This is war: Photojournalism in Iraq and Vietnam Inside
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Friday, November 8, 2013
The New Mexic an’s Weekly Magaz ine of Arts, Entert ainment & Cultur e
November 8, 2013
www.santafenewmexican.com $1.25
Co-op charged for 2011 blaze
The Forest Service bills the Jemez co-op $38.3 million to cover costs of the Las Conchas Fire. PAge B-1
State officer shoots, kills female driver, 39, following early-morning vehicle pursuit in Santa Fe
Jeanette Anaya crashed her silver Honda Accord on Camino Carlos Rey.
HIgH-sPeed CHAse TAkes fATAl Turn
Workplace bias ban Gay rights advocates hail senators for approving bill to bar workplace discrimination. PAge A-3
Mayoral race shrinks Six meet deadline for nominating petitions; 11 vie for council. PAge B-1
Owners of Five & Dime plan 10th store Couple to open latest branch in rival ‘oldest city’ in September 2014 By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican
A small general store that opened on the Santa Fe Plaza 15 years ago has turned out to be the nucleus of a growing chain of such businesses in well-trafficked tourist areas around the country. The owners of the Five & Dime General Store at 58 E. San Francisco St. aim to open their 10th store in St. Augustine, Fla., a tourist destination that has vied with Santa Fe for the title of oldest continually occupied city in the United States. Like the Santa Fe store, the other outlets sell souvenirs, postcards, snacks and soft drinks, as well as everyday items like paper towels, extension cords, light bulbs, office supplies, makeup and toiletries that help travelers “feel at home,” Five & Dime CEO Mike Collins said this week. In 1998, Earl and Deborah Potter of Santa Fe and a group of local investors opened the Santa Fe Plaza store in a space that had been leased
Please see sTOre, Page A-4
The scene of a shooting Thursday on Camino Carlos Rey near the Herb Martinez Park. State police officers killed 39-year-old Jeanette Anaya following an early-morning chase. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Chris Quintana
The New Mexican
A
state police officer shot and killed a 39-year-old woman following a car chase early Thursday morning in south-central Santa Fe. State police Sgt. Emmanuel Gutierrez said the incident started around 1:15 a.m., when an officer tried to pull over a vehicle that was being driven erratically on St. Francis Drive at Alta Vista Street. Gutierrez said the driver, later identified as Jeanette Anaya, refused to pull over, and the chase began. Anaya reached speeds of 87 miles per hour in a residential neighborhood, according to a police news release. The officer performed a “pursuit intervention technique,” a maneuver in which an officer tries to cause a fleeing vehicle to spin out of control. The four-door silver Honda Accord crashed on the west side of Camino Carlos Rey near Herb Martinez Park, and the officer got out of his vehicle to speak with her, police said. However, Anaya then drove “aggressively and immediately”
toward the officer, and, as indicated by damage to Anaya’s vehicle, struck the the police vehicle on the driver’s side. The release said the officer then fired multiple shots at Anaya, killing her. The rear window of the silver sedan, which remained at the scene hours after the incident, appeared to have been shot out, and there was at least one bullet hole in the front windshield. According to state police, Anaya was dead at the scene, and a male passenger, who was described as a minor, was taken to the hospital for an examination of slight injuries that were not life-threatening. As of midday Thursday, police vehicles remained on the scene while investigators processed evidence. According to Santa Fe County jail records, Anaya has an arrest history that includes a charge of battery against a household member in 2010 and several charges of failure to appear and failure to pay fines. She pleaded guilty to battery against a household member in February 2010, and was given a 364-day suspended sentence. She also was ordered
The Associated Press
DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — The ruthless commander behind the attack on teenage activist Malala Yousafzai as well as a series of bombings and beheadings was chosen Thursday as the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, nearly a week after a U.S. drone strike killed the previous chief. The militant group ruled out peace talks with the government, accusing Pakistan of working with the U.S. in the Nov. 1 drone strike. Islamabad
Index
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Mullah Fazlullah
Malala Yousafzai
denied the allegation and accused Washington of sabotaging its attempt to strike a deal with the Taliban to end years of violence. Mullah Fazlullah was unanimously appointed the new leader by the Taliban’s leadership council, or shura,
Classifieds C-2
Comics C-8
after several days of deliberation, said the council’s head, Asmatullah Shaheen Bhitani. Militants fired AK-47 assault rifles and anti-aircraft guns into the air to celebrate. The previous chief, Hakimullah Mehsud, was killed by the drone in the North Waziristan tribal area near the Afghan border. He was known for a bloody campaign that killed thousands of Pakistani civilians and security personnel, a deadly attack on a CIA base in Afghanistan and was believed to be behind the failed bombing in
Obituaries
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Today Partly cloudy. High 60, low 30. PAge A-8
Mark Alan Ginnel, 57, Colorado Springs, Colo., Sept. 9 Nestor S. Martinez, 53, Alcalde, Nov. 6
Police notes B-2
Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com
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Retiree health program proposes solvency plan
Pakistani Taliban pick militant who plotted attack on schoolgirl as leader By Ishtiaq Mahsud and Sebastian Abbot
to attend anger management classes, according to online court records. The male passenger’s identity hasn’t been released, and his connection to Anaya is still unclear. Police say he isn’t facing any charges at this time. Teresa Moya, who lives on Vereda de Pueblo on the south side of the park, said the sound of gunfire awoke her around 1:20 a.m. She said she heard five or six gunshots. She did not hear the car crash, she said, but when she looked out the second story of her home, she saw that the Accord had crashed into a concrete wall on her property. A few minutes later, she saw emergencyresponse personnel performing CPR on the male passenger. Annabelle Silva, who lives about a block away from where the incident took place, said she first heard sirens a little after 1 a.m. “I did hear the shots, but I didn’t know they were shots,” she said. She said motorists often speed by on Camino Carlos Rey.
Sports B-4
Public workers’ payroll contributions would rise By Barry Massey
The Associated Press
State and local government workers and taxpayers would chip in an additional $90 million a year to improve the finances of a program providing health care insurance to retired public employees under a proposal endorsed by a legislative study committee Thursday. Mark Tyndall, executive director of the Retiree Health Care Authority, said the health care program is projected to run out of money in 2029 if nothing is done, but sol-
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InsIde u Minimum retirement age for lawmakers proposed. u State lawmakers want breakdown of how health exchange funds are spent. lOCAl news, B-1
vency would be extended to 2043 if the proposed increases in payroll contributions become law. The Legislature’s Investments and Pension Oversight Committee endorsed the proposal on a 5-3 vote, agreeing to introduce the measure in the legislative session that convenes in January. The governor and Legislature must approve any con-
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Three sections, 24 pages Pasatiempo, 64 pages 164th year, No. 312 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
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In brief
Shutdown cost $2B in lost productivity WASHINGTON — October’s 16-day partial shutdown of the federal government cost taxpayers about $2 billion in lost productivity from 850,000 furloughed employees, the White House budget office said Thursday in a report quantifying the ripple effects of the impasse in Congress. On top of those costs, Sylvia Mathews Burwell, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said the shutdown set off a cascade of “negative ramifications on a number of fronts.” From $500 million in lost spending by visitors to closed national parks to stalled oil drilling permits, the first shutdown in 17 years disrupted private industries, slowed home buying and delayed crucial safety inspections, according to the OMB report. The effects of the closure were felt nationwide, the report said.
U.S. may split spy and cyber agencies WASHINGTON — The White House is considering a proposal to split the work of the single military commander who now oversees both the National Security Agency and cybersecurity operations, presenting an opportunity to reshape the spy agency. Army Gen. Keith Alexander is top officer at both the U.S. Cyber Command and the NSA, and he’s retiring next spring. White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said Thursday that no final decision has been made. The consideration of a split, first reported Wednesday in The Hill, a Capitol Hill newspaper, comes in the wake of revelations about the agency’s widespread monitoring of telephone, email and social-media data from documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. The concentration of power over two such different missions has been controversial. Alexander’s departure gives President Barack Obama a chance to make changes at the two agencies. The Associated Press
Toy Hall of Fame finalists included Nerf toys and Clue By Carolyn Thompson The Associated Press
Twitter signage is draped on the facade of the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday in New York. Twitter began trading Thursday in the most highly anticipated IPO since Facebook’s 2012 debut. In the first few hours, the stock jumped as high as $50.09, and closed at $44.90. MARK LENNIHAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dazzling debut sends Twitter stock soaring By Barbara Ortutay
The Associated Press
NEW YORK hares of Twitter went on sale to the public for the first time Thursday, instantly leaping more than 70 percent above their offering price in a dazzling debut that exceeded even Wall Street’s lofty hopes. By the closing bell, the social network that reinvented global communication in 140-character bursts was valued at $31 billion — nearly as much as Yahoo Inc., an Internet icon from another era, and just below Kraft Foods, the grocery conglomerate founded more than a century ago. The stock’s sizzling performance seemed to affirm the bright prospects for Internet companies, especially those focused on mobile users. And it could invite more entrepreneurs to consider IPOs, which lost their luster after Facebook’s first appearance on the Nasdaq was marred by glitches. In Silicon Valley, the IPO produced another crop of millionaires and billionaires, some of whom are sure to fund a new generation of startups. Twitter, which has never turned a profit in the seven years since it was founded, worked hard to temper expectations ahead of the IPO, but all that was swiftly forgotten when the market opened. Still, most analysts don’t expect the company to be profitable until 2015. Investors will be watching closely to see whether Twitter was worth the premium price. Thursday’s stock surge was “really not as important as you might think,” said Kevin Landis, a portfolio manager with Firsthand
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Funds, which owns shares in Twitter. “What really matters is where the stock is going to be in six months, 12 months.” The most anticipated initial public offering of the year was carefully orchestrated to avoid the dysfunction that surrounded Facebook’s IPO. Trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “TWTR,” shares opened at $45.10, 73 percent above their initial offering price. In the first few hours, the stock jumped as high as $50.09. Most of those gains held throughout the day, with Twitter closing at $44.90, despite a broader market decline. The narrow price range indicated that people felt it was “pretty fairly priced,” said JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade. The price spike “clearly shows that demand exceeds the supply of shares,” said Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter. Earlier in the day, Twitter gave a few users rather than executives the opportunity to ring the NYSE’s opening bell. The users included actor Patrick Stewart, who played Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation; Vivienne Harr, a 9-year-old girl who ran a lemonade stand for a year to raise money to end child slavery; and Cheryl Fiandaca of the Boston Police Department. Twitter raised $1.8 billion Wednesday night when it sold 70 million shares to select investors for $26 each.. Named after the sound of a chirping bird, Twitter’s origins date back to 2005, when creators Noah Glass and Evan Williams were trying to get people to sign up for Odeo, a podcasting service they created. Odeo didn’t make it.
By early 2006, Glass and fellow Odeo programmer Jack Dorsey began work on a new project: teaming with co-worker Christopher “Biz” Stone on a way to corral text messages typically sent over a phone. It was Glass who came up with the original name Twttr. The two vowels were added later. The first tweets were sent on March 21, 2006. By 2007, Twitter was incorporated with Dorsey as the original CEO and Williams as chairman. Dorsey and Williams would eventually swap roles. Both remain major shareholders, though neither runs the company. Glass, meanwhile, was effectively erased from Twitter’s history, writes New York Times reporter Nick Bilton in Hatching Twitter: A true story of money, power, friendship, and betrayal. Since those early days, the site has attracted world leaders, religious figures and celebrities, along with CEOs, businesses and countless marketers and self-promoters. The company avoided the trouble that plagued Facebook’s high-profile debut, which suffered technical glitches that had lasting consequences. The Securities and Exchange Commission later fined Nasdaq $10 million, the largest fine ever levied against an exchange. Those problems likely led Twitter to the NYSE. At its IPO price, Twitter was Research firm Outsell Inc. puts Twitter’s fundamental value at about half of the IPO price, said analyst Ken Doctor. That figure is based on factors such as revenue and revenue growth. “That’s not unusual,” Doctor said. “Especially for tech companies. You are betting on a big future.”
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — The rubber duck squeaked out a win for a place in the National Toy Hall of Fame, joining the ancient game of chess in the 2013 class inducted Thursday. The pair beat out 10 other finalists: bubbles, the board game Clue, FisherPrice Little People, little green Army men, the Magic 8 Ball, My Little Pony, Nerf toys, the Pac-Man video game, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and the scooter. Online polls had Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and My Little Pony running strong, but in the end a national selection committee made up of 23 experts, including toy collectors, designers and psychologists, voted in the winners. “The two inductees … are fantastic examples of the two extremes in the world of play,” said Christopher Bensch, vice president for collections at The Strong Museum, which houses the 15-year-old hall. Anyone can nominate a toy for the hall of fame, but to make it through the selection process and become a finalist a toy must have achieved icon status. “If there is a game you can call classic, this is that game,” said curator Nicolas Ricketts as he introduced chess during an induction ceremony. Chess can be traced back centuries to an ancient Indian war game, but evolved into the game it is today by 1475, Ricketts said. The rubber duck “has been a fixture in pop culture for decades,” curator Patricia Hogan said. Although rubber toys first appeared in the late 1880s, no one knows exactly who hatched the idea of the rubber duck, museum officials said. To date, 53 toys are in the National Toy Hall of Fame, including alphabet blocks, the jump rope, playing cards, Scrabble and the stick.
The rubber duck, above, and the ancient game of chess were inducted into the Toy Hall of Fame on Thursday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Rubber duck, chess are winners
Strong typhoon slams Philippines MANILA, Philippines — The world’s strongest typhoon of the year slammed into the Philippines early Friday, setting off landslides, knocking out power in one entire province and cutting communications in the country’s central region. Two people were reported dead. The U.S. Navy’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center in Hawaii shortly before landfall said Typhoon Haiyan’s maximum sustained winds were 195 mph, with gusts up to 235 mph. “There aren’t too many buildings constructed that can withstand that kind of wind,” Masters said.
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CELEBRATING SURVIVAL: EXPLORATIONS OF COURAGE, STRENGTH, LAUGHTER, AND LOVE: Staged readings by local playwrights plus a silent art auction; proceeds benefit the Cancer Foundation for New Mexico, 7:30 p.m. 142 E. De Vargas St. CHRISTOPHER WHITE AT COLLECTED WORKS BOOKSTORE: The author reads from his book The Melting World: A Journey Across America’s Vanishing Glaciers, 988-4226, 5 p.m. 202 Galisteo St. FUZE.SW FOOD + FOLKLORE FESTIVAL: Food conference with national and local chefs and authors, speakers include James Campbell Caruso and Cordelia Thomas Snow at Museum of International Folk Art, noon. 706 Camino Lejo. SEMINAR AT SANTA FE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION: GRI Certified Sustainability Reporting Training program Nov. 7-8 to learn about the Global Reporting Initiative Reporting Framework. Participants receive their certificate of completion directly from GRI. 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 501 Halona St. THE BUSINESS OF MUSIC SUMMIT: Panel discussions with New Mexico Lawyers for Arts and After Hours Alliance,
Lotteries 2-9 p.m. 1614 Paseo de Peralta. THE FOOD DEPOT L.O.V.E. PROGRAM: Child-friendly projects for ages 3 and older (accompanied by an adult) are available between 1 and 3 p.m. the third Friday of each month; call Viola Lujan, 471-1633, ext. 11, or vlujan@thefooddepot. org. WILDLIFE AT MAIN LIBRARY: The Wildlife Center presents: Inspiring Wildlife Stewardship in New Mexico, 2:30 p.m. 145 Washington Ave.
NIGHTLIFE
Friday, Nov. 8 CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: The Three Faces of Jazz, 7:30 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Ben Wright, Atmospheric Americana; Todd & the Fox, roots rock, 5 p.m. 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Mushi, jazz funk trio, 7 p.m. 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: C.S. Rockshow featuring Don Curry, Pete Springer, and John Elias, 9 p.m. 808 Canyon Road. IVA BITTOVÁ AT GIG PERFORMANCE SPACE: Czech avant-garde vocalist and violinist, 7:30 p.m. 1808-H Second St. LITTLE BIG MAN AT NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART: Screening of the iconic 1970 film with a discussion by director Chris Eyre about
Native filmmaking today from 6 to 9 p.m. 107 W. Palace Ave. MANHATTAN PIANO TRIO AT ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE: The trio performs works by Hayden, Brahms, and Smetana, 7:30 p.m. 1160 Camino de Cruz Blanca. OMIRA BAR & GRILL: Guitarist Ramon Bermudez,, 6 p.m. 1005 S. St. Francis Drive. PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL: Jazz pianist John Rangel, 6-9 p.m. 540 Montezuma Ave. SECOND STREET BREWERY: Hot Club of Santa Fe, Gypsy jazz, 6 p.m. 1814 Second St. TGIF RECITAL AT FIRST PRESBYTERIAN: Music of Buxtehude, Sowerby, Howells, Fischer, and Langlais, featuring Linda Raney on organ and harpsichord, 5:30-6 p.m. 208 Grant Ave.
VOLUNTEER
DOG WALKERS WANTED: . The Santa Fe animal shelter needs volunteer dog walkers for all shifts, but especially the Coffee & Canines morning shift from 7 to 9 a.m. For more information, send email to krodriguez@sfhumanesociety. org or call Katherine at 983-4309, ext. 128. AARP TAX-AIDE: Volunteer tax preparers and greeters for the tax season are needed from Feb. 1 to April 15.
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Corrections 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. Volunteers work one or more 4-hour shifts a week. Training will be offered in January. For more information, send an email to taxhelpsantafe@ gmail.com or ddreschel@ comcast.net or call 670-6835. THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Volunteers are needed to support the Cancer Resource Center at the Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center. Call Geraldine Esquivel with the American Cancer Society at 463-0308. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service
NATION & WORLD
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Ban on workplace bias vs. gays soars through Senate No vote planned yet in GOP-controlled House
people serving openly in the military in 2010 and President Barack Obama announced support last year for samesex marriage. “For more than two centuries, the By William Douglas and Curtis Tate story of our nation has been the story McClatchy Washington Bureau of more citizens realizing the rights WASHINGTON — The Senate and freedoms that are our birthright approved a long-stalled, landmark bill as Americans,” Obama said after the Thursday that would ban workplace vote. “Today’s victory is a tribute to all discrimination on the basis of sexual those who fought for this progress ever orientation or gender identity, reflecting since a similar bill was introduced after the nation’s fast-changing public and the Stonewall riots,” a milestone in the political attitudes toward gay rights. gay rights movement more than four The 64-32 vote caps a nearly 20-year decades ago in New York. effort to get the Employment NonTen Senate Republicans joined Discrimination Act through the Senate. 52 Democrats and two independents in It’s the most significant action on gay voting for the bill Thursday. Four senarights since Congress repealed the mil- tors didn’t vote. Obama urged House Speaker John itary’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” ban on gay
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Though Araghchi described the negotiations as “very difficult,” he told Iranian state TV that he expected agreement on details by Friday. The upbeat comments suggested that negotiators in Geneva were moving from broad discussions over a nuclear deal to details meant to limit Tehran’s ability to make atomic weapons. In return, Iran would start getting relief from sanctions that have hit its economy hard.
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GENEVA — Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator signaled progress at talks with six world powers Thursday on a deal to cap some of his country’s atomic programs in exchange for limited relief from sanctions stifling Iran’s economy, saying the six had accepted Tehran’s proposals on how to proceed. U.S. officials said Secretary of State John Kerry will fly to Geneva on Friday to participate in the negotiations — a lastminute decision that suggests a deal could be imminent. A senior State Department official traveling with Kerry in Amman, Jordan, said the secretary would come to Geneva “to help narrow differences in negotiations.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release
information about the Geneva visit. Even if an agreement is reached, it would only be the start of a long process to reduce Iran’s potential nuclear threat, with no guarantee of success. Still, a limited accord would mark a breakthrough after nearly a decade of mostly inconclusive talks focused on limiting, if not eliminating, Iranian atomic programs that could be turned from producing energy into making weapons. Tehran’s chief nuclear negotiator, Abbas Araghchi, told Iranian state TV that the six — the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany — “clearly said that they accept the proposed framework by Iran.” He later told CNN that he thinks negotiators at the table are now “ready to start drafting” an accord.
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Lehtinen of Florida, Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania, Jon Runyan of New Jersey, and Chris Gibson and Richard Hanna of New York. Opponents charge that the measure would lead to frivolous job-discrimination lawsuits. The measure would bar employers with 15 or more workers from discriminating based on sexual orientation or gender identity. It exempts religious institutions and the military. The bill drew more Republican support after the Senate approved an amendment Wednesday by Republican Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire that would prevent federal, state and local governments from taking legal action against exempt religious groups.
tion Act has been introduced in Congress every year since; it failed by one vote in the Senate in 1996. It passed the House in 2007 but died in the Senate. The bipartisan vote Thursday in the Senate was driven in large part by America’s evolving views on gay rights. Poll after poll has found increasing acceptance among people affiliated with both political parties on issues ranging from same-sex marriage to workplace protections for LGBT workers. “I have seen firsthand the progress that we have made in recognizing that fairness and opportunity are not partisan issues,” said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., the Senate’s only openly gay member. The House version of the bill has 193 co-sponsors thus far, including five Republicans — Reps. Ileana Ros-
Boehner, R-Ohio, to “bring this bill to the floor for a vote and send it to my desk so I can sign it into law. On that day, our nation will take another historic step toward fulfilling the founding ideals that define us as Americans.” Boehner opposes the proposal. Rory Cooper, a spokesman for House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said the measure wasn’t on the House of Representatives’ schedule. When the measure was first formally introduced in 1994, no states recognized gay marriage. Now 15 states and the District of Columbia do. But while gay rights have advanced on many fronts, there still is no federal law that protects gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans from job discrimination. The Employment Non-Discrimina-
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A-4
THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
Fatal: One area resident says he heard 12 consecutive gunshots Continued from Page A-1 She saw emergency personnel loading someone into an ambulance around 2:30 a.m. Another neighbor, Dean Harkelroad, said he was using his computer about 1:15 a.m. when he heard four shots. He said he didn’t hear any other noises before the shots. He said he can recognize gunfire because he used to work for the state Game and Fish Department. Another person, who lives several blocks away, said he heard “like
12 shots in a row.” Many residents in the surrounding neighborhoods, though, had slept through the gunfire and sirens. Camino Carlos Rey, a normally busy street, was expected to remain cordoned off from Siringo to Rodeo roads until the afternoon, police said. Anaya’s family members, reached by phone, declined to speak to a reporter Thursday. Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office reports concerning Anaya’s battery case say she had entered a body
shop where her then-lover — a married man — was working and tossed around several items, including a speaker and a computer base. The reports say she allegedly scratched, bit and punched the man, and later threw her cellphone at him. Anaya, however, claimed the man had attacked her, pulled out strands of her hair and even knocked her out. The deputy wrote that she had a welt on her eye but “did not have multiple injuries and she refused to be seen by medical staff.”
In another of Anaya’s run-ins with the law, a police report said in December 2010, she allegedly started a fight with a cousin and threatened to kill her. She was found guilty of driving with a revoked license in 2010. Thursday’s incident is the third officer-involved shooting in Santa Fe in 2013. The first occurred March 4, when Robert Dominguez, a 77-yearold property manager, was shot on Johnson Lane after Santa Fe police Officer Charles Laramie responded to an alarm call. Laramie reported the
caretaker pulled a gun at the scene, and he responded with several shots. The officer was cleared in the incident and returned to duty after an investigation by District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco. The second incident, in August, involved a Santa Fe police officer who shot 25-year-old Roberto Mendez in the face, causing injuries that were not life-threatening, after Mendez refused to get out of a vehicle that had been reported stolen and then backed the car into an officer.
Leader: Shooting on Malala sparked uproar across world Continued from Page A-1
From left, Five & Dime General Store co-owner Earl Potter, CEO Mike Collins and co-owner Deborah Potter are planning to open their 10th store in St. Augustine, Fla. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
Store: Couple opened 1st branch in 2003 Continued from Page A-1 as part of the site for a Woolworth’s store since 1935. In 2003, they opened their first branch on the River Walk in San Antonio, Texas. That led to a second store in San Antonio, near the Alamo, then others in Branson, Mo.; San Diego; Monterey, Calif.; and Charleston, S.C. Last March, stores opened in Savannah, Ga., and in Kansas City, Mo., at the Legends Center — which includes a NASCAR track and minor-league baseball park. This week, the company announced it has signed a lease for its 10th store, 1078 St. George St. in San Augustine, a town of 13,000 people on the Atlantic Coast about 40 miles south of Jacksonville, Fla. A September 2014 opening is planned. “It’s right in the heart of their historic district, so we’re very excited about getting it,” Earl Potter said. “It took us three years of negotiations to get that spot.”
Potter, a lawyer, said he’s not sure if the St. Augustine store will carry the Santa Fe store’s “world famous” Frito pies, which have been sold here since the 1960s. The initial effort to sell them at the first San Antonio store failed because there was so much food offered on the River Walk, he said. But October’s round of publicity — when food critic Anthony Bourdain claimed on his CNN show that the Santa Fe Frito pie was made with canned chile and then had to acknowledge that it is actually handmade in the store’s snack bar — has Potter thinking about trying the corn chip-chileand-cheese dish in Florida. For much of the 20th century, promoters of Santa Fe and St. Augustine carried on a friendly debate about which town is older and which has the older landmarks. A Spanish admiral founded St. Augustine in 1565 — decades before Santa Fe’s founding between 1607 and 1610, depending on your source. But Santa Fe’s provenance as a Tewa settlement began centuries earlier,
Police stun stepdad trying to save son 3-year-old boy dies in house fire The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — The family of a 3-year-old killed in a northern Missouri house fire is outraged after police used a stun gun on the boy’s stepfather as he tried to run back in and save the child. Riley Jeffrey Rieser Miller died early Oct. 31 in the Mississippi River town of Louisiana. A city police officer fired his stun gun at Ryan Miller, 31, as he tried to re-enter his burning home, according to a city official. The house was destroyed. Lori Miller said she witnessed two officers use their stun guns on her son a total of three times, twice after Ryan Miller had been handcuffed. The final time, he was in a police squad car, she said. “It was police brutality,” said Miller, adding that she was also threatened with arrest. “We’re still trying to
mourn.” City Administrator Bob Jenne called the police response a “judgment call.” Jenne said Thursday that he is waiting to review a police report from the fire. Emily Miller said the police response directed at her brother-in-law was “heartless.” Jenne said the fire started in an electrical outlet in the rear recreation room where Riley’s parents fell asleep watching television. By the time they awoke, smoke and flames prevented Ryan and Cathy Miller from reaching their son, whose bedroom was at the front of the house. They fled through the back, with Ryan Miller trying unsuccessfully to reenter the home before the second attempt that led to his arrest. Miller was taken to the city jail and released without being charged. He and his wife were later treated for minor burns at an Illinois hospital.
as evidenced by buildings, artifacts and bodies uncovered in various excavations around town. St. Augustine’s oldest dwelling, the González-Alvarez House, is believed to date from the 1600s, easily predating Santa Fe’s oldest house at 215 E. De Vargas St., believed to date from the 1700s. But the official history of Santa Fe’s oldest house claims it was built on the ruins of an 800-year-old Indian dwelling — again trumping the Florida city. Santa Fe clearly wins the oldest church contest. St. Augustine’s oldest church, the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine, built in 1797, is 87 years younger than even the most recent incarnation of Santa Fe’s oldest church, San Miguel Mission, first built in 1610, destroyed in 1640, rebuilt in 1645, destroyed again in the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 and rebuilt yet again in 1710. Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.
