand-wash station, deep, dark cuts in cutting board, pizza utensils stored on top of pizza oven. (All high-risk violations corrected by follow-up inspection.) Cited for moderate-risk violations for rusted table and equipment, mold and dust buildup on vents. Cited for low-risk violation for storing containers on floor. GHOST TOWN KITCHEN, 2859 N.M. 14. Cited for highrisk violations for lack of soap and towels at hand-wash station, wet rag and sponges outside of sanitizing solutions, lack of date on prepared foods, ground beef kept over prepared food. Cited for moderate-risk violation for use of unapproved microwave and toaster ovens and outside grill. Cited for low-risk violation for lack of hair restraint on employee, unprotected light. BISHOP’S LODGE RESTAURANT, 1297 Bishop’s Lodge Road. Cited for high-risk violation for failure of freezer unit to hold proper cold temperatures (corrected) Cited for low-risk violation for grease buildup on exhaust hood filters, nonworking light bulbs. RISTRA, 548 Agua Fría St. Cited for high-risk violations for storing sponges in hand sink (corrected), storing read-to-eat foods with raw meat. Cited for moderate-risk violation for dirty and discolored cutting boards. HACIENDA NICHOLAS BED AND BREAKFAST, 320 E. Marcy St. Cited for high-risk violation for lack of paper towels at hand sink (corrected). BANG BITE, 502 Old Santa Fe Trail. Approved for permit.
Staff and wire reports
The New Mexican
Free screenings highlight Hospitalist joins staff World Lung Health Day at Christus St. Vincent Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center will offer free screenings for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m, Wednesday, Oct. 23, in the hospital cafeteria. The screenings are in commemoration of World Lung Health Day, which is also during Respiratory Care Week. Members of the community, particularly those who have smoked or been exposed to second-hand smoke, are invited to answer a few questions about their risk factors and discuss their lung health history with a respiratory therapist. Those who are indentified as being at risk for COPD will be taught a few techniques to control their breathing and then referred to a pulmonary specialist. COPD is a condition that makes it harder to breathe over time, and currently the thirdleading cause of death in the United States. While there isn’t a cure for COPD, treatments can help patients lead a more active lifestyle,
PHOTO COURTESY CREATIONMUSEUM. ORG
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
A-10
LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
Democrat to fill judicial vacancy In brief By Tom Sharpe
The New Mexican
Gov. Susana Martinez appointed Matthew Justin Wilson, a domestic relations hearing officer for the First Judicial District, to fill the judicial vacancy left by the retirement of Stephen Pfeffer. Wilson, 44, said he expects to be sworn in next week and to work as family-law judge, taking over the duties of state District Judge T. Glenn Ellington, who will assume Pfeffer’s criminal docket. A Democrat, Wilson said he plans to seek a full six-year term by running in next year’s primary and general elections. “I think [the Republican governor’s decision to appoint him] has a lot to do with the fact that this is a family-law position and I have extensive family-law experience, and also I was a prosecutor for a few years and I have that jury trial
“
I’m just thankful to the governor for appointing me to this position.” Matthew Justin Wilson experience,” he said. “I’m just thankful to the governor for appointing me to this position. I know it’s a big responsibility, but I look forward to serving the community,” Wilson said. Wilson has a bachelor’s degree from the University of California at Santa Cruz and a Juris Doctorate from Stetson University College of Law in Florida. He was admitted to the New Mexico Bar Association in 2000 and has lived in Santa Fe since 2002. He is married to Stephanie Wilson. They have an 11-yearold son, Benjamin. As a domestic relations hearing officer for the last three and a half years, Matthew Justin
Wilson already operates as a quasi judge, with his own courtroom, under the supervision of the eight judges of the First Judicial District, covering Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties. Previously, Wilson was special assistant attorney general for the state Human Services Department and a prosecutor in Alamogordo for the District Attorney’s Office. Last year, he was one of 14 attorneys who applied for the governor’s appointment to the judicial vacancy left when Barbara Vigil joined the New Mexico Supreme Court. Francis Joseph Mathew got the appointment that time. Nine lawyers applied for
Taos co-op seeks ‘options’ with wholesale power supplier By J.R. Logan The Taos News
TAOS — Kit Carson Electric Cooperative is hoping it will be allowed to void its contract with wholesale power supplier Tri-State Generation and Transmission in order to expand its development of renewable energy. The co-op’s current contract with Denver-based Tri-State, which does not expire until 2040, caps the co-op’s ability to generate its own renewable energy at 5 percent. The co-op also has been an ardent critic of Tri-State’s frequent rate hikes, which it calls unwarranted. Last month, the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission began investigating the validity of a merger between Plains Electric Generation and Tri-State that was approved in 2000. The merger was contingent on Tri-State submitting itself to limited regulation — a requirement it is now battling in federal court. In 2000, Tri-State agreed it would allow regulators to review proposed rate increases if three or more New Mexico co-ops filed protests. A state law with the same language was passed just after the merger was approved. Last year, that provision was tested for the first time when three co-ops, including Kit Carson, filed protests to a proposed rate increase and rate design change from Tri-
State. The PRC called for an investigation into the rates, and Tri-State responded by filing a lawsuit claiming the law was unconstitutional because it violates the commerce clause of the Constitution. That move prompted the PRC to look at the validity of the 13-year-old merger. In its order starting an investigation, the PRC asked its staff to answer several questions: u If the law Tri-State agreed to in 2000 is unconstitutional, is the merger valid? u If the merger is not valid, should Tri-State be subject to full regulation by the PRC? u If the merger is not valid, should Tri-State’s contracts with New Mexico co-ops be voidable? Kit Carson CEO Luís Reyes said Tri-State’s refusal to submit to regulation means it’s not upholding its end of the merger bargain. Kit Carson paid TriState more than $7 million in cash and gave up energy purchase credits for 10 years when the merger was done. In exchange, Reyes said, the co-op expected “low and stable rates” with the possibility of regulatory oversight. Instead, Tri-State has about doubled the cost of power over the last 12 years, and Reyes said the costs are expected to keep rising. “We didn’t think that was part of the deal,” he said. Reyes and the Kit Carson board have long been at odds with Tri-State, primarily over
the renewable energy cap, which is currently the minimum amount required of New Mexico co-ops by 2015 under state law. Reyes said voiding its longterm contract with Tri-State would allow the co-op to shop around for an energy supplier and negotiate better terms on renewable energy. “I think it gives us options,” he said. Tri-State argues the renewable cap is necessary so it can ensure that it will sell enough electricity to meet its financial requirements. It’s not clear if any decisions will come out of the PRC investigation. In a regulatory filing, PRC staff said the issue of contract disputes usually rests with the courts, and they asked for additional information from Tri-State and the coops it serves. In its own filing, Tri-State claims the investigation is beyond the jurisdiction of the co-op and is “contrary to sound public policy.” Tri-State’s filing called the investigation “warfare against a company pursuing its rights to a federal court decision on a constitutional challenge in federal court.” Tri-State spokesman Lee Boughey said in an email that the merger saved New Mexico ratepayers $136 million between 2000 and 2006, and pointed out that Tri-State has invested $362 million to improve reliability in the state.
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Police arrested Sergio Duran, 25, of Santa Fe on suspicion of shoplifting, aggravated battery and battery at about 5 p.m. Thursday at Walgreens, 3298 Cerrillos Road. u An unidentified man stole three cartons of cigarettes valued at more than $218 from Giant, 1009 S. St. Francis Drive, about 3:43 p.m. Thursday. u Police arrested a juvenile male on suspicion of burglary and possession of drug paraphernalia in the 4300 block of Camino Alhambra at 11:10 a.m. Thursday. u A 32-inch TV and a laptop computer were stolen from a home in the 1900 block of Morris Place between 11:45 a.m. and 4 p.m. Thursday. u A 56-inch high-definition TV was stolen from a home in the 100 block of Mateo Circle North about 10:20 a.m. Thursday. u Someone broke into a home in the 4200 block of Vuelta Colorada and stole up to $15 in loose change and $30 to $40 in cash from a
the division vacancy created Oct. 11 when Pfeffer retired after 16 years on the bench. The First Judicial District Judicial Nominating Commission recommended to the governor five applicants: Sonya Carrasco-Trujillo, Paul William Grace, Joseph Edward Manges, David K. Thomson and Wilson. Late Friday, Gov. Martinez announced she would appoint Wilson. “As someone who has broad experience in the criminal justice process, Mr. Wilson is well qualified to serve on the bench,” Martinez said in written statement. “I’m confident that he will continue his strong record of service to New Mexicans and will fulfill his commitment to upholding the law.” According to the online state Sunshine Portal, the First Judicial District judges are paid $112,746 a year. Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.
Dail Circle between 8:15 a.m. and 6:15 p.m. Thursday.
Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Airport Road and Fields Lane; SUV No. 2 at Jaguar Drive between South Meadows Drive and Avenida Contenta; SUV No. 3 at Governor Miles Road between Richards Avenue and Camino Carlos Rey.
Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911
Fashions designed by Native Americans who “push the creative exploration of fashion,” will be showcased in the Fashion Heat 2013: Native Fashion as Art show Saturday at the Eldorado Hotel. The show was curated by Amber-Dawn Bear Robe and will feature designs by Patricia Michaels, Rose Simpson, Wendy Red Start, Naomi Bebo, Lloyd Kiva New and Kay Bennett. The event is a collaboration between the Institute of American Indian Arts’ Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, the Santa Fe Independent Film Festival and the Pablita Velarde Musem of Indian Women in the Arts. The show is scheduled to take place from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Eldorado Hotel & Spa, 309 W.
Christo project faces opposition DENVER — Christo says opposition to his planned Over the River project on the Arkansas River in Colorado is part of the art. The artist plans to string about 6 miles of fabric over sections of a 42-mile stretch of the river. The team hopes to start construction next year and open the exhibit in 2015 for two weeks before dismantling it. The Denver Post reported Thursday that a group has filed a lawsuit in federal court in Denver to stop the project. The opposition group, Rags Over the Arkansas River, says the project will be too disruptive to wildlife, traffic, fishing and river rafting businesses. Staff and wire reports
Funeral services and memorials STEPHEN E. CASE 59, of Santa Fe, NM died October 6th, 2013, due to complications from advanced cancer. Steve was born February 24th in Syracuse, NY and grew up in Santa Barbara, CA. Steve followed his early talent of repairing cars since his first repair shop during the sixties in Santa Barbara, CA. until his current repair facility in Santa Fe, NM, Expert Auto. Steve’s unique sense of humor and dedication to honesty, fairness and thrift insured his client’s devotion. Along with his wife, partner and best friend, Nancy, Steve delivered his wisdom and expertise for twenty years in Santa Fe. Although his legacy will be continued by his friend, Dave Frazee and partner, Nancy, Steve will be missed by the many people who enjoyed him. Steve is survived by his mother, Ruth Case, sisters, Debbie and Allison, and brother, Scott. Daughter, Julie lives in OK with husband Chris and Steve’s grandchildren Dylan and Savannah. Steve’s father, Ernest preceded him in death. His step children Stacy, husband Dennis Morton and step grandchildren Brianna and Alexandra live in CO. His stepson, William Thornton lives in Las Angeles, CA. Memorial Contributions should be donated to the wonderful staff at Kitchen Angels in Santa Fe, NM who gave food and comfort generously. Also, thanks to the kindness of the nurses at PMS Hospice for assisting this brave man to his too soon end.
OSCAR SIGALA
1ST ANNIVERSARY
Please know you are not forgotten and I still Love you very much and miss you more every day. Your Loving Wife, Carmen. DANIEL M. MONTOYA 30th Birthday 10/08/1983 1st Anniversary 10/17/2012
THANK YOU RIVERA FAMILY MORTUARIES SANTA FE ~ ESPAÑOLA ~ TAOS Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Santa Fe (505) 989-7032 Antonio "Tony" Guerra, 84, Santa Fe, October 4, 2013 Jame "Jimmy" Urioste, 87, Santa Fe, October 6, 2013 Stephen Case, 59, Santa Fe, October 6, 2013 Mary Lou Cook, 95, Santa Fe, October 7, 2013 Mary Kimbrell, 82, Santa Fe, October 11, 2013 Helen Elwyn, 87, Santa Fe, October 12, 2013
purse between 6 and 9 p.m. Thursday. u A California woman staying at La Quinta Inn, 4298 Cerrillos Road, told police she left her room to run errands for about an hour Thursday afternoon and returned to find her cellphone missing. u A Remington rifle was stolen from a home in the 4400 block of Mesa del Oro Court between 2 and 3 p.m. Wednesday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A brown leather purse, Ray-Ban sunglasses, an iPod Nano and other items valued at more than $1,600 were stolen from several vehicles parked in a garage at a home on Griego Hill Road between 11 p.m. Wednesday and 7 a.m. Thursday. Around the same time, a vehicle parked outside another home on Griego Hill Road also was burglarized. Two knives and $3 were stolen from the vehicle. u Someone stole a Sony Playstation, an iPod and a gold bracelet valued at $1,580 from a home in the 2800 block of
Native American designers in show
San Francisco St. Tickets for the event are $10 and can be purchased online at ticketssantafe.org. Tickets will also available at the door, but there is limited space for the event.
Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Taos (575) 758-3841 Phillip L. Graybull, 40, Albuquerque, October 12, 2013 Felix " Chuple" Fernando Gonzales, 66, Taos, October 14, 2013 Celestino Sanchez, 98, Amalia, October 15, 2013 Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Espanola (505) 753-2288 Betty Lopez Herrera, 64, Espanola, October 10, 2013 Maximillen Samson Francois, 58, Chamisal, October 11, 2013
The family of Joe Vela would like to extend their gratitude to all our family and friends for all the cards, flowers, prayers and support given to us during this most difficult time. Special thanks to Father Leo, Deacon Enrique Montoya, Liz Christianson and Mel Archuleta (music). JACK SINCLAIR Beloved artist, carpenter and Union brother, died at home after a long illness. Survived by wife Molly Clark, children, Ocean Quigley and India Fratus, stepson, Caleb Clark and five grandchildren.
It broke our hearts to lose you, you did not go alone. For part of us went with you, The day God called you home. 1st Anniversary Mass, Sunday, October 20th 7:30 a.m. at St. Anne’s Church. WE MISS YOU SO MUCH. Joe, Marcella, Angela & Andrew ANTHONY B. CASTOR 10/31/77 - 10/19/09
EMMA MONTANO FOUR YEAR ANNIVERSARY MASS For our mom and wife Emma Montano on October 21, 2013 in Pecos New Mexico at St. Anthony’s church at 6 p.m. We love you and miss you everyday!
Love you and miss you forever. Happy Birthday. 4 Year Anniversary Mass at St. John’s Catholic Church October 20 at 11:00 a.m. Love you, son. Mom, Dad, Family
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
Possible path out of financial trouble
I
t’s over. After a two-week government shutdown and a near-miss in avoiding a national default, the immediate crisis is over. The government is up and running once more. The debt ceiling Bill Stewart has been lifted and Understanding extended. Your World As a result, President Barack Obama has won a stunning political victory over the Republican Party leadership in Congress by refusing to negotiate on Republican terms. In the end, the Republicans caved, winning virtually nothing with their bold, dangerous and profoundly foolish tactic of trying to destroy “Obamacare” through spending resolutions that in one form or another gutted the president’s signature legislation. These were resolutions they knew were doomed to failure. Still, they hoped the president would blink, as he did in 2011, and approve some form of the Republican spending resolutions rather than face a government shut-down. But the president didn’t blink, the government shut down for the first time in 17 years, and in the end, the Republicans lost virtually everything by agreeing to a bipartisan spending resolution that funds the government until Jan. 15 and extends the debt limit until Feb. 7. The vote in the Senate was 81-18 in favor, and in the House it was 285-144. Most House Republicans opposed the bill, but 87 voted for it. Obamacare remains essentially untouched. Speaker of the House John Boehner led the Republican attack from his base in the House of Representatives. It was well-known that he opposed the tactic of bitterend tea party members to shut down the government, if need
A-11
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
ANOTHER VIEW
Head injuries come into focus Fort Worth Star-Telegram
T be to destroy, Obamacare, the bête noire of the Republican Party as a whole. In the end, he agreed, and so led a united Republican front, though many individual Republicans thought it was a lost cause. Curiously, although, he led his House Republicans to a crushing defeat, he did so in a way that seems to have won him increasing support from Republican moderates (yes, there are a few). That may have been his plan all along. In any event, it seems his speakership is safe for the moment, although House Republicans remain as divided and unruly as ever. In the Senate, we were treated to the specter of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, leading the Republican attack with such outlandish and unproved claims that one was reminded of Sen. Joe McCarthy 50 years ago, leading his one-man crusade against communists in the government. The Republican defeat seems only to have fueled Cruz’s belief that Washington is broken and he is the man to fix it. After the defeat, he told reporters, “Unfortunately, the Washington establishment is
failing to listen to the American people.” As usual, he excused himself and blamed everybody else. He is a man on a mission. He is also a troubled and troubling man. In remarks that may have been directed against Cruz, Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., said, “Let’s just say sometimes learning what can’t be accomplished is an important longterm thing, and hopefully for some of the members, they’ve learned it’s impossible to defund mandatory programs by shutting down the federal government.” We are not out of the woods yet, although we seemed to have found a path to get us out. Under the agreement, the House and the Senate are directed to hold talks and reach accord by Dec. 13 on a long-term blueprint for tax and spending polices for the next 10 years. Boehner and his team indicated that although they lost the battle over reopening the government, the fire may have gone out of their most conservative members, leaving the leadership able to negotiate with Democrats on such matters as spending cuts and changes to entitlement
programs like Social Security. And in the House, they have the upper hand, not only because they constitute the majority, but because the massive spending cuts that came as a result of the 2011 crisis, which the Republicans won, will remain in place, and any further cuts will be on top of the earlier ones, much to the anger of liberal Democrats. But there are no guarantees that Congress won’t be at a stalemate in mid-January, and there is deep skepticism that Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., who will lead the budget negotiations, can bridge the deep gulf between them. Nevertheless, President Obama has won a decisive victory by hanging tough. Whether that is enough to score points in a deeply divided Republican Party remains to be seen. For the moment, the country is in a better place than it was last week. Bill Stewart writes about current affairs from Santa Fe. He is a former correspondent for Time magazine and was an officer in the U.S. Foreign Service.