Solvency: Opponents express reservations Continued from Page A-1 tribution increases before they could take effect. For a government worker or educator earning $40,000 annually, the proposal would cost an extra $300 a year once the higher payments are fully implemented. A worker’s payroll contribution rate would increase by 0.75 percent over three years, starting in July. For the same worker earning $40,000 a year, a governmental employer would pay an additional $600 annually once a proposed 1.5 percent payroll contribution rate increase is phased in over six years. Under the proposal, about 100,000 public employees would make an additional $30 million in annual payroll contributions, while governmental employers — meaning taxpayers — would increase their payments by $60 million a year, once the increases are fully implemented. The health care program is financed by government workers and taxpayers as well as insurance premiums paid by about 55,000 retired public employ-
ees. The program also receives investment income from its balances of about $300 million. Tyndall said the authority’s governing board has taken steps to improve the long-term finances of the health care program by raising insurance premiums for retirees and their families, scaling back insurance plans to require higher copays and deductibles, and requiring retirees to pay a greater share of prescription drug costs. “Everyone has had to step in and make some sacrifices,” he said. The projected cost of providing insurance benefits to future retirees is about $3.6 billion greater than the program’s assets and anticipated revenues. That unfunded liability has dropped from $4.1 billion in 2007, however. But opponents expressed reservations about requiring current workers to increase their payments when there’s no guarantee the health care program will remain solvent beyond 30 years. “All this does is kick the can down the road,” said House Republican Leader Donald Bratton of Hobbs.
New York’s Times square in 2010. The U.S. had put a $5 million bounty on his head, Mehsud’s killing had outraged Pakistani officials. The government said the drone strike came a day before it planned to send a delegation of clerics to invite the Pakistani Taliban to hold peace talks, although many analysts doubted a deal was likely. Bhitani, the Taliban shura leader, said the group would not join peace talks with the government, accusing Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of selling out the group when he met with President Barack Obama in Washington on Oct. 23. “We will take revenge on Pakistan for the martyrdom of Hakimullah,” Bhitani told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location in North Waziristan, where the shura met. The Pakistani government did not immediately respond to request for comment on the Taliban comments or the appointment of Fazlullah. Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan has said he asked the U.S. ambassador in Islamabad, Richard Olson, not to carry out any drone attacks while Islamabad was pursuing peace talks with domestic Taliban militants. The Pakistani Taliban withdrew an offer to hold talks in May after their deputy leader was killed in a U.S. drone strike but warmed to negotiations again after Sharif took office in June. It’s unclear if the government will be able to coax the militants back to the table again, especially since Fazlullah is known to be such a hard-liner. Pakistani officials have criticized the drone strikes in public, saying they violate the country’s sovereignty and kill too many civilians. But the government is known to have secretly supported at least some of the attacks, especially when they targeted enemies of the state. The Pakistani Taliban is an umbrella organization of militant groups formed in 2007 to overthrow the government and install a hard-line form of Islamic law. Based in the country’s remote tribal region, the group also wants Pakistan to end its support for the U.S. fight in Afghanistan. The Afghan and Pakistani Taliban are allies but have generally directed their attacks on opposite sides of the border. Fazlullah, believed to be in his late 30s, served as the Pakistani Taliban’s leader in
the northwest Swat Valley but is now believed to be hiding in Afghanistan. He rose to prominence through radio broadcasts demanding the imposition of Islamic law, earning him the nickname “Mullah Radio.” His group began infiltrating the valley in 2007 and spread fear among residents by beheading opponents, blowing up schools, holding public floggings, forcing men to grow beards and preventing women from going to markets. The military invaded Swat in 2009 after a peace deal with the militants fell apart. The offensive pushed most of the fighters out of the valley, and Fazlullah escaped to Afghanistan. But periodic attacks continue in Swat. Fazlullah and his group carried out the attack on Malala, who was shot in the head while on her way home from school in October 2012. She was targeted after speaking out against the Taliban over its interpretation of Islam, which limits girls’ access to education. The shooting sparked international outrage, and Malala was flown to the United Kingdom, where she underwent surgery to repair the damage to her skull. She has since become an even more vocal critic of the Taliban and advocate for girls’ education, earning her international acclaim, including the European Parliament’s Sakharov Award, its top human rights prize. On her 16th birthday, she delivered a speech at the United Nations in New York. She was considered a front-runner for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize and met with Obama at the White House. Malala’s representatives said she declined to comment on Fazlullah’s appointment. Attempts to reach her father also were unsuccessful. Fazlullah also claimed responsibility for the deaths of a Pakistani army general and two other soldiers in a roadside bombing near the Afghan border in September. The killings outraged the military and raised questions about whether the Taliban had any real interest in negotiating peace. Imtiaz Gul, head of the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies, said Fazlullah became the Pakistani army’s “enemy No. 1” after the attack on the general. Fazlullah is the first leader of the Pakistani Taliban not to come from the Mehsud tribe based in South Waziristan. The group’s first leader, Baitullah Mehsud, also was killed by a U.S. drone strike in 2009.
People watch a news report on TV about Mullah Fazlullah, the newly selected leader of Pakistani Taliban, at a coffee shop in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Thursday. B.K. BANGASH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NATION
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-5
Minimum wage fight gains momentum
U.S. shows growth in 3rd quarter
Obama backs effort to hike standard pay to $10.10 per hour
Experts: Gains may weaken economy
By Franco Ordonez
McClatchy Washington Bureau
By Martin Crutsinger
WASHINGTON — The fight to raise the minimum wage caught a big wave of momentum this week as President Barack Obama endorsed a pay increase after voters pledged support in two key elections. The White House confirmed Thursday that Obama was backing an effort to increase the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, which is higher than the $9-an-hour proposal he championed in his State of the Union address in February. The announcement comes just days after voters in New Jersey approved a $1 increase in the state’s minimum wage to $8.25 an hour. And when all the votes are counted, residents of a suburban Washington town, SeaTac, likely pushed the minimum wage up to an eyecatching $15 an hour for about 6,500 men and women who work at or near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. “We’re talking about a $15-an-hour minimum wage,”
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy showed surprising growth from July through September just before the government’s partial shutdown. But much of the gain came from a buildup in company stockpiles. Consumers and businesses slowed their spending — a cautionary sign for the current quarter and early 2014. Americans did purchase more autos and other long-lasting goods. Yet most analysts say the economy isn’t showing enough underlying strength to cause the Federal Reserve to scale back its stimulus any time soon. Overall, growth accelerated to a 2.8 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That’s up from a 2.5 percent rate in the April-June quarter. And it’s nearly a full percentage point higher than economists had predicted. Home construction rose at a double-digit pace, and state and local governments spent at their fastest rate in four years. Still, the bulk of the unforeseen strength came from the buildup in company inventories. That suggests businesses overestimated consumer demand. “The economy grew more rapidly than anticipated in the summer but for the wrong reason, due to an unwanted buildup in inventories” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University. Many analysts forecast that growth is weakening in the current quarter to an annual rate below 2 percent. Sohn said businesses are now forced to cut back on their restocking to thin out the unwanted inventories. He also said companies are likely to hold off on hiring, which would weigh further on consumer spending.
said Tsedeye Gebreselassie, staff attorney for the National Employment Law Project, which is helping lead national efforts for a minimum wage increase. “That’s a message that people think the $15 minimum wage is fair and what you need to survive. And business can absolutely afford it. It’s a big deal.” Those results were expected to spur Obama to renew calls for a federal minimum wage hike. He did so Thursday by publicly supporting a proposal introduced this summer by Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, and Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., to raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per hour and index it to inflation. But the proposal is not expected to gain much traction in today’s divided Congress. And many Republicans feel it would kill job growth. Campaigns are spreading across the country, as more workers find themselves in low-wage jobs coming out of the Great Recession. Of the 1.9 million jobs created during the recovery, 43 percent have been in the low-wage industries of retail, food services and employment services, according to a recent National Employment Law Project study. This summer, thousands of
fast food restaurant workers across the country dropped their spatulas and picked up signs calling for super-sized wage hikes. Tyree Johnson, 45, stood outside a McDonald’s restaurant in downtown Chicago with a sign that read: “We are worth more.” He makes $8.35 an hour, just 10 cents over the Illinois minimum wage. Johnson has a room at a men’s hotel in downtown Chicago, which he pays for by cooking and cleaning at the fast food giant. He’s worked at McDonald’s for more than two decades. It’s a check-to-check lifestyle, he said. But if the minimum wage were raised to $15 an hour, as he hopes, he could get an apartment and wouldn’t have to depend on his aunt for help, he said. “The only times I’ve gotten a raise is when they increased the minimum wage,” he said. New Jersey became the fourth state to raise its minimum wage this year after New York, Connecticut and California, buoying the hopes of supporters elsewhere. But opponents like House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio,
and the National Federation of Independent Business say an increase would only make it harder for small businesses to hire people. “Small businesses clearly have been under financial pressure,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “They got hit in the recession hard and recovered more slowly than big companies and midsize companies. And the minimum wage will clearly
hurt them more.” Instead, Zandi thinks more changes could occur on the state level. Keep an eye on the Northeast and West Coast states, he said, where politics are more liberal and wages are higher. An extra dollar or two increase in the federal minimum wage will have less of an impact — and therefore opposition — when workers in lowwage jobs are already making more than proposed increases.
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A-6
NATION
THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
FDA moves to eliminate artery-clogging trans fats Agency officials say phase out could save 7,000 lives yearly
How can the government get rid of them? The FDA said it has made a preliminary determination that trans fats no longer fall in the agency’s “generally recognized as safe” category, which covers thousands of additives that manufacturers can add to foods without FDA review. Once trans fats are off the list, anyone who wants to use them would have to petition the agency for a regulation allowing it, and that would likely not be approved. The fats are created when hydrogen is added to vegetable oil to make it more solid, which is why they are often called partially hydrogenated oils. The FDA is not targeting small amounts of trans fats that occur
By Mary Clare Jalonick
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Heartclogging trans fats were once a staple of the American diet, plentiful in baked goods, microwave popcorn and fried foods. Now, mindful of the health risks, the Food and Drug Administration is getting rid of what’s left of them for good. Condemning artificial trans fats as a threat to public health, the FDA announced Thursday it will require the food industry to phase them out. Manufacturers already have eliminated many trans fats, responding to criticism from the medical community and to local laws. Even so, the FDA said getting rid of the rest — the average American still eats around a gram of trans fat a day — could prevent 20,000 heart attacks and 7,000 deaths each year. It won’t happen right away. The agency will collect comments for two months before determining a phase-out timetable. Different foods may have different schedules, depending how easy it is to find substitutes. “We want to do it in a way that doesn’t unduly disrupt markets,” said Michael Taylor, FDA’s deputy commissioner for foods. Still, he says, the food “industry has demonstrated that it is, by and large, feasible to do.” Indeed, so much already has changed that most people won’t notice much difference, if any, in food they get at groceries or restaurants. Scientists say there are no health benefits to trans fats. And they can raise levels of “bad” cholesterol, increasing the risk of heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States. Trans fats are widely considered the worst kind for your heart, even worse than saturated fats, which also can contribute to heart disease.
Alexes Garcia makes cinnamon rolls for students’ lunch in the kitchen at Kepner Middle School in Denver in 2012. The rolls are made using applesauce instead of trans fats. The Food and Drug Administration announced Thursday that it will require the food industry to gradually phase out trans fats. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Trans fats are used both in processed food and in restaurants, often to improve the texture, shelf life or flavor of foods. Although they have been removed from many items, the fats are still found in some baked goods such as pie crusts and biscuits and in ready-to-eat frostings that use the more-solid fats to keep consistency. They also are sometimes
used by restaurants for frying. Many larger chains have phased them out, but smaller restaurants may still get food containing trans fats from suppliers.
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Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
A-7
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
COMMENTARY
Anecdotes are no way to govern
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Tweeting your way into trouble
Dana Milbank
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON t did not sound good for Sen. Pat Toomey. “I’m a two-time breast cancer survivor and I’m facing the loss of insurance,” the Pennsylvania Republican declared Wednesday at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on the health care law. “Three years ago, I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis,” he added. “If my coverage is not in place before Jan. 1, I will have to go without my medications. This may cause permanent disability, blindness, inability to walk, speech problems.” Happily for Toomey, he was not describing his own maladies. He was reading emails sent by his constituents. But the senator has contracted a dangerous condition that can cause people to have impaired judgment. It’s called governing by anecdote — and it’s spreading. Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., spoke about “Margaret from Manhattan, Kansas,” who had trouble getting through to a toll-free number for the health care exchange. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., relayed the situation of 39-year-old Emily, who has lupus. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., was greatly agitated about one “Mr. Dougall” not getting a return call from the healthcare.gov website. “Let me talk about Mr. Hood, who lives close to me,” proposed Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. Confronted with this anecdotal assault, Democrats defended Obamacare in kind, with Richard from Oregon, Karl and Bonnie from Wisconsin, Kathleen from Iowa, Gary from Montana and far too many more. “While it’s always risky to
A
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legislate by anecdote, we’re telling stories here today,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., had said Tuesday at the first of two Senate hearings on Obamacare. “And so, let me just add one to the mix, and that’s Betty Berger from Meriden, Conn. … Betty’s story became one that can be repeated 2 million times every single year across this country.” Republicans are right to hammer President Barack Obama for his dishonest — and now debunked — claim that those who like their insurance plans can keep their coverage. Millions who buy their own health insurance will not have that option. The White House knew this during the health care debate and didn’t tell the truth. But what Republicans are doing now is dishonest, too, because their constituents’ tales of woe, even if true, aren’t representative. Suppose the worst forecast proves to be true, and 12 million people cannot renew their coverage and must find new policies on the exchanges. In a country of 317 million people, that group would still be dwarfed by the number of people now able to get health insurance for the first time — and by the overwhelming majority of Americans who are largely
unaffected by Obamacare. Using props to make policy may be unreliable, but it’s apparently irresistible. At a hearing of the Senate’s Health Committee on Tuesday, Scott devoted almost all of his questioning of Marilyn Tavenner, the Medicare chief, to one constituent, the aforementioned “Mr. Dougall,” who allegedly had personal information disclosed to others on HealthCare.gov. “Mr. Dougall is now requesting that the personal information for all of his family be removed from healthcare.gov, because he could not remove it himself,” Scott informed Tavenner. “Mr. Dougall has called on several occasions, but no one will call him back.” “We have reached out to Mr. Dougall several times, and we will find him,” Tavenner offered. “I’m happy to give you his phone numbers,” Scott proposed. “I think we have them,” Tavenner told him. “He doesn’t think so, actually,” the senator maintained, “because no one’s called him.” “Well,” Tavenner said, “we have a disagreement there.” Whatever horrible thing happened to poor Mr. Dougall, it’s hard to imagine it should be the top priority
of the person struggling to salvage the Obamacare launch. Or perhaps distracting Tavenner from that work was Scott’s purpose. After she takes care of Mr. Dougall, Tavenner can work on Mr. Hood’s rising premiums in North Carolina [mentioned by Burr] and Emily’s rising out-of-pocket costs in Tennessee [mentioned by Alexander]. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, at Wednesday’s Finance Committee hearing, was charged with addressing Steven from Topeka’s difficulty with the website [by Roberts]. Democrats felt compelled to defend Obamacare with happy anecdotes. Mary Lapis’ brother saved $700! Steven, from the Akron, Ohio, suburbs, can now buy insurance! Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., told of the favorable website experiences of Greg in Bloomfield Hills and Crystal in Pontiac. Max Baucus, D-Mont., the chairman of the finance panel, offered Gary from Billings, Allison from Wolf Point and Tony from Bozeman, all satisfied Obamacare customers. “I have no doubt,” he said, “that stories like these will keep coming in.” Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter @milbank.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Look elsewhere for country’s answers
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n response to John Greenspan’s letter praising Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (“Look to GOP governors for answers,” Nov. 3) it would behoove any readers not familiar with Walker to read the following column by Charles Pierce of Esquire magazine: http://bit.ly/HAP6fB. If, after reading this, you still think this is a plan for America, let me know and I’ll stand down. Walker, like our Gov. Susana Martinez, is in the pocket of the American Legislative Exchange Council (Susana just doesn’t say it out loud). They want what’s best for corporate America, not your and my America. J. Dan Dougharty
Santa Cruz
For shame Leave it up to a layman who believes he is irreplaceable to try to slander the character of someone like the Rev. Adam Ortega y Ortiz. Que verguenza, (the shame) when you lower yourself to attack without proof of your accusations. That The New Mexi-
SEND US yOUR lEttERS Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnew mexican.com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.
can would print such gossip makes me wonder why the paper would report on this instead of real problems in our community like drugs. I have known Father Adam for many years. Without question, he is a great example to our teenagers in this town — they love him and respect him as he does them. Maybe envidia of father’s connection to this community and churches is what lead to this attempted slander against his character.
Food for thought Recent stories like the expansion of city office space in the Santa Fe Railyard district and the 12 percent cut in city revenue by the state followed by a proposal to consider raising the gross receipts tax got me wondering about the city’s staffing levels. Based on 2012 population estimates and 2012 employment numbers from each city, the city of Albuquerque had 10.8 full-time equivalent employees per 1,000 estimated population, Las Cruces had 14.3, Rio Rancho had 7.1, Santa Fe had 22.0 and Roswell had 11.9. Certainly there are differences between the cities and their services. Some functions may be handled on a county level or vice versa. One would expect Rio Rancho, with its newer infrastructure, to have fewer public service employees, for example. But perhaps this should be food for thought for our City Council as well as those who are advocating a city-run electric company.
Gloria Mendoza
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
J. Lodes
Santa Fe
Santa Fe
lbuquerque Superintendent Winston Brooks has raised a stink by sending tweets that were disrespectful to Public Education Department Secretary-designate Hanna Skandera. Tweet-gate introduces another chapter in an escalating disagreement between the superintendent of the state’s largest school district and the state’s top education official. Brooks, like many teachers and parents across the state, disagrees with many of Skandera’s proposed reforms — with the controversial teacher evaluation changes the latest flash point. On Tuesday, Brooks was exchanging Twitter messages to a television reporter who was in Moriarty covering a Skandera event. In response to a tweet by reporter Lauren Zakalik of KOAT, Brooks said, “Maybe Skandy should head for the livestock truck???” following up with “Moo, Moo, Oink, oink!!” As Gov. Susana Martinez said in criticizing Brooks, being rude sets a bad example for children. Brooks was wrong and perhaps should rethink the need to be on Twitter. The instantaneous, 140-character medium can be unforgiving. His Board of Education, of course, will deal with him and his bad example. Board President Martin Esquivel was unhappy, to say the least, with Brooks and his careless tweeting. We trust the board will discipline its tweeting superintendent. We do want to point out one good example that Brooks set. He made a mistake. Several, actually. The superintendent was at a school board meeting and should have paid attention to business. That’s mistake one. Secondly, his conversation with a reporter was too casual. Twitter, for an official account, can’t be for public conversations. Third, the tweets Brooks sent were unprofessional and more than a little sexist. Yet Brooks deserves credit for what happened next. He apologized to Skandera and the public, admitted he was wrong and said he would try to do better. Superintendents of schools can’t engage in personal attacks. He must do better, or his Twitter handle won’t be @SuptBrooks, but @exSuptBrooks.
A weekend in food heaven
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his weekend, culinary enthusiasts are gathering in Santa Fe to consider the role of food and folklore in a conference that combines history, culture and great eating. FUZE.SW Food+Folklore Festival is a chance to think more deeply on the role of food in creating a sense of place, all while enjoying cuisine by some of the region’s best cooks. The conference takes place at the Museum of International Folk Art and features addresses by such notables as “Ask a Mexican” columnist Gustavo Arrellano and chef and author Maricel Presilla. Inspired by the sublime exhibit, New World Cuisine: The Histories of Chocolate, Mate y Más, this conference celebrates the spirit of the region’s food. (The exhibit, at the Folk Art Museum, runs through Jan. 5, 2014.) With the importance of food to the region, both as an economic driver and as a bedrock of our quality of life, a conference to celebrate and consider what and how we eat is a worthy endeavor. Consider some of its offerings. Local author Carmella Padilla will be discussing the flavors from her childhood kitchen, and author Nasario García is relaying the history of the matanza. Chefs Martín Rios and Rocky Durham and food authority Cheryl Alters Jamison are taking part. Conference fees are $250, or $200 for Museum of New Mexico Foundation members, with events beginning at noon today and running through Sunday. A few spots are still available (476-1126), with the opportunity to get in on the ground floor of a new Santa Fe tradition.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Nov. 8, 1963: Motorists of New Mexico have paid more than $165,355,999 in federal highway user taxes since the start of the Interstate Highway Program seven years ago, but 32.7 percent of that money ($54,141,000) was not spent on highways, according to Jack L. Jones, chairman, New Mexico Highway Users Conference. “The remaining money was spent on projects having no connection with roads.” Federal highway user tax revenues in other states met a similar fate, with the result that U.S. motorists have paid $11 billion more than the amount which was spent for roads.
DOONESBURy
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
Rob Lowe as President John F. Kennedy, left, and Ginnifer Goodwin as Jackie Kennedy in Killing Kennedy, one of many specials on TV this month. KENT EANES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TELEVISION
Filming Kennedy’s last moments sobering for Lowe By Michael Felberbaum The Associated Press
RICHMOND, Va. n his first day on the set of Killing Kennedy, Rob Lowe saw Ginnifer Goodwin donning a replica of the pink suit worn by first lady Jacqueline Kennedy when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Immediately, the intensity and the reality of what they were about to depict in the film hit home. “Seeing her in that beautiful pink Chanel with bloodstains on it was unbelievably emotional,” Lowe said in an interview with The Associated Press on the set, briefly suppressing the accent he groomed to emulate JFK. “It made it real,” he added. “If I were under any illusions about what we were doing, seeing her in that iconic moment was, I would say, sobering.” It also set the tone for filming of the movie, which profiles the Kennedy family and gunman Lee Harvey Oswald. Filmed in Richmond, it premieres Sunday on the National Geographic Channel, several days before the 50th anniversary of JFK’s death in Dallas. In one scene, Lowe and Goodwin paint a portrait of the last private moments of the first couple in a Texas hotel suite before the parade. As Jackie lays out the now infamous pink Chanel suit, the two share loving banter. “I’m so glad that you’re here, it’s so much better when you’re here,” Kennedy says. “Because the one thing I could never bear would be to lose you.” The film, based on Fox News host Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard’s book by the same name, chronicles the events that culminated with the assassination of the nation’s 35th president on Nov. 22, 1963. It carefully interlaces old film reels and TV broadcasts and delves beyond the details of that fateful day and the aftermath, showing viewers the intimate moments behind JFK’s presidency as well as the tale behind Oswald. Will Rothhaar, who took on a challenge portraying one of the most notorious killers in American history, said he attempted to convey Oswald’s strife and frustration just to be noticed, heard or respected. “Everyone thinks of him as this two-dimensional villain,” Rothhaar said, adding that while viewers may not feel compassion for him, Oswald is certainly relatable. Rothhaar stars opposite Michelle Trachtenberg, who
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Today’s talk shows 3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Rob Lowe; Sophia Grace and Rosie; Paris Hilton. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 3:30 p.m. CNBC Options Action 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey Honey Boo Boo and her family; introducing a new boyfriend to the children; Joy Bauer. KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury
FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. E! E! News FNC Hannity MSNBC Up Late With Alec Baldwin 8:30 p.m. KNME Washington Week With Gwen Ifill 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show Terry Crews; Jerry Ferrara; Kirk Fox (The Test). KTEL Al Rojo Vivo CNN Anderson Cooper 360 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Tom Brokaw; Rhys Darby; Black Joe Lewis performs. 10:45 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show
With Jay Leno Mariska Hargitay; Sen. Ted Cruz; Gavin DeGraw performs. 11:00 p.m. KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Jennifer Garner; David Arquette; Arcade Fire performs. FNC Hannity HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actress Mary Steenburgen; actress Becca Tobin. 12:00 a.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:19 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Natalie Portman; Taye Diggs; Nate Bargatze. 1:00 a.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live 1:18 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly Techno DJ Flula Borg; METZ perfoms.
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7 p.m. on Cw The Carrie Diaries After spending the summer in Kyoto, Larissa (Freema Agyeman, pictured) eagerly takes Carrie and Walt (AnnaSophia Robb, Brendan Dooling) to a Japanese festival in the city, where she meets Samantha (Lindsey Gort). Back in Castlebury, Carrie and Sebastian (Austin Butler) get locked in a classroom together in the new episode “Strings Attached.” 7:30 p.m. on ABC The Neighbors When Debbie (Jami Gertz) creates an unusual purse, Jackie (Toks Olagundoye) arranges for the two of them to go on Shark Tank and seek funding to produce them for sale. Larry (Simon Templeman) joins them on the show, and the results of their presentation surprise everyone. Shark Tank regulars Barbara Corcoran, Mark Cuban, Daymond John and Kevin O’Leary guest star in “We Jumped the Shark (Tank).” 8 p.m. on NBC Grimm Nick and Hank’s (David Giuntoli, Russell Hornsby) investigation of a series of disconcerting crime scenes leads them to an old feud that Nick and Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) find familiar. A royal death has several key players preparing to make a move in “A Dish Best Served Cold.”
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8 p.m. on Cw America’s Next Top Model In the opening hour of the two-part season finale, past contestants return to help the three finalists with the last leg of competition. One of the finalists is upset about not having the support of the group. Intense critique during a photo shoot for Guess causes tension to mount. Later, the eliminated contestants are put to the test with the offer of a cash prize. Tyra Banks hosts “Finale Part 1: The Finalists Shoot Their Guess Campaign.” 9 p.m. on NBC Dracula Grayson (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) continues investigating Lady Jayne’s (Victoria Smurfit) connections to the Order of the Dragon — specifically, whether she’s a vampire hunter. Lucy (Katie McGrath) prescribes absinthe, romance and a tour of bohemian London for Mina’s (Jessica De Gouw) broken heart. Grayson’s machinations cost Lord Laurent (Anthony Howell) his life in the new episode “Goblin Merchant Men.”
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plays Oswald’s wife, Marina. Trachtenberg speaks mainly in Russian throughout the film, a language she learned from her mother while growing up. The cast also includes Jack Noseworthy as Robert F. Kennedy, Casey Siemaszko as Jack Ruby, Francis Guinan as Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Flood as Kennedy aide Kenneth O’Donnell. Lowe said the opportunity to play JFK came with some responsibility to pay tribute to an historic figure whose legacy “belongs to all of us.” “There’s a connection playing him that is certainly deeper than playing other roles,” Lowe said. “My interest was in who he was as a man, as a father, as a husband, as a human being, and to try to inhabit that.” And in the eyes Lowe’s costar, he did. “There were times when I felt like I was with the ghost of Jack,” Goodwin said. “I can’t say that I have ever had that experience of feeling like maybe my scene partner was channeling something from a higher source.”