MY VIEW: MACKENZIE ALLEN
MY VIEW: LAURA CONCHELOS
Greed is at heart of shutdown debacle
A Canadian view on U.S. health care
A
midst all the ranting and writing about the government shutdown brought about by the extremist element of what passes these days for the Republican Party, one aspect is sadly overlooked. That would be the sheer cruelty and cold-heartedness of the prevailing Republican attitude. That well-heeled, infinitely provided-for politicians and their well-fed, health-insured supporters would deny basic health care to millions of less fortunate Americans is beyond appalling. This callousness and greed is breathtaking. The United States is well behind most industrialized nations in the realm of health care. Yes, we are, perhaps, best at specific treatments and procedures, but that is a very limited view of the overall picture. And, while it is certainly true that our national debt and budget need to be brought in line, depriving basic care to our population should not be the route to accomplishing it. Where, for example, is the Republican outrage at the F-35 fighter program? A trillion-dollar “sustainment” estimate and a mere $100 million a copy for a plane they can’t keep in the air. To be sure, Republicans don’t have a lock on the “pork” game. There is an abundance of blame to share when it comes to waste and fraud. But the vehemence with which Republicans are fighting the Affordable Care Act is staggering. The cowardice displayed by senior House Republicans, most notably Speaker John Boehner, is shocking. They should be eternally ashamed of themselves for selling their honor and responsibility to the country in an attempt to hold onto their offices. Of course, after they do leave office, they’ll walk down the block and become lobbyists, peddling their influence in the service of whichever corporate tyrant they hire on with. MacKenzie Allen lives in Santa Fe. He retired from a career in law enforcement and is a professional fundraising auctioneer.
I
am not going to say anything we haven’t heard already in regard to the Affordable Care Act. I just cannot believe that our elected officials shut down the government over it. The people who want it repealed or postponed claim it is dangerous to have government in our doctors’ offices. However, they seem to think it is OK for private companies to dictate our health care options. Currently, insurance companies can tell us who is even eligible for insurance coverage. They tell us what procedures we can and cannot have. And that’s if we are lucky enough to even afford health insurance. Of course, we can have all the medical care we want if we can pay for it all out-of-pocket. I am a Canadian and American citizen. I grew up in Canada without ever seeing a medical bill. I would gladly pay higher taxes here in the United States if I knew that myself and my fellow Americans were entitled to affordable health care. I just cannot believe we allow people to
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
go into bankruptcy because they become ill. We’ve all heard stories about how the Canadian health care system isn’t perfect. It isn’t. However, as far as I can tell, it is about a million times better than our system here in the U.S. My Canadian friends and family, like many other people around the world, can sleep at night, knowing that they’ll be able to receive medical care, should they require it. They don’t have to fear massive debt because they need to see a doctor, and they don’t have to worry that their private insurance company won’t allow them to have a certain procedure. While I wish that the United States were adopting a truly democratic, single-payer health care system (shouldn’t health care be a right for American citizens?), I believe the Affordable Care Act is, at least, a step in the right direction. Laura Conchelos is a Canadian American who moved to Santa Fe from New Hampshire to work as a solar installer for Positive Energy Solar.
he future was looking bright for a young University of Houston quarterback. He had chalked up an impressive record on the football field, with 41 touchdown passes and a total of 6,039 offensive yards in 20 career starts. Unfortunately, along with putting up outstanding numbers with his pass completions, David Piland suffered a number of concussions, the last one in a Sept. 7 game. Last week, the university announced that Piland’s career is over because of those head injuries. His coach emphasized that “our medical staff knows for his future and wellbeing he can no longer play.” That news came the same week PBS aired a two-hour Frontline documentary on the dangers of concussions in the National Football League. The documentary said the league has known for years that head injuries in the sport were contributing to brain disease, but consistently denied a connection. Thus the title of the documentary, League of Denial. Frontline also alleged the NFL, in protecting its own multibillion-dollar brand, misled players, enlisted or bullied doctors to discount scientific evidence of a brain disease called chronic traumatic encephalopathy and continued to put off thousands of ex-players who said football had led to their debilitating brain damage and mental health problems. On Aug. 29, the league and representatives of the 4,500 former players who sued it announced a $765 million settlement of the lawsuit. The agreement contains no admission of liability by the NFL. But the NFL now knows the issue of concussions and their consequences cannot be ignored and that the settlement of a lawsuit will not make it go away. Head injury concerns are now part of the public conscience, not just for professional football but for college, high school and all the way down to the Pop Warner programs that include kids as young as 5. Over the past few years, at all levels of play, rules have been changed to lessen head injuries, and new administrative policies, outlining what happens to a player who suffers a concussion during practice or a game, have been implemented. Unlike in the not-too-distant past, when a woozy player was told, “Shake it off and get back in there,” the NFL has a protocol for deciding when a player has suffered a concussion and determining at what point he can be allowed to play again. In addition, the league has instituted prohibitions against certain hits to the neck and head and has outlined stronger penalties (including suspensions) for violators. The University Interscholastic League, which governs Texas high school athletics, has devised new training programs for coaches and players about proper hitting techniques. The UIL also worked with the Texas Legislature on a law passed in 2011 requiring all school districts and charter schools to have a Concussion Oversight Team that includes at least one licensed physician and no coaches or school officials. Students suffering concussions must be removed from competition immediately and cannot return to practice or a game until he or she has been evaluated and cleared in writing by the treating physician. Some people are concerned that the all-American sport of football is being watered down or made so soft by these new regulations that the game will be ruined or perhaps even abolished. There’s little chance of that. The game, to which many are so fully devoted, will be around for a long time. That means even though progress has been made in addressing one important category of athletic injuries, we can’t stop there. More studies still need to be done, and those who govern the sport at all levels must be willing to adopt additional meaningful changes to protect those who play.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 19, 1913: NEW YORK — Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the English suffragette leader, who arrived here today for a lecture tour, was ordered deported by the immigration authorities within less than 3 hours after the vessel on which she came had docked. Under the ruling of the special board, she will not be permitted to leave Ellis Island until deported unless the findings are reversed. Oct. 19, 1988: Beef jerky made by two Santa Fe-area producers has been embargoed by state health officials because of unsanitary conditions discovered during an investigation into food poisoning.
DOONESBURy
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM
A-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
People have reported seeing evening grosbeaks at their feeders. Evening grosbeaks are nomads that wander unpredictably in our region all winter. COURTESY PHOTO
FOR THE BIRDS
Juncos return; grosbeaks irrupt By Anne Schmauss
For The New Mexican
N
ormally, the dark-eyed juncos return this time of year. They don’t like our warm climate for nesting season. Juncos nest in very high elevations and as far north as Alaska. They love the cold and snow so much, they spend winters throughout the U.S., even as far north as Minnesota. I lived in Minnesota for more than 20 years, so I can tell you that these little snowbirds, which purposely migrate to Minnesota to spend the winter, are pretty tough. The dark-eyed junco includes at least six recognizable populations. Similar in shape and behavior, the subspecies we are most likely to see in Northern New Mexico are the Oregon junco (this one has a hood), the pinksided junco (it sports pinkish flanks), the slate-colored junco (a plainer brownish gray) and the gray-headed junco (it has a red patch on its back). Check out a field guide for a closer look. To keep it simple, just remember that all juncos are smallish birds, about 6 inches in length, are gray and have a white belly. They tend to feed on the ground in small flocks, and you’ll often see them beneath your birdfeeder cleaning up the white millet that has been kicked to the ground. Sometimes, it’s hard to see their white bellies because you’re looking down at them, but watch closely for a flash of white tail feathers as
they fly away. Juncos will be with us all winter. People have reported seeing evening grosbeaks at their birdfeeders in the last week. Usually, with so many reports, it means that the grosbeaks are really hitting the area. These yellow and black birds have conspicuous white wing patches and very thick beaks. Evening grosbeaks are nomads that wander unpredictably in our region all winter. You might see and hear their large noisy flocks one year or one week, but not the next. Evening grosbeaks, like other irruptive species, are opportunistic and move around from one food source to the next. They can quickly clean out your birdfeeders and particularly like black-oil sunflower seeds. So keep a steady supply of a good sunflower mix in your backyard feeders. Look for their cousin, the black-headed grosbeak (an orange and black bird with a very thick bill) to be heading south soon. They winter in Mexico. The evening grosbeak may be around all winter or just every now and then. It’s hard to say, so take advantage of the chance to see evening grosbeaks right now. Anne Schmauss is the co-owner of Wild Birds Unlimited in Santa Fe, and she loves to hear your bird stories. She and her sisters are the authors of For the Birds: A Month by Month Guide to Attracting Birds to Your Backyard. Look for Anne’s new book, Birdhouses of the World, in April.
Juncos return to New Mexico this time of year. Juncos nest in very high elevations and as far north as Alaska. They like the cold and snow and spend winters throughout the U.S., including Santa Fe. COURTESY PHOTO
Newsmakers
Melissa Fumero
Two comedies get post-Super Bowl spots
Lee sues Alabama hometown museum
LOS ANGELES — Fox says the plum postSuper Bowl slot next February will be filled by two of its comedies. New Girl and freshman series Brooklyn Nine-Nine will air on Fox after the game that’s typically TV’s most-watched program and a big promotional platform for other network fare. Brooklyn Nine-Nine stars Andy Samberg, Melissa Fumero and Andre Braugher. New Girl stars Zooey Deschanel. It and Brooklyn Nine-Nine will air immediately after the Super Bowl on Feb. 2.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — To Kill a Mockingbird author Harper Lee is suing a museum in her hometown of Monroeville to stop it from selling souvenirs with her name and the title of her Pulitzer Prize-winning book. The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Mobile, says the Monroe County Heritage Museum has traded on Lee’s fame without her approval and without compensating her. Museum attorney Matt Goforth says the nonprofit museum honors Lee’s legacy and that she had never sought money from the museum in its 25 years of existence.
Harper Lee
Josh Duhamel pleasantly surprised by baby Axl
Josh Duhamel
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. — Proud papa Josh Duhamel has no problem bragging about his well-behaved baby. The 40-year-old actor and wife, Fergie of the Black Eyed Peas, welcomed their first child, Axl Jack, on Aug. 29. “What’s surprised me the most is how well behaved he is,” Duhamel said. Fatherhood may have brought some life changes for the Transformers star, but he said his approach to his career remains the same. “No I’m not going to let that affect the way I make decisions creatively,” he said.
Mahone treated for blood clot, cancels tour
Austin Mahone
NEW YORK — Teen singer Austin Mahone has postponed his tour and is being treated for a blood clot in his throat. A representative for the 17-year-old said that Mahone is dealing with extreme inflammation in his throat. Mahone’s U.S. tour was supposed to kick off this week but is being pushed to next year. The Associated Press
TV 1
top picks
4:15 p.m. on TCM Movie: Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb Stanley Kubrick’s biting 1964 satire about an insane general who heats up the Cold War by launching a nuclear strike against Russia may be the most brilliant black comedy ever made. It bristles with great performances that include George C. Scott’s work as comically high-strung Gen.‘Buck’ Turgidson. And how can you not love a film that includes the line “Gentlemen! You can’t fight in here! This is the War Room!”? 5:30 p.m. on NBC College Football A nonconference battle of historical rivals is in the offing tonight at South Bend, Ind., where Tommy Rees and the No. 22-ranked Fighting Irish of Notre Dame play host to Cody Kessler and the unranked USC Trojans. He’ll be facing down a Trojans defense that ranks among the nation’s best. 6 p.m. LIFE Movie: Missing at 17 Seventeen-year-old Candace runs away from home to search for her biological mother and meets a young man who offers to help her search. Unfortunately,
2
3
he’s involved in some illegal activities and is pulling Candace into that world. Marin Hinkle and Alex Carter star in this new thriller. 7 p.m. on TNT Movie: The Italian Job Honor among thieves goes only so far in director F. Gary Gray’s (The Negotiator) energetic 2003 update of a 1969 heist tale. Mark Wahlberg plays the mastermind behind a Venice gold robbery that goes like clockwork — until one team member (Edward Norton) turns traitor. The others are determined to even the score in Los Angeles. Charlize Theron also stars. 9 p.m. HBO Movie: Mama Jessica Chastain plays the rather Goth heroine of this horror tale from executive producer Guillermo del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth). She plays the girlfriend of the uncle (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Game of Thrones) of two children who vanished after their father killed their mother. Very spooky doings accompany their return. Megan Charpentier, pictured, and Isabelle Nelisse portray the youngsters.
4 5
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
National scoreboard B-2 Markets in review B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
Cardinals reach World Series: St. Louis defeats the Los Angeles Dodgers to advance. Page B-4
UNM FOOTBALL
UNM BASKETBALL
Lobos rev up fans at annual Howl
Davie mum on injured QBs before Utah State matchup By Will Webber The New Mexican
Cue the crickets. In doing his best impression of New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick, Bob Davie took the oft-used coach’s high road when discussing specific injuries to certain players. In this case, the current health status
There’s hope yet for Capital
of The University of New Mexico’s quarterbacks Cole Gautsche and Clayton Mitchem. The Lobos head into Saturday’s Mountain West Conference game against league newcomer Utah State with both signal callers on the mend. The pair became part of the walk-
Please see LoBos, Page B-3
B
By Will Webber
The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — As far as entrances go, give bonus points to Craig Neal for his introduction at Friday’s Lobo Howl in The Pit. The first-year University of New
Lobos quarterback Cole Gautsche will miss Saturday’s game because of a knee injury. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
Mexico men’s basketball head coach worked the crowd of more than 10,000 into a frenzy when he rode his custom motorcycle down the ramp and onto Bob King Court under the glare of a spotlight
Please see HowL, Page B-2
PREP FOOTBALL SANTA FE 28, LOS ALAMOS 9
SMASHING RALLY
I
f the last few years have shown Santa Fe’s high school football fans anything, it’s that they’ll have something to keep them occupied into the Thanksgiving holiday — and usually beyond. That’s all due to the St. Michael’s Horsemen and their penchant for making deep runs in the state playoffs. They’ve Will Webber been there every year since Class Commentary AAA was reclassified prior to the 2000 season, and they will be there again when the pairings are revealed three weeks from now. Most times, the Horsemen keep us occupied into the state semifinals and, occasionally, to the championship game the first weekend in December. A few years ago, we had the welcome addition of the New Mexico School for the Deaf with its state title run in Six Man. Last year, we had Santa Fe High make its first postseason appearance in 26 years with a district title in 2AAAA. Another breath of fresh air could come from the team the city has learned to overlook in recent times: Capital. The Jaguars, complete with just two seniors on the starting offense, appear to have all the pieces in place to be in contention in the same district that houses Santa Fe High, Los Alamos, Bernalillo and Española Valley. This is the same Jaguars team that averaged just one point over a dismal 18-game stretch that took them into Friday’s game against Española Valley. It’s the same Jaguars program that has avoided the 0-fer the last three years with a single solitary win somewhere along the way. Often the punchline for jokes about how bad football has become in District 2AAAA, Capital can find itself in the playoffs if it can pull things together against a weak district that lacks a true favorite. And what a story it would be. Imagine the possibilities. A team that had lost 33 of its previous 36 games all of a sudden making an appearance in the same playoff field as perennial powerhouse programs like Roswell Goddard, Los Lunas, Belen, Artesia and other emerging giants like Farmington and Kirtland Central. “Doesn’t matter who wins this district because the winner is going to be the 12-seed and get a rough game that first weekend,” said Capital head coach Bill Moon after Thursday’s practice. He’s right. With 12 teams invited to the show, the 2AAAA champion is already glued to that No. 12 spot and will head into an opening-round tilt at the No. 5 seed, presumably Farmington, Artesia or some other knuckledragging beast that will take its shot at pounding the district’s rep into submission. It happened last year with Santa Fe High and will happen again the second weekend in November when the playoffs commence. But at least Capital is in the discussion. And should the Jaguars actually make it, let the city rejoice that the proverbial redheaded stepchild is at least relevant for the first time in years. Love them or hate them, there’s no denying the impact the Capital Jaguars would make with a playoff bid. Imagine the possibilities.
Santa Fe High’s Lucas Gonzales goes for a first down during the first half of the Demons’ game against Los Alamos on Friday at Ivan Head Stadium. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Demons rebound from halftime deficit, out-execute Hilltoppers in second half By James Barron
The New Mexican
T
he light went on for Isaac Romero the moment the lights went out for Christian Gonzales. When the lithe senior running back for Santa Fe High was slammed to the ground by a Los Alamos defender at the end of a 9-yard run late in the third quarter of a key District 2AAAA football game Friday night, the flash of fire glowed in Romero’s eyes. He wasn’t the only Demon who felt that way. “It was just the way he slammed him,” said Romero, the Demons junior tight end. “The play was over and he
overexaggerated that slam. It just got us pissed.” And the Demons reacted in kind. The difference, though, was that they smashed into the Hilltoppers defense relentlessly over the final 14 minutes of the district game at Ivan Head Stadium, and it led to a 28-9 win for Santa Fe High. The win gives the Demons (3-4 overall, 2-0 2AAAA) a leg up in the district race, but it was the only gift the Demons accepted on the night. Instead, they out-executed Los Alamos (2-6, 1-1) in the second half and scored 28 unanswered points after trailing 9-0 at the half.
Please see Demons, Page B-3
Los Alamos’ Xavier Dennison carries the ball from the 30-yard line during Friday night’s game at Santa Fe High.
CAPITAL 49, ESPAÑOLA VALLEY 0
Jaguars earn first victory of season By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
Kevin Brown and Augie Larranaga looked like kings Friday night. The two Jaguars combined for seven touchdowns as Capital defeated Española Valley 49-0 in a District 2AAAA contest that doubled as the Jaguars’ homecoming game. Six of the scores came on the ground, but both players gave all the
credit to the offensive line. “Without them, it would not have been possible to do all that stuff,” Larranaga said. “It was them that scored.” “They were the best players on the field, by far,” said Brown, who had rushing touchdowns of 33 and 39 yards in his return to the team since being declared academically ineligible. “They made Augie and my jobs easy out there.” Larranaga did his part to reward the
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com
offensive line by scoring two 1-yard rushing TDs to help the Jaguars (1-6 overall, 1-0 2AAAA) jump to a 12-0 lead with 2:43 left in the first quarter. After throwing a 36-yard touchdown pass to Adrian Ornelas to make the score 18-0, Larranaga took off for a 59-yard touchdown on the first play of the second quarter for a 24-0 lead. He rushed 22 yards for another score in the third quarter before
hitting the bench at the start of the fourth to give freshman Mark Segura some time under center. Capital head coach Bill Moon said Larranaga’s mental capabilities, not his physical ones, were the reason he had a big night. “Augie is a smart kid,” Moon said. “On most teams, he would be the stud. He did a very nice job tonight
Please see JaGUaRs, Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
FOOTBALL Football
NFl american Conference
East New England Miami N.Y. Jets Buffalo South Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland
W 5 3 3 2 W 4 3 2 0 W 4 3 3 1 W 6 6 3 2
l 1 2 3 4 l 2 3 4 6 l 2 3 3 4 l 0 0 3 4
t Pct PF Pa 0 .833 125 97 0 .600 114 117 0 .500 104 135 0 .333 136 157 t Pct PF Pa 0 .667 148 98 0 .500 128 115 0 .333 106 177 0 .000 70 198 t Pct PF Pa 0 .667 121 111 0 .500 134 129 0 .500 118 125 0 .200 88 116 t Pct PF Pa 0 1.000 152 65 0 1.000 265 158 0 .500 144 138 0 .333 105 132
National Conference
East W l t Pct PF Pa Dallas 3 3 0 .500 183 152 Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 166 179 Washington 1 4 0 .200 107 143 N.Y. Giants 0 6 0 .000 103 209 South W l t Pct PF Pa New Orleans 5 1 0 .833 161 103 Carolina 2 3 0 .400 109 68 Atlanta 1 4 0 .200 122 134 Tampa Bay 0 5 0 .000 64 101 North W l t Pct PF Pa Detroit 4 2 0 .667 162 140 Chicago 4 2 0 .667 172 161 Green Bay 3 2 0 .600 137 114 Minnesota 1 4 0 .200 125 158 West W l t Pct PF Pa Seattle 6 1 0 .857 191 116 San Francisco 4 2 0 .667 145 118 St. Louis 3 3 0 .500 141 154 Arizona 3 4 0 .429 133 161 thursday’s Game Seattle 34, Arizona 22 Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 11 a.m. Chicago at Washington, 11 a.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. New England at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Miami, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Carolina, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Detroit, 11 a.m. San Diego at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. San Francisco at Tennessee, 2:05 p.m. Houston at Kansas City, 2:25 p.m. Cleveland at Green Bay, 2:25 p.m. Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 2:25 p.m. Denver at Indianapolis, 6:30 p.m. Open: New Orleans, Oakland Monday’s Game Minnesota at N.Y. Giants, 6:40 p.m.