JFK-relAted tV shows Here’s a guide to some of the Kennedy-related TV documentaries and specials airing this month: u JFK: The Final Hours: Friday, Nov. 8 on National Geographic Channel. u Fox News Reporting: 50 Years of Questions — The JFK Assassination: Saturday, Nov. 9 on Fox News Channel. u Killing Kennedy: Sunday, Nov. 10 on National Geographic Channel. u American Experience: JFK: In two parts — Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 11 and 12 on PBS. uCapturing Oswald: Tuesday, Nov. 12 on Military Channel. u Nova: Cold Case JFK: Wednesday, Nov. 13 on PBS. u JFK: One P.M. Central Standard Time: Wednesday, Nov. 13 on PBS. u Marching On: 1963 ArmyNavy Remembered: Thursday, Nov. 14 on CBS Sports Network. u JFK: A President Betrayed: On-demand beginning Nov. 14 on DirecTV. u Kennedy’s Suicide Bomber: Sunday, Nov. 17 on Smithsonian Channel. u The Day Kennedy Died: Sunday, Nov. 17 on Smithsonian Channel. u Letters to Jackie: Sunday, Nov. 17 on TLC. u The Lost JFK Tapes: Thursday, Nov. 21 on Discovery. u JFK Assassination: The Definitive Guide: Friday, Nov. 22 on History Channel. u Lee Harvey Oswald: 48 Hours to Live: Friday, Nov. 22 on History Channel. The Washington Post
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LOCAL NEWS
ficient in math and just 21 percent are proficient in reading. At the eighthgrade level, 23 percent are proficient in math and 22 percent are proficient in reading. By Robert Nott Those results put New Mexico The New Mexican among 18 states that score below the Yet another national survey of edu- national average. According to the latest report, cational progress among U.S. students 42 percent of fourth-graders in the shows those in New Mexico lagging U.S. are proficient in math and 34 perin reading and math. cent are proficient in reading. Among The National Assessment of Edueighth-graders, 34 percent are proficational Progress released a report cient in both math and reading. Thursday that finds only 31 percent of This is a small improvement from a previous study in 2011. New Mexico fourth-graders are pro-
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Horsemen ‘couldn’t get it done’ against Hope Christian
Report shows N.M. kids lag in reading, math State one of 18 that fall below national average
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
The assessment is a congressionally authorized project of the National Center for Education Statistics. It has been conducted periodically since 1969, and its results are published in The Nation’s Report Card, which informs the public about the academic achievement of elementary and secondary students in the U.S. The fourth-grade scores reflect the performance of about 186,500 students in 7,930 schools, while the eighth-grade scores are for 171,800 students in 6,510 schools. Although the report offers state-by-state rankings, it does not note how many stu-
dents and schools in each state were tracked for the report. The National Assessment of Educational Progress focuses on the percentage of students performing at or above three levels: basic, proficient and advanced. New Mexico scored below basic. Larry Behrens, spokesman for the state’s Public Education Department, said via email Thursday, “These results continue to reveal what we have said from the beginning, New Mexico’s students are paying the
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Field of mayoral hopefuls shrinks Pool down to six after Campos misses deadline By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican
LAS CONCHAS FIRE
A plane drops fire retardant into the upper part of Los Alamos Canyon on June 29, 2011. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
Co-op billed for blaze U.S. Forest Service aims to cover costs of fighting fire
erative through the area. The easement also crosses through some private properties. Property owners blame the cooperative for not properly clearing away trees that were tall enough to fall on the line. They blame the Forest Service for not giving the cooperative a wide enough easeBy Staci Matlock The New Mexican ment to prevent such problems. The Forest Service has confirmed it sent a he U.S. Forest Service has billed the state’s Notice of Indebtedness and Bill for Collection to largest rural electric cooperative for more the cooperative for nearly $38.3 million on Jan. 31 of than $38 million to cover costs of fighting this year. the Las Conchas Fire that roared through Recovering fire suppression costs is critical the Jemez Mountains in 2011 and for the cost of to the agency, which is spending an increasing rehabilitating damaged public lands. amount of money to fight wildfires. In 2011 and The bill, sent several months ago, is one more 2012, fire suppression costs alone on public lands claim against the Jemez Mountains Electric Coopate up $1.4 billion of the Forest Service budget, erative, which since January has been targeted by according to the National Interagency Fire Center. two pueblos, dozens of individual property ownSuppression costs alone for the Las Conchas Fire ers and several insurance companies over the fire. topped $41 million. Sixty-three structures and 156,000 acres burned in The Forest Service can charge individuals or the blaze. entities for the costs of fighting wildfires and for The Forest Service also is named in some of damage to public lands if the agency’s investigathose claims, on the grounds that the federal tors believe there’s enough evidence to hold them agency shares responsibility for the disaster. responsible. “There are several instances of this The fire started when a tree fell on a power line from different fires throughout the country,” said owned by Jemez Mountains Electric CooperaDenise Ottaviano, a public information officer with tive west of Los Alamos near the Valles Caldera the Santa Fe National Forest. “The Claims Office National Preserve. The tree was outside the at the Albuquerque Service Center for Budget and 20-foot-wide easement for the power line, which Finance aggressively pursues debts owned the government pursuant to federal regulations.” the Santa Fe National Forest granted to the coop-
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$38.3 million
Amount the U.S. Forest Service has billed the Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative to cover the costs of the Las Conchas Fire.
156,000
Number of acres destroyed in the fire, which ripped through the Jemez Mountains in 2011.
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tors and how much they’ve been paid to date — and they gave the board a deadline of Dec. 19. “This is taxpayer money, and we have an obligation to know where it is being spent,” said By Staci Matlock Sen. Mark Moores, R-Albuquerque, a The New Mexican member of the committee. State lawmakers want to know New Mexico applied for federal who is benefiting from the millions money under the Patient Protection of dollars in federal taxpayer funds and Affordable Care Act, popularly committed to the New Mexico Health called “Obamacare,” to set up a Insurance Exchange. hybrid health insurance exchange. Members of the Legislature’s The state is handling the exchange for interim Health and Human Services small businesses that choose to proCommittee voted Thursday to require vide insurance for their employees. It the exchange’s governing board to is using the federal health insurance exchange to enroll individuals and provide a complete list of contrac-
month. Those troubles are threatening New Mexico’s hopes of enrolling 84,000 individuals into health plans in the coming year. Sandel told the committee that the board has no information yet on how many individuals in the state have been able to purchase a health plan on the federal system. The state had only five months to set up the hybrid exchange and roll it out in time for the Oct. 1 launch date. Sandel said the exchange has spent about $13.7 million so far to hire staff, set up an Albuquerque office
A proposal to establish a minimum retirement age for New Mexico legislators to receive a taxpayer-funded pension won the endorsement of a legislative study panel Thursday but likely faces an uphill battle in next year’s legislative session. A measure by Sen. Jacob Candelaria, a first-term Albuquerque Democrat, would require a lawmaker to reach at least age 55 before collecting pension benefits after leaving office. Under current law, legislators can receive retirement benefits at any age after leaving office, provided they’ve served 10 years. They can collect retirement benefits at 65 if they were in office for five years. Candelaria’s proposal was endorsed by the Legislature’s Investments and Pension Oversight Committee, which agreed to introduce it in the legislative session that convenes in January. Past efforts to trim legislative pension benefits have run into trouble, however. A proposal for a minimum legislative retirement age of 62 died in last year’s session. “I hope mine has some legs to it as a sort of middle-ground approach,” Candelaria said in an interview after the committee hearing. “If we’re going to have this system that people think is needed, it should at least be fair and it should at least contemplate these kinds of situations where the
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Cousins Caleb Malboeuf and David Malboeuf will be paying for a long time for a campfire they left unattended. The two pleaded guilty to reduced charges after their campfire sparked the Wallow Fire, which burned 538,000 acres in Arizona and New Mexico in 2011 and destroyed 32 homes. They pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of failing to
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
Minimum age for legislators’ retirement proposed By Barry Massey
Number of structures burned in the blaze.
families, an online program that’s still plagued with technical problems. Jason Sandel, an Aztec businessman appointed to the New Mexico Health Jason Sandel Insurance Exchange board by the Legislature, said the governing board had sent a letter to federal officials expressing frustration that computer glitches have prevented many individuals from shopping and enrolling in insurance plans since the online marketplace was launched last
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The Associated Press
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Legislators want analysis of health law funds Lawmakers question who benefits from exchange
Only one of the declared candidates for the March 4 municipal election failed to turn in signed nominating petitions by Thursday’s deadline — Margaret Josina Campos, who had been seeking to run for mayor. Her failure to meet the deadline means the mayoral contest is down to a half-dozen candidates: Roman Abeyta, Patti Bushee, Michael Margaret D’Anna, Bill Dimas, Josina Javier Gonzales Campos and Rebecca Wurzburger. City Clerk Yolanda Vigil said that over the next 10 days, she will review the petition signatures to make sure they are from registered voters within city limits, and that they are legible, not duplicated on other petitions and were signed by the deadline of Nov. 2. She plans to announce Nov. 18 whether any of the petitions fails to meet the minimum number of valid signatures. Candidates in the citywide race for mayor must have at least 265 valid signatures of voters to get on the ballot. The deadline for candidates to withdraw is Dec. 13. Reached by telephone Thursday evening, Campos, 64, said she was unable to turn in any nominating petitions because her petitions were “confiscated” from her cousin’s car and probably burned. She also said she had been threat-
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
Suspect did not point gun at officer Albuquerque police shot alleged robber, carjacker The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — An alleged robber and carjacker never pointed his gun at a police officer before the officer shot and wounded him, Albuquerque Police Chief Allen Banks said Thursday. But Banks said the man, Joaquin Ortega, was armed, and police had already received emergency calls about shots being fired in two different areas. Ortega, 34, was accused of confronting a man outside a muffler shop with a gun in an effort to get a ride. The man was retreating behind his vehicle when Officer
Brian Pitzer arrived. The officer told Ortega to show his hands, but the chief said he did not comply. An image from the officer’s lapel video shows Ortega running between two cars and at one point facing the officer with a gun in his right hand. “The officer perceived a threat to himself and perceived a threat to the community, so he took the actions he felt necessary at the time,” Banks said, detailing the events of Oct. 28 during a news conference. Pitzer shot at Ortega eight times. The shooting happened two days after another man — armed with a rifle, handgun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition — had a shootout with law enforcement while leading them on a chase through the city in a stolen police cruiser. That man, Christo-
Mayoral: Poll shows Bushee ahead in city Continued from Page B-1 ened with a gun and “politically harassed” by “gays, lesbians and transsexual people” opposed to her candidacy. A recent poll showed Bushee, who has been a city councilor since 1994, leading the mayor’s race among decided city voters; 24 percent said they favored her for the seat, versus 11 percent each for Gonzales and Dimas, 8 percent for Wurzburger and 7 percent for Abeyta. However, 39 percent of those polled said they have not decided which candidate will get their vote. The poll, commissioned by ProgressiveNow New Mexico, did not ask about D’Anna or Campos. All of the declared candidates for City Council seats submit-
ted signed nominating petitions Thursday, including: u Signe I. Lindell and Michael J. Segura in the northside District 1. Chris Calvert, who currently holds the seat, isn’t seeking another four-year term. u Rad Acton, Joe H. Arellano, Mary Louise Bonney, Jeff E. Green and Joseph M. Maestas in the southeast-side District 2. Wurzburger, who holds the seat, is running for mayor. u Incumbent Carmichael Dominguez, Marie Campos and Angelo Jaramillo in the southwest-side District 3. u Ron Trujillo is unopposed in the south-side District 4. Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.
Lag: Center says results are a ‘disgrace’ grades 3-8, 10 and 11 are reading to grade level and about 42 perprice for inaction on school cent are proficient in math. reform. … By not ensuring stuAlthough some national dents are reading in 3rd grade education leaders pointed out we are seeing the results in 4th modest gains in some areas grade and beyond.” within The Nation’s Report Gov. Susana Martinez Card, Kara Kerwin, president of and Secretary of Educationthe Maryland-based Center for designate Hanna Skandera Education Reform, released a have urged the Legislature to statement saying, “It’s a disgrace approve a bill that would allow schools to hold back third-grade and truly incomprehensible students who are not reading at that after decades of mediocrity, we celebrate today the fact that grade level. Earlier this year, the state’s only 34 percent of our nation’s Standards Based Assessment, 8th graders can read at grade a test that measures how well level and only 34 percent are students are mastering reading, proficient in math.” math and other core subjects, Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 showed that about 51 percent of New Mexico’s students in or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
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pher Chase, wounded four law enforcement officers and ended up dying. The latest shooting also comes as the department is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department for an escalation of police shootings and several high-profile cases of abuse. Since 2010, more than two dozen people have been shot by Albuquerque police, 19 fatally. In the latest shooting, the victim of the intended carjacking, Jim Sutton, told the Albuquerque Journal that Pitzer shot at Ortega as he was running away. He said Ortega threw away his gun after the first two shots. Banks said Ortega was also accused of robbing a woman and her 7-year-old granddaughter at gunpoint before the shooting.
In brief County reports tax scam
The Santa Fe County Treasurer’s Office said several residents are reporting they received a phone call from a man named “Benjamin” who claims he is from the county Social Services Department, and that he is collecting property taxes that are due. He is asking for credit-card information, and claiming that if property owners don’t pay their taxes, their property will be foreclosed. The county wants people to know that it does not have a social services office, and the Treasurer’s Office does not have the authority to foreclose on any properties or receive credit-card information over the telephone. If taxpayers have any questions or concerns, they can call the Treasurer’s Office directly, 986-6245.
Wolf Creek Ski Area operating Wolf Creek Ski Area outside Pagosa Springs, Colo., received another 9 inches of snow this week. All six lifts are operating. Beginning Saturday, the ski area will be in full operation from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. seven days a week. The Alberta, Raven and Magic Carpet lifts will be open for the first time this season. The Treasure Stoke lift, Wolf Creek’s new high-speed detachable quad, already has been transporting skiers and snowboarders up the mountain, along with the Bonanza and Nova lifts, since Oct. 19, when Wolf Creek began operating during the weekends.
The area has received 47 inches so far this season. The midway base depth is 29 inches. Sunday is College Day, offering $38 lift tickets to full-time students with their valid college photo ID. Ski rental and the BoarderDome will be open, as well as Treasure Sports. The Wolf Creek Lodge will be serving up lunch, and drinks will be available at the Pathfinder Bar. The Base Camp will be open for those who prefer to pack their own lunch. Ski school will be available for all ability levels, including the Wolf Pups Program.
State aligns curriculum ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico’s state colleges and universities are moving to a common nursing curriculum to make it easier for students to complete their degrees. Gov. Susana Martinez and leaders of the New Mexico Nursing Education Consortium announced the alignment Thursday, following a two-year effort by her administration and education officials. According to Martinez’s office, the use of a common curriculum will make it easier and less expensive for students to transfer from one school to another. It also will allow nursing students at colleges in rural areas to be able to earn bachelor’s degrees without having to leave their communities. “The lack of a common curriculum for nursing students in New Mexico has put undue stress on our health care system, causing high costs and frustrating delays for many New Mexicans who seek to serve their state and communities as nursing professionals,” the governor said.
Drive, with a grocery cart filled with about $700 worth of merchandise sometime Tuesday. u Someone broke into Real Burger, 2641 Cerrillos Road, between Monday and Tuesday. u A woman reported Thursday that her deceased mother’s vehicle was stolen from an apartment complex in the 500 block of West Zia Road between April and July. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A Coach purse, an iPad and jewerly were stolen from an unlocked Jeep parked at T Anna Lane sometime Wednesday. u A burglar broke into a car and stole a purse and money between 1:30 and 3 p.m. Wednesday. u Marvin Cordova, 25, 6432 Calle Kryshana, was arrested on a charge of marijuana possession after he was detained on five outstanding bench warrants following a traffic stop near the Tierra Real mobile home park.
Monday. u Richard Bell, 40, 538 Morning Lane, was arrested on charges of aggravated drunken driving, an open container violation and driving without registration in the 3600 block of Agua Fría Street between 12:34 and 1 a.m. Thursday.
Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Nava Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Siringo Road at Calle de Sueños at other times; SUV No. 2 at Wood Gormley Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Galisteo Street between Coronado Road and Booth Street at other times; SUV No. 3 at Galisteo Street at West Alicante Road.
Help lines
Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women u Corina Hanson, 39, 837 Rio Vista, was and children: 982-6611 arrested on a DWI charge after deputies Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 found that she had gotten her car stuck New Mexico suicide prevention hotwhile trying to make a U-turn on Apache line: 866-435-7166 Canyon Trail sometime Wednesday. u Jose Vidal-Guerra, 36, of Santa Fe was Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 9869111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 arrested on charges of drunken driving, Youth Emergency Shelter/Youth Shelconcealing identity, improper use of registration and driving without a proper license ters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 or insurance after city officers pulled him over at Cerrillos and Siler roads at 4:28 a.m. Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)
DWI arrests
MARK ALAN GINNEL
Born in Detroit, Michigan October 15, 1957, passed away September 9, 2013, and is now in the presence of our Lord God and his son Jesus Christ, at last set free and at eternal peace. Mark of Colorado Springs, CO is survived by his wife, Mayim, of CO, his mother Janet Miskus, children, Melissa, Mark McLaughlin, brother Scott, sister Kathy all of Michigan. Mark Alan, also leaves behind many relatives, friends, whom he loved, and who loved him back. Mark Alan is also survived by the following friends, mentors, his pastor William Kennedy, Colorado Springs, Co., Irene Morrison, Garavah Ireland, Terry Northway, Santa Fe, NM., Steve Garcia, Chama, NM., Pastor Travis Reeves, Albuquerque, NM., and Pastor Paul Scozzafava, Santa Fe, NM. Memorial Service to be held November 9, 2013 at Gospel Life Church, 2520 Camino Entrada, Santa Fe, NM. at 1:00 p.m.
FIDEL LEE GUTIERREZ The Life Center Foundation is deeply saddened and is feeling a profound loss with the passing of Fidel Lee Gutierrez, our Vice President for over 3 terms. His extraordinary compassion, knowledge and insight brought invaluable wisdom to our selection process for annual Grant Awards. His years of acquaintance with and support of non-profits serving low-income, at-risk children, guided us wisely in response to the numerous applications for annual funding requests. We will profoundly feel the loss of Fidel’s presence, especially at Life Center Foundation meetings. We will miss his generous and warm-hearted spirit. Fidel was an exceptionally decent and honorable gentleman. A unique man. We convey our heartfelt condolences to his wife, Gina Imprescia and their family. The Life Center Foundation Board of Directors Marjorie Miller-Engel Max Myers Annette Vigil-Hayden President Secretary Treasurer Felice Gonzales, Ruth Ritchie, Nat Owings, Robert Engel, John F. Stevenson, Jr., Myrna Ruskin
IN LOVING MEMORY OF MERCEDES J. QUINTANA 10/20/1935 ~ 11/7/2002
Staff and wire services
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Jason Vega, 33, 19-7 Pueblo Garcia Road, was arrested on charges of driving with a revoked license after officers stopped him on suspicion of speeding in the 3500 block of Zafarano Drive between 9:30 and 9:40 p.m. Wednesday. u City officers responded to an unattended death in the 2000 block of Hopewell Street at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday. u A man reported that between 5 p.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday, someone stole two tractor batteries from his property in the 500 block of Bluff Lane and sold them to a local scrap dealer, Capital Scrap Metals Inc., 1162 Cooks Lane. u A burglar carried off a flat-screen TV from a home in the 1300 block of San Juan Drive between Oct. 31 and Monday. u Bradley Campbell, 19, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, was arrested on charges of distribution of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia at St. Michael’s Drive and Pacheco Street sometime Sunday. u John Garcia, 804 Alarid St., was arrested on a charge of commercial burglary. A report alleged he took a television set from Wal-Mart, 3251 Cerrillos Road, at 2 p.m. Wednesday. u Burglars forced their way into a home in the 2600 block of West Zia Road and stole a 50-inch TV, two DVD players and a set of car keys sometime Wednesday. u Edward Manzanares, 25, of Santa Clara Pueblo was arrested on a charge of commercial burglary after he allegedly tried to leave Wal-Mart Supercenter, 5701 Herrera
Funeral services and memorials
This November 7th, marks the 11th Anniversary of the ascension of our Beloved Angel, Mercy. We miss you dearly...You are forever in our hearts, thoughts and prayers! "Happy Birthday" Love, Robert, your husband, your children, Robert Jr., Dickie, Lisa, Gene, Donna, Andrew and your grandchildren and great grandchildren. Family and friends, please join us for an Anniversary mass at St. John’s the Baptist Catholic Church, sunday, November 10, at 9:00 a.m.
FIDEL GUTIERREZ The Board and Staff of The Lensic Performing Arts Center are greatly saddened by the death of our beloved board member and friend, Fidel Gutierrez. He was a valued member of our board who will be remembered for his kindness, generosity, and caring spirit. He always had a ready smile and a great sense of humor. We extend our deepest sympathies to his wife, family, friends, and co-workers. He will be missed by so many in our community.
NESTOR S. MARTINEZ Nestor S. Martinez, 53 of Alcalde, NM, passed away on November 6, 2013. He is preceded in death by his sister; Janelle (Joseph) Martinez, grandparents; Emedardo & Sofia Lopez, Benancio & Lugarda Martinez, his mother and father in law Isabel & Emma Gurule. He is survived by his wife; Kathy Martinez, parents; Nestor and Syliva Martinez, children; Monica, Patricia (Billy) Rachel (Manny), grandchildren; Billy, Julie, and Elijah. Sister; Susan (Joe), brother Eugene (Loriann). He is also survived by many more family and friends. Memorial Service will take place on Saturday, November 9, 2013 at 1:00 pm at Rivera Family Funeral Home in Espanola.
Arrangements by Rivera Family Funeral Home (505) 753-2288. To share a memory, please visit our website at www.riverafuneralhome.com
Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican
Call 986-3000
LOCAL & REGION
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
Gov. rips school official for Twitter comments Blaze: “I know I’m the oink, oink!!” KOAT reported. leader of 90,000 kids Brooks should be ashamed of himself, ALBUQUERQUE — Gov. Susana and 14,000 employees, Martinez said Wednesday. Martinez has called out Albuquerque and I’m really disap“All he’s doing is showing young girls Public Schools Superintendent Winston and boys that it’s OK to do things like pointed in myself,” he Brooks over his social media remarks said. that,” Martinez said. “It’s not OK to about Martinez’s education chief, and Brooks and other behave that [way].” Brooks has apologized. educators have been The governor said women shouldn’t Brooks suggested in a Twitter comat odds with the Marbe treated that way, and she and the Winston ment Tuesday to a KOAT-TV reporter tinez administration Albuquerque school board president Brooks that Public Education Secretary-desover the state’s new demanded that Brooks apologize. ignate Hannah Skandera “head for the teacher evaluation “It’s unfortunate, it’s uncalled for,” livestock truck.” system. said board President Marty Esquivel. Skandera was participating in an Skandera called Brooks’ Twitter comBrooks did apologize, saying his education meeting at the high school in tweets were a display of sick humor, and ments “disparaging and disappointing.” Moriarty that the reporter was covering. he was embarrassed by what he called a This is Brooks’ second Twitter brouhaha. He recently retweeted a photo of a lapse in judgment. Winston then tweeted “Moo, moo, The Associated Press
protester with a sign depicting Skandera and the governor with bloodied fangs. Esquivel said board members will discuss whether Brooks should be disciplined for this. “Personally, I don’t think it’s a good idea for Mr. Brooks to be on Twitter,” Esquivel said. Brooks said he is relatively new to Twitter and other social media, and he said he also doesn’t like being the subject of a personal attack. “In hindsight, I see that it was wrong,” Brooks said. “I’m not making any excuses. I am sorry. I did what I did. I apologized to the secretary. I will try to do better.”
Funds: State has second highest uninsured rate in U.S. preference to New Mexico companies. Out-of-state contractors also have subcall center, and establish the bewellnm. contracted with New Mexico firms, he com website to help New Mexicans buy said. health insurance. The board has agreed Sandel said the board recently voted to pay close to $100 million in contracts to have staff prepare a monthly list of to expand outreach, enroll more people checks cut and the recipients. and ensure a more robust computer sysPaige Duhamel, an attorney with tem for the health exchange. Southwest Women’s Law Center in Moores and other legislators wanted Albuquerque, also testified before the to know how many of the contracts for committee. She asked the members the state’s exchange went to New Mexto support legislation ensuring that a ico companies. The law establishing the Stakeholder Advisory Committee — set exchange did not require the agency to up under the law to give broad advice follow the state’s procurement code. But to the exchange board — is made up of Sandel told lawmakers the board tried more than just contractors. She said it should include consumers, health practo follow the code anyway and gave
Continued from Page B-1
In brief
DENVER — The judge in the Colorado theater shootings says records from two dating websites where defendant James Holmes asked “Will you visit me in prison?” can be used as evidence in his trial. The judge on Thursday rejected a defense motion to suppress the records from AdultFriendFinder.com and Match.com. The judge says part of the defense request is moot because prosecutors don’t plan to use as evidence any communication Holmes had with other website subscribers. The judge also says defense attorneys didn’t show Holmes has a constitutionally protected expectation that his website records would be private. Holmes pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to charges of killing 12 people and injuring 70 in a sub-
Continued from Page B-1 benefit may be a little too generous.” Candelaria, who isn’t participating in the legislative pension plan, said he could have started collecting a pension at age 36 if he left office after serving 10 years. He would have qualified for a pension of about $14,000 a year. That would have cost taxpayers about $560,000 by the time he reached age 80. But with a minimum retirement age of 55 before receiving benefits, Candelaria said, taxpayers would save more than $175,000 in cumulative pension payments. As proposed, Candelaria said, the minimum retirement age would apply to future lawmakers and only those current members who haven’t served at least five years. That means the measure has the potential of applying to at least a fourth of the current 112 House and Senate members. Another legislator, Rep. Miguel Garcia, an Albuquerque Democrat, abandoned plans to push for legislative pension changes after his proposal ran into strong opposition from committee members Thursday. Garcia had suggested eliminating cost-of-living adjustments for legislative pensions — including current retirees — and scrapping the retirement system for future lawmakers — those elected starting in 2016. Garcia had planned to ask for the committee’s endorsement of his proposal, but said he dropped that after seeing there was little chance it would have the support of a majority of members. Sen. Carlos Cisneros, a Questa Democrat, called the current pension system a “small perk” for legislators, who don’t receive a salary.
fewer full-time employees to enroll with an insurance company and offer health coverage to their employees that will begin Jan. 1. Their employees have until Nov. 31 to sign up for a plan that is partially subsidized by their employers. A total of 294 employers have finished enrolling, and their 1,100 employees can select insurance. Another 925 business owners have begun the health insurance process but have not finished. The Associated Press contributed to this story. Contact Staci Matlock at 470-9843 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
urban Denver movie theater in 2012. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.
value of $172,000.
LAS CRUCES — A drug smuggler left more than a load of marijuana when he abandoned his vehicle in the desert near Las Cruces. U.S. Border Patrol agents say he also left a woman and a small child. Agents at the Interstate 25 traffic checkpoint stopped a vehicle for inspection early Tuesday. The driver refused to follow agents’ instructions and fled the checkpoint at a high rate of speed. Agents attempted to pursue the vehicle, but lost sight of the taillights as the vehicle headed off road. They later found the vehicle perched on the ledge of an arroyo. The driver had left behind the woman and child along with 215 pounds of marijuana in several bundles in the vehicle’s luggage area. Authorities say the marijuana has an estimated
seize the vehicles of people arrested for allegedly soliciting the services of prostitutes. The City Council this week approved a nuisance abatement ordinance. It targets the use of vehicles by so-called “johns” who pick up prostitutes and pimps who deliver them. The ordinance is similar to one the city has for vehicles used for alcohol-impaired drivers. A first offense would have a vehicle seized for 30 days. A repeat offense means an offender could lose the vehicle and the city could sell it. Under the ordinance, there doesn’t have to be a conviction for a seizure to occur. There is a provision that a vehicle owner can get it back if somebody else used it.
Albuquerque police targets Smuggler leaves behind vehicles used in sex trade marijuana load, woman, child ALBUQUERQUE — Albuquerque police can now
Holmes dating website records can be used at trial
Age: Plan could apply to fourth of members
titioners, health providers, brokers and others. New Mexico has 448,000 uninsured residents and the second highest rate of uninsured in the nation, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. About half of those people will qualify for expanded Medicaid or be old enough to move into Medicare. The rest will be eligible for coverage through the health insurance exchange. Getting more of those people enrolled by a Dec. 15 deadline so they can receive insurance beginning Jan. 1 is a big goal, Sandel told the committee. Meanwhile, the first deadline has passed for small businesses with 50 or
The Associated Press
Potential deal will likely take months Continued from Page B-1
clear away flammable material from a campfire and leaving the campfire unattended. The reported cost of fighting the fire was $79 million. A federal judge in 2012 ordered the brothers to pay $3.7 million in restitution to property owners, according to media reports at the time. Ottaviano said the claims officer with the Center for Budget and Finance has the authority to decide if, based on investigative reports, “there is a substantial likelihood” that someone acted negligently or otherwise unlawfully caused damages to Forest Service resources. In an email, Ottaviano said the cost totals are based on a Transaction Register, “a report generated from the Forest Service’s accounting records that lists all payments for a specific accounting code. Forest Service fire financial records are based on unique accounting codes that are assigned at the start of a fire.” The Forest Service often negotiates with entities it bills for damages to public lands. But if no deal is reached, the agency can refer delinquent debts to the U.S. Department of Justice for a possible civil lawsuit, or to the U.S. Department of Treasury for collection. Any such deal in connection with the Las Conchas Fire is still likely months away, since the electric cooperative and the Forest Service will be in court with other parties, sorting out responsibility and damages associated with the fire. Several of the claims have been filed in state District Court in Bernalillo County. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
The following Banks and Credit Unions will be closed for
VETERANS DAY Monday November 11, 2013 Please take care of your financial business today!
5:00 - 7:00 (or when the turkeys run out) $5.50/$6.50 (includes admission & skate rental) Turkay Bowl $3.00 per bowl All proceeds to benefit The Food Depot chavezcenter.com 505-955-4033
505.995.1200 centurynetbank.com
Espanola Tierra Amarilla
City of Santa Fe
Recreation Division
3221 Rodeo Rd.
Santa Fe
505-946-3500 www.communitybanknm.com Member FDIC
Fort Marcy Complex
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B-4 THE NEW MEXICAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2013
SPORTS
At last: Ponder, Peterson help Vikings rally to beat Redskins. Page B-8
Lady Chargers blank, outlast Demonettes By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — Keith Richards caught a glimpse of his future on Thursday night. The Santa Fe Abq. Acad. 3 High head coach SFHS 0 just witnessed his team go down 3-0 to Class AAAA powerhouse Albuquerque Academy in the state quar-
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Stanford holds off Oregon
terfinals and saw it as a sign of things to come. The Demonettes (13-8 overall) were riding a wave of good fortune. They entered the tournament as the 12-seed after a 14-year postseason drought and upset No. 5 Los Lunas 3-0 in the first round to be the only 12th-seeded team in the entire state to play in the quarterfinals. So just when it looked like Santa Fe High might become a contender in
AAAA for years to come, they will be forced into the new Class AAAAAA, where they will compete with schools that currently make up the AAAAA class. As Santa Fe High was being outplayed by a team that has won the last five AAAA state championships and will play Albuquerque St. Pius X at 2 p.m. Friday for a chance to compete for their sixth, Richards told his underclassmen to remember this match
because the Demonettes will be facing teams as good as the Lady Chargers (12-8) in regular-season play. “We’re going to deal with this a lot next year since we’re moving up,” he said. “We have a lot of work to do. We’re going to be playing teams with speed and strength like this on a regular basis.” The Demonettes were able to compete with the speed and strength of the Lady Chargers for most of the first
half until Academy’s Maddie Higgins knocked in a header for a 1-0 lead that they would take into halftime. While the Demonettes kept up with the Lady Chargers’ speed, the effort brought on fatigue and took away some of their quickness. “Three girls were about to throw up,” said Demonette goalkeeper Mia Melchor. “We were running so hard.” Tired and depleted, the Demonettes
Please see cHaRGeRs, Page B-7
BOYS SOCCER HOPE CHRISTIAN 2, ST. MICHAEL’S 0
squashed hope
Horsemen ‘couldn’t get it done’ against strong Huskies
By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press
STANFORD, Calif. — Tyler Gaffney ran for 157 yards, and No. 6 Stanford hammered No. 2 Oregon for three quarStanford 26 ters, then held Oregon 20 off a furious rally by the Ducks to crush their national title hopes for a second straight season, this time with a 26-20 victory Thursday night. Kevin Hogan ran for a touchdown and played a mistake-free game for Stanford (8-1, 6-1 Pac-12). The Cardinal put on a clinic in how to play keep away from a team that was averaging 55.6 points. Stanford ran for 274 yards and held the ball for 42½ minutes. Heisman Trophy contender Marcus Mariota was inaccurate and under pressure much of the night, but he threw two fourth-quarter touchdown passes, sandwiched around a blocked field goal return for a score by Rodney Hardrick, to pull the Ducks (8-1, 5-1) to 26-20 with 2:12 left. Oregon couldn’t recover a second onside kick, and Stanford ran out the clock. And the biggest winners of all?
Please see stanfoRD, Page B-6
PREP FOOTBALL
Santa Fe High eyes district title shot By Will Webber The New Mexican
In 1979, gas was 86 cents a gallon, ESPN was just getting started, and Santa Fe High’s football team was busy winning its first and only state championship. On Friday night at Ivan Head Stadium, the Demons can do something they haven’t done since those days — and that’s win a district title in consecutive years. They actually won three straight between 1977 and 1979. With a win over Capital on Friday, it would be two in a row for a school that spent most of the last quarter century with a football program in ruins. On Saturday afternoon, the school just a mile down Siringo Road will try to go for its own bit of history. St. Michael’s, the defending Class AAA state champ and consensus No. 1 all season, is a win away from
Please see titLe, Page B-8
Live coveRaGe u Follow The New Mexican for live blog coverage of the Capital vs. Santa Fe High football game, starting at 7 p.m. Friday. Go to www.santafenewmexican. com/sports.
St. Michael’s Sean Smith tries to keep the ball away from Hope Christian’s Derek Nelson and Lucas Baca during the second half of their game Thursday at the state soccer tournament at APS Soccer Complex in Albuquerque. For more photos from Thursday’s games, go to tinyurl.com/ kzymste. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Will Webber
The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE ound ball, playoff pressure, St. Mike’s versus Hope. Just another day in the evolving history of a sports-wide rivalry between two of the elite athletic programs in Class AAA. On Friday in the fading light of the Class A-AAA Boys Soccer State Tournament at the Albuquerque Public Schools Soccer Complex, this latest round
R
went to the guys in green. Behind a pair of goals from sophomore forward Avery Serda, Hope Christian sent St. Michael’s packing in the quarterfinals of the 12-team bracket with a 2-0 win. The Huskies (12-10) advance to Friday’s semifinals against Albuquerque Bosque School. As the sixth seed, they are the lowest-seeded team remaining in the tournament. St. Michael’s, on paper, was the favorite in Thursday’s match despite a 2-0 loss to the Huskies during the regular season and dropping three of
insiDe u Monte del Sol wins vs. Santa Fe Prep. PaGe B-7
their last five before the playoffs. The third seed after capturing its district title in the regular season, the Horsemen (12-9) simply had no answer for Serda. He broke a scoreless tie just 20 seconds before halftime with a rolling shot that squeezed just inside the left pipe of the St. Michael’s net, a goal
Please see HoPe, Page B-7
Unflappable Capital Jaguars beat Los Lunas By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — If there is a team that doesn’t panic, it is the Capital Jaguars. After being down 2-1 to No. 4 Los Lunas at halfCapital 3 time in a Class Los Lunas 2 AAAA boys soccer quarterfinals match at the Albuquerque Public Schools Soccer Complex, the No. 5 Jaguars pulled out two goals in the second half to get a 3-2 win over the Tigers and move on the semifinals against No. 1 Albuquerque Academy at 10:30 a.m Friday. The final goal came when Capital’s (14-6) Luis Rios launched a pass from near midfield to Jason Alarcon, who ran it down and knocked it right over Los Lunas goalkeeper Dylan Romero.
“I thought right away to just chip it,” Alarcon said. “I chipped it too high and I thought it was going to go over the goal. When it went in, it felt like a relief.” That goal was a relief because it was the go-ahead score with only five minutes left to play. After being ahead just 35 minutes earlier, the Tigers (17-4) began to break down and get frustrated with each other, knowing that they had little time to keep their hopes at a state championship alive. “With five minutes left, it was hard to get the energy back up,” Los Lunas head coach Daniel Martinez said. “At that point, you feel that it’s over.” The Tigers were not always at the end of their rope though. After Bayron Sican gave the Jaguars a 1-0 lead in the 12th minute, Los Lunas’ Alejandro Garcia scored
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
goals in the 19th and 21st minutes to quickly give the Tigers control of the match. Los Lunas has the top-2 scorers in the class with Garcia and sophomore Chris Lovato. With their high-scoring potential, they were expecting to have a lead at some point in the match. “We prepared all week for getting a lead,” Martinez said. “Once we got the lead, we tried to do what we had practiced we pulled people back to try to defend the goal.” Los Lunas kept the Jaguars away from the goal for the rest of the half and Capital went into the break with a deficit. Being down by one score, Alarcon was nearly thinking about the offseason. “I did get kind of nervous,” he said. “I thought we were going to lose.” While Alarcon may have had some
doubt in his mind, Doyle was as cool as a cucumber. “There’s always 80 minutes in a match, so I knew that we could have a chance to come back, and we did,” Doyle said. The Jaguars lost to Los Alamos earlier in the season because they were trying to force a goal after being down, and Doyle reminded his team of that during his halftime speech. “I told them to take their time,” Doyle. “We have 40 minutes and we don’t have to get the goal in the first minute.” Capital came out in the second half and did not try to score right away, Instead, it focused on bringing their team chemistry back together. “We found a way to calm ourselves and keep playing the way we do in
Please see JaGUaRs, Page B-7
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
FOOTBALL Football NFl american Conference
East New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo South Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Cleveland Baltimore Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland
W 7 5 4 3 W 6 4 2 0 W 6 4 3 2 W 9 7 4 3
l 2 4 4 6 l 2 4 6 8 l 3 5 5 6 l 0 1 4 5
t Pct PF Pa 0 .778 234 175 0 .556 169 231 0 .500 174 187 0 .333 189 236 t Pct PF Pa 0 .750 214 155 0 .500 173 167 0 .250 146 221 0 .000 86 264 t Pct PF Pa 0 .667 217 166 0 .444 172 197 0 .375 168 172 0 .250 156 208 t Pct PF Pa 0 1.000 215 111 0 .875 343 218 0 .500 192 174 0 .375 146 199
National Conference
East W l t Pct PF Pa Dallas 5 4 0 .556 257 209 Philadelphia 4 5 0 .444 225 231 Washington 3 6 0 .333 230 287 N.Y. Giants 2 6 0 .250 141 223 South W l t Pct PF Pa New Orleans 6 2 0 .750 216 146 Carolina 5 3 0 .625 204 106 Atlanta 2 6 0 .250 176 218 Tampa Bay 0 8 0 .000 124 190 North W l t Pct PF Pa Detroit 5 3 0 .625 217 197 Chicago 5 3 0 .625 240 226 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 232 185 Minnesota 2 7 0 .222 220 279 West W l t Pct PF Pa Seattle 8 1 0 .889 232 149 San Francisco 6 2 0 .750 218 145 Arizona 4 4 0 .500 160 174 St. Louis 3 6 0 .333 186 226 thursday’s Gane Minnesota 34, Washington 27 Sunday, Nov. 10 Detroit at Chicago, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Green Bay, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Baltimore, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 11 a.m. Oakland at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Carolina at San Francisco, 2:05 p.m. Denver at San Diego, 2:25 p.m. Houston at Arizona, 2:25 p.m. Dallas at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 11 Miami at Tampa Bay, 6:40 p.m. Open: Cleveland, Kansas City, N.Y. Jets, New England thursday, Nov. 14 Indianapolis at Tennessee, 6:25 p.m.
Vikings 34, Redskins 27
Washington 10 14 3 0—27 Minnesota 7 7 14 6—34 First Quarter Was—FG Forbath 20, 8:16. Min—Peterson 18 run (Walsh kick), 5:10. Was—Garcon 8 pass from Griffin III (Forbath kick), 1:17. Second Quarter Min—Patterson 2 pass from Ponder (Walsh kick), 12:59. Was—Reed 11 pass from Griffin III (Forbath kick), 5:02. Was—Paulsen 1 pass from Griffin III (Forbath kick), :10. third Quarter Was—FG Forbath 40, 9:22. Min—Carlson 28 pass from Ponder (Walsh kick), 4:32. Min—Peterson 1 run (Walsh kick), :57. Fourth Quarter Min—FG Walsh 39, 9:54. Min—FG Walsh 40, 3:36. A—64,011. Was Min First downs 27 22 Total Net Yards 433 307 Rushes-yards 36-191 24-91 Passing 242 216 Punt Returns 1-0 2-34 Kickoff Returns 3-74 6-98 Interceptions Ret. 1-30 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 24-37-0 21-27-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-39 1-5 Punts 3-45.0 1-50.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 8-63 1-7 Time of Possession 36:01 23:59 INDIVIDUal StatIStICS RUSHING—Washington, Morris 26-139, Griffin III 7-44, Helu Jr. 2-8, Young 1-0. Minnesota, Peterson 2075, Ponder 2-13, Gerhart 1-4, Cassel 1-(minus 1). PASSING—Washington, Griffin III 24-37-0-281. Minnesota, Ponder 17-211-174, Cassel 4-6-0-47. RECEIVING—Washington, Garcon 7-119, Reed 6-62, Hankerson 5-61, Helu Jr. 3-23, Paulsen 2-3, Moss 1-13. Minnesota, Carlson 7-98, Simpson 4-45, Jennings 3-18, Wright 2-34, Patterson 2-22, Peterson 2-2, Ford 1-2.
NFl Injury Report
CINCINNatI bENGalS at baltIMoRE RaVENS BENGALS: DNP: LB Rey Maualuga (knee), DT Devon Still (elbow), T Andrew Whitworth (not injury related). LIMITED: RB Giovani Bernard (ribs), LB Michael Boley (hamstring), TE Jermaine Gresham (groin), G Kevin Zeitler (hamstring). RAVENS: OUT: G Kelechi Osemele (back). DNP: LB Daryl Smith (thigh), CB Jimmy Smith (thigh), WR Brandon Stokley (thigh). LIMITED: WR Marlon Brown (finger). DEtRoIt lIoNS at CHICaGo bEaRS LIONS: DNP: DE Ziggy Ansah (ankle), CB Bill Bentley (knee), S Louis Delmas (knee), T Corey Hilliard (knee), LB Travis Lewis (ankle). LIMITED: WR Nate Burleson (forearm), WR Calvin Johnson (knee), S Glover Quin (ankle). BEARS: DNP: LB Lance Briggs (shoulder), C Patrick Mannelly (calf), DT Jeremiah Ratliff (groin). LIMITED: LB Blake Costanzo (back), QB Jay Cutler (groin), TE Dante Rosario (ankle), CB Charles Tillman (knee). PHIlaDElPHIa EaGlES at GREEN baY PaCKERS EAGLES: DNP: DE Cedric Thornton (knee). LIMITED: CB Bradley Fletcher (pectoral), LB Jake Knott (hamstring), QB Michael Vick (hamstring). FULL: CB Roc Carmichael (groin), S Patrick Chung (shoulder), WR Riley Cooper (illness), WR Damaris Johnson (ankle), LB Mychal Kendricks (ankle), T Jason Peters (pectoral, shoulder), RB Chris Polk (shoulder, knee). PACKERS: DNP: G T.J. Lang (concussion), QB Aaron Rodgers (collarbone). LIMITED: LB Clay Matthews (thumb), LB Andy Mulumba (ankle), LB Nick Perry (foot). FULL: DT Ryan Pickett (knee). St. loUIS RaMS at INDIaNaPolIS ColtS RAMS: DNP: G Harvey Dahl (knee), TE Lance Kendricks (hand), QB Brady Quinn (hip), RB Zac Stacy (foot). COLTS: DNP: NT Josh Chapman (knee), CB Josh Gordy (groin), S Delano Howell (neck), LB Robert Mathis (shoulder), RB Trent Richardson (ankle), G Hugh Thornton (calf), CB Greg Toler (groin). FULL: WR Darrius Heyward-Bey (shoulder), LB Cam Johnson (knee).
SEattlE SEaHaWKS at atlaNta FalCoNS SEAHAWKS: DNP: DE Red Bryant (concussion), DE Chris Clemons (not injury related), RB Derrick Coleman (hamstring), DT Jordan Hill (biceps), C Max Unger (concussion). LIMITED: T Breno Giacomini (knee), RB Marshawn Lynch (knee). FULL: S Jeron Johnson (hamstring). FALCONS: DNP: DT Corey Peters (knee). LIMITED: T Sam Baker (knee), DT Peria Jerry (toe), LB Stephen Nicholas (thigh), WR Roddy White (hamstring, ankle). oaKlaND RaIDERS at NEW YoRK GIaNtS RAIDERS: DNP: S Tyvon Branch (ankle), WR Juron Criner (shoulder), K Sebastian Janikowski (rib), LB Kaluka Maiava (rib), T Matt McCants (toe), RB Darren McFadden (hamstring), T Tony Pashos (hip). LIMITED: C Andre Gurode (quadriceps), WR Andre Holmes (hamstring). FULL: CB Tracy Porter (shoulder), QB Terrelle Pryor (knee), WR Rod Streater (hip). GIANTS: DNP: WR Victor Cruz (neck), CB Terrell Thomas (knee), CB Corey Webster (groin), RB David Wilson (neck). LIMITED: CB Jayron Hosley (hamstring), RB Brandon Jacobs (hamstring), DT Shaun Rogers (knee). JaCKSoNVIllE JaGUaRS at tENNESSEE tItaNS JAGUARS: DNP: DE Jason Babin (not injury related), RB Maurice Jones-Drew (not injury related), DT Sen’Derrick Marks (not injury related), C Brad Meester (not injury related). LIMITED: DT Roy Miller (shoulder), G Will Rackley (concussion), WR Denard Robinson (hamstring), WR Cecil Shorts III (groin), WR Stephen Williams (Achilles). TITANS: DNP: CB Tommie Campbell (shoulder), LB Moise Fokou (knee), T David Stewart (shoulder). FULL: LB Zaviar Gooden (hamstring), S Michael Griffin (quadriceps), DE Ropati Pitoitua (calf). bUFFalo bIllS at PIttSbURGH StEElERS BILLS: DNP: WR Marquise Goodwin (hamstring), WR Robert Woods (ankle). FULL: QB Thad Lewis (ribs), QB EJ Manuel (knee), DT Kyle Williams (Achilles). STEELERS: DNP: CB Ike Taylor (concussion), LB Vince Williams (concussion). LIMITED: G Kelvin Beachum (knee), T Marcus Gilbert (ankle), TE Heath Miller (not injury related), C Fernando Velasco (thigh). FULL: G David DeCastro (ankle), DE Cameron Heyward (knee), WR Markus Wheaton (finger). CaRolINa PaNtHERS at SaN FRaNCISCo 49ERS PANTHERS: DNP: LB Chase Blackburn (foot), CB James Dockery (shoulder), G Chris Scott (knee). 49ERS No data reported. HoUStoN tEXaNS at aRIZoNa CaRDINalS TEXANS: DNP: RB Arian Foster (back), LB Mike Mohamed (hamstring), LB Darryl Sharpton (foot, toe), G Wade Smith (knee). LIMITED: LB Tavares Gooden (back), TE Garrett Graham (thigh), S Shiloh Keo (ankle), RB Ben Tate (ribs). FULL: G Brandon Brooks (foot), T Andrew Gardner (knee), WR Keshawn Martin (shoulder), CB Brice McCain (hip), NT Earl Mitchell (knee), T Derek Newton (knee, elbow). CARDINALS: DNP: WR Brittan Golden (hamstring), T Bradley Sowell (illness), LB Daryl Washington (illness). LIMITED: LB John Abraham (shoulder), RB Rashard Mendenhall (toe), DE Frostee Rucker (calf). FULL: LB Matt Shaughnessy (knee). DENVER bRoNCoS at SaN DIEGo CHaRGERS BRONCOS: DNP: CB Champ Bailey (foot), S Duke Ihenacho (ankle), WR Wes Welker (ankle). LIMITED: TE Joel Dreessen (knee), T Orlando Franklin (ankle), C Manny Ramirez (knee), TE Julius Thomas (ankle). FULL: WR Eric Decker (toe), G Chris Kuper (ankle), QB Peyton Manning (ankle), RB Knowshon Moreno (ankle), LB Danny Trevathan (ribs), C J.D. Walton (ankle). CHARGERS: DNP: T Mike Remmers (ankle), WR Eddie Royal (toe). LIMITED: CB Crezdon Butler (groin), DE Lawrence Guy (toe), G Chad Rinehart (toe). DallaS CoWboYS at NEW oRlEaNS SaINtS COWBOYS: DNP: WR Miles Austin (hamstring), WR Dez Bryant (back), CB Morris Claiborne (hamstring), DT Jason Hatcher (neck), LB DeVonte Holloman (neck), S J.J. Wilcox (knee). LIMITED: DT Nick Hayden (ribs), DE George Selvie (shoulder), DE DeMarcus Ware (thigh). FULL: S Barry Church (hamstring), WR Dwayne Harris (hip), S Danny McCray (hip, toe), RB DeMarco Murray (knee). SAINTS: DNP: G Jahri Evans (hip), TE Jimmy Graham (elbow, foot), LB David Hawthorne (toe), S Malcolm Jenkins (knee), DE Cameron Jordan (ankle). LIMITED: WR Marques Colston (knee), S Kenny Vaccaro (chest). FULL: S Roman Harper (knee), TE Josh Hill (foot), DE Tom Johnson (hip), LB Curtis Lofton (hamstring), RB Darren Sproles (concussion), DE Tyrunn Walker (knee).
COLLEGE CollEGE
NCaa Football aP toP 25
thursday’s Game #6 Stanford 26, #2 Oregon 20 #5 Baylor 41, #12 Oklahoma 12 Friday, Nov. 8 #20 Louisville at UConn, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 9 #1 Alabama vs. #10 LSU, 6 p.m. #3 Florida St at Wake Forest, 10 a.m #7 Auburn at Tennessee, 10 a.m #9 Missouri at Kentucky, 10 a.m #11 Texas A&M vs. Miss. St., 1:30 p.m. #14 Miami vs. Virginia Tech, 5 p.m. #15 Okla. State vs. Kansas, 2 p.m. #16 UCLA at Arizona, 8 p.m. #17 Fresno St. at Wyoming, 8:15 p.m. #19 UCF vs. Houston, 5 p.m. #21 Wisconsin vs. BYU, 1:30 p.m. #23 Arizona State at Utah, 2 p.m. #24 Notre Dame at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. #25 Texas Tech vs. Kansas St., 10 a.m
NCaa baSKEtball aP toP 25
Friday’s Games #1 Kentucky vs. UNC Asheville, 5 p.m. #2 Michigan St vs. McNeese St, 5 p.m. #4 Duke vs. Davidson, 5 p.m. #5 Kansas vs. Louis-Monroe, 6 p.m. #6 Arizona vs. Cal Poly, 8 p.m. #7 Michigan vs. UMass-Lowell, 5 p.m. #8 Oklahoma State vs. MVSU, 6 p.m. #8 Syracuse vs. Cornell, 5 p.m. #10 Florida vs. North Florida, 1 p.m. #12 N.Carolina vs. Oakland, 7 p.m. #14 VCU vs. Illinois State, 5 p.m. #17 Marquette vs. Southern U., 6 p.m. #18 UConn vs. Maryland at the Barclays Center, 4:30 p.m. #19 Oregon vs. Georgetown, 6 p.m. #20 Wisconsin vs. St. John’s, 5 p.m. #21 N.Dame vs. Miami (Oh), 5 p.m. #24 Virginia vs. James Madisn, 5 p.m. #25 Baylor vs. Colorado at American Airlines Center, Dallas, 8 p.m.
Hurricanes 1, Islanders 0
HOCKEY HoCKEY
NHl Eastern Conference
atlantic Tampa Bay Detroit Toronto Boston Montreal Ottawa Florida Buffalo Metro Pittsburgh Washington N.Y. Rangers Carolina N.Y. Islanders New Jersey Columbus Philadelphia
GP 15 17 15 15 17 16 16 17 GP 16 16 16 16 16 15 15 15
W 11 9 10 9 8 6 3 3 W 11 9 8 6 6 4 5 4
l 4 5 5 5 8 6 9 13 l 5 7 8 7 7 7 10 10
ol Pts 0 22 3 21 0 20 1 19 1 17 4 16 4 10 1 7 ol Pts 0 22 0 18 0 16 3 15 3 15 4 12 0 10 1 9
GFGa 51 37 43 45 48 36 42 29 44 38 50 49 32 57 31 53 GFGa 49 38 53 44 35 43 30 45 47 51 29 42 36 44 22 42
Western Conference
Central GP W l ol Pts GFGa Colorado 14 12 2 0 24 46 25 Chicago 16 10 2 4 24 56 43 St. Louis 14 10 2 2 22 50 33 Minnesota 17 9 4 4 22 45 38 Nashville 15 8 5 2 18 37 44 Dallas 16 8 6 2 18 44 47 Winnipeg 17 6 9 2 14 40 51 Pacific GP W l ol Pts GFGa Anaheim 17 13 3 1 27 57 42 San Jose 16 10 2 4 24 59 36 Phoenix 17 11 4 2 24 56 53 Vancouver 18 11 5 2 24 52 46 Los Angeles 15 9 6 0 18 43 40 Calgary 16 6 8 2 14 45 57 Edmonton 17 4 11 2 10 42 66 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. thursday’s Games Washington 3, Minnesota 2, SO Boston 4, Florida 1 Ottawa 4, Montreal 1 New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 0 Carolina 1, N.Y. Islanders 0 N.Y. Rangers 4, Columbus 2 Dallas 4, Detroit 3, OT Tampa Bay 4, Edmonton 2 St. Louis 3, Calgary 2 Los Angeles 2, Buffalo 0 Vancouver 4, San Jose 2 Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 5, Pittsburgh 1 Chicago 4, Winnipeg 1 Nashville 6, Colorado 4 Anaheim 5, Phoenix 2 Friday’s Games New Jersey at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Nashville at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. Calgary at Colorado, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Anaheim, 8 p.m.
thursday Rangers 4, blue Jackets 2
N.Y. Rangers 1 2 1—4 Columbus 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 3 (Callahan, Richards), 4:16. 2, Columbus, Tyutin 1 (Dubinsky, J.Johnson), 17:31. Second Period—3, N.Y. Rangers, Callahan 5 (Zuccarello, McDonagh), 4:17 (pp). 4, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 4, 12:44. 5, Columbus, Murray 2 (Wisniewski, Gaborik), 13:32. third Period—6, N.Y. Rangers, McDonagh 4 (Girardi, Stepan), 19:06 (en). Shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 10-213—34. Columbus 10-10-14—34. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 1 of 3; Columbus 0 of 2. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Talbot 3-1-0 (34 shots-32 saves). Columbus, Bobrovsky 4-8-0 (33-30). a—11,746 (18,144). t—2:30.