NCaa the aP top 25
Friday, oct. 18 UCF 38, No. 8 Louisville 35 Saturday, oct. 19 No. 1 Alabama vs. Arkansas, 5 p.m. No. 2 Oregon vs. Washington State, 8 p.m. No. 3 Clemson vs. No. 5 Florida State, 6 p.m. No. 4 Ohio State vs. Iowa, 1:30 p.m. No. 6 LSU at Mississippi, 5 p.m. No. 7 Texas A&M vs. No. 24 Auburn, 1:30 p.m. No. 9 UCLA at No. 13 Stanford, 1:30 p.m. No. 11 South Carolina at Tennessee, 10 a.m. No. 12 Baylor vs. Iowa State, 5 p.m. No. 14 Missouri vs. No. 22 Florida, 10:21 a.m. No. 15 Georgia at Vanderbilt, 10 a.m. No. 16 Texas Tech at West Virginia, 10 a.m. No. 17 Fresno State vs. UNLV, 8 p.m. No. 18 Oklahoma at Kansas, 1:30 p.m. No. 20 Washington at Arizona State, 4 p.m. No. 21 Oklahoma State vs. TCU, 10 a.m. No. 23 Northern Illinois at Central Michigan, 1 p.m. No. 25 Wisconsin at Illinois, 6 p.m.
BASEBALL baSEball
BASKETBALL baSKEtball
(best-of-7; x-if necessary) american league all games televised by Fox boston 3, Detroit 2 thursday, oct. 17 Boston 4, Detroit 3 Saturday, oct. 19 Detroit (Scherzer 21-3) at Boston (Buchholz 12-1), 2:37 p.m. x-Sunday, oct. 20 Detroit (Verlander 13-12) at Boston (Lackey 10-13), 6:07 p.m. National league all games televised by tbS St. louis 4, los angeles 2 Friday, oct. 18 St. Louis 9, Los Angeles 0
atlantic Toronto Brooklyn New York Philadelphia Boston Southeast Miami Charlotte Washington Atlanta Orlando Central Chicago Cleveland Detroit Milwaukee Indiana
Mlb PlayoFFS lEaGUE Championship Series
totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
St. louis
ab r MCrpnt 2b 4 1 Beltran rf 4 1 Jay cf 1 0 Hollidy lf 5 0 YMolin c 5 2 Freese 3b 4 1 MAdms 1b 3 1 SRonsn rf 4 1 Kozma ss 2 1 Wacha p 3 1 Wong ph 1 0 CMrtnz p 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0
28 0 2 0 totals
hbi 1 1 3 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 2 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
36 9 13 8
los angeles 000 000 000—0 St. louis 004 050 00x—9 E—Puig 2 (2). DP—Los Angeles 1, St. Louis 1. LOB—Los Angeles 2, St. Louis 8. 2B—A.Ellis (2), M.Carpenter (2), Beltran (2), Ma.Adams (1). SF—M. Carpenter. IP H R ER bb So los angeles Kershaw L,0-2 4 10 7 7 2 5 Belisario 1-3 0 2 2 1 0 Howell 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Withrow 1 1 0 0 1 0 Marmol 2 1 0 0 0 2 St. louis Wacha W,2-0 7 2 0 0 1 5 Ca.Martinez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Rosenthal 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kershaw pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. WP—Kershaw 2, Howell. Umpires—Home, Greg Gibson; First, Gerry Davis; Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Mike Everitt; Right, Ted Barrett; Left, Bruce Dreckman. T—2:59. A—46,899 (43,975).
TENNIS tENNIS
atP-Wta toUR Kremlin Cup
W 4 4 2 1 1 W 3 3 1 1 1 W 5 3 1 0 0
l Pct 1 .800 1 .800 2 .500 3 .250 5 .167 l Pct 2 .600 2 .600 3 .250 3 .250 4 .200 l Pct 0 1.000 1 .750 3 .250 4 .000 5 .000
Western Conference
Friday’s NlCS boxscore Cardinals 9, Dodgers 0
los angeles ab r Crwfrd lf 3 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 AdGnzl 1b 3 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 Ethier cf 3 0 Puig rf 3 0 Uribe 3b 3 0 A.Ellis c 3 0 Kershw p 1 0 Belisari p 0 0 Howell p 0 0 Schmkr ph 1 0 Withrw p 0 0 Marml p 0 0 MYong ph 1 0
Nba PRESEaSoN Eastern Conference
Friday at olympic Stadium Moscow Purse: Men, $823,550 (Wt250); Women, $795,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Men Quarterfinals Andreas Seppi (2), Italy, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 5-2, retired. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, def. Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, 6-4, 7-6 (4). Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, def. Karen Khachanov, Russia, 6-4, 6-0. Richard Gasquet (1), France, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, 6-3, 6-2.
HOCKEY HoCKEy Gb — — 11/2 21/2 31/2 Gb — — 11/2 11/2 2 Gb — 11/2 31/2 41/2 5
Southwest W l Pct Gb New Orleans 5 0 1.000 — Houston 3 1 .750 11/2 Dallas 2 2 .500 21/2 Memphis 2 2 .500 21/2 San Antonio 1 2 .333 3 Northwest W l Pct Gb Oklahoma City 2 1 .667 — Minnesota 2 1 .667 — Portland 3 2 .600 — Denver 2 2 .500 1/2 Utah 1 3 .250 11/2 Pacific W l Pct Gb Sacramento 3 1 .750 — Golden State 3 2 .600 1/2 L.A. Clippers 3 2 .600 1/2 Phoenix 2 2 .500 1 L.A. Lakers 2 4 .333 2 Friday’s Games Golden State 115, L.A. Lakers 89 Memphis 97, Orlando 91 Chicago 103, Indiana 98 Portland 94, L.A. Clippers 84 Saturday’s Games Washington vs. New Orleans at Lexington, KY, 5 p.m. Dallas vs. Charlotte at Greensboro, NC, 5:30 p.m. San Antonio at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Indiana at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m. Denver vs. L.A. Clippers at Las Vegas, NV, 8:30 p.m.
SOCCER SoCCER
NoRtH aMERICa Major league Soccer
East W l t Pts GF Ga x-Kansas City 16 10 7 55 45 29 x-New York 15 9 8 53 50 39 Houston 13 10 9 48 39 37 Montreal 13 12 7 46 48 47 Chicago 13 12 7 46 44 47 Philadelphia 12 10 10 46 40 40 New England 12 11 9 45 45 36 Columbus 12 15 5 41 40 42 Toronto 5 16 11 26 29 46 D.C. United 3 23 7 16 21 57 West W l t Pts GF Ga Portland 13 5 14 53 49 33 Salt Lake 15 10 7 52 55 40 Los Angeles 15 11 6 51 52 37 Seattle 15 11 6 51 41 39 Colorado 13 10 9 48 42 33 San Jose 13 11 8 47 33 41 Vancouver 12 11 9 45 48 42 Dallas 10 11 11 41 45 50 Chivas USA 6 18 8 26 29 60 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. x- clinched playoff berth Friday’s Games Kansas City 1, D.C. United 0 Saturday’s Games Philadelphia at Montreal, 12 p.m. Seattle at Dallas, 12:30 p.m. Vancouver at Colorado, 4 p.m. Columbus at New England, 5:30 p.m. Toronto at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. Salt Lake at Portland, 8:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games New York at Houston, 2 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 7 p.m.
NHl Eastern Conference
atlantic GP Detroit 8 Toronto 8 Montreal 7 Tampa Bay 7 Boston 6 Ottawa 7 Florida 8 Buffalo 9 Metro GP Pittsburgh 7 Carolina 8 N.Y. Islanders7 N.Y. Rangers 6 Columbus 6 Washington 7 New Jersey 7 Philadelphia 8
l 2 2 2 2 2 2 6 7 l 1 2 2 4 4 5 4 7
ol 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 ol 0 3 2 0 0 0 3 0
Pts 12 12 10 10 8 8 4 3 Pts 12 9 8 4 4 4 3 2
GFGa 22 18 29 19 25 13 26 16 15 10 20 21 18 31 11 24 GFGa 27 16 18 23 22 19 11 25 15 17 17 24 13 26 11 24
Western Conference
Central GP W l ol Pts GFGa Colorado 7 6 1 0 12 23 10 St. Louis 7 5 1 1 11 27 19 Chicago 7 4 1 2 10 20 18 Winnipeg 8 4 4 0 8 21 22 Minnesota 8 3 3 2 8 18 20 Nashville 7 3 3 1 7 14 20 Dallas 6 3 3 0 6 15 17 Pacific GP W l ol Pts GFGa San Jose 7 6 0 1 13 33 13 Anaheim 7 6 1 0 12 24 16 Vancouver 8 5 3 0 10 23 22 Phoenix 8 4 2 2 10 22 24 Los Angeles 8 5 3 0 10 19 20 Calgary 6 3 1 2 8 20 20 Edmonton 8 1 6 1 3 23 35 Friday: Winnipeg 4, St. Louis 3, SO Anaheim 3, Phoenix 2, SO Saturday’s Games Vancouver at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Edmonton at Ottawa, 12 p.m. Colorado at Buffalo, 5 p.m. Nashville at Montreal, 5 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Florida, 5 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Columbus at Washington, 5 p.m. Toronto at Chicago, 5 p.m. Detroit at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Calgary at San Jose, 8 p.m. Dallas at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.
Jets 4, blues 3, So
St. louis 2 0 1 0—3 Winnipeg 1 0 2 0—4 Winnipeg won shootout 3-2 First Period—1, St. Louis, Backes 6 (Oshie), 8:43. 2, Winnipeg, Jokinen 2 (Halischuk), 15:30. 3, St. Louis, Steen 6, 18:14. Second Period—None. third Period—4, St. Louis, Steen 7 (Backes, Bouwmeester), 3:34. 5, Winnipeg, Kane 4 (Little), 13:13. 6, Winnipeg, Enstrom 1 (Byfuglien, Wheeler), 18:06. overtime—None. Shootout— Winnipeg (Jokinen GWG). Shots on Goal—St. Louis 11-12-81—32. Winnipeg 9-10-8-2—29. Power-play opportunities—St. Louis 0 of 3; Winnipeg 0 of 2. Goalies—St. Louis, Elliott 0-0-1 (29 shots-26 saves). Winnipeg, Pavelec 3-4-0 (32-29). a—15,004 (15,004). t—2:50.
Coyotes 3, Ducks 2, So
Phoenix 0 1 1 0—2 anaheim 1 0 1 0—3 anaheim won shootout 4-3 First Period—1, Anaheim, Selanne 2 (Perreault), 6:38. Second Period—2, Phoenix, Vermette 2 (Yandle, Ribeiro), 11:11. third Period—3, Phoenix, Klesla 1 (Hanzal, Doan), 7:54. 4, Anaheim, Bonino 3, 17:58. overtime—None. Shootout—Anaheim (Silfverberg GWG). Shots on Goal—Phoenix 12-12-62—32. Anaheim 11-14-10-4—39. Power-play opportunities—Phoenix 0 of 6; Anaheim 0 of 4. Goalies—Phoenix, Smith 3-2-2 (39 shots-37 saves). Anaheim, Hiller 4-0-0 (32-30). a—13,206 (17,174). t—2:52.
PGa toUR Shriners Hospitals for Children open Friday
at tPC Summerlin las Vegas Purse: $6 million yardage: 7,243; Par: 71 Second Round Webb Simpson John Senden Jeff Overton Chesson Hadley J.J. Henry Jason Bohn Ryan Moore Russell Knox Luke Guthrie Stephen Ames Brian Stuard Ryo Ishikawa Brendan Steele Daniel Summerhays Brian Davis Morgan Hoffmann Seung-Yul Noh Freddie Jacobson Kevin Stadler Carl Pettersson Jhonattan Vegas Brice Garnett Brendon Todd James Driscoll Jonathan Byrd Greg Chalmers Andrew Svoboda Charley Hoffman Harris English David Toms Vijay Singh Kevin Penner Ben Crane Justin Hicks Troy Matteson Charles Howell III Chad Campbell Ted Potter, Jr. Jose Coceres Kyle Reifers Brian Harman George McNeill William McGirt Ricky Barnes Cameron Tringale Marc Turnesa Hudson Swafford
64-63—127 65-66—131 63-68—131 65-66—131 60-71—131 67-64—131 69-63—132 67-65—132 69-64—133 65-68—133 68-65—133 67-66—133 67-67—134 66-68—134 68-66—134 67-67—134 69-65—134 67-67—134 70-65—135 68-67—135 68-67—135 67-68—135 67-68—135 63-72—135 63-72—135 67-68—135 68-67—135 66-70—136 69-67—136 68-68—136 67-69—136 71-65—136 68-68—136 71-65—136 67-69—136 67-69—136 71-66—137 69-68—137 67-70—137 69-68—137 70-67—137 70-67—137 71-66—137 66-71—137 66-71—137 68-69—137 68-69—137
lPGa toUR KEb Hanabank Championship
Friday at Sky 72 Golf Club, ocean Course Incheon, South Korea Purse: $1.9 million yardage: 6,364; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round Katherine Hull-Kirk 36-31—67 Anna Nordqvist 33-34—67 Ju Young Pak 34-33—67 Amy Yang 32-35—67 Caroline Hedwall 35-33—68 Carlota Ciganda 35-34—69 Ha-Neul Kim 34-35—69 Brittany Lang 36-33—69 Suzann Pettersen 35-34—69 Jenny Shin 34-35—69 Jiyai Shin 36-33—69 Michelle Wie 35-34—69 Natalie Gulbis 33-37—70 Inbee Park 33-37—70 Jane Park 35-35—70 So Yeon Ryu 36-34—70 Giulia Sergas 35-35—70 Na Yeon Choi 33-38—71 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 35-36—71 Vicky Hurst 34-37—71 Eun-Hee Ji 38-33—71 Hyo Joo Kim 36-35—71 Sei Young Kim 36-35—71 Jessica Korda 37-34—71 Meena Lee 35-36—71 Brittany Lincicome 34-37—71 Pernilla Lindberg 33-38—71 Mo Martin 37-34—71 Hee Kyung Seo 37-34—71 Lexi Thompson 35-36—71 Ayako Uehara 34-37—71 Alison Walshe 34-37—71
EURoPEaN/PGa toUR oF aUStRalaSIa Perth International open
Friday at lake Karrinyup Country Club Perth, australia Purse: $2 million yardage: 7,143; Par: 72 Second Round Peter Hedblom, Swe 68-69—137 Ross Fisher, Eng 72-67—139 Soren Hansen, Den 71-69—140 Clint Rice, Aus 68-72—140 Josh Younger, Aus 70-70—140 Jin Jeong, Kor 68-72—140 Dimitrios Papadatos, Aus 69-71—140 Brody Ninyette, Aus 72-69—141 James Nitties, Aus 68-73—141 Bo Van Pelt, USA 70-71—141 Richard Finch, Eng 72-69—141 Marcus Fraser, Aus 72-70—142 F.Andersson Hed, Swe 69-73—142 Jason Scrivener, Aus 75-67—142 Michael Hoey, NIr 73-69—142 Ryan Haller, Aus 72-70—142 Nick O’Hern, Aus 69-73—142 Mark Brown, NZl 70-72—142 Nick Cullen, Aus 69-73—142 Chris Campbell, Aus 71-71—142
CHaMPIoNS toUR Greater Hickory Classic
Friday at Rock barn Golf and Spa, Jones Course Conover, N.C. Purse: $1.6 million yardage: 6,846; Par 70 (34-36) First Round Bernhard Langer 31-33—64 Dick Mast 30-34—64 Anders Forsbrand 32-32—64 John Riegger 35-30—65 Olin Browne 33-32—65 Mike Goodes 33-33—66 Brad Bryant 33-33—66 Mark Brooks 33-34—67 Bob Tway 33-34—67 Joel Edwards 32-35—67 John Inman 32-35—67 Joe Daley 34-33—67 Michael Allen 33-34—67 Russ Cochran 34-33—67 Colin Montgomerie 34-33—67 Tom Pernice Jr. 33-34—67 Mark McNulty 34-33—67 David Frost 32-35—67 Fred Funk 33-34—67 Willie Wood 32-35—67
AUTO RACING aUto RaCING INDyCaR MaVtV 500 lineup
after Friday qualifying; race Saturday at auto Club Speedway Fontana, Calif. lap length: 2 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (12) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 220.775 mph. 2. (3) Helio Castroneves, DallaraChevrolet, 219.677. 3. (2) A J Allmendinger, Dallara-Chevrolet, 218.894. 4. (7) Sebastien Bourdais, DallaraChevrolet, 218.513. 5. (83) Charlie Kimball, DallaraHonda, 217.986. 6. (16) James Jakes, Dallara-Honda, 217.979. 7. (9) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 217.979. 8. (25) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Chevrolet, 217.958. 9. (20) Ed Carpenter, Dallara-Chevrolet, 217.932. 10. (67) Josef Newgarden, DallaraHonda, 217.871. 11. (27) James Hinchcliffe, DallaraChevrolet, 217.798. 12. (11) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 217.566. 13. (10) Alex Tagliani, Dallara-Honda, 217.419. 14. (5) Carlos Munoz, Dallara-Chevrolet, 217.05. 15. (1) Ryan Hunter-Reay, DallaraChevrolet, 216.898.