Stars 4, Red Wings 3
Dallas 0 1 2 1—4 Detroit 0 2 1 0—3 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Detroit, Bertuzzi 5 (Zetterberg, Datsyuk), 7:44. 2, Detroit, Almquist 1 (Zetterberg, Bertuzzi), 14:50. 3, Dallas, Horcoff 2 (Whitney, Chiasson), 19:39. third Period—4, Dallas, Ja.Benn 6, 4:08. 5, Detroit, Datsyuk 7 (Zetterberg, Kindl), 11:34. 6, Dallas, Eakin 4 (Gonchar, Daley), 18:50 (pp). overtime—7, Dallas, Peverley 3 (Nichushkin, Goligoski), 4:41. Shots on Goal—Dallas 4-8-11-5—28. Detroit 7-8-12-2—29. Power-play opportunities—Dallas 1 of 2; Detroit 0 of 0. Goalies—Dallas, Lehtonen 7-2-2 (29 shots-26 saves). Detroit, Howard 5-5-3 (28-24). a—20,066 (20,066). t—2:37.
blues 3, Flames 2
Calgary 0 0 2—2 St. louis 2 1 0—3 First Period—1, St. Louis, Tarasenko 5 (Bouwmeester, Schwartz), 3:01 (pp). 2, St. Louis, Lapierre 1 (Leopold, Shattenkirk), 10:12. Second Period—3, St. Louis, Steen 14 (Oshie, Leopold), 5:55. third Period—4, Calgary, T.Jackman 1 (O’Brien, Billins), 4:41. 5, Calgary, Cammalleri 5 (Butler, Hudler), 14:49. Shots on Goal—Calgary 2-10-8—20. St. Louis 11-7-9—27. Power-play opportunities—Calgary 0 of 6; St. Louis 1 of 3. Goalies—Calgary, Berra 1-2-0 (27 shots-24 saves). St. Louis, Elliott 2-0-1 (20-18). a—14,877 (19,150). t—2:23.
Stars 4, Red Wings 3, ot
Dallas 0 1 2 1—4 Detroit 0 2 1 0—3 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Detroit, Bertuzzi 5 (Zetterberg, Datsyuk), 7:44. 2, Detroit, Almquist 1 (Zetterberg, Bertuzzi), 14:50. 3, Dallas, Horcoff 2 (Whitney, Chiasson), 19:39. third Period—4, Dallas, Ja.Benn 6, 4:08. 5, Detroit, Datsyuk 7 (Zetterberg, Kindl), 11:34. 6, Dallas, Eakin 4 (Gonchar), 18:50 (pp). overtime—7, Dallas, Peverley 3 (Nichushkin, Goligoski), 4:41. Shots on Goal—Dallas 4-8-11-5—28. Detroit 7-8-12-2—29. Power-play opportunities—Dallas 1 of 2; Detroit 0 of 0. Goalies—Dallas, Lehtonen 7-2-2 (29 shots-26 saves). Detroit, Howard 5-5-3 (28-24). a—20,066 (20,066). t—2:37.
lightning 4, oilers 2
Edmonton 1 0 1—2 tampa bay 2 1 1—4 First Period—1, Tampa Bay, Stamkos 12, 7:37. 2, Edmonton, Fedun 2 (Eberle, Hemsky), 10:11. 3, Tampa Bay, Stamkos 13, 19:07. Second Period—4, Tampa Bay, Johnson 4 (Panik, Gudas), 18:33. third Period—5, Edmonton, Hall 4 (Eberle), 10:22 (pp). 6, Tampa Bay, Filppula 6, 18:55 (en). Shots on Goal—Edmonton 12-1612—40. Tampa Bay 10-9-7—26. Power-play opportunities—Edmonton 1 of 2; Tampa Bay 0 of 2. Goalies—Edmonton, Dubnyk 3-6-1 (25 shots-22 saves). Tampa Bay, Bishop 10-2-0 (40-38). a—18,695 (19,204). t—2:18.
N.Y. Islanders 0 0 0—0 Carolina 1 0 0—1 First Period—1, Carolina, Dvorak 3 (Hainsey), 6:39. Second Period—None. third Period—None. Shots on Goal—N.Y. Islanders 5-79—21. Carolina 7-11-6—24. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Islanders 0 of 3; Carolina 0 of 2. Goalies—N.Y. Islanders, Poulin 1-3-0 (24 shots-23 saves). Carolina, Peters 2-5-0 (21-21). a—11,541 (18,680). t—2:13.
Capitals 3, Wild 2, So
Minnesota 1 1 0 0—2 Washington 1 0 1 0—3 Washington won shootout 1-0 First Period—1, Washington, Ovechkin 13 (Nic.Backstrom, Johansson), 8:10 (pp). 2, Minnesota, Coyle 1 (Parise, Koivu), 17:51 (pp). Second Period—3, Minnesota, Granlund 2 (Pominville, Niederreiter), 6:07. third Period—4, Washington, Johansson 2 (Wilson, Laich), 16:52. overtime—None. Shootout—Minnesota 0 (Pominville NG, Koivu NG, Coyle NG), Washington 1 (Grabovski NG, Ovechkin NG, Nic. Backstrom G). Shots on Goal—Minnesota 12-10-103—35. Washington 5-9-11-2—27. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 1 of 3; Washington 1 of 3. Goalies—Minnesota, Harding 8-2-2 (27 shots-25 saves). Washington, Holtby 7-5-0 (35-33). a—18,506 (18,506). t—2:41.
Senators 4, Canadiens 1
Montreal 1 0 0—1 ottawa 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Montreal, Markov 2 (Subban, Plekanec), 12:32 (pp). 2, Ottawa, Ryan 9 (MacArthur, Gryba), 13:00. Second Period—3, Ottawa, Methot 2, 11:31. 4, Ottawa, Borowiecki 1 (MacArthur, Ryan), 12:08. third Period—5, Ottawa, Turris 3 (Ryan), 18:51 (en). Shots on Goal—Montreal 9-14-11—34. Ottawa 7-6-11—24. Power-play opportunities—Montreal 1 of 5; Ottawa 0 of 5. Goalies—Montreal, Price 6-7-1 (23 shots-20 saves). Ottawa, Lehner 2-2-2 (34-33). a—19,292 (19,153). t—2:33.
bruins 4, Panthers 1
Florida 0 0 1—1 boston 0 1 3—4 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Boston, Krejci 3 (Chara, Hamilton), 7:17. third Period—2, Boston, Marchand 2 (Eriksson, Seidenberg), 4:09. 3, Boston, Krug 6 (Kelly, Smith), 8:57. 4, Florida, Winchester 4 (Bjugstad, Huberdeau), 14:25. 5, Boston, Smith 2, 18:13. Shots on Goal—Florida 8-9-7—24. Boston 7-9-14—30. Power-play opportunities—Florida 0 of 4; Boston 0 of 1. Goalies—Florida, Clemmensen 0-1-1 (30 shots-26 saves). Boston, Rask 8-4-1 (24-23). a—17,565 (17,565). t—2:28.
Canucks 4, Sharks 2
Vancouver 3 1 0—4 San Jose 2 0 0—2 First Period—1, San Jose, Thornton 2 (Hertl, Wingels), 1:17. 2, Vancouver, Richardson 5 (Archibald, Bieksa), 4:28. 3, Vancouver, Santorelli 5 (Higgins, Burrows), 9:25. 4, San Jose, Brown 1 (Sheppard, Desjardins), 10:45. 5, Vancouver, Higgins 6 (Burrows), 18:55. Penalties—Stanton, Van, major (fighting), 11:16; Desjardins, SJ, major (fighting), 11:16; Richardson, Van (hooking), 13:12. Second Period—6, Vancouver, Kassian 4 (Bieksa, Stanton), 5:22. Penalties—Garrison, Van (interference), 9:23; Demers, SJ (kneeing), 13:37. third Period—None. Penalties— Sestito, Van (slashing), 3:45; Boyle, SJ (tripping), 9:08; B.Stuart, SJ (slashing), 12:02; Bieksa, Van (roughing), 18:21; Wingels, SJ (roughing), 18:21. Shots on Goal—Vancouver 9-17-8—34. San Jose 6-5-13—24. Power-play opportunities—Vancouver 0 of 3; San Jose 0 of 3. Goalies—Vancouver, Luongo 9-4-2 (24 shots-22 saves). San Jose, Niemi 9-2-4 (13-9), Stalock (5:22 second, 21-21). a—17,562 (17,562). t—2:22. Referees—Dean Morton, Brad Watson. linesmen—Jay Sharrers, Brad Lazarowich.
Kings 2, Sabres 0
buffalo 0 0 0—0 los angeles 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Richards 4 (Muzzin, Toffoli), 19:24 (pp). Penalties—Muzzin, LA (holding), 7:52; Myers, Buf (interference), 17:36. Second Period—2, Los Angeles, Kopitar 4 (Doughty, Richards), 12:18 (pp). Penalties—Carcillo, LA (hooking), 4:35; Regehr, LA (hooking), 10:34; McBain, Buf (high-sticking), 11:00; Stafford, Buf (slashing), 11:45; Myers, Buf, served by Leino, minor-major (holding, fighting), 18:50; Frattin, LA, major (fighting), 18:50. third Period—None. Penalties— Kopitar, LA (slashing), 10:10; Myers, Buf (high-sticking), 13:01. Shots on Goal—Buffalo 7-5-7—19. Los Angeles 8-12-8—28. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 0 of 4; Los Angeles 2 of 5. Goalies—Buffalo, Enroth 1-4-1 (28 shots-26 saves). Los Angeles, Quick 9-5-0 (19-19). a—18,118 (18,118). t—2:24.
SOCCER SoCCER
NoRtH aMERICa MlS Playoffs CoNFERENCE SEMIFINalS
EaStERN CoNFERENCE New York vs. Houston leg 2 — Wednesday’s Game Houston 2, New York 1, OT, Houston advanced on 4-3 aggregate leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 3 New York 2, Houston 2 Sporting KC vs. New England leg 2 — Wednesday’s Game Sporting KC 3, New England 1, OT, Sporting KC advanced on 4-3 aggregate leg 1 — Saturday, Nov. 2 New England 2, Sporting KC 1 WEStERN CoNFERENCE Portland vs. Seattle leg 2 — thursday’s Game Portland 3, Seattle 2, Portland advanced on 5-3 aggregate leg 1 — Saturday, Nov. 2 Portland 2, Seattle 1 Real Salt lake vs. la Galaxy leg 2 — thursday’s Game Real Salt Lake 2, LA Galaxy 0, OT, Real Salt Lake advanced on 2-1 aggregate leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 3 LA Galaxy 1, Real Salt Lake 0
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
BASKETBALL baSKEtball
Nba Eastern Conference
atlantic Philadelphia Brooklyn Toronto New York Boston Southeast Miami Charlotte Orlando Atlanta Washington Central Indiana Milwaukee Detroit Cleveland Chicago
W 3 2 2 1 1 W 4 3 3 2 1 W 5 2 2 2 1
l Pct 2 .600 2 .500 3 .400 3 .250 4 .200 l Pct 2 .667 2 .600 2 .600 3 .400 3 .250 l Pct 0 1.000 2 .500 2 .500 3 .400 3 .250
GolF GOLF Gb — 1/2 1 11/2 2 Gb — 1/2 1/2 11/2 2 Gb — 21/2 21/2 3 31/2
Western Conference
Southwest W l Pct Gb San Antonio 4 1 .800 — Houston 4 2 .667 1/2 Dallas 3 2 .600 1 New Orleans 2 3 .400 2 Memphis 2 3 .400 2 Northwest W l Pct Gb Oklahoma City 3 1 .750 — Minnesota 3 2 .600 1/2 Portland 2 2 .500 1 Denver 1 3 .250 2 Utah 0 5 .000 31/2 Pacific W l Pct Gb Golden State 4 1 .800 — Phoenix 3 2 .600 1 L.A. Lakers 3 3 .500 11/2 L.A. Clippers 3 3 .500 11/2 Sacramento 1 3 .250 21/2 thursday’s Games Miami 102, L.A. Clippers 97 Denver 109, Atlanta 107 L.A. Lakers 99, Houston 98 Wednesday’s Games Orlando 98, L.A. Clippers 90 Washington 116, Philadelphia 102 Indiana 97, Chicago 80 Charlotte 92, Toronto 90 Boston 97, Utah 87 Golden State 106, Minnesota 93 Milwaukee 109, Cleveland 104 New Orleans 99, Memphis 84 San Antonio 99, Phoenix 96 Oklahoma City 107, Dallas 93 Friday’s Games Boston at Orlando, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Toronto at Indiana, 5 p.m. Brooklyn at Washington, 5 p.m. New York at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Utah at Chicago, 6 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 6 p.m. L.A. Lakers at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Golden St. at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Denver at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Portland, 8 p.m. Saturday’s Games Utah at Toronto, 5 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m. Boston at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Houston, 6 p.m. Golden State at Memphis, 6 p.m. Dallas at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. Portland at Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Heat 102,Clippers 97
l.a. ClIPPERS (97) Dudley 1-5 0-0 2, Griffin 11-15 4-5 27, Jordan 4-8 3-5 11, Paul 3-11 5-5 11, Redick 4-11 5-6 15, Crawford 6-11 0-0 14, Green 2-4 0-0 5, Mullens 3-5 0-0 6, Collison 2-3 0-0 6, Bullock 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-73 17-21 97. MIaMI (102) James 6-13 5-9 18, Haslem 2-2 0-0 4, Bosh 4-8 3-6 12, Chalmers 2-5 1-1 6, Wade 13-22 3-4 29, Allen 5-8 2-3 12, Battier 2-4 2-4 7, Andersen 3-3 4-5 10, Cole 0-5 0-0 0, Lewis 1-1 1-1 4. Totals 38-71 21-33 102. l.a. Clippers 31 25 17 24—97 Miami 28 24 24 26—102 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 8-24 (Collison 2-2, Crawford 2-5, Redick 2-6, Griffin 1-1, Green 1-2, Mullens 0-1, Paul 0-3, Dudley 0-4), Miami 5-16 (Lewis 1-1, Chalmers 1-2, Bosh 1-2, James 1-3, Battier 1-3, Cole 0-1, Wade 0-1, Allen 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 43 (Griffin, Jordan 14), Miami 43 (Bosh 6). Assists—L.A. Clippers 22 (Paul 12), Miami 27 (Wade 7). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 30, Miami 23. Technicals— Crawford, Paul, Miami defensive three second. A—19,600 (19,600).
Nuggets 109, Hawks 107
atlaNta (107) Carroll 4-9 1-1 10, Millsap 10-15 7-11 29, Horford 10-21 1-1 21, Teague 7-17 0-0 14, Korver 6-10 2-2 16, Antic 2-5 1-2 7, Martin 0-7 1-2 1, Scott 1-2 0-0 2, Cunningham 0-0 0-0 0, Mack 3-8 0-0 7. Totals 43-94 13-19 107. DENVER (109) Hamilton 2-7 1-2 6, Faried 2-6 0-0 4, McGee 7-13 0-0 14, Lawson 9-16 2-3 23, Foye 4-7 2-3 13, Robinson 5-11 1-2 15, Fournier 5-10 0-0 12, Hickson 1-4 1-2 3, Mozgov 3-4 4-5 10, A.Miller 3-5 0-0 7, Arthur 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 42-86 11-17 109. atlanta 26 25 32 24—107 Denver 26 28 29 26—109 3-Point Goals—Atlanta 8-26 (Millsap 2-3, Korver 2-4, Antic 2-5, Mack 1-3, Carroll 1-4, Teague 0-1, Scott 0-1, Horford 0-1, Martin 0-4), Denver 14-25 (Robinson 4-6, Foye 3-5, Lawson 3-5, Fournier 2-3, A.Miller 1-1, Hamilton 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Atlanta 56 (Millsap 10), Denver 51 (Faried 9). Assists—Atlanta 31 (Teague 11), Denver 28 (Lawson 8). Total Fouls—Atlanta 23, Denver 18. Technicals—Atlanta defensive three second, Denver defensive three second. A—15,404 (19,155).
lakers 99, Rockets 98
B-5
l.a. laKERS (99) Young 3-9 4-4 11, Gasol 1-10 0-0 2, Kaman 3-5 0-0 6, Nash 3-11 4-4 12, Blake 5-10 0-0 14, Henry 1-5 1-2 3, Johnson 6-15 1-2 16, Farmar 5-12 0-0 11, Meeks 6-9 1-1 18, Hill 3-6 0-2 6. Totals 36-92 11-15 99. HoUStoN (98) Parsons 6-11 3-4 16, Howard 5-10 5-16 15, Asik 1-3 4-6 6, Beverley 1-10 0-0 3, Harden 9-24 14-16 35, Lin 5-8 5-8 16, Casspi 1-5 2-2 5, Garcia 1-6 0-0 2. Totals 29-77 33-52 98. l.a. lakers 36 28 17 18—99 Houston 19 31 27 21—98 3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 16-35 (Meeks 5-7, Blake 4-6, Johnson 3-8, Nash 2-5, Farmar 1-4, Young 1-5), Houston 7-27 (Harden 3-9, Lin 1-2, Casspi 1-3, Parsons 1-3, Beverley 1-5, Garcia 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 59 (Gasol 12), Houston 68 (Howard 14). Assists— L.A. Lakers 26 (Farmar 7), Houston 17 (Harden 5). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 36, Houston 17. Technicals—Houston defensive three second. A—18,133 (18,023).
PGa toUR McGladrey Classic
thursday at Sea Island Resort, Seaside Course St. Simons Island, Ga. Purse: $5.5 million Yardage: 7,005; Par: 70 (35-35) 54 golfers did not finish the round First Round Briny Baird 32-31—63 Brian Gay 32-31—63 Webb Simpson 31-34—65 Kevin Kisner 34-31—65 Seung-Yul Noh 31-34—65 Kevin Chappell 33-32—65 Scott Langley 34-32—66 Scott Brown 34-32—66 Chris Kirk 34-32—66 Jonathan Byrd 33-33—66 John Senden 34-32—66 Camilo Villegas 35-31—66 Heath Slocum 35-32—67 Matt Every 34-33—67 Ted Potter, Jr. 35-32—67 Boo Weekley 31-36—67 Scott Piercy 33-34—67 Tim Clark 33-34—67 J.J. Henry 35-32—67 Brendon de Jonge 33-34—67 Brice Garnett 34-33—67 Stephen Ames 31-36—67 Brian Harman 34-33—67 Trevor Immelman 35-32—67 D.H. Lee 34-33—67 Steven Bowditch 34-34—68 Kevin Stadler 34-34—68 Michael Putnam 34-34—68 Erik Compton 36-32—68 Stuart Appleby 34-34—68 Woody Austin 34-34—68 Y.E. Yang 34-34—68 Retief Goosen 33-35—68 Ben Curtis 36-32—68 Joe Durant 35-33—68 Greg Chalmers 34-34—68 Robert Karlsson 34-34—68 Brendon Todd 34-34—68 Pat Perez 33-35—68 Aaron Baddeley 34-34—68 leaderboard SCORE THRU 1. George McNeill -8 16 2. Brian Gay -7 F 2. Briny Baird -7 F 4. Kevin Chappell -5 F 4. Seung-yul Noh -5 F 4. Kevin Kisner -5 F 4. Webb Simpson -5 F 4. Robert Garrigus -5 13 9. Camilo Villegas -4 F 9. Chris Kirk -4 F 9. Scott Langley -4 F 9. Carl Pettersson -4 16 9. Jonathan Byrd -4 F 9. Will MacKenzie -4 17 9. Scott Brown -4 F 9. John Senden -4 F
turkish open
thursday at Maxx Royal Course, belek, turkey; Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,100; Par: 72 First Round 15 players finished the round because of rain-delayed start Ricardo Gonzalez, Arg 30-36—66 Thorbjorn Olesen, Den 33-33—66 Ross Fisher, Eng 33-35—68 Pablo Larrazabal, Esp 32-36—68 David Lynn, Eng 33-35—68 Marc Warren, Sco 34-35—69 David Horsey, Eng 34-35—69 Marcel Siem, Ger 34-35—69 Garth Mulroy, SAf 36-34—70 Liang Wen-chong, Chn 34-37—71 Shane Lowry, Irl 33-39—72 JB Hansen, Den 36-36—72 Morton Orum Madsen, Den 39-34—73 Paul Lawrie, Sco 36-38—74 Hamza Sayin, Turkey 39-36—75 leaderboard tHRU SCoRE Paul Casey, Eng 14 -7 Darren Fichardt, SAf 14 -7 Steve Webster, Eng 12 -7 Ricardo Gonzalez, Arg 18 -6 Thorbjorn Olesen, Den 18 -6 Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Esp 16 -6 Ricardo Santos, Por 15 -6 Goerge Coetzee, SAf 15 -6 Peter Uihlein, USA 12 -6 Thomas Bjorn, Den 12 -6 Justin Walters, SAf 11 -6 also Charl Schwartzel, SAf 12 -4 Lee Westwood, Eng 11 -4 Padraig Harrington, Irl 16 -3 Tiger Woods, USA 10 -1 Justin Rose, Eng 10 -1 Louis Oosthuizen, SAf 12 E
australian PGa
thursday at Royal Pines resort course Gold Coast, australia Purse: $1.25 million Yardage: 7,378; Par: 71 First Round Rickie Fowler, USA 29-34—63 Matthew Ballard, Aus 32-33—65 David McKenzie, Aus 32-33—65 Adam Scott, Aus 32-33—65 Nathan Green, Aus 32-34—66 Jason Norris, Aus 32-35—67 Kwon Sung-yeol, Kor 31-36—67 Sven Puymbroeck, NZl 35-32—67 Richard T.Lee, Aus 35-33—68 Craig Hancock, Aus 33-35—68 Gareth Paddison, NZl 33-35—68 Aaron Pike, Aus 35-33—68 Steven Jeffress, Aus 32-36—68 Josh Geary, NZl 32-36—68 Jack Wilson, Aus 34-34—68 Ashley Hall, Aus 32-36—68 Stephen Leaney, Aus 34-34—68 Bradley Lamb, Aus 36-32—68
TENNIS tENNIS
atP WoRlD toUR baRClaYS FINalS
thursday at o2 arena london Purse: $6 million (tour Final) Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Singles Group a No matches. Standings Nadal 2-0 (4-0); Berdych, 1-1 (3-2); Wawrinka, 1-1 (2-3); Ferrer, 0-2 (0-4). Group B Roger Federer (6), Switzerland, def. Richard Gasquet (8), France, 6-4, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Juan Martin del Potro (4), Argentina, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. Standings Djokovic, 2-0 (4-2); Federer, 1-1 (3-2); del Potro, 1-1 (3-3); Gasquet, 0-2 (1-4). Doubles Group a Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (4), Brazil, def. Mariusz Fyrstenberg, Poland, and Marcin Matkowski (8), Poland, 6-3, 3-6, 10-2. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and Jean-Julien Rojer (5), Netherlands, 7-6 (3), 1-6, 14-12. Standings Dodig-Melo, 2-0 (4-2); FyrstenbergMatkowski, 1-1 (3-2); Bryan-Bryan, 1-1 (3-3); Qureshi-Rojer, 0-2 (1-4).
B-6
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
No. 5 Baylor beats No. 12 Oklahoma
By Stephen Hawkins
ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 10 a.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for ServiceMaster 200, in Avondale, Ariz. 11:30 a.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for AdvoCare 500, in Avondale, Ariz. 1:30 p.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for ServiceMaster 200, in Avondale, Ariz. 6 p.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Truck Series, Lucas Oil 150, in Avondale, Ariz. COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Louisville at UConn 7 p.m. on ESPNU (Comcast Ch. 261; DirecTV Ch. 208; Dish Network Ch. 141) — Air Force at UNM GOLF 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, The McGladrey Classic, second round, in St. Simons Island, Ga. 2 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Turkish Airlines Open, third round, in Antalya, Turkey
Baylor quarterback Bryce Petty fakes the handoff to Lache Seastrunk in the first half of Thursday’s game against Oklahoma in Waco, Texas. TONY GUTIERREZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Baylor trailed 5-3 after a strange sequence that started at the end of the first quarter when the Bears were penalized 38 yards on one play, and had a player’s ejection overturned before he made a touchdownsaving play. After Petty scored on a 1-yard keeper with a minute to go in the first half, Oklahoma gave the ball right back when Blake Bell threw an interception right into the arms of linebacker Eddie Lackey at the Sooners 38. Petty ran 14 yards on thirdand-10 before a double-pump throw to Antwan Goodley, whose Big 12-leading ninth TD catch was a spectacular grab with both arms fully extended. He held on for a 24-yard play that put the Bears up 24-5 at halftime. Goodley made it 10 touchdown receptions he had a 25-yard catch with 9 minutes left in the game. He finished with six catches for 80 yards.
Petty completed 13 of 26 passes for a season-low 204 yards. He ran 16 times for 45 yards. Bell finished 15-of-35 passing for 150 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions. Oklahoma had 237 total yards. The Bears are 5-0 at home against Top 25 teams since the start of the 2011 season. That includes a 45-38 win over the Sooners two years ago in a game that likely clinched the Heisman Trophy for Robert Griffin III, and 52-24 last November over Kansas State, which arrived in Waco as the No. 1 team in the BCS standings. Baylor got penalized 38 yards on one play late in the first quarter, including a targeting penalty and two flags for unsportsmanlike conduct, setting up Oklahoma at the 7. The Sooners failed to score when Bell was tackled for a 1-yard loss on fourth-and-goal
from the 1 by cornerback K.J. Morton, who had been called for targeting only a few plays earlier. Morton was flagged after a vicious hit on Sterling Shepard that knocked the ball loose and laid out the receiver. Officials reviewed the play and determined it was a shoulder-toshoulder hit, overturning Morton’s ejection and keeping him in the game. But the penalty still stood, and there was extra yardage tacked on for the calls against cornerback Ahmad Dixon for unnecessary roughness and then taking his helmet off while on the field. Two plays after Bell was stopped on fourth down, Petty was sacked in the end zone by Dominique Alexander for a safety. Jalen Saunders then returned the free kick 55 yards to the Baylor 12, though the Sooners had to settle for Michael Hunnicutt’s 22-yard field goal.