Howl: Neal making changes
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Parker, Dawkins put on a show
Continued from Page B-1
By Joedy McCreary
The Associated Press
DURHAM, N.C. — Freshman phenom Jabari Parker went coastto-coast with rebounds, Rodney Hood slashed to the rim and Andre Dawkins knocked down 3-pointers. During Duke’s first public intrasquad scrimmage of the preseason, the up-tempo team barely resembled last year’s group. The scrimmage was the centerpiece of Duke’s “Countdown to Craziness” celebration Friday — an annual night of frivolity before coach Mike Krzyzewski’s team gets back to the serious business of preparing for the season. Krzyzewski told the crowd that “we’re trying to change the style of play” and that “we’re going to play a lot faster.” Parker had 16 points in one 15-minute scrimmage, then eight points, eight rebounds and a highlight-reel dunk in another one. The first 10 points of the first game were scored by players who didn’t see a minute of court time at Duke last season. That includes two redshirts: Hood, who transferred from Mississippi State, and Dawkins, who sat out while continuing to deal with his sister’s death when he was a freshman in 2009. Dawkins received one of the louder ovations — along with Parker — during the player intro-
W 6 6 5 5 4 3 2 1 W 6 3 3 2 2 2 0 1
GolF GOLF
Jabari Parker of the Blue team and Semi Ojeleye of the White team reach for a rebound during Friday night’s Blue-White scrimmage Friday in Durham, N.C. GERRY BROOME/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ductions and screamed “I’m back, baby” to the crowd. Then, the first time he touched the ball, he buried a 3 over Rasheed Sulaimon, prompting the Cameron Crazies to chant “Dre all day.” “It was cool to get that kind of reaction from the crowd — a crowd I haven’t been around for a year,” Dawkins said, adding that his 3 “felt pretty good. Wish I had hit a couple more.” While the Blue Devils have been practicing for three weeks, this was the first chance for fans to get a look at the highly regarded freshman class — Parker, Semi Ojeleye
and Matt Jones — in game situations. Parker and Dawkins led the Blue team during the first scrimmage while Hood and Ojeleye were on White. Dawkins hit two free throws with 0.9 seconds left in Blue’s 36-34 win. Then they switched up the teams, with four probable starters — Parker, Hood, Quinn Cook and Amile Jefferson — plus Dawkins and Ojeleye on White. Parker had the move of the night, a reverse, one-handed slam that even had Krzyzewski hiding a smile in White’s 33-30 win.
and to the tune of blaring rock music. Parking his rumbling ride near midcourt, he dismounted and — decked in blue jeans and a black leather jacket — greeted the fans and thanked them for jumping on board for what should be another huge year for Lobo basketball. “I’ve been talking about it for six years, but I guess now that I’m the boss I am allowed to do it,” Neal said, adding that the biggest hurdle to pulling it off came from UNM athletic director Paul Krebs. “He wanted to know if I had insurance,” Neal joked. Friday was the first day that college teams could officially begin preseason workouts. The Howl was a free public event that allowed fans to enter The Pit and watch both the men’s and women’s teams on the floor as well as get autographs. Just hours before it started, the men’s team learned that it was ranked No. 20 in the preseason USA Today Coaches’ Poll, three spots ahead of UCLA. The Bruins, of course, are forever linked to Neal and Lobo basketball now that Steve Alford — Neal’s best friend and longtime assistant — spurned a 10-year contract extension from UNM and moved to Westwood. Offered a spot on Alford’s staff, Neal chose to stay in Albuquerque and was promoted to UNM’s top job shortly after the Lobos were bounced from the NCAA Tournament last March. His entrance on Friday night showed how he’s already making a change. The custom for Lobos coaches is to don a cherry red blazer and fashion it like a beacon for UNM hoops. In a pre-Howl video montage, Neal was shown thumbing through his closet and bypassing the blazer in favor of the black leather jacket. “We’ve got the best fans and the best facility in the country,” he yelled, bringing the crowd to its feet. UNM opens the season in two weeks with the first of two exhibition games, facing Eastern New Mexico on Nov. 2 and then Jamestown four days later. The regular season opener is Nov. 9 in The Pit against Alabama A&M. The defending Mountain West Confer-
ence champions are seeking their fifth title in six years, but on Friday all the fans cared about was greeting the familiar faces and welcoming the new players. Returning starters Cameron Bairstow, Hugh Greenwood, Kendall Williams and Los Alamos High grad Alex Kirk all received ovations so loud that they drowned out public address announcer Stu Walker. Among the newcomers are freshmen Cullen Neal, the coach’s son, and another 7-footer in Obij Aget. Aget joins a crowded low post dominated by two of the country’s best big men, 7-foot junior Alex Kirk and 6-9 senior Cameron Bairstow. Friday’s Howl lasted three hours. The UNM women kicked things off with an autograph session, followed by a brief practice. Along the way were a dunk contest and 3-point shooting competition. UNM women’s head coach Yvonne Sanchez said it’s easy for the players to get caught up in the excitement of the Lobo Howl. “I told the kids not to be nervous because it’s just a practice, but that’s like telling a freshman not to be homesick,” she said. HOwl nOTeS u Antiesha Brown won the women’s 3-point shooting contest, beating Alex Lapeyrolerie in the finals. A Clovis High grad and one of two transfers from Texas Tech, Brown used a late surge to hit 10 treys while Lapeyrolerie, a freshman from Highland Village, Texas, hit seven. u Cullen Neal won the men’s 3-point contest. u Deshawn Delaney won the dunk contest, beating defending champion Bairstow and Nick Banyard in the finals. Z-facTOR Highly touted recruit Zylan Cheatham was on hand for the Howl. Fifteen minutes before the men’s team took the floor, he found a seat behind the Lobos bench just as fans waved white placards with a red and black “Z” on them. A 6-foot-7 power forward from Phoenix, Cheatham is weighing scholarship offers from UNM, San Diego State, Arizona State, Memphis and Washington. The Pit fans chanted “We Want Z” as he filmed it all on his smartphone.
SPORTS
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 2 p.m. on FS1 — NASCAR Truck Series: Fred’s 250, in Talladega, Ala. 4:30 p.m. on FS1 — American Le Mans Series: Petit Le Mans, in Braselton, Ga. 5 p.m. on NBCSN — IRL Indy Lights: Lefty’s Kids Club 100, in Fontana, Calif. (same-day tape) 6 p.m. on NBCSN — IRL IndyCar: MAVTV 500, in Fontana, Calif. BOXING 7:45 p.m. on HBO — Champion Mike Alvarado (34-1-0) vs. Ruslan Provodnikov (22-2-0) for WBO junior welterweight title, in Broomfield, Colo.
Santa Fe High senior Taylor Cherwinski runs from the 30-yard line during the first half of Friday’s game against Los Alamos. The Demons beat the Hilltoppers 28-9. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Demons: Errors prove costly for Hilltoppers Continued from Page B-1 “No disrespect to Los Alamos, but the only team that was going to beat us on this field tonight was us,” Demons head coach Ray Holladay said. That was apparent as the second half played out in favor of Santa Fe High. After going 69 yards on its opening drive to score on Romero’s recovery of Mario Holladay’s fumble at the goal line in the end zone to cut Los Alamos’ lead to 9-7, the Demons started the next drive at their 47 thanks to a 9-yard punt return by Gonzales. But it was at the end of that play that Gonzales was driven into the ground on the Los Alamos tackle. After a few minutes, he got up, but he never returned to the field. However, it seemed to galvanize his teammates. Fullback Rayes Montano plowed into several Hilltoppers on his way to a 10-yard run, and it set the tone for the rest of the night. Eight consecutive running plays followed, and it ended with Romero driving a pile of Hilltoppers into the end zone
for a 7-yard touchdown run to give the Demons a 14-9 lead with 9:33 left. Santa Fe High ran for 226 yards in the second half and 378 overall. Gonzales had 82 yards on 10 carries before getting hurt, while Montano had 95 on 17 carries. “It was nice,” Montano said of the workhorse running. “I worked my [butt] off. It was nice.” The Demons threw the ball just three times, and the only completion was a 3-yarder from Taylor Cherwinski, playing quarterback in place of a suspended Robert Corriz, to Romero in the second quarter. Corriz didn’t play because of an ejection from last week’s 27-9 win over Española Valley. The difference between the Demons’ success in the second half and the lack of it in the first was simply execution. Four of their first half drives reached Los Alamos territory, but there were no points to show for it. Cherwinski was stopped short of a first down by a yard on a fourth down-and-5 play at the Los Alamos 22 on the open-
ing drive. Holladay fumbled a handoff that the Hilltoppers recovered at the Los Alamos 22 on the next drive. Santa Fe High’s final drive of the first half died when Montano was stopped inches from the goal line on the final play before halftime. “It should have been 21-9 [in favor of Santa Fe High] at the half,” Holladay said. “If Taylor keeps it and runs to the corner on the wedge option instead of giving it [on the final play], there’s seven. If Mario doesn’t fumble and whoever else fumbled, it’s 21-9 at the half.” Los Alamos head coach Garett Williams felt the second half essentially was decided before Romero’s injury. The Hilltoppers forced an incompletion by Cherwinski on a second-and-13 at the Hilltoppers’ 24, but Los Alamos was called for roughing the passer. It put the ball at the 12, and Cherwinski gained four yards on a keeper that set up Holladay’s run/Romero’s fumble recovery. On the ensuing drive, Hilltoppers quarterback Brice Van Etten didn’t see an open Simon
Heath, and instead was sacked for a 14-yard loss on third down. “What it came down to in the second half was the same thing is has been all season,” Williams said. “Costly, costly mistakes.” One of the costliest was a special teams mistake on Heath in the fourth quarter when he shanked a punt from the Los Alamos’ 6. It was so bad, he downed the ball at the 2 for a net kick of minus-4 yards. Three plays later, Cherwinski scored on a quarterback sneak for a 21-9 lead with 6:19 left. It was the first action for Cherwinski since suffering a concussion against Piedra Vista, and he performed admirably in place of Corriz. The bigger return, though, was linebacker Isaiah Taylor after missing seven weeks with a knee injury. How much of a difference did Taylor make? “First game [against Grants], he had 18 tackles, an interception, a blocked kick, three sacks,” Holladay said. Perhaps that was the biggest light that shined at Ivan Head Stadium on Friday night.
Jaguars: Capital defense anticipated speed Continued from Page B-1 managing the game and being very intelligent.” In addition to the offensive line, the Jaguars defense also contributed to the scoring effort. Five Española turnovers turned into touchdowns. All of them gave Capital possession on the Sundevils’ side of the field. “When the defense gives you the ball in a good situation, the offense aught to produce,” Moon said. Española (1-7, 0-2) has allowed at least 48 points in
four of its last five games. Sundevils head coach Miguel Medina said he believes his system can work, but with a starting lineup that comprises mostly sophomores, Medina said they need a little more time to mature. “We have a great system on offense and a great system on defense, but we’re just not executing because we’re just not ready,” Medina said. “Football mentality-wise, we’re just a JV team. We’re just young. When we do make plays, they’re big plays and they’re
exciting, but we just don’t make enough of them.” The Sundevils have scored only 13 points in their last six games, but they have some playmaking ability in running backs Justin Martinez and Lucas Bustos, something that concerned Moon coming into the game. “We were very worried about their speed, so the defense did a super nice job anticipating the width and the speed that they were facing,” Moon said. The Jaguars were able to stop the speed of the young Sundev-
ils and were able to get their first official win of the season. After having to forfeit their first win over Socorro for using ineligible players, this one is fair and square. “We don’t feel cheated this time,” Larranaga said. The Jaguars can continue to feel like kings until Monday, when they prepare to face another district foe in Bernalillo. “We’re glad we started off the district this way,” Brown said. The Sundevils will travel to Los Alamos next week, seeking their first district win.
Lobos: Vega brings self-confidence to field Continued from Page B-1 ing wounded in recent weeks: Gautsche with a right knee injury in last week’s loss to Wyoming and Mitchem with a concussion and back issue in a win two weeks ago against New Mexico State. Both may see action against the Aggies. They may not. In that regard, it’s time for UNM fans to say hello to David Vega. The Lobos’ third-string quarterback, he has seen limited duty the last couple of games thanks to a lopsided score and the ongoing injury bug sweeping the Lobo backfield. He threw only one pass in the loss to Wyoming. It went for a touchdown. He’ll need to do more of the same against a Utah State team that is dealing with its own set of issues, namely the seasonending knee injury to star quar-
terback Chuckie Keeton. “Well, David only threw one pass, so I’m not ready to nominate him for the Heisman Trophy,” Davie said. “But that one pass did produce results.” What Vega brings to the field is an overwhelming sense of self-confidence. Davie has spoken about it in the past and said it’s his intangibles that make him more relaxed about the prospect of facing Utah State without Gautsche and Mitchem. As for the status of those two, Davie isn’t saying. He told a group of media members last weekend that he would not address either player’s injury, and then he had the UNM sports information department solidify that statement by issuing a news release later in the day that said he would not respond to injury related queries. “I think, in the interest of
fairness, that’s the right thing to do,” Davie said. At 2-4 overall and 0-2 in the MWC, the Lobos are looking for a spark that a player like Vega — a former high school standout at Roswell Goddard — might be able to provide. He certainly possesses the speed to run UNM’s option attack and has the arm to move the ball vertically, if warranted. Utah State comes in at 3-4 overall and 2-1 in league play. The Aggies have had some high-profile losses, one to Southern California in the Los Angeles Coliseum and others to Brigham Young, Bosie State and Utah. Their wins all have been blowouts, over Air Force, San Jose State and Weber State. The school began the season with an online push to get Keeton some Heisman love, going as far as to launch a web-
site with videos, photos and stats. The team has inserted Craig Harrison and Dare Garretson in his place. GAME NOTES u Utah State has dropped two straight games. It hasn’t lost three in a row since 2010, a span of 39 games. u Saturday’s game kicks off at 7 p.m. and will be broadcast on regional television network, ROOT Sports. u It’s been a busy weekend on UNM’s south campus. In addition to Saturday’s football game, it also hosted the annual Lobo Howl and women’s soccer Friday night, and it will have a men’s soccer match on Saturday before the football game. Combine that with the ongoing renovations at Lobo Field for baseball and softball, and parking has become an issue. Fans are encouraged to arrive early for Saturday’s game.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL 10 a.m. on CBS — Georgia at Vanderbilt 10 a.m. on ESPN — South Carolina at Tennessee 10 a.m. on ESPN2 — Minnesota at Northwestern 10 a.m. on ESPNEWS — Navy at Toledo 10 a.m. on FOX — TCU at Oklahoma St. 10 a.m. on FSN — Southern Miss. at East Carolina 10 a.m. on FS1 — Texas Tech at West Virginia 1:30 p.m. on ABC — UCLA at Stanford 1:30 p.m. on CBS — Auburn at Texas A&M 1:30 p.m. on ESPN — Oklahoma at Kansas 1:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Iowa at Ohio St. or UCLA at Stanford 1:30 p.m. on ESPNEWS — BYY at Houston 5 p.m. on ESPN — Arkansas at Alabama 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — LSU at Mississippi 5:30 p.m. on NBC — Southern Cal at Notre Dame 6:07 p.m. on ABC — Florida St. at Clemson 7 p.m. on Root Sports (Comcast channel 21; DirecTV channel 683; Dish Network channel 541) — Utah State at UNM 8 p.m. on FS1 — Washington at Oregon 8:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Oregon St. at California GOLF 9 a.m. on TGC — LPGA: KEB HanaBank Championship second round, in Incheon, South Korea (same-day tape) Noon on TGC — Champions Tour: Greater Hickory Classic second round, in Conover, N.C. 3 p.m. on TGC — PGA Tour: Shriners Hospitals for Children Open third round, in Las Vegas 10:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour: Perth International third round, in Perth, Australia (delayed tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5:30 p.m. on FOX — American League Championship Series, Game 6, Detroit at Boston SOCCER 5:40 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League: Liverpool at Newcastle 7:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League: Southampton at Manchester United 10:30 p.m. on NBC — Premier League: Manchester City at West Ham 12:30 p.m. on NBC — MLS: Seattle at Dallas WOMEN’S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL 5:30 p.m. on FSN — Iowa St. at Texas
Today on radio Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7 p.m. on KOB-AM 770 — Utah State at UNM
PREP FOOTBALL SCORES Animas 73, NMSD 20 Atrisco Heritage 23, Rio Grande 0 Capital 49, Española Valley 0 Carlsbad 16, La Cueva 0 Centennial High School 21, Ruidoso 20 Cleveland 52, Hobbs 12 Clovis 42, Sandia 24 Cobre 41, Lordsburg 27 Deming 41, El Paso Cathedral 0 Dexter 40, Tornillo, Texas 2 Escalante 70, Shiprock 6 Fort Sumner 28, Melrose 7 Gadsden 27, Oñate 20 Gateway Christian 58, Carrizozo 0 Goddard 55, Lovington 0 Hagerman 42, Jal 0
Hatch Valley 56, Tularosa 12 Hondo 49, Roy/Wagon Mound 0 Kirtland Central 25, Bloomfield 14 Laguna-Acoma 50, Crownpoint 0 Lake Arthur 62, San Jon 6 Las Cruces 50, Alamogordo 0 Los Lunas 49, Grants 12 Navajo Prep 50, Newcomb 0 Roswell 38, Portales 21 Santa Fe 28, Los Alamos 9 Santa Rosa 27, Estancia 0 Silver 42, Santa Teresa 7 Taos 45, West Las Vegas 0 Texico 21, Tucumcari 20 Valencia 46, Miyamura 20 West Mesa 66, Highland 28
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.