Stanford: Oregon powerless to stop push Continued from Page B-4 No. 3 Florida State. The Seminoles don’t have to worry about the Ducks nudging them out of second place in the BCS standings. The Seminoles were in danger of slipping to third in the BCS if Oregon could have registered a big road victory against a quality opponent. Now, Florida State faces a manageable remaining schedule with a good chance to win its way to the BCS championship
game at the Rose Bowl in January. Stanford won a three-point game in overtime at Oregon last year to deny the Ducks a chance to play for the national title. It didn’t look as if there would be any drama in the return bout on the Farm. Stanford led 17-0 at halftime and added three more field goals by Josh Williamson in the second half. Oregon looked like dead Ducks, down 26-0 early in the
fourth with Stanford hammering away behind Gaffney, who set a school record with 45 carries. Even after Oregon finally broke the seal with a 23-yard touchdown pass from Mariota to Daryle Hawkins, the Cardinal went on another time consuming drive and attempted a long field goal that would have sealed it. Instead, the Ducks blocked it, Hardrick scooped and scored from 65 yards out with 5:08 left and suddenly it was interesting. Only 5 seconds later it was
even more interesting when the Ducks recovered an onside kick. They quickly moved inside the Stanford 5, but got pushed back to a fourth-and-goal from the 12. Mariota threw a touchdown pass to Pharoah Brown with 2:12 remaining, but the time it took the Ducks to get in while burning a timeout was key. Stanford grabbed the next onside kick and Oregon was powerless to stop the clock.
NBA
Wade lifts Heat over Clippers 102-97
By Tim Reynolds
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Dwyane Wade had everything going. Jump shots, drives to the rim, passes out of the post. He was vintage, on a night when the Miami Heat needed him to be that way. Wade scored 11 of his gamehigh 29 points in the fourth quarter, an ailing LeBron James added 18, and the Heat got enough stops down the stretch to beat the Los Angeles Clippers 102-97 on Thursday night for their third straight win. Wade made 13 of 22 shots, added a team-best seven assists, and fueled the fourthquarter burst that allowed the Heat to build enough of a cushion to hold off the Clippers in
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules
The Associated Press
WACO, Texas — Bryce Petty threw for three touchdowns and ran for two more, Shock Linwood Baylor 41 ran for 182 yards Oklahoma 12 and fifthranked Baylor stayed undefeated by passing its first big test with a 41-12 victory over No. 12 Oklahoma on Thursday night. Baylor (8-0, 5-0 Big 12) scored twice in the final minute before halftime and stretched its school-record winning streak to 12 games since a loss at Oklahoma last November. The Bears are 8-0 for the first time. “We’re just talented, man. We’re committed. I think that’s all you can say about it,” Petty said. “It’s a very special team.” Even though Baylor came in leading the nation in scoring (64 points per game) and total offense (718 yards per game) — and was outscoring opponents by an average margin of 48 points — many questioned how good the Bears were after getting into November without playing a ranked opponent. They have now, and they responded with an impressive victory against a team that used to routinely overwhelm them. Oklahoma (7-2, 4-2) has a 21-2 lead in the series, but both losses have come in its last two trips to Floyd Casey Stadium for prime-time games. Running backs Lache Seastrunk and Glasco Martin got banged up in the game, so Linwood ran 23 times. The Bears also were missing top receiver Tevin Reese, who was without a catch before dislocating his right wrist. He spent the second half on the sideline with his arm in a sling, and coach Art Briles said afterward he hopes Reese could be back for a bowl game.
Northern New Mexico
the final minutes. “Everyone said he was done,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “Go figure.” Including playoffs, the Heat (4-2) have won 51 of their last 57 games when Wade scores at least 20 points, going back to June 2012. It’s also the first time since last March that Wade has scored at least 20 points in four consecutive games, this streak immediately following him sitting out the second game of the season for rest. “I know I can play basketball,” Wade said. “I know when I’m healthy what I can do.” Wade either scored or assisted on Miami’s first six field goals of the fourth quarter, including a three-point play while getting fouled on a
jumper by J.J. Redick. About a minute later, Wade set up Shane Battier for a 3-pointer that put Miami up 91-80, and the 2006 NBA Finals MVP punctuated it all with a fist pump. “You can see in the third quarter they slowed the game down and we slowed it down with them,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “And I thought that really hurt us. We had a 6-minute stretch where we could have stretched the game. Instead we started walking it up, slowing everything down. They’re too good with a set defense. We allowed them to set their defense. That’s when all the turnovers came.” NUGGETS 109, HAWKS 107 In Denver, Ty Lawson had
23 points and eight assists, and the Denver Nuggets held on to beat the Atlanta Hawks to give new head coach Brian Shaw his first win. Nate Robinson added 15 points and JaVale McGee had 14 for Denver (1-3), which rallied from eight points down in the fourth quarter before surviving a late Atlanta rally. The win leaves Utah (0-5) as the NBA’s only winless team. LAKERS 99, ROCKETS 98 In Houston, Steve Blake hit a 3-pointer with 1.3 seconds remaining to lift the Los Angeles Lakers to a victory over the Houston Rockets and Dwight Howard. Houston led by two points before Blake took the inbounds pass from Jodie Meeks and made the shot to win the game.
Reckless Demonettes score win over Los Alamos in volleyball semifinal The Santa Fe High Demonettes were care free, reckless and all over the court on Thursday night. Santa Fe High continued its march through the District 2AAAA field with a convincing 25-23, 25-21, 25-17 win over Los Alamos in the district semifinal in Griffith Gymnasium. The win puts the Demonettes in the 2AAAA title match against top seed Espa-
ñola Valley at 7 p.m Saturday. Serving and passing have been Santa Fe High’s strong suit, and that trend continued. Cassandra Flores had 33 good passes and just six errors, while Kayla Herrera had 30 with one error. The Demonettes’ ability to pick up Los Alamos’s serves and hits wore out the home team. “Everyone played great,” said Estrada, the Demonettes’ head coach. “No one had a
bad day. Our passing was good, our serving was good. Our hitting was solid. We were blocking in front of them and they made errors that they usually don’t make.” Sabrina Lozada Cabbage led Santa Fe High (17-5) with 11 kills, three solo blocks and two block assists, while Hannah Hargrove had seven kills and five solo blocks. The New Mexican
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 3 p.m. on FSN — Alabama vs. Oklahoma, at Dallas 4 p.m. on FS1 — Boston College at Providence 4:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Maryland vs. UConn, in Brooklyn, N.Y. 5:30 p.m. on ESPN — Armed Forces Classic, Oregon vs. Georgetown, in Seoul, South Korea 8 p.m. on FSN — Colorado vs. Baylor, at Dallas MEN’S COLLEGE HOCKEY 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Minnesota at Notre Dame SOCCER Midnight on ESPN2 — Youth, FIFA, U-17 World Cup, championship, teams TBD, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (delayed tape) TENNIS 1 p.m. on ESPN2 — ATP World Tour Finals, round robin, in London
Today on radio Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. HIGH SCHOOL 7 p.m. on 101.5 KVSF-FM — Capital at Santa Fe High UNM SPORTS 7 p.m. on 770 KOB-AM — Air Force at UNM
MIDDLE SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL SCORES Eighth grade St. Michael’s 28, Ortiz 16. Top scorers — St. Michael’s: Felicity Tapaya 14; Karissa Baca 8; Ortiz: Briana Jacquez, Ashley Zapata 6. Records — Ortiz 2-1, St. Michael’s not reported. Capshaw 49, Pojoaque 13. Top scorers — Capshaw: Monique Cordova 19, Angelica Tapia 17; Pojoaque: Leandra Apodaca 6.
Seventh grade St. Michael’s 51, Ortiz 22. Top scorers — St. Michael’s: Angela Griego 15, Miquela Martinez 9; Ortiz: Kyannah Cole, Miranda Cortez 7. Records — Ortiz 2-1, St. Michael’s not reported. Pojoaque 34, Capshaw 27. Top scorers — Pojoaque Adriana Quintana 8, Taylor Roybal and Janessa Chacon 7; Capshaw: Elizabeth Martinez 13.
PREP FOOTBALL SCORES Atrisco Heritage 67, West Mesa 13 Cleveland 28, Rio Rancho 14 Eldorado 34, Manzano 14
Oñate 33, Alamogordo 28 Valley 64, Highland 12
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, call 986-3045.
Today Football — Capital at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Thoreau, 7 p.m. Bernalillo at Española Valley, 7 p.m. Raton at Taos, 7 p.m. Boys soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament at APS Soccer Complex (Field number in parenthesis): Semifinals Class AAAA No. 6 Los Alamos/No. 3 Farmington winner vs. No. 10 Artesia/No. 2 Roswell winner (No. 3), 10:30 a.m. No. 5 Capital/No. 4 Los Lunas winner vs. No. 8 Chaparral/No. 1 Albuquerque Academy winner (No. 2), 10:30 a.m. Class A-AAA No. 8 Taos/No. 1 Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory winner vs. No. 5 Santa Fe Preparatory/No. 4 Monte del Sol winner (No. 3), 3:30 p.m. No. 6 Albuquerque Hope Christian/No. 3 St. Michael’s winner vs. No. 7 Bloomfield/No. 2 Albuquerque Bosque School winner (No. 2), 3:30 p.m. Girls soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament at APS Soccer Complex (Field number in parenthesis): Semifinals Class AAAA No. 12 Santa Fe High/No. 4 Albuquerque Academy winner vs. No. 9 Santa Teresa/No. 1 Albuquerque St. Pius X winner (No. 1), 2 p.m. Class A-AAA No. 5 Albuquerque Bosque School/No. 4 Taos winner vs. No. 8 Socorro/No. 1 Albuquerque Hope Christian winner (No. 4), 11:30 a.m. No. 11 East Mountain/No. 3 Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory winner vs. No. 7 Santa Fe Preparatory/No. 2 St. Michael’ winner (No. 1), 11:30 a.m. Volleyball — District 2AAA Tournament: semifinal, Wednesday’s winner at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. District 2AA Tournament: championship, Wednesday’s winner at Santa Fe Preparatory, 6:30 p.m. District 1A Tournament: championship, Cimarron/Springer winner at Questa, 7 p.m.
Saturday Cross-country — Class A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Champioships at Rio Rancho High School: Boys Class AA, 12:05 p.m. Class AAA, 12:35 p.m. Class AAAA, 1:05 p.m. Class A, 2:05 p.m. Girls Class AA, 9:30 a.m. Class AAA, 10 a.m. Class AAAA, 10:30 a.m. Class A, 11:30 a.m. Football — Albuquerque Hope Christian at St. Michael’s, 1:30 p.m. West Las Vegas at Las Vegas Robertson, noon Boys soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament at APS Soccer Complex (Field number in parenthesis): Championships Class AAAA (No. 1), 10:30 a.m. Class A-AAA (No. 1), 1:30 p.m. Girls soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament at APS Soccer Complex (Field number in parenthesis): Championships Class AAAA (No. 2), 3:30 p.m. Class A-AAA (No. 2), 9:30 a.m. Volleyball District 2AAAA Tournament: Thursday’s winner at Española Valley, 7 p.m. District 2AAA Tournament: Friday’s winner at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. District 5AAA Tournament: Thursday’s winner at Albuquerque Hope Christian, 7 p.m. District 2A Tournament: championship, Thursday’s winners at higher seed, 6 p.m. District 4A Tournament: Coronado/Escalate winner at McCurdy, 6:30 p.m. District 5B Tournament: Thursday’s winner at Santa Fe Waldorf (Christian Life), 5 p.m.
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
sPoRTs
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-7
BOYS SOCCER MONTE DEL SOL 2, SANTA FE PREP 0
GIRLS SOCCER
Dragons finally get their shot
St. Michael’s easily defeats Santa Fe Prep
Monte del Sol wins over rival Santa Fe Prep
For The New Mexican
By James Barron
The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — One shot. It’s all the Monte del Sol boys soccer program has ever wanted. At a Class A-AAA championship berth. At the Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory Sundevils. On Friday, the Dragons get the opportunity of a lifetime — and perhaps a transformative moment for the program — when it plays the top-seeded Sundevils in an A-AAA semifinal, this thanks to a 2-0 win over District 2A-AAA rival Santa Fe Prep in the quarterfinals at APS Soccer Complex on Thursday afternoon. It is the furthest the program has ever advanced in the postseason, but it is one step away from a golden opportunity to play for a blue trophy. Monte del Sol, the fourth-seed in the bracket, has proven itself against its district brethern, and the respect for the program is mutual in 2A-AAA. But when it came to earning that same respect against the top teams in the class — specifically Albuquerque’s Hope Christian and Sandia Prep — that request has been denied. Don’t think for a minute the Dragons (13-5) haven’t forgotten. “It’s a chance to prove everyone wrong,” said senior Luis Lozoya. “Especially since they have never wanted to play us in the regular season. They always said no to our schedules. They think we are too weak for them. But now we’re here. We’re in state.” If anyone embraced the moment against Santa Fe Prep, it was Lozoya. In the 36th minute, he took a Skye Dascher pass into the penalty box and outfought Prep goalkeeper Diego Perea for the loose ball and knocked it in from about 2 feet to break the scoreless knot. After both teams took proverbial swings at the other’s goal, it was the Dascher-Lozoya combo that came up pure again with just two minutes left in the match. Dascher gathered himself from the left side and crossed the ball perfectly to Lozoya, who headed it past ‘keeper Wyeth Carpenter into the right side of the net for the exclamation point. “It barely got past their defender,” Dascher said. “He’s great at heading it, let me tell you.” It was the perfect ending to a fierce battle between rivals that saw both teams have ample opportunities to score. The Blue Griffins (14-7) spent the second half coming maddeningly close to executing
St. Michael’s junior Isabel Chavez’s well-timed passes found junior Cristina Gabaldon ALBUQUERQUE — The in the 30th minute and Ish in conventional wisdom is that it the 32nd minute for a 4-0 lead. is hard to defeat a team three “We expected them to open times in one up and actually attack against St. Michael’s 5 season. us,” Lady Horsemen head coach The S.F. Prep 1 Robyn Serge said. “So it opened St. Michael’s up more space for a lot of our girls soccer team, however, had girls to get involved and be on little trouble in dispatching rival the scoring end. Everybody on Santa Fe Preparatory, 5-1, in the our team can score and put the Class A-AAA state soccer quarball in the back of the net.” terfinals Thursday morning at The Blue Griffins did get a the APS Soccer Complex. goal back just before the halftime “I think it’s good that we whistle as senior Brigid Quinn know how they play,” picked off a pass near the Lady St. Michael’s senior Catie Ish said. “We know what works and Horsemen’s goal and fired home her team’s lone score of the day. what doesn’t work. [But] it’s hard not to go in with that menFreshman Monse Camarena tality that this is an easy game.” scored St. Michael’s lone goal of The second-seeded Lady the second half in the 61st minHorsemen advance to play ute off a pass from senior Ally No. 3 Sandia Preparatory at Weidner. 11:30 a.m. Friday in a semifinal No. 4 Taos 1, match. Fourth-seeded Taos, a No. 5 Bosque school 0 1-0 winner over Albuquerque The Lady Tigers and Lady BobBosque, will meet No. 10 Hope Christian in the other semifinal cats played another grind-it-out match before Taos senior Zoie at the same time. Hensley fired home a stunning “We’re excited, we’re ready,” game-winner in the 78th minute. Ish said. “I mean, to be the best Hensley found herself wide to you have to play the best. We know we’re going to have to play the right of the goal when she them [eventually]. I think we’re decided to take a shot. Her high, arcing blast somehow snuck into so excited to play. We have a lot the upper left corner of the net, to prove. Beating them would sending the Lady Tigers (14-13) prove our No. 2 seed.” into raucous celebration while St. Michael’s (17-4) used a Bosque (11-10) was left stunned. balanced attack to quickly over“It just came naturally,” Henswhelm Santa Fe Prep (10-10) ley said. “I didn’t really think in the first half. Junior Adriana about what to do. It was just Camarena smoked a shot into instinct and it happened.” the lower left corner of the goal The game was tight throughin the third minute. out. Both goalkeepers had five Freshman Nique Enloe found saves apiece and Taos only outherself in the right place at the shot Bosque 7-6 on the day. right time in the 26th minute as “We knew that we had good she put away a rebound off Blue opportunities and we were just Griffins goalkeeper M.K. Enggetting unlucky putting them lish to make it 2-0. in the back of the net,” Hensley Santa Fe Prep did not have said. “We knew it was coming the whole game and it finally did.” any chance to recover as By Chris Jackson
From left, Monte del Sol’s Skye Dascher and Santa Fe Prep’s Ben Perrillo chase after a loose ball during the second half of their game Thursday during the state soccer quarterfinals at APS Soccer Complex in Albuquerque. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
perfect combination passes that could have set up teammates for scores. Gabe Purvis was oh-so-close to getting his feet on several passes from midfielders Sam Brill and Adam Weyrauch, but come up inches shy of connecting on them. Weyrauch rifled a shot from about 35 yards in the 60th minute but it sailed wide right. Perhaps the wildest exchange came in the 74th minute, when Dascher crossed to brother Shalto Dascher, but Carpenter, who played in goal after Perea took a hit to the head late in the first half, broke it up cleanly. That triggered a counterattack that had Weyrauch finding Brill on a through-ball but Brill bounced his shot from 10 yards to the left of the goal. “Soccer is a cruel sport,” Prep head coach Hersch Wilson said. “It’ll break your heart every time.” Even though Monte del Sol had a 1-0 lead at the break, head coach Mazatl Galindo felt his team was flat for most of the half. And he had a stern message for his boys during halftime. “I said, ‘As far as I’m concerned, we’re losing,’ ” Galindo said. “Just in terms of the demeanor, the strength, the effort
they put in the second half was much better.” But it will take more of the same — and then some — for the little program that could against the one of the premier programs in the state. But even Wilson, whose team lost to Sandia Prep 3-1 on Oct. 24, recognizes what Dragons could accomplish. “They have the opportunity to say they are one of the top teams in the state,” Wilson said. “If they can relax and play their game, they can be OK. [The Sundevils] are good, but they’re always good. But I think Monte is within two or three goals of them.” All the Dragons ever wanted was one shot. Friday, they get it. In another A-AAA quarterfinal: No. 1 saNdia PReP 8, No. 8 Taos 1 The Tigers had one shot to unsettle the top-seeded Sundevils, but missed a shot off a direct kick in the 20th minute while trailing 1-0. Sandia Prep followed with a goal from Ryan Hunter a minute later and continued to pour it on to advance to the A-AAA semifinals. Taos finished the season at 14-7.
chargers: Santa Fe outgunned in 2nd half
Jaguars: Capital players keep their cool Continued from Page B-4 practice and pass the ball and not get frustrated with each other,” Alarcon said. “I think that helped us out a lot. We just went in and tried to play our game, and it worked. We were still looking for the goal, but we were calm.” The Jaguars took 21 minutes before Jesus Garcia knocked in a header off a corner kick from teammate Brayan Perez to tie the match at 2-2. “That was such a relief because we knew that we could go into overtime or PKs,” Alarcon said. Now the Jaguars will play an Albuquerque Academy team that they beat in the quarterfinals last year. While that
might give the Jaguars confidence, they know the Chargers are going to be out for revenge. “Some people told us that they’re even better than last year,” Alarcon said. “We know that we have to play our hardest in that match too.” No. 6 los alamos 1, No. 3 FaRmiNgToN 0 (shooTouT) Evan Gartz was never more calm and confident than he was when the Scorpions prepared for their fifth and final shooter for the shootout. Los Alamos (12-10) led 4-3 in penalty kicks and it came down Hilltoppers’ goalkeeper Chris Parker, who snared the final kick to preserve a spot in the AAAA semifinals against No. 2 Roswell.
“I was hoping [Hilltoppers forward] Collin [Stone] would make that fifth shot,” said Gartz, the Hilltoppers head coach. “Once he did, I knew Chris would be up for the challenge. He lives for that stuff. It was awesome to watch.” And who knew that Los Alamos’ defense would rise to the challenge against the Scorpions? The back row has been much maligned during the season, but it has yet to give up a goal in the state tournament. “Defense is such a mentality,” Gartz said. “They are in the right position. That gives them a chance to win. And we’ve made a weakness a strength.” Los Alamos faces a Coyotes team it lost to 6-2 in August.
hope: Horsemen had no answer for Serda Continued from Page B-4 that changed the complexion of what had been a game that neither team had asserted itself in. Serda struck again with about 90 seconds left in regulation to close out the scoring, taking a pass inside the box between two defenders and pounding it high into the back of the net to ice it. “Just another example of us playing 78 minutes of an 80-minute game,” said Horsemen head coach Merritt Brown. Serda wasn’t exactly hard to spot. While every Hope player was sporting bleached blond hair to commemorate their entry in the playoffs, he was the only one with a giant white cast on his arm. After the game he talked about a broken thumb he incurred in a recent outing against arch rival Sandia Preparatory, the tournament’s top seed. “Bent it backwards,” he said. “I don’t even notice it anymore.” With his hand wrapped inside what looked like a padded club, he went to work by finding seams in the St. Michael’s defense at the most inopportune
time for the Horsemen. As it appeared the match would head into halftime as a scoreless stalemate, Serda picked up a crossing pass in the box and used his right foot to make it 1-0. “That was big for momentum,” Serda said. “We’re both good teams but getting that one right at the half let us come out feeling a little better in the second half.” The Horsemen did have their chances, albeit late in the game when they sacrificed some of their defensive intensity for movement up front. They had three solid chances in the final 10 minutes, the first when midfielder Soren Brown had a clear shot from the top of the box that was converted into a clean save by Hope. Brendan Cullen had a long, floating shot that sailed just high of the net with three minutes left, then Geno Palermo had an off-balance header that was saved with about two minutes remaining. “We had some chances but, both games against these guys, we just couldn’t get it done,” Merritt Brown said.
Santa Fe High’s Bryanna Garcia and Albuqerque Academy’s Lissy Saiz go for the ball during the first half of their game Thursday at the State Boys and Girls Soccer Tournaments at APS Soccer Complex. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Continued from Page B-4
St. Michael’s Brendan Cullen and Hope Christian’s Lincoln Busselle scramble for the ball during the during the second half of Thursday’s game. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
gave up a goal from Albuquerque Academy’s Natalie Dubois five minutes into the second half. “We basically just got outgunned in the second half,” Richards said. “They were quicker at every position and we did the best we could to stay disciplined like we have throughout the year. Our defense has a tough time against speed, and that caught up with us in the second half.” The Lady Chargers’ third score came when Santa Fe High’s Eliana Bell knocked the ball into her own goal when a shot from an Albuquerque Academy striker ricocheted off her shin. But if you ask Bell about it, that one should not have counted. “She was out and the ball was out and she knocked it back in and then it went off of me,” she said.
While Bell agrees that the Demonettes might not have come back from a 2-0 deficit if the goal had not counted, she believes they would have had a chance to not leave Albuquerque empty handed. “I think there was at least enough time left for us to get one,” she said. “It’s hard to get a goal after a three-goal lead.” The Demonettes may have been outmatched, but no one thought it was for a lack of effort. “Yeah they were faster and stronger, but for our little team, we kept up with them pretty well,” Melchor said. And that quality was something Santa Fe High could leave Albuquerque with that made the night worthwhile. “I’m just happy to be here,” Melchor said. “I never thought in a million years that we’d keep up with Albuquerque Academy like we just did. To just keep up with those girls was fun.”
B-8
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
THURSDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
Ponder, Peterson help Vikings rally to beat Skins By Dave Campbell
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Vikings found a way to stop Robert Griffin III and the Washington Redskins, showing late resolve after a series of final-minute collapses. Adrian Peterson ran for 75 yards and two touchdowns, and the Vikings forced Griffin into three straight incompletions from the 4 to hold on for a 34-27 victory Thursday night. After losing three games this year in the final minute, the Vikings finally pulled one out. “There were many times during the course of that game where they could’ve gone, ‘Oh, no, here we go again,’ ” coach Leslie Frazier said. Christian Ponder went 17 for 21 for 174 yards with two touchdowns and an interception for Minnesota before leaving late in the third quarter with a dislocated shoulder on his non-throwing left arm. John Carlson had seven catches for 98 yards and a touchdown and rookie Cordarrelle Patterson also had a scoring reception for the Vikings (2-7). “We just played the way we were supposed to,” Ponder said. “We executed like an NFL team is supposed to, especially a 10-6 playoff team like we were last year. We really needed that, to help out with our confidence, and now that’s our expectation for the rest of the year.”
Vikings running back Adrian Peterson runs to the end zone on a 1-yard touchdown run during the second half of Thursday’s game against the Washington Redskins in Minneapolis. ANN HEISENFELT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Griffin was 24 for 37 for 281 yards, three touchdowns and no turnovers for the Redskins (3-6), who led 27-14 early in the third quarter. He also
ran seven times for 44 yards, but the Vikings took him down for four sacks for 39 yards in the second half including 2½ by Kevin Williams.
The Redskins committed eight penalties for 63 yards. “You can’t do that,” Redskins coach Mike Shanahan said. “You’ve got to
Think you know Mike Tyson? Think again Boxer to air demons in Nov. 16 biopic
the beauty pageant contestant who Tyson was convicted of raping in Indianapolis — a charge he heatedly denies By Tim Dahlberg — and spent three years in The Associated Press prison. “How do you rape someone Mike Tyson’s life story is when they come to your hotel the gift that keeps giving. room at two in the morning?” And giving. And giving. he asks. At one time he was the badEven in prison he got his fill, dest man on he says, first with visitors and the planet, a then with a prison drug counheavyweight selor who suddenly became champion available after Tyson had who ter$10,000 sent to her home to fix rorized her roof. anyone who “I was having so much sex got in his that I was too tired to even way, inside Mike Tyson, right, delivers a blow to Trevor Berbick on to go the gym and work out,” Nov. 22, 1986, in Las Vegas, Nev. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO the ring or Tyson wrote. “I’d just stay in Mike Tyson out. More my cell all day.” recently he’s The book is in Tyson’s voice needed an extra epilogue writIf so, Tyson has yet to figure unburdened himself as perbut written by Larry Sloman ten just before printing to talk out the punch line. Although haps the most tortured soul on offers a fascinating look into about him falling off the sobri- he has reinvented himself earth, with a one-man show a life that up until now had ety wagon once again. in recent years as a family on Broadway that Spike Lee already been well chronicled. And though things might be man and vegan with enough has turned into an HBO speIt’s raw, and so profane that comedic chops to act in movbetter these days in Tyson’s cial airing Nov. 16. Tyson needs to explain some ies, he says he lives daily with world, he constantly warns It turns out that Tyson of the terms he uses for that he’s not far from slipping the dark past of a junkie who didn’t tell us everything. Not women and blacks in a sepaloved to snort cocaine and off the edge, or slipping back to worry, because he’s taken rate chapter at the end. drink and was constantly preinto a strip club to party with care of that in a hefty autoBut it is also quite funny occupied with finding women in parts, like the time Tyson drugs and women. biography that might be the to bed. “Sometimes I just fantasize most soul baring book of its forgot about a suitcase that The sex is detailed in almost contained $1 million in cash, about blowing somebody’s genre ever written. clinical terms, and the many brains out so I can go to only to have one of his gofers The title is Undisputed women in Tyson’s life flow in find it a week later. prison for the rest of my life,” Truth, and the truth is that and out of the pages like they Mike Tyson is one messed up he writes. “Working on this “I had had a rough night dude. He’s desperate to put his book makes me think that my did in his life. One big excepin the city and had forgotten demons to rest, but the book whole life has been a joke.” tion is Desiree Washington, where I left it,” Tyson said.