Today Football — Hot Springs at Santa Fe Indian School, 1 p.m. Boys Soccer — Bernalillo at Capital, 11 a.m. St. Michael’s at Portales, noon Desert Academy at Monte del Sol (MRC), 1 p.m. Robertson at Bloomfield, 1 p.m. Los Alamos at Piedra Vista, 3 p.m. Girls Soccer — Bernalillo at Capital, 11 a.m. Santa Fe High at Sandia Preparatory, 11 a.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Bloomfield, 11 a.m. Piedra Vista at Los Alamos, 1 p.m. St. Michael’s at Portales, 2 p.m. Volleyball — Moriarty JV at Questa, 1 p.m. To’hajiilee at Desert Academy (Larson), 2 p.m. Evangel Christian at Santa Fe Waldorf (Christian Life), 3 p.m. Bernalillo at Los Alamos, 6 p.m. Santa Fe High at Española Valley, 6:30 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 6:30 p.m. Taos at Raton, 6:30 p.m. Monte del Sol at Santa Fe Preparatory, 6:30 p.m. McCurdy at Mesa Vista, 7 p.m. Cross Country — Santa Fe High, Capital, St. Michael’s, Santa Fe Indian School, Santa Fe Preparatory, Academy for Technology and the Classics, Desert Academy, Pojoaque Valley, Los Alamos, Española Valley, Peñasco, Mesa Vista, Taos, Pecos, West Las Vegas, Las Vegas Robertson, Mora at Rio Rancho Jamboree at Rio Rancho High School, 9 a.m.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Submit your announcement
u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
B-4
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
SOCCER
NFL
Wambach: Marriage not about politics
Teams take threat of MRSA seriously By Eddie Pells
The Associated Press
At the first sign a potentially deadly strain of staph infection was coursing through the Washington Redskins’ locker room, owner Daniel Snyder told his trainer to spare no expense. So, Bubba Tyer embarked on a renovation that ran nearly $80,000. “A major, major project,’ ” Tyer said, referring to the 2006 remodeling of the team’s headquarters. “But it was something that had to be done.’ ” As the recent cases of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection in Tampa Bay have reminded players, owners and trainers across the league, the NFL has safety issues not only on the playing fields, but lurking in the corner of its locker rooms as well. Scrapes and cuts can be every bit as dangerous as the hard hits and concussions that have grabbed so many headlines lately. In Washington, five players were afflicted with MRSA in 2006. The most notable case was that of defensive lineman Brandon Noble, who nearly lost his leg because of complications related to the infection. “A tiny little thing that I cannot see,” Noble called the infection in a blog on the Infectious Diseases Society of America website. “It has hurt me more than any of the others combined and had a hand in ending my career.” By the time the infection had reached the Redskins, it wasn’t a complete mystery in the NFL. The St. Louis Rams had encountered a widespread outbreak three years earlier and used bleach to disinfect their entire facility. Snyder wanted a more high-tech approach. Benches in the locker room were ripped out, replaced by stools in front of each player’s locker, so no infection could spread across the surfaces where the players sat. A new ventilation system was installed to dry the sweat-drenched pads. Ultraviolet lights were put in to kill infection. The hot tub was torn out and replaced, and the entire building — meeting rooms, weight rooms, locker room — was sprayed to eradicate any lingering infection on surfaces. “And education was a key factor,” Tyer said. “It’s important that guys look for it and are very aware of it.” Signs went up around the team facility, reminding players to shower before entering hot tubs and not to share razors. Large containers of antibacterial soap were installed on the walls. Lessons learned in St. Louis, Washington and elsewhere were shared across the league and are every bit as relevant today. “I constantly talk to the players not only about hydration and nutrition, but also cleaning up in the locker room, making sure it’s clean, making sure that we’re wiping down our helmets and things like that,” Bills coach Doug Marrone said. MRSA germs are staph
bacteria that are resistant to many antibiotics. MRSA can live on the skin or in the nose without causing symptoms. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says about 2 percent of Americans are carriers. The germs typically spread by skin-to-skin contact or by touching items used by a carrier or someone who’s infected. Infection can occur when the germs enter a cut or scrape. The result may be a red pus-filled pimple or skin boil, often mistaken as a spider bite. The surrounding skin can be red, swollen and painful. Left untreated, MRSA infections can become dangerous and potentially lifethreatening if they spread into muscle, blood, bones or the lungs. In 2003 in St. Louis, the MRSA outbreak began with players who had turf burns on their elbows, knees and forearms. They developed large infected skin abscesses that had to be surgically drained. MRSA was found in team whirlpools and taping gel, and from nose swabs of 42 percent of the players and Rams staff. “They’re often working out together, in close physical proximity, they often have skin abrasions and wounds, they often share towels, sometimes to wipe off their sweat, and some have a “lucky” towel or jersey that they don’t wash, which may become contaminated with MRSA,” said Dr. Victoria Fraser, chair of the department of medicine at Washington University in St. Louis, who helped the CDC investigate the Rams’ outbreak. In Cleveland, a number of staph infections, including MRSA, dogged the club through much of the last decade and led to two lawsuits against the team, contending the Browns failed to sanitize equipment. The Browns, who settled lawsuits filed by former receiver Joe Jurevicius and offensive lineman LeCharles Bentley, said their hygiene practices are state of the art. An NFL physicians’ survey determined there were 33 MRSA infections across the league from 2006-08. Two occurred in San Francisco, where receiver Josh Morgan reportedly lost about 15 pounds at the start of the 2008 season. This year in Tampa, guard Carl Nicks, kicker Lawrence Tynes and cornerback Johnthan Banks have been diagnosed with MRSA. After initially treating his infection with antibiotics, Nicks had a recurrence and needed surgery. Tynes is on the non-football injury list; Banks has not been sidelined. The Bucs brought in a California-based company to make sure the infection is completely removed from the building. Not an easy task, and one that must be completed thoroughly. And the latest reminder of the hidden dangers of a locker room. Said Dr. Buddy Creech, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University: “People need to pay it [MRSA] a healthy respect for what it can do.”
Buccaneers guard Carl Nicks participates in a drill during training camp in July. The two-time All-Pro was diagnosed with an antibiotic-resistant staph infection the following month. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
By Jim Vertuno
The Associated Press
The Cardinals’ Yadier Molina and Trevor Rosenthal celebrate Friday after winning the National League championship series against the Dodgers. DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NLCS CARDINALS 9, DODGERS 0
Cards advance to World Series By R.B. Fallstrom
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Carlos Beltran and the Cardinals stunned Clayton Kershaw with a four-run third inning, rookie Michael Wacha was again magnificent on the mound and St. Louis advanced to its second World Series in three seasons by roughing up the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-0 in Game 6 of the NL championship series Friday night. Matt Carpenter sparked St. Louis’ big inning with a one-out double on the 11th pitch of his atbat. Beltran singled him home and the Cardinals quickly removed all the suspense surrounding a team that squandered a 3-1 series lead in the NLCS last fall against San Francisco. Game 1 of the World Series is Wednesday at the winner of the ALCS between the Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers. After losing Game 5 in Los Angeles, the Cardinals turned to Wacha once again. The righthander was even better in outpitching Kershaw for the second time this series. Wacha was selected MVP of the series after giving up two hits in seven innings Friday. It was 52 degrees at game time, a 23-degree drop from the Kershaw-Wacha matchup in Game 2 six days earlier, and Kershaw never warmed up. The top NL CY Young Award candidate was knocked out of a start for the first time this season without finishing the fifth.
Beltran had three hits and drove in two runs while facing Kershaw and made a spectacular catch in right field, helping him advance to the World Series for the first time in his 16-year career. Perhaps showing the Cardinals weren’t stressed by the possibility of a second straight postseason meltdown, Games 1 and 5 starter Joe Kelly had a post-national anthem staredown against Dodgers reserve outfielder Scott Van Slyke that was broken up by a fed-up home plate umpire Greg Gibson after several minutes. Kelly blinked first, all in good fun but, when it counted, St. Louis wouldn’t budge. The Cardinals jumped on Kershaw in the third, batting around. After Wacha grounded out, Carpenter doubled in a gritty at-bat. Beltran singled him home for the game’s first run. With two outs, Yadier Molina added an RBI single, Shane Robinson drove in two runs with a single in his first career postseason start after replacing slumping Jon Jay — and advanced to second base on Dodgers rookie Yasiel Puig’s first of two errors. The Cuban defector also struck out twice and was booed heartily. Kershaw needed 48 pitches, the most pitches of his career in one inning, in the third. He took exception one pitch in particular, complaining to plate umpire Greg Gibson after Matt Adams’ full-count walk loaded the bases.
SAN ANTONIO — For Abby Wambach, marrying partner and professional teammate Sarah Huffman was purely a statement of love, not politics. Yet the star of the U.S. women’s national soccer team understands that as soon as news broke of their Oct. 5 ceremony in Hawaii, she became perhaps the highest-profile athlete in the national debate over same-sex marriage and a Abby Wambach role model for advocates. “I know that I’ll end up being a role model for many, many people out there for all kinds of reasons,” Wambach said this week in her first public comments since getting married. “My first hope is for being a genuine, honest and good person, then a great soccer player and then down the line, the choice I’ve made to marry not only my best friend and teammate, but the love of my life.” Wambach and the national team play Australia on Sunday in San Antonio. In an interview this week, the 2012 FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year and international career goals leader smiled as she showed off her wedding ring and talked about the reaction to her wedding. “I’ve heard from a lot of people. … The response has been awesome,” Wambach said. “I expected some backlash on some level from some people who don’t agree, but I haven’t really had any of that. … I’m pleasantly surprised by that.” Wambach and Huffman are teammates on the Western New York Flash in the National Women’s Soccer League. They had their ceremony on the island of Kauai, which they picked because a previous trip there had been canceled. Wambach said she didn’t know Hawaii lawmakers are scheduled to meet later this month in a special session to consider legalizing gay marriage.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Seminoles, Tigers set for showdown By Pete Iacobelli
The Associated Press
CLEMSON, S.C. — Get ready for the first College Football Playoff game when No. 5 Florida State and No. 3 Clemson meet on Saturday. While the four-team chase for the BCS title doesn’t start until 2014, the playoffs will probably look and feel very much like Saturday night’s Atlantic Coast Conference showdown between the Seminoles (5-0) and Tigers (6-0) in a jam-packed stadium, ESPN College GameDay will be on campus with a track to the national title game at stake. There will even be at least one playoff selection committee
member on hand: Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich. Tigers quarterback Tajh Boyd and Florida State’s Jameis Winston say their teams are keeping the frenzied atmosphere in perspective as they get ready for the ACC’s first matchup of top-five teams since 2005. “We’re all about our goals,” said Boyd, who leads the ACC with 297 yards passing a game. “The next goal for us is win the division. This sets the line for us to do that. The goal after that is to win the conference. This sets the line to do that.” Boyd became the school’s all-time passing yardage leader with his 14th career 300-yard game in a 24-14 victory over Boston College last week.
Boyd’s 164 yards shy of joining ex-North Carolina State quarterback Philip Rivers and former Duke passer Thad Lewis as the only ACC players to reach 10,000 yards passing. Winston, a redshirt freshman, has elevated himself alongside Boyd in Heisman Trophy talk with his play so far. Winston has thrown two more TD passes than Boyd (17 to 15) in one less game. He’s also shown poise likely to serve him well when the Death Valley crowd turns the volume up to 11. “They have outstanding players. They have a great offense,” Winston said. “They have a very athletic defense, a great defense we’re going to have to prepare well for.”
Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston passes the ball during the Sept. 28 game against Boston College. Winston and the No. 5 Seminoles will play No. 3 Clemson on Saturday in South Carolina. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Beyond the game of the week, five things to know By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press
The Atlantic Coast Conference doesn’t take center stage during the football season all that often, so let’s give the conference better known for basketball a chance to stick its chest out this week. No. 5 Florida State and No. 3 Clemson deftly dodged upsets and now get together for the game of the week. It’s just the fourth matchup of top-five teams in ACC history and first since 2005. The winner will emerge as a serious national championship contender. A serious Heisman Trophy contender also could emerge. Clemson quarter Tajh Boyd and Florida State’s fabulous redshirt freshman Jameis Winston are both putting up numbers worthy of Heisman attention. Beyond the Dabo and Jimbo show in Death Valley, here are five things to know during Week 8 of the college football season.
Different story: Southern California is at Notre Dame this week. The Trojans and Fighting Irish have already combined for four losses and one coach firing. The storied rivalry hasn’t quite been as glamorous lately. This will mark the third time in the last four seasons that neither team has been ranked coming into the game, and the fourth straight season the Trojans are unranked when they play the Irish. Bears’ attack: No. 12 Baylor fell off its 70-points-per-game pace last week and returns home this week to face Iowa State. Expect another Bears blitz from quarterback Bryce Petty and RB Lache Seastrunk. The Cyclones rank last in the Big 12 in yards allowed per game (447.6) and are second-tolast in yards allowed per play (5.64). Mauk to start: No. 14 Missouri returns home to face No. 22 Florida and its nasty defense with quarterback Maty Mauk making his first start. The redshirt freshman steps
in for the injured James Franklin. Mauk is known for a quick release and decent mobility that he showed off in last week’s big win over Georgia. On a roll: UNLV (4-2) has won four straight games, doubling last season’s win total. In fact, the Rebels have won only two games in each of the last three seasons under coach Bobby Hauk — so who cares if the Rebels have beaten up on bad teams to get where they are heading into a road game against No. 17 Fresno State? The Rebels’ solid pass defense will be challenged by Bulldogs quarterback Derek Carr. Big Ten expectations: Illinois won its first two games and three of its first four, giving hope that coach Tim Beckman’s second season would be much better than his first (2-10). A 39-19 loss last week at Nebraska has Illini fans feeling a bit less optimistic. Illinois tries to break 15-game Big Ten losing streak against No. 25 Wisconsin.
NYSE
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Name
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Markets The weekininreview review Dow Jones industrials Close: 15,399.65 1-week change: 162.54 (1.1%)
15,800
64.15 -133.25 205.82
-2.18
28.00
MON
THUR
FRI
TUES
WED
15,600 15,400
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
15,200 15,000 14,800 14,600
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
14,400
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
Last Chg %Chg
DIARY
Volume
Name
Wk %Chg
YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg
Volume
Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg
Last
Here are the 944 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and 670 most active stocks worth more than $2 on the Nasdaq National Market. Stocks in bold are worth at least $5 and changed 10 percent or more in price during the past week. If you want your stocks to always be listed, call Bob Quick at 986-3011. Tables show name, price and net change, and the year-to-date percent change in price. Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … %YTD Chg: Percentage loss or gain for the year to date. No change indicated by … How to use: The numbers can be helpful in following stocks but as with all financial data are only one of many factors to judge a company by. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.
Stock footnotes: Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.
YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
NASDAQ National Market NATIONAL NASDAQ Name
Wk Chg
DIARY
New York Stock Exchange NEW Name
Last
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
MARKET SUMMARY 52-Week High Low
B-5
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
MARKET
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name
Div
PE
Last
Wk Chg
YTD %Chg
Wk YTD Chg %Chg
CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Last
Prev.
Last
Prev.
KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.
Last
Week ago
Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds
METALS
Prev. Last day Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.8144 0.8103 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.2528 3.2467 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1316.50 1319.25 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 21.920 21.885 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2127.50 2103.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 739.65 736.80 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1434.80 1431.90
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad call
986-3000 or Toll Free (800) 873-3362 or email us at: classad@sfnewmexican.com »real estate«
SANTA FE
SANTA FE
LOTS & ACREAGE
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
OUT OF TOWN
PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000. OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395 PLEASE SEE PHOTOS ON PECOSRIVERCLIFFHOUSE.COM
Now Showing ELDORADO
OPEN HOUSE ELDORADO. 3+ bedrooms. 2+ bath. Guest quarters. Open house Sunday, 1-4. 73 Encantado Loop. $315,000. Call 575-421-0100 for more information.
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, plus Den, 2 Fireplaces, 1920 Square Feet. Easy acces paved road, 2 car finished garage. New granite countertops in kitchen & baths. Kohler sinks & fixtures. Jennair gas cooktop. $294,500.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.
SANTA FE
Rancho Viejo Townhome $237,500
360 degree views Spectacular walking trails Automated drip watering Finished 2 car garage 2 BDR, 2 ½ bath plus office.
575-694-5444
LA CIENEGA SOUTHWEST STYLE home, 2200sf, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 + 1 garage. 16 x 26 private, well, septic, and 500 gallon propane tank. Owner owned. 2.5 acres $380,000. 505-699-6694 1804 San Felipe Circle, Beautiful midcentury multi generational Stamm Home, significant additions, upgrades, and remodeling. Must See to Believe. Main, Guest, 3,352 squ.ft., 4 bedroom, 3 bath, cul-de-sac lot on Acequia, 2 plus car garage, private well, incredible irrigated landscaping. $565,000. Sylvia, 505-577-6300.
REDUCED PRICES! 3 bedroom, 2 bath plus 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment. $380,000. 5600 sq. ft. warehouse, $280,000. 5 bedroom 4600 sq.ft. 1105 Old Taos Highway, $480,000. 3.3 acres Fin del Sendero, $145,000. 505-470-5877
TESUQUE LAND .75 acre
1 BEDROOM RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000
MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com
5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Well water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.
SCENIC DOUBLE Wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath on 2 1/2 acres. Close to Pecos River, Ilfeld Area. Asking $90,000. 407325-0253.
OFFICE FOR SALE
»rentals«
VIA CAB 2587 CALLE DELFINO Total remodel, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car, 2 Kiva, 7 skylights, tile, AC. Huge lot $290,000. 505-920-0146
NAVA ADE
ACALDE ADOBE Green and Irrigated, wood floors, brick fireplace, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car garage. Seperate Large workshop. Great Deal at $130,000. TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
LEASE & OWN Zero down! Payment exactly what owner pays. Zia Vista’s largest 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Save many thousands. Incredible "Sangre" views. 505-204-2210
426 ACRE Ranch with water rights. Adjacent to Tent Rocks National Monument. Call Bill Turner, (LIC. No. 13371) at 505-843-7643.
LOTS & ACREAGE
STUNNING VIEWS! 5.8 acres
Great in town office with reception, 5 private offices, conference room or 6th office, file room, break area, 2 baths & storage closet. Total remodel 7 years ago. Plenty of parking. Great views! $375,000. Owner/Broker. 505-690-4709
OUT OF TOWN
Architect designed 3 Bedroom, 2.5 Baths, 2850 sq.ft., open floorplan, custom kitchen with kiva, radiant heat, brick floors, 18ft. high beamed ceilings! Silverwater RE, 505-690-3075. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane, washer & dryer hook-ups, near Wal-mart, single story complex. ONE MONTH free rent, No application fees!! Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH , washer, dryer, 2749 B Agua Fria, $750 monthly plus utilities. No pets. 505-670-4672
CHARMING 2 bedroom Casita, $850 plus utilities. Centrally located, near bus stops and parks. 101 1/2 Taos, Call Gertrude, 505-983-4550.
APARTMENTS FURNISHED ADOBE DUPLEX near railyard. Fireplace, skylights, oak floor, yard. $775 month to month. Incdludes gas and water. $625 deposit. 505-982-1513 or 505-967-6762.
CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
Abiquiu
Peaceful, sublime acreage. Panoramic views. Pedernal, O’Keeffe country. Spiritual Retreat. Near Abiquiu lake, 62 acres. Just $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Ra n c h o Siringo Rd. Fenced yard, laundry facility on-site, separate dining room Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
Walk-in closet, carpet and tile floors, off-street parking. Camino Capitan, near city park, walking trails. $665 plus utilities & deposit. NO PETS. 505988-2057.
[2] CHIMAYO 1 acre lots, private, quiet, irrigation, views, adjacent to BLM, 1/2 mile from Santa Cruz River $95,000, 970-259-1544
Cozy Cottage
In Pecos area, 3 beds, 1 bath on 6 treed acres. Panoramic views of Pecos Wilderness. Horses ok. Shared well. $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001
426 ACRE Ranch with declared water rights. Adjacent to Tent Rocks National Monument. Call 505-843-7643. (NMREC Lic. 13371)
PRIME NORTH RAILYARD. Private with fenced yard. Washer, dryer. Steps to farmer’s market. $1000 plus utilities. 505-231-5409
ATTRACTIVE, QUIET 1 BEDROOM.
FARMS & RANCHES New wood floors, high-end kitchen appliances, new blinds. 3 bedrooms, upstairs Master Suite, 2 baths, 20’ ceilings, vigas, fireplace. 1635 square feet. 2 car garage. $279,900.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.
NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane. laundry facility on-site, balcony & patio, near Wal-mart. $625 monthly. ONE MONTH free rent, No application fees!! Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
(3) 2.5 Acre Lots, Senda Artemisia, Old Galisteo Road, Close to town. Easy building sites. Views, utilities, shared well. Owner financing. No Mobile homes. $119,700- $129,700 each. Greg. 505-690-8503, Equity Real Estate. BUILDING SITE 2.5 Acres, all utilities plus well, at the end of St. francis Dr. and Rabbit Rd. on Camino Cantando. Views, views, views! Beautiful land, vigas, latillas and lumber included. $280,000, 505-603-4429.
1616 BRAE , 1 bedroom, 1 bath (shower only), tile throughout, wood floor. $640 with water paid. 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY , Live-In Studio. Full Kitchen and bath, plenty of closet space. $680 with gas and water paid.
FOR SALE. Old store and residence. Adobe 2 story, 2,700 sq.ft., on 1.048 acres. Ideal for B&B. On highway State Road 518, Cleveland, NM 87715. Owner financed at 3%. $96,000. Call, 575-387-2490 leave message.
FURNISHED, South Side : 1 room efficiency, $400 plus utilities; 2 room efficiency, $440 plus utilities. $600 deposit. Clean, NON-SMOKER. 505-204-3262
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 B A T H , new heater, upgraded appliances, remodeled, $700 monthly, $300 deposit. No Credit Check. Available November 1st. 505-470-5188 LARGE 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, kitchen, private patio, brick floors, quiet neighborhood. Driveway parking, Price negotiable. Small pet ok. 505603-8531
LAS PALOMAS APARTMENTS
Hopewell Street is now offering SPOOKTACULAR savings on our already affordable Studios! Call (888) 482-8216 to speak with our new management team today and ask about how you can rake in the fall savings. We’re conveniently located and we’re sure you’ll love the BOO-tiful changes we’ve made both inside and out. Se habla español, llame ahora! SOUTH CAPITOL charming 1 bedroom, spacious antique kitchen, beautiful vigas, hardwood floors, mudroom, portal, private parking. $785. Utilities included. 505-898-4168.
service«directory CALL 986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! CABINETRY
CLEANING
LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
GREEN HEALTHY CLEAN. Chemical & Fragrance Free Products, or yours. Licensed & Insured. Meticulous. Excellent local references. Free estimates. 505-577-6069
JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
TRASH HAULING, Landscape clean up, tree cutting, anywhere in the city and surrounding areas. Call Gilbert, 505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ESTIMATES!
Tree removal, yard Cleaning, haul trash, Help around your house. Call Daniel, 505-690-0580.
LANDSCAPE ARTIST From exceptional stonework, pruning, planting, to clean-up, hauling, water wise beauty (drip). Yard Ninja 505-501-1331
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
HANDYMAN
AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493 I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared!
CLASSES PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $35 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684
CLEANING CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT
Windows, carpets and offices. Own equipment. $18 an hour. BNS 505-920-4138.
Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS 505-316-6449.
YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 years experience, Residential & offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PROPANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877
CONCRETE Cesar’s Concrete.
Concrete work, Color, Stamp, and Acid Wash. Masonry work. Licensed, bonded, insured. License# 378917. Call Cesar at 505-629-8418.
FIREWOOD Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 150.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPING COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510
PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPES • Fall Preparations • Pruning/Planting • Retaining walls • Irrigation Installation & Renovations • Design • Flagstone, Brick, Rock, Block • Portals
“Be smart, have a woman do it.” 505-995-0318 505-310-0045
ROOFING
CLASSIFIEDS
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
MOVERS Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881. PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.
PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded. Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119. HOMECRAFT PAINTING Small jobs ok & Drywall repairs. Licensed. Jim. 505-350-7887
ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call, Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760. ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster and stucco. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.
FREE ADS Sell your stuff from last year to someone who didn’t get that stuff..
upgrade
Make money and buy this year’s stuff! Even a stick kid gets it.
PLASTERING
(If your item is priced $100 or less the ad is free.)
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
classad@sfnewmexican.com
sfnm«classifieds
986-3000
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
COMMERCIAL SPACE
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
27202 East Frontage Road. 2,000 squ.ft. with two ten foot doors, over 2 acres of parking with easy I25 on and off at exit 271. (La Cienega) Building has paint spray booth. $1,200 per month plus utilities. 505-490-1472.
$1165 MONTHLY. A T T R A C T I V E , COMPLETELY R E M O D E L E D home, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057.
NAVA ADE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Garage, all appliances. Fireplace, storage unit, Access to clubhouse (workout, pool). Low maintenance. 1500 sq.ft. $1400. 505-660-1264
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 1 BEDROOM, 1 bath Los Arroyos. Section 8 accepted, pet ok. Washer, Dryer. $975, water, gas included. 505603-1111, 505-984-0011, stormymiller@msn.com.
NEW! SPACIOUS TWO STORY, 3 bedroom, 2 3/4 bath, attached 2 car garage, upstairs laundry, modern washer, dryer. $1300, 505-2211966
$1300 742 1/2 W. Manhatten 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 fireplaces Complete tile, wood floors. Custom cabinets with pantry. Stove, Ref, NEW washer, dryer, AC Call, Text, email Joe 505-690-2389 ciandrew1@aol.com
$1525 MONTHLY. BEAUTIFUL Rancho Viejo 3 bedroom, 2 bath hom e with gas rock fireplace, granite counter-tops, evaporative cooler, enclosed spacious walled yard. N/S. 505-450-4721. www.ranchoviejo.shutterfly.com/pict ures/16
1 BEDROOM DELIGHT!
NICE 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 1.5 bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoking. No pets. $825 plus utilities. Unfurnished. Calle De Oriente Norte. Year lease. 505-983-4734
High ceilings, great light. Huge bathroom, walk-in closet, laundry, radiant heat. New kitchen. Fenced yard, deck. Dog door, secure shed, off-street parking. Lease. $1150 includes water and refuse, $500 deposit. 505-795-5245
RANCHO SANTOS, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pretty unit, 2nd story, 1 car garage. $1000. Western Equities, 505-982-4201.
2 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATHS TOWNHOME IN RANCHO VIEJO. 1150 sq.ft. 2 car garage. Across from park. $1300 monthly plus utilities. 505-471-7050
RARELY AVAILABLE North Hill compound 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2000 square feet. Minutes to Plaza. Mountain & city light views. 2 Kiva Fireplaces, fabulous patio, A/C, washer & dryer, freezer, brick style floors, garage. $1,950 monthly, includes water. 1 level private end unit. 214-491-8732
2 BEDROOM 2 BATH 2 car garage, washer, dryer. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golf course. Near Cochiti Lake. $900 505-359-4778, 505-980-2400.
GO TO: www.MeridianPMG.com
Lisa Bybee, Assoc. Broker 505-577-6287 GUESTHOUSES 1 bedroom 1 bath casita, unfurnished. 1 year lease. Washer, dryer, pets ok. Utilities (water, gas, electric, cable, internet) included. Close to plaza. $1475 monthly. Call 505-795-3734.
CHARMING, 500 SQUARE FEET SOUTHEAST HILLS. Washer, dryer, fenced yard with small patio. Pet negotiable. $800 monthly, includes utilities. 505-6995708 EASTSIDE WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936
3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage. Upscale 2,300 sq. foot south side home. $1800 plus utilities. 505-6033821. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190
COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $925 plus utilities Furnished 1 Bedroom 1 Bath. Skylites, radiant heat, off-street parking, sunny & warm. Includes utilities, internet, TV. $1250. Available 11/1. 505-577-6300. PRIVATE QUIET, SOUTH SIDE CENTRAL LOCATION. Washer, dryer, small patio, tile floors, one bedroom, bathroom with walk-in shower living area and kitchen, private driveway, $800 monthly, includes utilities. 505795-0195 Sunny and inviting one bedroom furnished Tesuque guesthouse. Portal, vigas, saltillo tile, washer & dryer, no pets, no smoking, $1095 including utilities. 982-5292.
HOUSES FURNISHED
DESIRABLE NAVA ADE COMMUNITY 3 bedroom, plus library, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, enclosed backyard, 2 wood burning fireplaces, $1800 plus STUNNING SOUTHSIDE HOME 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, vigas, open concept, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, beautifully landscaped backyard $1700 plus utilities DARLING 1 bedroom, 1 bath, walk in closet, close to park, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, $725 plus utilities
NEWLY RENOVATED CASITA 1 bedroom, 1 bath, quiet and secluded location, $495 plus utilities CALLE MIQUELA 3 bedroom family home. 1.5 bath. Fenced backyard. 2 car garage. Nonsmoker, no pets. $1350 monthly plus utilities. 505-235-7151.
CHARMING NEIGHBORHOOD. Convenient location. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Wood stove, laminate & tile. $1500 monthly. www.enchantedcity.com 505-204-3309
TESUQUE GUEST HOUSE. Fully furnished, fireplace, washer, dryer. $1900. By appointment only. 505-660-3805, 505-982-8328.
COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. EASTSIDE 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Fireplaces, garage, & storage, plus 1 bedroom, 1 bath guest house. $2700 plus utilities. By appointment only. 505-660-3805
HOUSES PART FURNISHED
ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603
ELEGANT SANTA FE SUMMIT
FENCED IN YARD AND SINGLE CAR G A R A G E . Quiet street. Wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1150 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196
4 miles to downtown on Hyde Park Road. All masonry, luxe home. Woodland setting. On-site manager. Guarded Gate. 2 Bedroom, 2 baths, study. $2250 monthly. 505-983-7097.
GRAND 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath home plus loft, $1750.00, in great neighborhood near Richards and Governor Miles, 2,100 sq.ft. 505-577-0397 LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271
Spotless, breathtaking views of the Pecos River Valley. Brand New Treetop House on 1 acre, deluxe 1 bedroom, granite, radiant and private. Non-Smoking. $1,300 for 1,200 squ.ft. 505-310-1829.
LIVE IN STUDIOS
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906
OFFICES 1000 SQUARE FOOT COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE, GALISTEO STREET . 4 offices, file room, reception. $1200 plus electric & gas. By appontment only. 505-660-3805, 505-690-5162.
2 OFFICES WITH FULL BATH & KITCHENETTE. Excellent signage & parking. 109 St. Francis Drive, Unit #2. $650 monthly plus utilities. 505-988-1129, 505-6901122.
Lots of light, off street parking, elevator. 500 sq feet, $700 a month. Utilities plus wifi included. Pomegranate Studios 535 Cerrillos Road at Paseo de Peralta (above Sage Bakehouse) Call 505-986-6164 or email: pomegranatesfnm@yahoo.com
LAS CAMPANAS Immaculate. Classic Santa Fe-style. Big views. 3 bedrooms, office, 3+ baths, 3 car garage. Large, private 3bedroom, guest house. Main house $5000 month or both for $6,500 month. Deposit and utilities. Pets negotiable. Call, 505 690 2728.
LOST Lost beautiful black persian cat. Please call if you have, or think you have seen him. REWARD! South Santa Fe area. 505-690-2464 or 505-6901594.
NEW SHARED OFFICE
SIRINGO AND CAMINO DEL GUSTO AREA Black male Maine Coon with part of his left ear missing. He answers to Jasper. Very sweet and friendly. Will walk up to anyone. Belongs to a little girl that is very worried about him. If you see him or have him, please call 480-310-7110, 602-821-1585, or 505-467-8121.
ADMINISTRATIVE
PROGRAM ADMINISTRATOR
OWN BEDROOM, bathroom. $275 plus half utilities. Available November 1st. Glorietta, acreage, peaceful. 505-757-6372 or 505-216-2852
STORAGE SPACE A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00
LOST DOG. Reward $200. She answers to "Cinnamon". Takes medication. Siringo- Las Campanas area, Friday 10/11. 505-204-4583
WAREHOUSES 1,000 or 1,500 squ.ft., on Comercio. Insulated, dock, roll ups, parking no auto, $8 - $9 per square foot. 505-660-9966
1500 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE
$900 monthly. Bathroom, skylights, large office, hot water, 12’ ceilings. 1364 Rufina Circle. Clean. Available NOW. 505-480-3432.
ARTIST WORKSPACE. 1,470 Squ.ft., two 8 foot overhead doors, easy access to I-25. (110-120) volt outlets. $1,325 monthly with 1 year lease plus utilities, or divided into two separate rentals. South Santa Fe. 505-474-9188.
»announcements«
$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS
Private desk, and now offering separate private offices sharing all facilities. Conference room, kitchen, parking, lounge, meeting space, internet, copier, scanner, printer. Month-To-Month. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
To view full job profile & qualifications go to: http://www.akalsecurity.com Must apply online. E.O.E./M.F./V.D.
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
SCHOOLS - CAMPS CONSTRUCTION CAMINO DE PAZ MONTESSORI MIDDLE SCHOOL’S OPEN HOUSE, Sunday, October 20, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. Studentled tours of the school farm campus, meet staff and parents. 505-231-2819 or www.caminodepaz.net.
»jobs«
CONTRACTING AND M A N A G E MENT COMPANY NEEDS ASSISTANT TO OWNER. Some administrative duties. Computer skills. Pleasant personallity and people management. Not a typical construction pm position. Pay based on talents. Email resume to : mitch@mitchdavenport.com.
EDUCATION COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS o f New Mexico (CISNM) is seeking full-time
SITE COORDINATORS
EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330
Responsible for developing, implementing, executing and monitoring compliance to administrative requirements for the company.
SEEKING INTELLIGENT, accurate, self-motivated person with exceptional customer service skills to handle all day-to-day business for specialty contractor. Full-time, ~45k DOE. See http://crockerltd.net/officemgr.htm. No phone calls.
$450 INCLUDES UTILITIES, 200 SQ.FT ROOM. Shared bath & kitchen. Upstairs, fireplace, wet bar. No dogs. Month-to-month. $450 deposit. 505470-5877
WORK STUDIOS FOR LEASE OFFICE - RETAIL 509 Camino de los Marquez Convenient central location with abundant parking. Ten-minute walk to South Capitol Rail Runner station. Suites ranging from 2,075 to 3,150 square feet. Call 505-235-2790 for information.
ACCOUNTING SEEKING FULL-TIME BO O KKEEPER for professional, Santa Fe business. Qualified person will have a baccalaureate degree and a minimum of 5 years professional experience. Please submit cover letter, resume, and list of references to quinoarose@gmail.com.
ADMINISTRATIVE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT OFFICE MANAGER
Busy 4 person architectural firm needs part-time help. Responsibilities include ordering office supplies, accounts payable and receivable, monthly billing, maintaining files and coordinating with firm accountant. Must have knowledge of QuickBooks, Adobe Photo Shop, Microsoft Office, and Social Media. AutoCad, a plus. Must have dependable vehicle and be a team player. Pay commensurate with experience. Send resume to Eric at eric@archallinc.com. Business Brokerage seeks PT & FT administrative & marketing assistant. Data entry, reception. Honest with excellent writing and verbal skills, accuracy. $15 per hour. Email resume: info@samgoldenberg.com.
HR Administrator. NCRTD.
Bachelors Degree and four years of experience in HR required. Job description and application instructions can be viewed at
www.ncrtd.org.
LOCATED AT THE LOFTS on Cerrillos, this live, work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities
CHARMING ADOBE, WALK TO PLAZ A . 2 bedroom, 2 bath, plus den, 3 fireplaces, washer, dryer. $1700 plus deposit. 505-690-4791
LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA WITH SUNSET VIEWS 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-6996161.
RANCHO VIEJO 2 bed 2 bath house, radiant heat, open floorplan. $1,300 monthly plus damage deposit. Call or text Tom, 505-463-9336 or Jessica at, 505-463-9337 for more info.
ROOMMATE WANTED
NORTH SIDE CONDO 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, kiva fireplace, vigas, covered patio, washer, dryer, $950 plus water & electric.
COZY GUEST HOUSE 1 bedroom, 1 bath, enclosed private yard, fireplace, $675 plus utilities
BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 1 BEDR O O M GUESTHOUSE. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Close to town. Pets on approval. $ 1 , 3 5 0 month. 505-699-6161.
RANCHO MANANA stunning views off Tano Road; 3 bedroom 4 bath executive home; open plan; dramatic gourmet kitchen; available now $3200 per month. St. Clair Properties 505-955-1999, www.stclair-properties.com
BEAUTIFUL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT
PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
$975 + UTILITIES, OFFICE S U IT E , GALISTEO CENTER. Two bright, private offices plus reception area, kitchenette, bathroom. Hospital proximity. Available November 15th. 518-672-7370
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
LOST CAT
Mobile Home: 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Remodeled. With storage, washer,dryer. Amenities. No smoking. No pets. 505-455-3287 2 bedroom, 2 bath in Eldorado. Living, dining, large office or extra room. Great outdoor areas. Well maintained. $1,500, WesternSage 505-690-3067.
OFFICES
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available
MANUFACTURED HOMES
WE HAVE RENTALS!
986-3000
B-7
to help redress student dropout in Santa Fe Public Schools through the nationally-recognized Communities In Schools integrated student services framework. Working in partnership with a school principal, the CISNM Site Coordinator is responsible for the overall planning and management of CISNM operations at their assigned CISNM school site. Bilingual Spanish/English Required. Experience working with children and or youth in an educational setting, strong interpersonal and organization skills are essential. Education requirements: Bachelor’s degree and demonstrated relevant equivalent experience in education, social work or related field. Please submit cover letter, resume and 3 references to johnsona@cisnewmexico.org by Friday, October 18, 2013 PRIVATE HOME SCHOOL TEACHER wanted for 7 year old student ASAP. Must be Energetic, fun, and motivated. Teaching experience, certification, and references required. Fax resume: 505-819-5849.
HOSPITALITY
DINING SERVICE POSITIONS:
Full time server positions. Must be professional. Weekends and Holidays a must. Wonderful work environment with great medical and retirement benefits. Complete application at El Castillo, 250 E Alameda; Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. or email resume to: humanresources@elcnm.com or fax to 505-983-3828
FOUND PROFESSIONAL OFFICES
1033 sq.ft. Great parking, Views, 3 large + 2 small offices + reception. 2074 Galisteo St. B3. Serena Plaza. $995 monthly. 505-920-4529
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.
CAT: ORANGE, neutered male. Abandoned - I’ve been feeding for 3 months. Shelter is full - please give him a home before winter! Very loving. 505-699-8780
MALE PUPPY found 10/14/13 brown body, white paws, white face. Found on Gonzales Road. Call 505-471-6961 or evening 505-989-4500. SET OF KEYS found on sidewalk; October 15th in front of Downtown Post Office. Includes Saab key fob. 505-690-8892
NursiNg positioN aNNouNcemeNt Director, Medical Surgical Instructor and Family Nursing Instructor Phone: 505-454-2503 Fax: 505-454-2520 E-mail: rsilva@luna.edu 366 Luna Drive Las Vegas, NM 87701 Website: luna.edu
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
sfnm«classifieds HOSPITALITY
Part-time Server Needed. Must be professional. Weekends and Holidays a must. Complete application at El Castillo, 250 E Alameda; Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. 5 p.m. No phone calls please.