NHL
Devils end scoreless skid with win over Flyers The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Martin Brodeur stopped 22 shots, and Adam Henrique and Cam Janssen Devils 3 each scored goals to Flyers 0 lead the New Jersey Devils to a 3-0 win over the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday night. BRUINS 4, PANTHeRS 1 In Boston, Tuukka Rask made 23 saves, and the Bruins got goals from four players to hand Florida its seventh straight loss. Rask improved to 9-1 against Florida in helping Boston win for the third time in its past seven home games. The Bruins have won five straight and seven of their last eight against the Panthers. BLUeS 3, FLAMeS 2 In St. Louis, Alexander Steen scored his league-leading 14th goal, Brian Elliott stopped 18 shots for his 100th career win, and the Blues beat Calgary. St. Louis has won five of six and are 6-1-1 at home. The Flames have lost four of five and eight of 11. STARS 4, ReD WINGS 3 (OT) In Detroit, Rich Peverley’s goal at 4:41 of overtime completed a comeback and gave Dallas a win over the Red Wings. Peverley beat Howard on a wrist shot from the high slot.
Shawn Horcoff, Jamie Benn and Cody Eakin also for Dallas. Kari Lehtonen stopped 26 shots. SeNATORS 4, CANADIeNS 1 In Ottawa, Ontario, Robin Lehner stopped 33 shots to lead the Senators over Montreal. Bobby Ryan, Marc Methot, Mark Borowiecki and Kyle Turris, scored for the Senators (6-6-4), who posted back-toback wins for just the second time this season. CAPITALS 3, WILD 2 (SO) In Washington, Nicklas Backstrom scored the only goal in a shootout, and the Capitals rallied to beat Minnesota for its fourth straight victory. Braden Holtby had 33 saves for Washington before blanking the Wild during the shootout. Holtby outplayed Minnesota goaltender Josh Harding, who stopped 25 shots. HURRICANeS 1, ISLANDeRS 0 In Raleigh, N.C., Justin Peters stopped 21 shots in his third career shutout, and Carolina beat New York. Radek Dvorak scored a deflected goal in the first period to help the Hurricanes win their second straight following a fivegame slide that coincided with a lowerbody injury to starting goalie Cam Ward. RANGeRS 4, BLUe JACKeTS 2 In Columbus, Ohio, Carl Hagelin scored
two goals — one thanks to an opposing player — and Cam Talbot made 32 saves, and New York extends the Blue Jackets’ losing streak to five games. Rangers captain Ryan Callahan and defenseman Ryan McDonagh each added a goal and an assist. LIGHTNING 4, OILeRS 2 In Tampa, Fla., Steven Stamkos had two goals to help the Lightning beat Edmonton for its sixth win in seven games. Stamkos, who extended his goal-scoring streak to five games, has 13 goals this season. Ben Bishop made saves on firstperiod breakaway shots by Mark Arcobello and Taylor Hall. CANUCKS 4, SHARKS 2 In San Jose, Calif., Chris Higgins had a goal and an assist and Roberto Luongo made 22 saves to help Vancouver snap a nine-game losing streak. Brad Richardson, Mike Santorelli and Zack Kassian also scored for the Canucks, who had lost all five regular season meetings between the teams the past two seasons and were swept by San Jose in the first round of the playoffs last spring. KINGS 2, SABReS 0 In Los Angeles, Mike Richards and Anze Kopitar scored power-play goals, and Jonathan Quick earned his first shutout of the season in the Kings’ victory over the Buffalo Sabres.
keep your poise. You make mistakes like that and so often it will cost you the game.” With the Redskins out of timeouts, Griffin ran for 12 yards on fourthand-1 at his own 49 right after the 2-minute warning. After a run to the 4, the Vikings stopped the clock. Wide receiver Greg Jennings was livid on the sideline, but Frazier defended the timeout to give the drained defense a rest and allow at least a few seconds for a comeback in case the Redskins scored. But Griffin’s next two passes were incomplete, for Jordan Reed and Pierre Garcon. On fourth-and-goal with 32 seconds left, his throw to the corner of the end zone was caught by Santana Moss with only one foot in bounds. “It felt like we were in control and when you walk off the field with a loss, it’s very disheartening,” Griffin said, “but I don’t think anyone on this team is going to quit.” The Vikings didn’t. “That was an awesome feeling,” Peterson said, adding: “Through the adversity we’ve been through, guys just continued to fight.” Blair Walsh kicked two fourthquarter field goals for the Vikings after Peterson’s second score gave them a 28-27 lead late in the third quarter. That drive started at the Washington 41, thanks to an unnecessary roughness call.
Title: SFHS needs win over Capital Continued from Page B-4 icing its third straight undefeated regular season. The Horsemen’s lone remaining stumbling block is burgeoning rival Albuquerque Hope Christian. While St. Michael’s (9-0) is a shoe-in for another trip to the playoffs, Santa Fe High needs a win over Capital to assure its second straight trip to the postseason. “I actually think we should be going for our third district championship in a row right now because the team we had a couple years ago was good enough to win one,” said Santa Fe High head coach Ray Holladay. “But two in a row, it’s saying something about how far we’ve come.” Santa Fe High (3-6, 2-1 in District 2AAAA) kept its hopes alive by doing nothing more than watching district rival Los Alamos beat Capital last weekend. Doing so gives the Demons the tie-breaking edge over Los Alamos and Bernalillo in the very likely event that all three finish the regular season tied at 3-1 in the district standings. While it’s not an outright 2AAAA title, Holladay will take anything he can get because, in an age where most Santa Fe High seasons are measured in failed opportunities, this one can end with the ultimate reward for a team like his. Making it even more special is the fact that this is very likely the last time Capital and Santa Fe High will meet at district rivals — at least for the foreseeable future. The Demons will move into the new Class AAAAAA next year while Capital will bump up to AAAAA. “I don’t think a playoff berth will add anything to the rivalry because, let’s face it, it’s Santa Fe High-Capital,” Holladay said. “We don’t need any extra incentive.” As for St. Michael’s, it’s more a matter of survival at this point. The Horsemen lost freshman starting linebacker Xavier Vigil with a broken foot
MaxPreps. com rankings This week’s prep football rankings, compiled and published by MaxPreps.com, an online site whose weekly computuerized rankings are used, in part, by the New Mexico Activities Association to help formulate state playoff berths and seeds. The site uses a criteria of wins and losses, strength of schedule and quality of an opponents’ record. Each team is then assigned a numerical rating, shown in parentheses along with overall record prior to Thursday’s games. For more information on the rankings, visit MaxPreps.com.
during last week’s win at 5AAA rival Albuquerque Academy, the same game that saw leading rusher and top linebacker Daniel Ortega go down with a sprained ankle. Head coach Joey Fernandez said Thursday that Vigil had surgery on Tuesday and is done for the season. Ortega hasn’t practiced at all this week and will probably sit out Saturday’s game. Back, however, is starting center Ryan Ortiz. He has missed considerable time this season with a bad shoulder, forcing Chad McNamara to fill his role. Backup offensive lineman Luke Sanchez has filled in at times on the line. Against Hope he’ll slide into the backfield and play some running back in place of Ortega. “We could put Isaiah [Dominguez] in Daniel’s spot, but we’re better off as an offense with [Dominguez] at tight end,” Fernandez said. A win would secure the top overall seed for the Horsemen in the AAA playoffs, giving them a bye through the first week of the postseason. It would also extend their winning streak to 23 games, establishing a new school record that currently equals the unbeaten run from 1937-39. While the streak is a topic of interest, the thing the Horsemen players like to talk about the most this week is their next opponent. “It’s Hope and any game against Hope is a big one for us,” said Dominguez. “Doesn’t matter what sport. If it’s those guys, everyone will be ready.” NOTeS: If Capital (1-8, 1-2) pulls off the upset, Los Alamos (4-6, 3-1) would win the 2AAAA title based on its head-to-head win with Bernalillo. The Hilltoppers finished their regular season last week and have been sitting around all this week waiting to see if Capital can extend their season with an unlikely win. “I’ve been in that position with the bye week at the end and it really sucks,” Holladay said. “I’d rather play right til the end than sit and wait on everyone else.”
Class AAAAA 1. Las Cruces (9-0) 49.3 2. Cleveland (8-1) 40.7 3. Valley (9-0) 39.9 4. Mayfield (8-1) 34.5 5. Sandia (7-2) 34.3 6. Cibola (6-3) 33.8 7. Rio Rancho (6-3) 29.8 8. Manzano (5-4) 27.2 9. Clovis (4-5) 24.8 10. Volcano Vista (5-4) 23.3
Class AAAA 1. Goddard (6-2) 28.6 2. Farmington (8-1) 26.6 3. Belen (7-2) 21.7 4. Los Lunas (7-2) 19.7 5. Centennial (7-2) 18.5 6. Deming (8-1) 17.0 7. Valencia (6-3) 13.5 8. Piedra Vista (7-2) 13.1 9. Moriarty (5-4) 11.4
10. Artesia (3-6) 10.1 Also: 16. Los Alamos (4-6) -8.6 21. Santa Fe High (3-6) -16.1 24. Capital (1-8) -28.7 25. Española Valley (1-8) -46.6
Class AAA 1. St. Michael’s (9-0) 23.0 2. Ruidoso (6-2) 7.9 3. Silver (6-3) 7.4 4. Bloomfield (6-3) 6.6 5. Taos (7-1) 6.6 6. Abq. Academy (6-3) 0.7 7. Hope Christian (5-4) 0.4 8. Portales (6-4) -2.7 9. Robertson (4-5) -3.2 10. Lovington (1-8) -9.9 Also: 11. Pojoaque Valley (5-5) -17.3 14. West Las Vegas (1-8) -33.6 The regular season for Six Man, Eight Man, Class A and AA is over.
Classifieds C-2
District on mission to help teen parents juggle school and kids
n o i t ra
gen e
Let’s talk about sex
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN SECTION C
By Elizabeth Sanchez Generation Next
I
t may be uncommon for teens under 18 to be involved in any decisions regarding their schooling, welfare or life, but adolescent parents can have a say in the possible changes in the way the school district deals with teen mothers and fathers who have to juggle schooling with parenting. Teen parents, sex-education instructors, counselors, health care providers and representatives of various health/adolescent parent organizations held a teen pregnancy forum Oct. 30 on the South Campus of Santa Fe High School, where the district’s Teen Parent Center is located. The forum was a continuation of ideas discussed during a similar spring 2013 event and served as a strong basis for those in the room to better understand the issues at hand and formulate solutions. Led by Katie Dry, manager of the Santa Fe Baby Fund; Alicia Wolfe, the new Teen Parent Center coordinator; and facilitator Mary Ann Shaening, the TPC Action Plan Forum began with a PowerPoint data presentation regarding teen pregnancies. Dry explained the data, including New Mexico’s slightly decreasing but for the most part longitudinal average of teen pregnancies. (According to the Santa Fe County Community Health Profile, the pregnancy rate per 1,000 births averaged 69.3 births for Hispanic teens, 36.7 births for Native American teens and 14.5 for White non-Hispanic teens between 2007 and 2011.) Among other points, the presentation emphasized that highest adolescent pregnancy ratings take place in areas lacking useful and easily accessible teenfriendly health centers, and that the more often a mother or father figure was present in a teen’s life, the less self-reported sexual activity occurred. One main focus was on educating people on an adolescent parent’s everyday life, including finding time for school. A few ideas mentioned were flexible job hours for teen parents, more readily available mental health care, preset times for breastfeeding, and overall support and recognition.
for and by teens
THEATER
Teen mom Karina Fierro embraces her daughter, Izabel Garcia, Oct. 30 during a teen pregnancy forum at Santa Fe High School. ELIZABETH SANCHEZ/GENERATION NEXT
One teen father attending Capital High School expressed concern over unsympathetic teachers and tardy sweeps. One woman identified the need to disprove misconceptions regarding pregnancy, including the belief among some that the use of birth control can affect the ability to have children in the future. Another woman, J.G. Agu, expressed the need for more peer-to-peer education: “They’re the ones who listen to each other … they need to use their ways to listen to each other and reach out to their peer groups. We need to support them in doing that.” She went on to explain her thoughts on the creation of a public service announcement by teen parents and promoting the positive use of social media venues — rather than the negative bullying that is sometimes used to attack adolescent parents. The participants then broke off into smaller groups to discuss the various categories of ideas, which included creating a centralized app, Facebook page or website that is bilingual, teen
friendly and features an easily navigational resource directory. Other thoughts included focusing on youth engagement in sexeducation presentations, enabling students to relate to those who have experienced teen parenting firsthand, offering classes for grandparents of children who are the result of teen pregnancies, expanding Medicaid to cover undocumented parents, offering child care for teen parents who are elsewhere (including school), and the start of a new program that would pair adults with teens who do not have a parental figure. Many teen parents have trouble completing their education or working when their child is ill, or if they are a single parent, so another idea being considered is offering flexible evening courses and on site 24-hour day care. One Santa Fe High School teen mom, Karina Fierro, said that while she enjoys some aspects of public schooling that many teen mothers use — E2020 online learning — she feels a more interactive connection with teachers
From clinics, schools and pharmacies, where teens turn to get contraceptives By Tilcara Webb and Marco White Generation Next
Are contraceptives easily accessible to Santa Fe teens who want them? The Generation Next staff made phone calls and in-person inquiries to find out which schools, clinics and pharmacies actually have contraceptives for teens. The most common contraceptives are condoms, birth-control pills, IUDs, the patch (used once a week) and the Depo Provera shot. And now, there is Plan B. Note: the only 100 percent method to preventing pregnancy and/or sexually-transmitted diseases is abstinence. u Plan B, often referred to as the “morningafter pill” or the “emergency contraceptive,” is a pill that can be taken after unprotected sex, but it must be taken within five days after in order to work. Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration declared that Plan B be made available to all “women of child-bearing potential.” Although Plan B is legally available to teen girls, its availability in Santa Fe is sporadic. CVS carries Plan B, but only offers it to customers 18 and older. Medicap pharmacies only allow customers younger than 18 to
get it with a doctor’s prescription. Walgreen’s is the only pharmacy that provides Plan B contraceptives to all ages. Pharmaca said they do not currently carry Plan B. Plan B generally costs about $45; Walgreens offers it for $53. u Planned Parenthood offers medical testing services, including pregnancy tests and STD testing as well as contraceptives. These services are usually paid for by insurance under the Affordable Care Act. Persephone Wilson, the regional director of community education at Planned Parenthood, emphasizes the importance of teens learning about sex and having extensive conversations about making the right choice when it comes to their bodies. Planned Parenthood also offers comprehensive sexuality-health education and trains teens in different high schools to be able to pass on medically-accurate information to their peers. u The Santa Fe County Health Office, 605 Letrado St., offers free contraceptives to any teen who walks in the door. Age does not matter. A variety of contraceptives are offered, including Plan B, birth-control pills, condoms and the Depo Provera shot. The office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
How accessible are contraceptives?
Alex Veleta, Capital High School “Getting contraceptives in my school is extremely easy.”
Andrea Holguin, Santa Fe Community College “It’s actually really easy to get them. You can get them from any clinic. And since I’m at a very young age, they’ll support me in every way they can.”
Yovanaa Mendoza, Ortiz Middle School “In my school, it is very easy to get them. I just have to go to the nurse.”
Edgar Reyes, Capital High School “It is easy. You just have to go to the teen health center, give them your name, they will then open the drawer and you get as many as you want.”
and other students would provide a better understanding of lessons. She believes in a stronger base of homework and tutoring for teen parents. Luis Alarcon, a Capital High School father, said, “They should expand the [current] programs because a lot of teens are not sure where to go.” Another Capital High School dad, Guillermo Perez, said, “It’s hard to reach out to other parents [fathers] because they’re afraid.” He clarified that many teens worry about their eligibility for scholarships, involvement in sports programs and other future dreams. The meeting concluded on a positive note, with a follow-up forum slated to be held in January 2014 and a hope that the group can continue to educate adults and teens on the causes and effects of teen pregnancy. Elizabeth Sanchez is a junior at Santa Fe High School. Contact her at elizabethann97@hotmail.com.
u La Familia Medical Center, which has four locations (one for dental services and one for the homeless) in Santa Fe, also offers the same contraceptives as the Santa Fe County Health Office, plus the IUD. All contraceptives are free. u The Santa Fe Family Health Center on Rodeo Road does not offer contraceptives, but doctors will write a prescription if needed. u Based on inquiries at local high schools, the private Desert Academy, St. Michael’s High School and the Santa Fe Waldorf School do not offer any contraceptives, including condoms, to teens. Students attending these schools are referred to public clinics. Santa Fe Preparatory offers condoms through its guidance councilor. Santa Fe High School does not give out contraceptives at school, but its Teen Health Center, located on campus, does offer a variety of contraceptives. New Mexico School for the Arts declined to provide information, and Generation Next was unable to find out what the Academy for Technology and the Classics, Capital High School or the Academy at Larragoite offer when it comes to contraceptives. Compiled by Tilcara Webb, Marco White and the Generation Next staff. Tilcara Webb is a sophomore at New Mexico School for the Arts and Marco White is a senior at Santa Fe Prep. Contact them at tilcara.webb@gmail.com and marcowhitesfnm@gmail.com.
SPEAK OUT Sasha Baca, Capital High School “I really don’t know.”
Jasmine Saenz, Bernalillo High School “It is very easy to find and get contraceptives. They even provide courses, which both deal how life is created and about sexual activity.”
Section editor: Adele Oliveira, 986-3091, aoliveira@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com
Ezra Marsalis, Capital High School “It’s like I want to play out in the rain, but I don’t know where to get a rain coat.”
BLANCA ORTIZ GENERATION NEXT
Arts school showcases conquest of Mexico By Aaron Stevens Generation Next
New Mexico School for the Arts’ recent theater piece, En Punto de Mis Ojos — which played Oct. 31 at the school — was unlike anything I’ve ever experienced. An audience-interactive, sitespecific piece, En Punto de Mis Ojos is a dramatization of Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés’ discovery and conquest of Mexico as seen from both the Spanish and native perspective. The play’s first wrinkle, for audience members, is the need for them to choose a path: Aztec native or Spanish conquistador. The two sides are presented as radically different, though certain scenes and encounters are interwoven between the two. Audience members were directed (often aggressively) by actors through the darkened hallways, classrooms and stairwells of the school building. Audience participation goes much deeper than just following the cast around the school. Attendees were given basic costume pieces (a mask and a sash) and a hot beverage — spiced cider on the Spanish side and hot cocoa with chile and cinnamon on the Aztec side. Attendees also were asked to do a number of actions: carry objects, kneel, and in one memorable scene, take notes. While participating to this level was optional, what the viewer puts into the performance corresponds to what he/she gets out of it. No matter which path you choose, or what degree of participation you pursue, En Punto de Mis Ojos, directed by Joey A. Chavez, Charles Gamble, Deborah Potter and Elizabeth Wiseman, is designed to provoke reactions. Race, religion and sexuality all play significant roles in the story, as do cleverly produced minimalistic special effects. The plot is loosely centered on the relationship between Cortés and the Aztec woman Malinal (La Malinche), who had a son with the Spaniard and then helped him conquer her people. However, the set up of the show condenses this dynamic into two, terse scenes — highlights of the entire production. The use of the school’s classrooms as classrooms initiated another set of ingenious scenes as a trio of students (one for the Spanish and two for the Aztecs) portrayed teachers and setup the climactic sequence using PowerPoint presentations. Also in the offing from these would-be educators was a wild and hilarious recreation of an Aztec ritual and a mention of La Llorona, the ghostly legend who appears throughout the show and is critical to its ending. Actually, the conclusion of En Punto de Mis Ojos is something of a letdown after the rest of the show, and I found it a shame that such a creative, well-executed program ended on such a hammy, conventional-plot note. The rest of the show had its flaws too — the Spanish path includes a series of repetitive, “are-youwith-us-or-not?” scenes, while the scenes on the Aztec route appeared jumbled and disjointed at times. The Aztec side does do more with audience participation and actually includes a few lighthearted moments. En Punto de Mis Ojos is a one-of-itskind visionary work that transcends its high school setting and cast. I have nothing but admiration for the four directors and 41 actors who pulled this off. (No writers are identified for the project, but the program notes that the school’s entire theater department worked as researchers.) Despite its rough edges, En Punto de Mis Ojos is a thoroughly original spectacle-on-a-shoestring. Aaron Stevens is a senior at Santa Fe Prep. Contact him at aaronbstevens1@gmail. com.
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
C-2
THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 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«
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY St. Michael Hospital Corridor
Multi-use 28,000 sq.ft. building, on 1.67 acres. Priced to sell under two million dollars. Owner will finance. Old Santa Fe Realty 505983-9265.
OUT OF TOWN
PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000 OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395 PLEASE SEE PHOTOS ON PECOSRIVERCLIFFHOUSE.COM
CONDO
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.
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
FARMS & RANCHES
RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000
426 ACRE Ranch with water rights. Adjacent to Tent Rocks National Monument. Call Bill Turner, (LIC. No. 13371) at 505-843-7643.
MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS?
»rentals«
TV book CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750 2 BEDROOM, $800 Utilities paid, fireplace, charming, clean, 5 minute walk to Railyard, No Pets, 505-471-0839
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 UNIQUE THREE bedroom, three bath, Park Plazas home offers privacy and Jemez Mountain v i e w s . Large family room - guest suite. Beautiful remodeled kitchen. 438-0701 by appointment.
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
HISTORIC REMODELED ADOBE , 1 bedroom 1 bath with yard. In the downtown area minutes to the Plaza. $850 monthly.
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Ra n c h o Siringo Rd. Fenced yard, laundry facility on-site, separate dining room. $725.00 Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
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!! $699. Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 2 BEDROOM 1 bath, utilities paid. Off Airport Rd. $850 monthly. $700 deposit. Available November 1st. 505474-2887.
2 bedroom, non-smoker, no pets $600, $1200 deposit required. Appointment only. 505-471-2929
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
PUEBLO STYLE, CUSTOM BUILT 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Drop dead Sangre views, minutes from the hospital. LOGIC REAL ESTATE 505-820-7000
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, Laundry facility on site, fire place, balcony, patio, near Walmart. $625 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, laundry hookups, fireplace, single story complex. $699 month. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RANCHO SIRINGO ROAD , fenced yard, fireplace, laundry facility on-site. $725 month. One Month Free Rent, No Application Fees.
2 Bedroom Apartmant off Agua Fria Behind Home Depot. Available Now! Call 505-603-4622 for details.
Check out the coupons in this weeks
LOTS & ACREAGE
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
NORTHSIDE TOWNHOME, minutes from Plaza. New carpet, paint, updated. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1000SF. Washer, Dryer hook-up. Courtyard. $1300, monthly + gas, electric + DD. 505259-4433.
SANTA FE
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
$800 HILLSIDE STREET. 1 BEDROOM. Great neighborhood. Walk to Plaza. Utilities included. Private patio. Clean. Off-street parking, Nonsmoking. No pets. Quiet Tenant Preferred! 505-685-4704 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY: 2 available, Live-in Studio & 1 Bedroom, both have Full kitchen and bath, plenty of closet space with gas and water paid. Studio: $680 and 1 Bedroom: $750. DOWNTOWN, 104 FAITHWAY: Live-in studio, Full bath and kitchen, tile throughout, fireplace. $760 with all utilities paid. 1425 PASEO DE PERALTA , 1 bedroom, full kitchen and bath, small living room, tile throughout, free laundry, $735 with all utilities paid. NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405
(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.
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
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.
CAMINO CAPITAN, one bedroom, one bath in quiet fourplex, fireplace, off street parking. $650 Western Equities 505-982-420. Rental Near downtown, quiet, complete. 1 bedroom $695, Utilities included. Hilltop Views. Washer, Dryer. No pets or smoking. 505-983-7408, 505-310-7408.
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 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 CHARMING 1 BEDROOM Compound. Private Patio. Lots of light. Carport, Laundry facilities. No pets. Non-smoking. $600 monthly, $600 deposit. (505)474-2827
CHECK OUT THE AMAZING AUTUMN MOVE-IN SPECIALS we’re offering this month on our sunny, spacious Studios & Large 2 Bedroom Apartments! You won’t believe the savings! The new management & 24 hour professional maintenance teams at Las Palomas ApartmentsHopewell Street are ready to show you how easy life can be when you love where you live. Call 888-4828216 for a tour today. Se habla español.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
Chamisa Management Corporation, 505-988-5299
ONE BEDROOM EFFICIEN CY apartment for rent, available immediately. $675.00 per month, including utilities. $300.00 cleaning deposit. No Pets, No Smoking. Contact phone number: 505-204-4777 (please leave voice message).
Available Now!
1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. $620-1bdrms $680-2bdrms $720-3bdrms Includes: Washer/Dryer and Gas Stove $0 Security Deposit (OAC ) 15 minute application process
SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS 2029 CALLE LORCA Call for appointment
505-471-8325
PARK PLAZAS! 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath, 1,350 sq.ft. Private end unit, attached two car garage. $1,150 monthly plus utilities. No pets or smoking. Available 11/15. 505-471-3725.
GUESTHOUSES 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 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
SOUTH CAPITOL NEIGHBORHOOD Charming 1 bedroom, spacious kitchen, beautiful vigas, hardwood floors, mudroom, portal, private parking. $695. Pet considered. 505898-4168 STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648
SUNSET VIEWS: charming 1 bedroom, 700 sq.ft. $655, deposit plus utilities. Laundry access. Cats ok. East Frontage Road. 505-699-3005.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 BEDROOM, 1 1/2 Bath, 2 Car Garage. Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher, Kiva Fireplace, Private Courtyard, Skylights. Sunset, Mountain Views. Walk to Plaza. Small Pets. $1,500 monthly. 505-660-4585. DOS SANTOS, one bedroom, one bath, upper level, upgraded, reserve parking. $800 Western Equities, 505-982-4201 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
AFFORDABLE LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA
Sunset views, 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-699-6161. AWESOME VIEWS, 8 miles from Plaza. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Short term rental for winter season. Wifi, directtv, sauna, utilities included. VERBO# 406531. $1,500 monthly. 505-690-0473
POJOAQUE CASITA. Fully furnished 1 bedroom, 2 bath. Baseboard heat, lots of trees, open space. $700 monthly plus $350 deposit. Some utilites. No smoking, no pets. Call, 505-455-3902.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, new heater, super clean. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References required. No Credit Check. 505-4705188
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
$1125 MONTHLY. BRIGHT, A T TRACTIVE, REMODELED HOME, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057.
Large one bedroom including loft two bath $1350 One bedroom one bath $900 Modern kitchens and appliances, New carpet and paint. 505-603-0052.
T O W N H O U S E , 1200 square feet. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Garage, patio, storage, large kitchen. Beautifully furnished. Convenient location. $1100 monthly. 866-363-4657
Walk to Geneveva Chavez just off of Richards. Available November 15th. Includes landscaped yard, washer dryer. 505-490-2800
$1200 Monthly: 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Remodeled Home
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! ANIMALS
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
505 Go K9 Sit Pet Sitting in your home.
Refernces available, insured, Call Michelle, 505-465-9748, michelle@petsits.com or visit 505GoK9Sit.com
CABINETRY LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073
CHILDCARE
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!
A+ Cleaning
MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m, For More Information Please Call Miranda 505-467-8623 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
CONSTRUCTION
FLORES & MENDOZA’S PROFESSIONAL MAINTENENCE. Home and Office cleaning. 15 years experience, references available, Licensed, bonded, insured. (505)7959062.