MEDICAL DENTAL CLERICAL ASSOCIATE. Excellent opportunity with benefits, computer record skills required, up to 16 an hour depending on experience. Contact HR Department, 855-462-2725.
EXPERIENCED OPTICIAN Needed in busy Optometry practice. Benefits include 4, 10 hour workdays per week, paid holidays after 90 days, 1 week paid vacation after first year of service, supplemental insurance available after 90 days, Safe Harbor 401k after 1 year. Positive work environment with growth opportunities such as continuing education. Please email resumes to: purplebean4250@hotmail.com
HEALTH CENTER POSITIONS:
Full time positions available in conjunction with our Memory Care facility opening and our Health Center expansion -- RNs, LPNs, CNAs, Housekeepers. Experience with dementia and/or Alzheimer’s a plus. All shifts available. Wonderful work environment with great medical and retirement benefits. Email resume to: humanresources@elcnm.com or fax to 505-983-3828
Opportunities for Motivated Heath Care Professionals
The Santa Fe Indian Health Service is now or will soon accept applications for health care professionals, including: Nurse Executive, Staff Nurse, Nursing Assistant in/outpatient, Family Nurse Practitioner, Medical Technologist, Dentist, Facilities Engineer, Biomedical technician. Competitive salary, federal benefits and retirement, offered. For more information, contact Bonnie at 505-946-9210 or at Bonnie.Bowekaty@ihs.gov. The IHS is an EOE employer with preferential hiring for AI/ANs. P C M is hiring PCAs, Caregivers (FT & PT Hours), LPNs, RNs, for in-home care in the Santa FE, NM area. PCA, Caregiver $11 hourly, LPN $25 hourly, RN $32 hourly. Call 866-902-7187 Ext. 350 or apply at: procasemanagement.com EOE
PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE Has an immediate openings for:
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT The Santa Fe New Mexican has the perfect position for an early bird who likes to get the day started at the crack of dawn! We are seeking two part-time Home Delivery Assistants to deliver newspaper routes and replacement newspapers to customers, and resolve customer complaints. Must have valid NM drivers’ license, impeccable driving record and be able to operate a vehicle with manual transmission. Must be able to toss newspapers, lift up to 25-50 lbs; climb in and out of vehicle, bend, climb stairs and reach above shoulder. Have hearing and vision within normal ranges. Hours for one position are 5:30 to 9:30 a.m. Monday through Thursday; hours for second position are 5 to 10 a.m. Friday through Sunday. Pay rate is $10.51 per hour. No benefits. Selected candidates must pass a drug screen. Submit references and job application or resume by Friday, October 25, 2013, to: Human Resources The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501-2021 Or email to gbudenholzer@ sfnewmexican.com Job application may be obtained at above address or 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. EOE THE SANTA Fe Opera - Facilities Manager. Enjoy the beautiful setting of the Opera theater and grounds. This position requires excellent management skills and the ability to oversee complex buildings, grounds and systems. See our position description at www.santafeopera.org. Send resume and cover letter as explained on the web site, or via mail to P.O. Box 2408, Santa Fe, NM 87504. No phone calls, please. Tired of flat rate? How about a straight 40 with Great benefits? At least 2 ASE certifications? Can you pass a back ground? Looking for dependable car and light truck Tech, strong electrical a plus. Contact David at 505-827-3308 or 505-469-2958. YARDMAN, SERVICE TECH Must have valid driver’s license and some small engine skills. Call 505-471-1024 for appointment.
TRADES
PART TIME DOG BATHER NEEDED . Duties: clip nails, brush out, bathe dogs and clean facility. Call 989-1414.
The Santa Fe New Mexican is seeking an A1 editor with excellent news judgment to help anchor its presentation desk at night. Our editors do it all: Write accurate, punchy headlines; spot holes in stories while editing for AP style; design clean, eyecatching pages and graphics; and keep our website up-to-date and looking sharp. We’re seeking candidates with at least two years of experience in editing and design.
Approximately 90 Reader’s Digest condensed hard back books. Great condition. $100. 505-690-6050.
STAIR STEPPER $20. 505-466-3047
Black leather briefcase from Overland Outfitters, two pockets, strap $45. 505-471-0508
TENT CAMPER, ROAD WORTHY. $100. LOS ALAMOS, 505-231-2665.
Security gate, den, play yard, white metal, $60. 505-471-0508
TOOLS MACHINERY
24"X 24" cream porcelin tiles. Paid $5 per sq.ft., asking $2.25 per sq.ft. Call 505-231-9133. 26 4X8 SHEETS of 1/2" plywood. Unused. $15 each. 3 solid doors. Lots of oak boards. 505-490-1472
5 THERMOPANE metal clad- wood W I N D O W S , $65 each. 3 HANDCRAFTED DOORS, various sizes, $65-100; 2 boxes SALTILLO TILES, lovely reddish color, $50. 505-7572528 A-1 LANDSCAPING MATERIALS #1, 9 foot Railroad Ties, $13.50. #2, 8 foot Railroad Ties, $8 . #3, 8 foot Railroad Ties $6.75. Delivery Available, 505-242-8181 All CC accepted.
BUILDING M A T E R I A L S Gre en House, Flea Market kits, Landscaping, Fencing, Vehicles, Trailer. Contact Michael at 505-920-4411 or Jackalope 505-471-8539. DOUBLE Pane window with frame, 29 1/4 x 48 1/4. $100. 505-795-9081
Steel Building Bargains Allocated Discounts We do deals 30x40,50x60,100x100 and more Total Construction and Blueprints Available www.gosteelbuildings.com Source #18X
505-349-0493
APPLIANCES MAYTAG WASHER $100. 505-662-6396 4 DRAWER FILE CABINET $40. 505-6626396
CUTE DAYBED. White metal with brass accents. Very clean Sealy mattress. $100. 505-231-9133.
HAND PAINTED GIRLS Bedroom Furniture. Bed, desk, armoir, dresser, chair, dolls. $1,500. Call Helen, 505989-3277. LOVELY DOWN Filled Couch. Seven feet long. Very very comfortable. 505-603-1779
TRUE GLASS Merchandiser with 6 Rotating Shelves. 360 visibility of your baked desserts. Self-closing door. Copper aluminum finish with black trim. Dimensions 32.5"W x 27.5"L x 78.63"H. Call Daphne at 505820-1130.
CLOTHING
BOOK COLLECTION: First editions, Fiction to non-fiction. $3 and up. 505474-9020 CALIFORNIA KING Size Bedsheets, white, with trim. Used once. $40. 505204-5755
CUISINART FOR HOLIDAY COOKING! Only $23. 505-474-9020
TV RADIO STEREO 27" TV with digital box, mint cond. $85. 505-757-2528
ONYX CHESS set (minus the board) $80. 505-570-0213
»animals«
POOL TABLE TOP - 4x7. Good condition. $100. 505-795-9081
Small black TV cabinet on castors. Very nice with smokey glass door. 28x18x20. $25. 505-231-9133
THE GODFATHER! Collector’s Edition. 7-piece VHS. Perfect condition. $25. 505-474-9020
TWO COMPUTER tables, 70" x 29 1/2" $25, 47 1/2" x 29 1/2", $18 505-474-1449
BEN HUR. Best Picture 1959, Academy Award. VHS. $15. 505-474-9020 WOMEN’S DESIGNER SLACKS, all colors, sizes 0 - 9. $20 for all. 505-795-9081
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FENDER ACOUSTIC Guitar - like new. $100. 505-982-2791
HOT TUB 220 VOLTAGE, $100. LOS ALAMOS, 505-231-2665
OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT
HOT TUB- brand new, luxery spa, 6 horspower, 50 jets. Still in wrappernever used. $3950. Will deliver. 505270-3104
4-DRAWER LOCKING FILE CABINET. Beige. $85. 505-757-2528
1 SIZE fits all, Mink Cape, $250. Fox Fur Jacket, women’s size 14 or 16, $150. Both excellent condition. 505820-0813.
CRAFTSMAN CHAINSAW, 10" bar, gas, needs carb. repair. $50. 505-7572528
COLOR TV, approximately 30". Good for bedroom. $85. 505-933-3359.
STONE AGE ROCK IS GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. LARGE INVENTORY. 7521 CERRILLOS ROAD.
JEWELRY
AB DOER CHAIR $20. 505-466-3047
Good quality 8 white hand towels, and 4 white bath mats, all cotton. All for $20, 505-954-1144.
SHAFER AND Sons model VS-52 upright piano. Excellent condition. 505-603-1779
WICKER ETEGARE: 5 shelves, 78"H x 28"W x 12"D and WICKER TABL E: Beautiful. Coffee table or end table. 25x17x22 with shelf. Set for $60. 505474-9020
MINI TRAMPOLINE $20. 505-466-3047
HP PRINTER. Deskjet D4160. Works great. $20. 505-231-9133.
PHOTO EQUIPMENT
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES ALFALFA GRASS Mix bales. $11 each Bale. Barn stored Ribera, NM. 505-473-5300.
CLEAN BERMUDA 3 twine 90 pound bales at $15 per bale including delivery. By truckload of 512 only. Call Pete at 623-251-8018.
PETS SUPPLIES 10 WEEK old female Pomeranian puppies. 1 white, 1 brown. Serious inquiries only. Call for pricing. 505-9202319.
GORGEOUS 1940S full length evening dress. Smaller size. $50. (505)9131410. GREY TRADITIONAL Justin Western Boots. Size 5 1/2 Medium. $40, 505954-1144
LONDON FOG 100% wool, black Jacket. $50 505-204-5755 OPERA CAPE: 1940s Black Velvet Full Length with Hood Adorned with Pearls. $99. (505)913-1410.
WOMEN’S DESIGNER JEANS, sizes 0 9. $20 for all. 505-795-9081
C O M P U T E R - H A R D drive, 17" inch monitor, keyboard, mouse and printer. $55. 505-467-8218.
SOUTH SEAS PEARL BRACELET. Lovely, green, South Seas pearl bracelet with 14K links, toggle clasp. Very wearable. Perfect for that special someone. Call 505-920-4420.
KIDS STUFF
Classy Black PELLET BUCKET for pellet stove. Great for other uses as well. $20, 505-954-1144.
SEASONED PINE FIREWOOD- cut last November. Hundreds of truckloads. It is piled in random lengths and diameters in our forest after thinning. Sold by truckload, depending on bed size. $60 for 8 foot bed. Five miles east of Peñasco. Call for haul times, days and location. 575-587-0143 or 505-660-0675
NIKON D7000 with AF-s DX NIKKOR 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR II Zoom Lens (inclides filter) and 32GB SDHC card. Equipment includes manuals and it is in excellent condition. $800. Please call after 6 p.m., 505-470-4371.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
BENGALS SILVER KITTENS from Supreme Grand Champion, $950 to $1,600. New Litter will be ready in December. 720-434-6344, chateauxchampagne@gmail.com
Summer video monitor set; graco infant carseat & base, packnplay; whistle n’ wink wildflowers bumper & cribskirt; toys, baby girl dresses & clothing 575-208-8773.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT HOVEROUND ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR. Low mileage- Like new! Top of the line. $2,900. 505-428-0688
LUGIE POWER SCOOTER. Folds up. 53 pounds. Hardly used. Burgundy.
ALMOST NEW!! Driver, Woods, complete set of irons, putter. Each set $200 OBO or both for $350 includes bags. 505-989-1842, 505-603-6344. HAND push Golf Cart, $30. 505-9541144 All paperwork & instruction included. $2,000. 308-530-0338
ORVIS BATTENKILL gun case. Fits rifle with scope. Never used. Cost $200 asking $100. 505-231-9133.
Pomeranian Puppies, 1 teacup $800, 1 toy $500, registered, first shots, quality. POODLE PUPPIES, $400. ShihPoo Puppy, male, $350. 505-9012094 LARGE VINTAGE Parrot Cage or Bird Cage with Stand. $95. 940-597-3991.
Get your headlines on the go!
FURNITURE
ART
Beautiful Abstract Impressionistic Painting by the Renowned Artist Barbara Gagel. The height is 48" and 68" across. Asking $1,250. Call Hope at (505)913-1410. BIRGER SANDZEN Lithograph, smoky hill river 1946 perfect condition. $1000. 719-369-8708
5-piece bunk bed set. White painted wood, includes desk with corkboard, shelf-drawer unit, ladder and 2 twin bedframes, one on wheels. 505-989-3906.
Artisan Handcrafted Desk or Table with beautiful detail and hardware. Asking $250. Call (505)913-1410.
VETERINARY TECHNICIAN
Send resumes to: ccharney@sfhumanesociety.org, fax 505-216-0018, or drop them off at the Clare Eddy Thaw Animal Hospital, 100 Caja del Rio Road. No phone calls
Charming Antique Hutch and Cabinet. Moving and must sell. Asking $695. Call, 505-913-1410.
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT
Email your cover letter, résumé and five best design clips to Presentation Editor Brian Barker at bbarker@sfnewmexican.com.
The Santa Fe Animal Shelter seeks a veterinary technician to work in our public animal hospital. This full-time position offers excellent benefits, vacation, continuing education, and an opportunity to hone your skills. Competitive salary based on experience.
Toddler roller coaster. Little Tykes,, $60. 505-471-0508
A-1 FIREWOOD INC. Seasoned Cedar, Pinon, Juniper; 1 cord, $260 2 cords, $250 3 cords $245 4 or more $240 Cedar, Pinon, Oak; $375 Oak and Hickory; $450 Each Delivered 505-242-8181 All CC accepted.
WANTED! Old Joseph Murphy horse drawn wagon or buggy. Please call Tom at, 800-959-5782.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
BUILDING MATERIALS
FIREWOOD-FUEL
ANTIQUES
MISCELLANEOUS
NORDIC TRAC $50. 505-466-3047
AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $90. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.
Please contact Carol, 505-982-8581.
We currently have great freelance copy and production editors and would like to expand the pool. If you have these skills and are interested in working on a freelance basis, please submit your resume and contract rate to: Box # 5003 c/o The New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe, NM 87504.
FURNITURE
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
4 METAL UTILITY Shelves plus bookcase, various sizes. $17 each, 505474-1449
SHAWN’S CHIMNEY SWEEP Accepting applications for Chimney cleaning and installers.Clean driving record, Experience a plus. 505-474-5857.
»merchandise«
986-3000
FRAMES, ALL SIZES. Whole Collection, Reasonable. $4 - $25. 505-4749020.
COMPUTERS
Full-Time and Part-Time. Santa Fe, and surrounding areas. We offer competitive salaries.
Experienced Copy and Production Editors Needed on a Freelance Basis
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES
JOURNEY MEN Plumbers. Must Have 5 years experience with references, own transportation, hand tools and valid driver’s license. 505-920-3929.
*REGISTERED NURSE *PHYSICAL THERAPIST
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
to place your ad, call
BLACK COAT Hooks, on wood. 3 hooks on one and 2 singles. Brand new from Hobby Lobby. $15, 505-9541144 MAGNIFICENT PAINTING by the Renowned Native American Artist Stan Natchez. Due to the nudity only part of the painting can be shown here. Height 65" by 35". Oil and Mixed Media. Moving to France selling for only $5000. Call Hope Stansbury 505-9131410.
BOOKSHELVES, VARIOUS sizes, nicely finished. Each $75. 505-757-2528 HIGH CHAIR $25. 505-466-3047 CRIB $50. 505-466-3047 QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS SET $25. 505466-3047
Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES
GARAGE SALE NORTH
to place your ad, call
»cars & trucks«
986-3000
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
4X4s
IMPORTS
2011 Nissan Frontier Crew Cab PRO-4X. Only 28k miles! leather, moonroof, Rockford Fosgate sound, new tires, 1 owner clean CarFax $27,641. Call 505-216-3800.
2007 Infiniti M35. Unbelievable 33k miles! another 1-owner Lexus trade! clean CarFax, Nav, Bose, pristine $19,621. Call 505-216-3800.
IMPORTS
SATURDAY, MULTI-FAMILY 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. NO EARLY BIRDS! Good & unique furniture, guitar, clothes, and micellaneous items. 267 Camino del Oro, behind north Payne’s, off Alire.
CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily
Candy Corn is an 8 week old Golden Retriever puppy who wants to learn to fetch your slippers.
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
GARAGE SALE SOUTH 1414 MIRACERROS LANE SOUTH, Saturday, 8 - Noon. F u r n it u r e , clothes, books, kitchenware, miscellaneous, and more!
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES FIVE 2011 Jeep Wrangler FactoryOEM wheels, 17" x 8.5" like new, Regular and lockout lugs included. $350 obo. 505-424-1382, 505-412-0243.
Both pets and more than 100 others will be at the ASPCA Mega-Match-aThon this Saturday, 10/19, at PetSmart in Santa Fe, across from Target from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at: www.evalleyshelter.org
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
(FORD) REAR PICK-UP WINDSHIELD. 1990s? $100. Tom, 505-692-9188 or 753-4664
97-06 JEEP Wrangler Solid doors, complete. Tinted windows, mirrors, and keys. $1,500, trades possible. 505-699-1502
CLASSIC CARS
1898 ESPLENDOR STREET, 9 - 1 Saturday. NO EARLIES. Enter from Portabella. lots of furniture, baby, bed linens and more!
2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.
2001 JAGUAR-XK8 CONVERTIBLE Local Owner, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 77,768 Original Miles, Every service Record, Custom Wheels, Books, X-Keys, Navigation, Soooo Beautiful! $14,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
Junior is a tiny apricot Poodle who doesn’t let his small size stop him from jumping into bed with you.
1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339
Toy Box Too Full?
CAR STORAGE FACILITY 22 CUMBRES PASS, RANCHO VIEJO. SATURDAY 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bicycles, bedding, birdefeeders, cat and dog items, kitchen items, fine art photos, tennis rackets, electronics, rugs, office supplies, patio furniture, turtle sandbox/ pool, miscellaneous items. CASH ONLY. 4363 SAN BENITO STREET #A 7 A.M. - 3 p.m., Saturday Only! Furniture, kitchen items, elliptical, household items, and more! BLOWOUT SALE! 2925 Pueblo Pintado, Camino Carlos Rey and Governor Miles Road, 8:30 - 12. Follow signs. women’s and men’s clothing, coffee table and lamp, golf clubs, twin car bed, scuba equipment, bicycles, and much more!
EXCEPTIONAL BOXER-HEELER mix looking for exceptional home. Loves people, intelligent, affectionate, athletic, and house-trained. Neutered male, 7yrs, 50lbs. 505-672-8003 adopt.boomer@gmail.com Miniature Schnauzer Puppies. 9 weeks old. Parents registered. Pedigree Certificate. 1st shots; vet checked. 505-670-8267
PET ADOPTION EVENT!
1703 CALLEJON ZENAIDA. SATURDAY ONLY, 8:30- NOON. Living room set, Patio furniture, clothing (kids to adult), toys, tools, and more!
Have a product or service to offer?
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 DOMESTIC
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
CALL 986-3000
IMPORTS
1982 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505471-3911
2011 LAND Rover Range Rover Sport HSE SUV Certified Pre-Owned. Climate Comfort Package, Satellite and HD Radio, and Anigre Wood. 30,296 miles. One owner. Showroom Condition! $52,995. Call 505-474-0888.
.
2008 LAND ROVER LR2 HSE SUV Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, tires are in excellent condition. 52,704 miles. Very clean interior. No accidents! Well maintained. $18,995. Call 505-474-0888.
AULA CT AT DE COMPADRES MULTI-FAMILY! Collectibles, baskets, pottery, frames, guy stuff, CDs, household, Bead Closeout! Friday 12-6, Saturday 8-2, Sunday 9-3.
FORD FUSION SEL 2011 Blue Sedan. Auto. 6-cyl. FWD. 50,000 mi. Great cond. clean title $5,800. 865-325-9408.
Sell Your Stuff!
25-60% off All Inventory
SM UDGE and M ARSHALL are two of the dozens of dogs, cats and even bunnies who are going to be waiting for you at this weekend’s ASPCA Mega Match-A-Thon at PetSmart. The Santa Fe Animal Shelter is partnering with eight other shelters and rescue groups from throughout New Mexico for Santa Fe’s biggest and best pet adoption event ever. Saturday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., PetSmart Santa Fe, 3561 Zafarano Drive. PIPER, WHITE, B L A C K , spayed, s h o t s , chipped, and housetrained. Has had training, male dog pals and adult humans only. High energy, very well behaved. Needs exercise. Margaret 505-250-5545.
»garage sale«
Fall Sale Saturday, 10/19, 9-6 Sunday 10/20, 12-6 Closed Friday 10/18 Two Days Only 2701 Cerrillos Rd. 505-471-0802
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
WOW!
2003 Pontiac Grand Prix GT, leather, sunroof, automatic. Freshly serviced. Runs great. Must see! $5495. 505-316-2230, ask for Lee.
Have a product or service to offer?
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
520 PASEO de Peralta Saturday, Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Multi Family Sale Furniture, household items, clothing, and more!! MOVING SALE EL NIDO ON TESUQUE VILLAGE RD. 9AM-1PM SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 toys, skis, snowboard, elliptical, furniture, clothing, housewares, building materials.
2007 Porsche Carrera S Cabriolet. Rare X51 performance package, full natural leather, Navigation, Bose, S P E C T A C U L A R ! $55,721. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000
2002 BMW 540i. Amazing 45k miles! another 1-owner Lexus trade! clean CarFax, excellent condition $13,931. Call 505-216-3800.
CALL 986-3000
EVERYTHING ESTATES PRESENTS: The Garacia Estate Sale 23 Senda Corva - Santa Fe Fri, Oct 18 & Sat, Oct 19 9am-3pm This lovely home near the Santa Fe Outlet Mall is full of nearly new leather furnishing from Ashley Furniture including: Sofa, loveseat, chair & ottoman, coffee & side tables, king bed with leather head & foot board, 2 benches, dressers and nightstands, dining table and chairs. There is also a complete bunk-bed set and small child’s bed. The yard includes a hot-tub, play set and lots of building material and tools and a huge collection of Betty Boop collectibles.
4X4s
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.
2008 Land Rover LR3 V8 SE SUV Cold Climate Package, Bluetooth Sirius Radio Package. No accidents! Low Mileage. 65,301 miles. $23,995. Please call, 505-474-0888.
2012 Toyota Camry LE. Only 3k miles! just like new, 1 owner clean CarFax $19,641. Call 505-216-3800.
MOVING SALE Saturday October 19th 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. 1313 Cibola Circle off West Alameda Roll top desk 1920’s $450 OBO, Amish corner hutch $350, walnut & oak dining set (8 chairs, 4 leaves, 1920’s) $695, vanity set (bench & mirror) $100. MUCH MORE! 207-939-6750 Ok to call now on the furniture
NOW OPEN! FINE CONSIGNMENT FURNITURE STORE LA CASA FINA, 821 W SAN MATEO ROAD (NEXT TO CHOCOLATE MAVEN BAKERY). ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENTS NOW! TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. AND SUNDAY 12 P.M. - 4 P.M. 505-920-5006.
2006 SAAB 9-3 Aero SportCombi. Low miles, rare 6-speed, 4 cyl turbo, fun with great fuel economy, new tires, clean CarFax $10,681 Call 505-216-3800.
2011 HONDA CIVIC COUPE One owner, no accidents, 28k miles, automatic, factory warranty. Silver with grey interior, nonsmoker. Below Blue Book $13995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
Save the date: Oct 24th - 26th for a huge downtown gallery liquidation! Details at: www.everythingestates.com
GARAGE SALE NORTH
2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .
2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.
ESTATE SALES Stephens A Consignment Gallery
2010 MINI Cooper Clubman S. Just 19k miles, turbocharged, super well-equipped, Navigation, leather, panoramic roof, 1 owner clean CarFax $22,731. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 AUDI A3 2.0 TDI. DIESEL! 42 mpg hwy, new tires, excellent condition, one owner Clean CarFax. $21,561. Call 505-216-3800.
GARAGE SALE ELDORADO
1002 CANYON ROAD, HUGE SALE! 9 A.M., SATURDAY. Drop Leaf Table, Chairs, Shelves, Garden Furniture, Benches, Flower Pots, Stage Coach Trunk, Collectables, Art, De Grazia, G. Roler, Jim Leasure, Handy man tools, armoire, washer, stuff under $1.
1999 MERCEDES-BENZ E320 Excellent condition . 93k miles, no accidents, everything works, Barolo red metallic with tan leather. $6,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2006 TOYOTA Tundra 4D Crew Cab Limited 4WD. This Tundra is in great mechanical condition. 62,000 miles, leather interior, loaded with options, a few dents. $19,300. 505-690-9999, 505-570-3072
SATURDAY & Sunday 10:00 - 4:00. Corner of Airport & Buffalo Grass Road. Snowboard equipment, Vinyl, stuffed Build-a-Bears accessories 400+, Ty Beanie Babies 50+, Pokemon 50+, Pokemon Cards 1000’s, Tools, Shelving, Power Wheel Chairs.
GARAGE SALE WEST
2002 LEXUS LS 430 LUXURY SEDAN Local Owner, Carfax, Every Service Record, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-keys, New Tires, Loaded, Afford-ably Luxurious, $13,750, Must See! WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE!
2007 LAND ROVER RANGE ROVER SUPERCHARGED SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.
1997 HONDA PRELUDE. Nice clean car, needs some work. Must see! 110,000 miles. $3,500 OBO. Please call, 505-660-9714. 1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $18,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862
TOYOTA PRIUS, 2008. $14,750. Navigation, leather, bluetooth, keyless entry, new tires, excellent condition. 57,000 miles. One owner. 505-9301954 or vignettesf@gmail.com.
VOLVO XC-70 2002. Has all the extras: AWD, leather, cruise, sunroof, navigation system, etc., etc. 114 K miles so just nicely broken in. Immaculate, inside and out. You will love it! "Volvo for Life". $7,000. 505983-6011
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS
2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C HYBRID FWD One Owner, Carfax, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, X-Keys, 14,710 Miles, City 53, Highway 46, Navigation, Remaining Factory Warranty. $20,650. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE!
to place your ad, call
986-3000
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
SUVs
2008 TOYOTA Sienna LE. Just 59k miles, another 1-owner Lexus trade-in! clean CarFax, immaculate condition $15,941. Call 505-2163800.
2006 VOLVO-C70 CONVERTIBLE FWD Another One Owner, Local, 36,974 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax,Garage,Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Convertible Fully Automated, Press Button Convertible Or Hardtop. Soooooo Beautiful, Pristine. $18,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2010 SUBARU FORESTER LIMITED AWD Another One Owner, 12,746 Miles, Records, Carfax, X-Keys, Manuals, Non-Smoker, Garaged Factory Warranty, Loaded, Pristine $22,750. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
GET NOTICED!
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! VANS & BUSES
BOATS & MOTORS
1997 FORD E-350 15’ CUBE VAN 5.4 V8. AC. Runs great and dependable. See to appreciate. $3950. 402-419-3163 - Eldorado
1989 Larson Senza 16ft with traile r. Lots of extras! Asking $3,200 OBO (trades possible). Please leave message at 505-690-2306, serious inquiries only.
CAMPERS & RVs
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
2008 HONDA Odyssey Touring Full Options, 68k mi, Automatic, Clear title, One owner, Garage kept. $8750 321-837-9617
CALL 986-3000
2007 ALFA Gold 5th wheel 35RLIK 3 slide-outs, generator, basement, A/C, 2 refrigerators, ice maker, deepfreeze, central vacuum, W/D, 3 TV’s, leather chairs and hide a bed, and more!! $35,000 OBO, Trade, part trade considered.
Sell Your Stuff!
PICKUP TRUCKS
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today! 2010 TOYOTA RAV4 4WD. Low miles, 1-owner clean CarFax, new tires, recently maintenanced, NICE $17,921. Call 505-216-3800
2006 Toyota Prius. Package 7, fully loaded! 1 owner, well maintained and only 90k miles. $10,671. Call 505-216-3800 .
2011 TOYOTA 4 RUNNER. Limited Edition, fully loaded- sunroof, leather seats, navigation. 1 owner. 64,000 miles (highway). $28,000. 505-6909058
»recreational«
2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book $29,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2009 TOYOTA
MATRIX WAGON4 AWD Another One Owner, Local, 74,000 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Pristine. $13,250 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2004 TOYOTA HIGHLANDERSUV 4X4 Another One Owner, Local, 85, 126 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, Third Row Seat, New Tires, Pristine. $13,950 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
1976 Chevy Holiday RV Motorhome, new tires, carpet, floormats, upholstery. Motor is in good condition. $5,000 OBO. 505471-2763
986-3000
2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.
2012 42FT FIBERGLASS FIFTH-WHEEL. 4 slides, 2 Bedroom, 2 airs, washer, dryer, dishwasher, awning, 4 Seasons. LIKE NEW, USED ONCE. $38,900 505-385-3944.
26’ 1997 Mobile Scout. One owner, one slide out, great condition! $7,800 OBO. 505-690-4849 Mike.
BICYCLES
SUVs
Sell your car in a hurry!
2012 BMW X3 xDrive35i. 21k miles, excellent condition, totally loaded: panoramic sunroof, navigation, xenon, etc. Deep Sea Blue exterior, tan leather interior. BMW certified in 2013, CarFax report available. $41,000. barry@frenchesabroad.com.
2004 TOYOTA Landcruiser, 59k miles, black, tan leather, loaded, $23,000 firm. Very good condition, no accidents, and loaded with options incl. nav. Contact, barry@frenchesabroad.com.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 TRUCKS & TRAILERS 40’ VAN trailer for storage. $1500. 505-490-1472
SALE! ECO MOTIVE ELECTRIC BIKES.
(5) Storm 300’s, New. Pedal bike with electric assist. $1000. 505-690-9058
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
any way YOU want it TWO GREAT WAYS TO ENJOY UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS
1
12
$
95
9
$
2
30 days
Total access PRINT + DIGITAL
Get unlimited digital access to santafenewmexican.com and pasatiempomagazine.com on your tablet, smartphone or computer PLUS your choice of print delivery for one low monthly price. Choose from 7-day, weekend or Sunday only. *Automated monthly payments. Must reside within in The New Mexican’s home delivery area.
95 30 days
Online access DIGITAL ONLY
Unlimited digital access to santafenewmexican.com and pasatiempomagazine.com on your tablet, smartphone or computer. Does not include a print subscription.
santafenewmexican.com/subscribe QUESTIONS?
We can help!
Call 505-986-3010 or email circulation@sfnewmexican.com.
Saturday, October 19, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Horoscope
Crossword
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013: This year you have the drive and energy to take the lead at work or to launch your own business. You enjoy that interpersonal touch that helps others open up. Taurus is grounded but sometimes too conservative. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Observe your more possessive side emerging. You might be confused as to the proper way to eliminate some distorted insecurity. Tonight: Make it your treat. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Express your feelings, and know that you have a full audience. Your charisma peaks, and others respond accordingly. Tonight: Let the good times roll. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Know when to pull back and say little. Someone clearly responds to your efforts, but you do need to stay low-key. Tonight: Vanish while you can. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH Zero in on what you want. Being a leader is all good and well, but it is not the same as being a real friend. Your anger could emerge in a subtle way. Tonight: Where the crowds are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Someone might have to deal with your conservative, uptight personality. Confusion surrounds plans and conversations. Hang in there, and you’ll gain insight. Tonight: Count on being with people. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Keep reaching out for a different idea. This does not mean that you need to break into wild behavior, but that you need to think outside the box. Tonight: Take stock of a situation that drags you down.
Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.
Subject: SO AND SO Each answer is of the form “___ and ___.” (e.g., The two major U.S. political parties. Answer: Republicans and Democrats.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. A room for the night and a meal the next morning. Answer________ 2. Robin Hood’s favorite weaponry. Answer________ 3. Involving the driver of a motor vehicle who leaves the scene of an accident. Answer________ 4. The various arguments in favor of and against a motion. Answer________ 5. Lodging and meals earned or purchased for a set fee. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 6. Emblem warning of danger or death. Answer________ 7. Having no legal force or effect. Answer________
8. Spotlessly clean and neat. Answer________ 9. Pulley blocks with associated rope or cable. Answer________ 10. Seafood and beefsteak served as the main course. Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 11. The relation between these two factors determines the price of a commodity. Answer________ 12. Sold for hard currency without delivery service. Answer________ 13. Raising a barbell to shoulder height and then overhead. Answer________ 14. Constabulary to suppress the Sinn Fein rebellion of 1919 to 1921. Answer________ 15. A country in the northern Leeward Islands of the Caribbean Sea. Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Bed and breakfast. 2. Bow and arrow. 3. Hit and run. 4. Pros and cons. 5. Room and board. 6. Skull and crossbones. 7. Null and void. 8. Spick and span. 9. Block and tackle. 10. Surf and turf. 11. Supply and demand. 12. Cash and carry. 13. Clean and jerk. 14. Black and tan. 15. Antigua and Barbuda.
SCORING: 24 to 30 points — congratulations, doctor; 18 to 23 points — honors graduate; 13 to 17 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 5 to 12 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 4 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher
Cryptoquip
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Deal with others directly. You are even better on a one-on-one level. Don’t hesitate to express your feelings; your vulnerability could be your best defense. Tonight: With a loved one.
Dear Annie: I dated “Carol” for more than eight years. I loved her and wanted to marry her. The problem was her children (now aged 37 and 42), who have not grown up to be mature adults. Carol knew from the beginning that if we ever broke up, it would be because of them. I spent every weekend with her. The kids had a tendency to go through my personal belongings when we were on a date and when we slept. I had to hide my checkbook, wallet, truck and house keys. Her kids still live there and put forth zero effort to make it on their own. They have no interest in facing the realities of life and simply sponge off their mother. They don’t realize that when Mom passes away (one of these days), they will have to face what they’ve been avoiding for years. Her kids are nothing more than liars and thieves. I loved Carol very much, and they destroyed our relationship. I am hoping she will see my letter. — Anonymous Dear Anonymous: We hope you realize that it is Carol who bears most of the responsibility for permitting this behavior from her children. If she truly wanted them out of the house, they would be out. Parents do a grave disservice to their children when they encourage such dependence. It is both selfish and lazy parenting. And Carol’s children seem particularly untrustworthy, as well. Yes, they will have difficulty when she can no longer provide for them, but we worry about what could happen to Carol should she become ill or infirm. Those kids are unlikely to put their mother’s welfare above their own interests. We recommend you give her the number for Adult Protective Services in your state neac.aoa.gov or call the Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116. She may need it someday. Dear Annie: My husband and I are very social and have several groups of friends. Lately, one of these friends has started to make every
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH When you hit a problem, you will be energetic and enthusiastic. It is as if you are doing a special exercise where you mentally allow new vistas to present themselves. Tonight: Curb your temper. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might opt to stay close to home, where you will get a lot done. Your ability to deal with important matters will save you time. Tonight: Time to relax. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Read between the lines. Touch base with a sibling who often might be on a different path. Be aware of what seems off. Tonight: Hang out at a favorite spot. Jacqueline Bigar
Hint: Win a pawn. Solution: 1. Be4ch! Kh6 2. Rc6ch! Kg7 3. gxh5.
Today in history Today is Saturday, Oct. 19, the 292nd day of 2013. There are 73 days left in the year.
Hocus Focus
get-together a potluck. Even for special occasions such as birthdays, the hostess asks each guest to bring a food item. Many times, she actually assigns dishes. I’m starting to dread these invitations. What happened to throwing a party and providing refreshments for your guests? Or at least waiting for your guest to offer? Most of these friends are in their 50s and 60s, and most live quite comfortably, so it’s not as if they cannot afford to host. I know I have the option of not accepting the invitations, but we enjoy the company, and I hate to miss the social activity. Am I being a scrooge, or is this trend rather tacky? — Fed Up with Potluck Dear Fed Up: Yes, it is tacky to “host” a party and expect others to provide the refreshments, unless this is agreed upon in advance. However, your friends’ financial situation may be less rosy than you think, and one way to hide this while still entertaining friends is to make everything potluck. If you enjoy these get-togethers, you may as well play along, although you might offer a dish you actually want to bring. Dear Annie: I’d like to say one more word in favor of adult children calling their parents daily. One size does not fit all. Three years ago, I found out I have terminal cancer, and at about the same time, my husband left me after 31 years of marriage. After my husband left, my father, for whom I’d been caregiver for four years, passed away. My adult daughter lives in the same city, and we speak daily. My married adult son lives about 1,000 miles away, and we speak, text or email every few days. My daughter’s daily calls became my saving grace. Without our conversations and constant closeness, I may not have had the drive to battle my disease and continue on as I have. — Jacksonville, Fla.
Sheinwold’s bridge
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Stay focused on what you want to accomplish. There could be some frustration and/or anger surrounding a personal matter. Tonight: Lounge around at home.
WHITE TO PLAY
On Oct. 19, 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value, to close at 1,738.74.
Woman permitted children’s behavior
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might find it unusually difficult to share and integrate with others. As a result, you might opt to go in your own direction for now. Tonight: Sort through invitations.
Chess quiz
Today’s highlight in history:
B-11
Jumble
B-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, October 19, 2013
THE NEW MEXICAN WILL BE TESTING OUT SOME NEW COMIC STRIPS IN THE COMING MONTHS. PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: EMAIL BBARKER@SFNEWMEXICAN.COM OR CALL 505-986-3058
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
PEANUTS
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
LA CUCARACHA
LUANN TUNDRA
ZITS RETAIL
BALDO STONE SOUP
GET FUZZY KNIGHT LIFE
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
ROSE IS ROSE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PARDON MY PLANET
BABY BLUES
NON SEQUITUR