REMODELING. Our Specialty is Showers. Expert workmanship. License #58525 since 1982. Life-time Workmanship Warranty. 505-466-8383
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
FIREWOOD
A.C.E. PLASTERING INC. Stucco, Interior, Exterior. Will fix it the way you want. Quality service, fair price, estimate. Alejandro, 505-795-1102
GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE
Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed and Insured. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072
Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117
HANDYMAN
Clean Houses in and out. Windows, carpets. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and office with TLC. Excellent references. Nancy, 505-986-1338.
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPING
PLASTERING
ROOFING
COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510
CLEANING Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.
HANDYMAN
CLEANING
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
CONCRETE Cesar’s Concrete.
Concrete work, Color, Stamp, and Acid Wash. Masonry work. Licensed, bonded, insured. License# 378917. Call Cesar at 505-629-8418.
AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PROPANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877
MOVERS 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.
ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call, Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760. ROOFING PRO Panel, shingles, torch down. Also restucco parapets, repair plaster and sheet rock damage.All phases of construction. 505-310-7552.
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
$1425 MONTHLY. BEAUTIFUL Rancho Viejo 3 bedroom, 2 bath hom e with gas rock fireplace, granite counter-tops, evaporative cooler, enclosed spacious walled yard. NonSmoker. 505-450-4721. www.ranchoviejo.shutterfly.com/pict ures/16
ARROYO HONDO (SF) award winning contemporary gated 4 acres. Bright, spacious 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, plus guest quarters - studio. $5000 monthly + utilities. 505-9860046
2 BEDROOM, 1-1/2 BATH Country living on Highway 14, Northfork. Approximately 900 square feet. Horse friendly. $850 monthly. Deposit required. Pets negotiable. 505-920-9748
CHARMING NEIGHBORHOOD. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Wood stove, laminate & tile. $1300 first 6 months. www.enchantedcity.com 505-204-3309
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, fireplace, wood and tile floors, washer and dryer. No pets. $750 monthly. 505-471-7587 or 505-690-5627.
EASTSIDE ADOBE. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, fireplace, hardwood floors, washer, dryer. Off-street parking $1600 monthly, some utilities included. 303-908-5250
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.
ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603
2BR, 1BA, Adobe House in scenic Chimayo. Minutes from El Santuario. Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator, $700 monthly + Utilities, No smoking. References required. 505-662-3927. 3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, near Rodeo Yuca. New Energy efficient windows, air conditioning, garage, enclosed yard. Non-smoking, small pet ok, $1150 plus utilities. 505-930-8124 3 bedroom, 1 bath. Single car garage, quiet street, wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1100 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196.
3 BEDROOM 2 bath adobe. 1,900 sq.ft. 3 car carport, enclosed yard, pets ok. $1,300 monthly. Includes utilities. $1,300 deposit. Available 12/1/13. 505-470-5877. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190
4 BEDROOM, 1 3/4 baths, washer, dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered patio, storage, central location. $1800 plus utilities, deposit, 1-yr lease, no pets, no smoking. 505-9820266.
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 LEASE & OWN. ZERO DOWN! PAY EXACTLY WHAT OWNER PAYS: $1200 includes mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance (HOA). ZIA VISTA’S LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CONDO. Save thousands. Incredible "Sangre" views. 505-204-2210
LIVE AMONG Pines near Plaza. 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Wood floors, kiva fireplace, front, back yards, washer, dryer. NO smoking, 2 car garage. $1,700 monthly. 505670-6554 MALE, looking for roommate. Share 3 bedroom 2 bath home. Beautiful garden, deck. Off St. Michael’s, $582. 505-988-5836. NAVA ADE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Garage, all appliances. Fireplace, storage unit, Access to clubhouse (workout, pool). Low maintenance. 1500 sq.ft. $1,350. 505-660-1264
DESIRABLE NAVA ADE COMMUNITY 3 bedroom, plus library, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, enclosed backyard, 2 wood burning fireplaces, $1695 plus utilities 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 AND CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 bedroom, 1 bath, wood & tile floors, enclosed backyard, additional storage on property $1100 plus utilities EXQUISITE SANTA FE COMPOUND PROPERTY situated on 5 acres, boasts majestic mountain views, 6200 sqft of living space, 8 bedrooms, 7 baths, 2 car garage. $3500 plus utilities. Call for personal showing COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948.
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
REDUCED PRICE FOR RENT OR SALE:
4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage; approximately 3200 sq.ft. enclosed yard, private cul-de-sac, mountain views. Beautiful house in Rancho Viejo. $2,000 + deposit + utilities. Call Quinn, 505-690-7861. REFURBISHED. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH $1000 monthly plus utilities. Nonsmoking, no pets. Behind DeVargas Mall, 10 minute walk to Plaza or Railyard. 505-690-3116, 505-438-8983.
TESUQUE, 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath on horse property, wood stove, no dogs, horses possible. $800 monthly plus electric. 505-983-8042
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
»jobs«
VACATION
TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE
"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"
505-989-9133
VACANCY
1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH
Single & Double Wide Spaces
MANUFACTURED HOMES $600. 2 small bedrooms. Very clean, quiet, safe. Off Agua Fria. Has gas heating. Pay only electric. No pets. 505-473-0278
Applicants my apply on-line at www.santaclaran.com
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.
WAREHOUSES 2000 SQUARE foot space with high ceilings & 2 overhead doors. Office, bath. Great for auto repair. $1600 monthly. 505-660-9523
Opportunity Knocks!
1,500 sq.ft. industrial unit with nice office, half bath, overhead door, high ceilings, sky lights, parking, absolutly no automotive. $900 monthly plus utilities. No better deal in town! Call 505-438-8166.
WORK STUDIOS OFFICES $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
NEW SHARED OFFICE
$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS
Arroyo Hondo Studio 4 acre compound. 1,000 ft, with loft. Overhead door, views, quiet, W/D. $600, monthly, plus utilties. 505-670-7958. FURNISHED, CHARMING Studio Apartment. No Pets. Use of nice patio. Walking distance to Plaza. $650 monthly. All utilities paid. 505-9836184.
»announcements«
Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $450 monthly. 505-690-5092
MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCED BILINGUAL tax preparer wanted. Must have prior experience and be willing to work Saturdays. Directax 505-473-4700.
WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad
ADMINISTRATIVE PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE
HIRING RECEPTIONIST, FULL-TIME ENTRY LEVEL. 10.51 HR, WITH FULL BENEFITS. FAX RESUME: 505-982-0788 OR CALL VICTORIA 505-982-8581
DRIVERS Lincare, leading national respiratory company seeks caring service representative. Service patients in their home for oxygen and equipment needs. Warm personalities. Age 21 plus who can lift up to 120 pounds should apply. CDL with DOT a plus or obtainable. Growth opportunities are excellent, drug free workplace. EOE. Apply at 712 West San Mateo, Santa Fe, NM 87505.
HOSPITALITY
RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available
1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.
STORAGE SPACE
AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330 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
FOUND WOMEN’S WHITE Gold or Silver Ring with 3 stones. Found in La Casa Sena Parking Lot on October 30, 2013. 505660-7913.
BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is Hiring Assistant Managers at two Santa Fe Locations! Pay DOE, 35-40 hours per week. Contact Lupe at L F e r n a n d e z Marquez@lotaburger.com to apply. HISTORIC SANTA Fe Foundation seeks dynamic ED to lead conservation, education, fundraising, etc. Apply at www.historicsantafe.org/edsearch. No calls.
CALL 986-3000
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.
HOSPITALITY The Santa Claran Casino Hotel is hiring Food & Beverage managers and line cooks. Pay DOE.
1200 & 600 SQUARE FEET
ROOMMATE WANTED
PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
986-3000
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
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.
PRIVATE SMALL HO U SE on 5 acres lots of trees off Old Las Vegas Highway. $875 month, includes water. C o n t a c t wellness@hypnosissantafe.com
COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $895 plus utilities
LIVE IN STUDIOS
LOT FOR RENT CHARMING 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom. Quiet neighborhood. $1100 monthly plus utilities and deposit. Available November 1st. Please call 505-4735396 or 505-660-4289.
2 BEDROOM 1 bath adobe home. Freshly remodled. Columbia Street. $1,050 monthly plus utilities. Available now! 505-983-9722.
to place your ad, call
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Smith’s is now accepting applications for an EXPERIENCED BAKER. Retail experience preferred. Apply in person at 224 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur or apply online at www.smithsfoodanddrug.com, select store location 426.
NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RISK MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
Non-profit local governmental association seeking a risk management director to oversee three public entity self-insurance pools. Successful candidate should have experience in management, insurance administration, finance and claims, as well as familiarity with local government issues. Law degree, M.B.A., or advanced insurance certification a plus. Excellent benefits package and working environment. Email resume and references by November 22 to cstephenson@nmcounties.org
NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RISK MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
Non-profit local governmental association seeking a risk management director to oversee three public entity self-insurance pools. Successful candidate should have experience in management, insurance administration, finance and claims, as well as familiarity with local government issues. Law degree, M.B.A., or advanced insurance certification a plus. Excellent benefits package and working environment. Email resume and references by November 22 to cstephenson@nmcounties.org WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
LOST LOST LAPTOP between Trades West Rd, Siler, Cerrillos Rd. Dell with windows 8 and has fingerprint encryption. REWARD! 505-603-2099 or 505424-0115.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO ADMISSIONS
**REWARD** LOST tan & white Pitbull in Santa Fe. Last seen by Kearny elementary. Please if found call 505-819-9922 or 505-231-9752.
For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.stjohnscollege.edu. Click on — “About” “Santa Fe Campus” “Santa Fe Jobs.” This is a temporary position — 25 to 35 hours per week.
CLASSIFIEDS
Send resume, letter of intent, salary history and names, addresses and phone numbers of three professional references to jobs@sjcsf.edu. Resume packets will be accepted until interviews begin.
Where treasures are found daily
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
PUBLIC NOTICES A special, one-night, home-based business galeria-sharing their wares! Includes drawings every 15 minutes, refreshments, and caroling fun!,entry fee: a donation to operation christmas child shoe box: small non-war related toy, grooming item, or school supply for a child in a wartorn or disaster struck country. Businesses represented: accessories, women’s clothing, cosmetics, supplements and fitness nutrition, culinary items, childrens books, photography, purses, home decor, jewelry, and chocolate! I AM looking for my sister Rita (Martinez) this is Trudy, email racerwife@hotmail.com, her birthday is in April & grew up in Santa Fe.
www.twitter.com/sfnmsports
flock to the ball.
www.twitter.com/sfnmsports
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THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL DENTAL
COMPUTERS
to place your ad, call
986-3000
»animals«
GARAGE SALE SOUTH
HORSES
3328 LA Avenida De San Marcos XMAS IN NOVEMBER. SATURDAY 9th, 8am-2pm. Jolly assortment of XMAS stuff; car stuff air filters, ramps; lighting fixtures, lamps, glass shades; saddles and tack; men’s shirts and new tshirts; housewares; blankets, comforters, pillows; building hardware- nails, etc. Various odds and ends.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! CLASSIC CARS
4X4s
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
CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily
AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $70. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.
FURNITURE
6324 AVENIDA CHAMISA. Designer Garage Sale: Off of Paseo Del Sol between Jaguar and Airport: Decor, Furniture, Books. SATURDAY, 8:30. POSSIBLY SUNDAY (?).
1950’S MAHAGONY drop-leaf table. Rectangular, 28"x36", extends to 60"x36". 4 ladder-back chairs. Very good condition. $490, OBO. 505-9882761
2005 FORD Thunderbird 50th Anniversary Edition! Convertible with only 52k miles! $15,500. Mint condition. 505-363-2592
Toy Box Too Full?
CAR STORAGE FACILITY 1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $16,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862
ESTATE SALES Place an ad Today!
A TOUCH OF CLASS ESTATE SALES PRESENTS
CALL 986-3000 "FREEMONT" STARTED under saddle. 3 year gelding Mustang. Very gentle. Would make good kid horse. USFF Adoption, $475. John, 505-419-9754.
PART TIME PRODUCTION - WAREHOUSE HELP NEEDED. Approximately 24 hours per week. Apply at Aroma Coffee: 4 Bisbee Court, Santa Fe. 505-424-7777
TRADES ASSISTANT MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
HVAC, Pool Certified, electrical, plumbing, painting experience required. Competitive pay & benefits. Drug test required. santaferesume@gmail.com HIRING ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMAN OR APPRENTICE. 2 years experience, Valid Driver’s license, Background check required. Pay DOE. Contact Allied Electric, 505-438-8899.
STAFF WRITER, PAGE DESIGNER
An award-winning weekly newspaper based in the Rocky Mountains ski town of Angel Fire, N.M., the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle has an immediate opening for a staff writer/page designer who will work 30 hours per week. The person in this position will write stories and take photos for the newspaper and its special sections and help with page layout once a week. The ideal candidate will have a degree or experience in journalism, a strong grasp of AP style and a fervor for both hard and soft news. Experience in page layout is preferred. The pay for this position is $12.82 per hour without medical benefits. Send your résumé, three clips and samples of page design to Managing Editor Jesse Chaney at news@sangrechronicle.com or PO Drawer 209, Angel Fire, NM 87710. Deadline is 5 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2013. EOE.
»merchandise«
PETS SUPPLIES
BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING.
DOG HOUSE, Precision-Wood, Medium Size, Good Condition $60. 505982-2791.
MASSAGE TABLE. Adjustable, oak, with locking pins. 74"Lx33"W; 24"33" high; 44 lbs, carrying case. Excellent condition. $100. 505-473-1916. TWO NEW Kia Sedona bucket seats, $95. 505-995-0341.
ITALIAN WATER DOGS. 4 MONTH OLD PUPPIES, CRATE TRAINED. 25-35 lbs, non-shedding. Free training and daycare. $2,000. Excellent family or active retiree pet. Call Robin, 505-6606666. WHITE AKC Labrador Retriever Puppies! Excellent Bloodlines! Visit www.hufflabs.com or call 719-5880934.
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
»garage sale«
Russian Impressionist, Italian and Chinese silk paintings, Aizpiri, Boncompain, botanicals, birds, Venetian scenes.
Furniture:
AWESOME!
1990 FORD F-150 Lariat extended cab. Low mileage, ready to make you money, 4x2. Great shape! Nice truck. $4,295. Ask for Lee 505-316-2230.
2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.
1991 CAMERO RS, Runs Good, Ttop, $2,000. 575-483-5987
Sofas, ceramic side tables, granite dining table, console table, chairs, coffee tables, king-size beds, mirrors, Indian screen, outdoor tables, chairs.
China Crystal and Pottery:
Baccarat, Waterford, Tiffany, Chinese export, Pueblo.
Lamps:
Jugenstahl, Chinese, Japanese, Delft, Kinkaid, Simon Pearce.
Jewelry and Silver:
Blue Gem Lotus Blossom necklace, 1920’s, serving spoon and forks. Miehle vacuum, lots of kitchen. Persian and decorator rugs, bed and table linens.
DOWNSTREAM
Fine women’s clothes... three racks of luxury designer items in cashmere, leather and silk.
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
2001 TOYOTA Tundra 4x4 Limited Access Cab. Single owner. New tires. Well maintained with records. Clean interior. All the extras plus shell and bed liner. 187,000 miles. $10,400. 505699-3731
IMPORTS
»cars & trucks«
1921 MASON and Hamlin, Model A, 5.8" Concert Baby Grand, wonderful condition. $24,500. Please call for an appointment. 505-984-9849
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
986-3000
CLOTHING
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
BLACK LEATHER COAT. SIZE MED-LG. GOOD CONDITION . $30. 505-474-9020.
ATLAS SNOW SHOES. Small size. 17" long by 6.5" wide. Great shape. $40. 505-474-9020.
pets
Santa Fe Animal Shelt 983-4309 ext. 610
make it better.
Santa Fe Animal Shelter.Adopt. Volunteer. Love. 983-4309 ext. 610
TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2002 with 108k miles, clean title. $2900. Please call or text me anytime at 762-359-0324.
GARAGE SALE NORTH 427 KATHRYN Place MOVING SALE Saturday 11/9 8 am. to Noon Many household and gardening items. Books, CDs, DVDs, weber grill, hoses, tools, supplies, leaf blower, rakes, shovels, dishes, utensils, planters, terra cotta pots and more.
4X4s
2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.
CLASSIC CARS
MULTI-VENDOR ARTS & CRAFTS FLEA MARKET . Supplies, handmade books, journals, papers, gifts. Saturday 11/9, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Meem Room, Palace of Governors.
GARAGE SALE SOUTH CHRISTMAS ITEMS, furniture, jewelry, China, Mexican Pottery, books, collectables, art, Americana. 2 Family Sale. 106 East Coronado Road. Saturday 8-12.
Life is good ...
pets
95 MITSUBISHI Montero, mechanically sound, second owner, service receipts. $3,400. 505-231-4481.
(take Cruz Blanca one block past St. John’s) Friday, November 8th: Noon to three p.m., Saturday, November 9th: Ten a.m. to Two p.m.
Art:
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sell Your Stuff!
ELECTRIC STOVE, almond in color. Good condition and clean. $100. 505662-6396.
DOMESTIC
Antiques:
NEVER BEEN USED 48" sandwich prep table, with under counter refrigeration. 3 year compressor warranty. $1,600 OBO. 505-852-0017
APPLIANCES
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039
Moving Through Presents, 761 Calle Picacho,
Cottage-Style settee, rustic demilune table, Spanish chest, fruitwood sideboard, country beidemeier bureau, marble-top French Directoire bureau, birds-eye maple dresser, Vacquero traveling desk, armoires, Sheraton-style settee, Victorian wing chair, English arm chairs, side tables.
TV 27" SONY, remote, great condition, $95. OAK ROCKER, sturdy "grandpa" size, $75. GRACEFUL WOODEN ARMCHAIR, upholstered seat and back $65. 505-466-9669.
MISCELLANEOUS
2 Thyme Court, Santa Fe (NM599 Las Campanas Road), Thursday November 7th - Saturday (10 am - 3 pm). Home of sous vide chef, cookware, Jennaire refrigerator, Subzero freezer, Oriental rugs, LP collection, book collection, flat screen TV, projection TV, top line camera equipment, Apple computer.
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800. 1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339
2013 VW GTI with only 4,000 miles. Carbon Steel, 4-door, 6-speed manual with Laguna wheels. Factory warranty. Perfect. $23,000. 505-4669248.
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS
2011 HONDA CIVIC COUPE One owner, no accidents, 28k miles, automatic, factory warranty. Silver with grey interior, nonsmoker. Below Blue Book $13,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
to place your ad, call
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
2006 LEXUS GS 300 AWD. Just in time for winter, AWD sports sedan, recent trade, absolutely pristine, Lexus for less $17,891. Call 505216-3800.
2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium. 25,321 miles, AM/FM stereo with CD player, Bluetooth hands-free. $23,771. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000 IMPORTS
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!
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Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
»recreational«
PICKUP TRUCKS
2010 NISSAN Titan Crew Cab PRO4X. 4x4, local trade-in, clean CarFax, immaculate, new tires $22,321. Call 505-216-3800.
BICYCLES
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS? Check out the coupons in this weeks
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
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! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
TV book
2010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i Premium. Only 24k miles! AWD, heated seats, moonroof, 1 owner clean CarFax $16,951. Call 505-216-3800.
2008 TOYOTA Sienna LE. Just 59k miles, another 1-owner Lexus trade-in! clean CarFax, immaculate condition $15,941. Call 505-2163800.
2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C HYBRID FWD Another One Owner, Carfax, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, 14,710 Miles, City 53, Highway 46, Navigation, Factory Warranty. $19,850. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE!
CAMPERS & RVs 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.
SUVs
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.
1977 Prowler 16ft Trailer, Sleeps 6, Excellent Condition. Oldie but Goodie! Great for hunters or families $3,000 OBO. 505-660-4963.
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!
2007 MERCEDES C280 4matic. Only 65k miles!, All wheel drive, loaded, recent trade, clean CarFax, must see $15,471. Call 505-2163800.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
CLASSIFIEDS
2011 VOLKSWAGEN-TDI JETTA WAGON MANUAL Another One Owner, Carfax, Garaged Non-Smoker 54,506 Miles, Service Records, 42 Highway 30 City, Loaded, Pristine $20,750. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
Where treasures are found daily
Place an ad Today!
(5) Storm 300’s, New. Pedal bike with electric assist. $1000. 505-690-9058
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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.
SALE! ECO MOTIVE ELECTRIC BIKES.
2010 T o y o t a 4Runner Trail V6 SUV . 43,338 miles, Remote Engine Start, One owner, No accidents! $29,995. 505-474-0888.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2013 TRACER Executive 34ft Travel Trailer $22,500. Top-of-the-line, only used once! Two slide-outs, sleeps 10, includes all upgrades. 505-363-2592
WERE SO DOG GONE GOOD! We Always Get Results!
Call our helpful Ad-Visors Today!
CALL 986-3000
986-3000
2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged SUV. 86,695 miles, Rear Seat Entertainment, Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, Roof Rail System, and much more. $29,995. Call 505-474-0888.
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!
1999 MERCEDES-BENZ E320 Excellent condition . 93k miles, no accidents, everything works, Barolo red metallic with tan leather. Was $6,995. REDUCED TO $5,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945 2010 TOYOTA Prius III. Just 21,000 miles! Package 3 with navigation, 1 owner clean CarFax. $19,761. Call 505-216-3800.
for activists rally Immigrants,
Locally owned
and independent
rights at Capitol
Tuesday,
February
8, 2011
Local news,
www.santafenew
A-8
50¢
mexican.com
for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary near E.J. Martinez
The New
SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010
PICKUP TRUCKS
2005 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. $4400. BEST COLOR COMBO, BLACK MAGIC OVER BLACK. FACTORY RECARO SEATS, ALL WEATHER FLOOR MATS, BLACK MAGIC EXTERIOR, BLACK & GRAY CLOTH INTERIOR. CALL, 224999-0674 2005 VOLVO XC90. SUV, V-8, Black. AWD. Low mileage, 34,490. Loaded: GPS, sunroof, leather seats, 7passenger. Like new. $16,000. 505881-2711
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.
2009 TOYOTA Corolla LE. Only 53k miles! Another 1 owner clean CarFax trade-in! Super nice, fully serviced $12,961. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book. Was $29,995. REDUCED TO $28,995. 505954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com 2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .
2009 TOYOTA Prius III. ANOTHER super low mileage Prius, 22k miles, package 3, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one $15,931. Call 505-2163800.
to place legals, call
986-3000
LEGALS
LEGALS
toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com
LEGALS
STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF John T. Sanchez, DECEASED. No. 2013-0154
to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,
2007 Land Rover Range Rover Supercharged SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.
sfnm«classifieds
NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe New Mexico 87501 Dated: November 4, 2013 Thomas A. Sanchez Signature of Personal Representative 2308 Las Casitas Santa Fe, NM 87507 505473-0074 Legal#96056 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: November 8, 15, 2013
You can view your legal ad online at:
sfnmclassifieds. com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
to place legals, call LEGALS
g dicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex at Santa Fe, New Mexico at 8:30 a.m. on the 22nd day of November, 2013 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of the child from Liam Brannen to Liam MiOF chael Brannen.
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE MEXICO COURT No. D-101-PB-2013SANTA FE COUNTY 00185 No. 2013-0139 4B-302
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ROBERT SHWEDER, DECEASED. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grant Ave., Santa fe, NM, 87504. Dated 10/28, 2013 Martha Shweder Personal Representative 2099 Galisteo St. Street address Santa Fe, NM, 87505 City, state and zip code 505-438-8462 Telephone number USE NOTE 1. See Sections 45-3801 to 45-3-803 NMSA 1978 for notice to creditors. Legal #98948 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 1 and 8, 2013.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS RFB No. ’14/20/B Competitive sealed bids will be received by the Santa Fe Solid Waste Management Agency and will be delivered to City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Bldg. "H", Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 until 2:00 p.m. local prevailing time on Friday, December 3, 2013. Any bid received after this deadline will not be considered. This RFB is for the purpose of procuring: INDEFINITE QUANTITY SCRAP TIRE HAULING AND RECYCLING PRICE AGREEMENT The Bidder’s attention is directed to the fact that all applicable Federal Laws, State Laws, Municipal Ordinances, and the rules and regulations of all authorities having jurisdiction over said item shall apply to the bid throughout, and they will be deemed to be included in the bid document the same as though herein written out in full. The Santa Fe Solid Waste Management Agency (Agency) is an Equal Opportunity Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation or national origin. The successful Bidder will be required to conform to the Equal Opportunity Employment regulations. Bids may be held for sixty (60) days subject to action by the Agency. The Agency reserves the right to reject any or all bids in part or in whole. Bid packets are available by contacting: Shirley Rodriguez, City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Building "H", Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505. Telephone number is (505) 955-5711. Questions related to this bid can be directed to Randall Kippenbrock, P.E., Santa Fe Solid Waste Management Agency, 149 Wildlife Way, Santa Fe, NM 87506. Telephone number is (505) 4241850, ext. 100. The RFB is also available a t http://www.santafen m.gov/bids.aspx. ATTEST: Robert Rodarte, Purchasing Officer Legal# 95956 Published at the Santa Fe New Mexican Novermber 8, 2013
986-3000
LEGALS
LEGALS
p y tained via the w e b s i t e www.sl.universalserv ice.org . The zip code to enter is 87544. Posting number is 996420001155853. Responses should be submitted to the Los Alamos Public Schools Purchasing Office at 2075 Trinity Drive, Los Alamos, NM 87544 or mailed to Los Alamos Public Schools, P.O. Box 90, Los Alamos, NM 87544. Submissions via e-mail will be accepted for this solicitation at d.obermeyer@lascho ols.net .
y y Holian), as well as for a countywide representative, who can reside anywhere within Santa Fe County.
OBTAINING CONTRACT DOCUMENTS: Drawings, Specifications and other Contract Documents may be obtained from M & E Engineering, 1222 Luisa, Suite B, Santa Fe or 8417 Washington Pl. NE, AlbuquerIN THE MATTER que upon payment of THE ESTATE OF JOHN ELLVINGER , STEPHEN T. PACHECO, a deposit of $ 100.00 District Court Clerk per set. The deposit DECEASED By: Maureen Naranjo shall be in check form Deputy Court Clerk and shall be payable NOTICE TO to M & E Engineering. CREDITORS Submitted by: The deposit for each Daniel Eugene set will be refunded upon return of the NOTICE IS HEREBY Brannen Jr. Contract Documents GIVEN that the under- Petitioner, Pro Se Jennifer Elizabeth in good condition not signed has been aplater than fifteen (15) pointed Personal Brannen days following the Representative of the Petitioner, Pro Se opening of Bids. Responses will be acEstate of J O H N Plans may be viewed cepted until 5:00 P.M., E L L V I N G E R , De- Legal #95937 Mountain Standard ceased. All persons Published in The San- in the Plan Rooms. time, on Wednesday, having claims against ta Fe New Mexican on this Estate are re- November 8 and 15, BID SECURITY: Each December 4, 2013. Dean Bid shall be accom- Contact quired to present 2013. panied by an accept- Obermeyer at 505their claims within 663-2204 or at the eable form of Bid Setwo (2) months after FIRST JUDICIAL curity in an amount mail address above the date of the first DISTRICT COURT equal to at least five for further informapublication of this STATE OF (5) percent of the tion. Notice or their claims NEW MEXICO amount of the Prowill be forever barCOUNTY OF posal payable to the Legal #95936 red. Claims must be SANTA FE Owner as a guaranty Published in The Sanpresented either to that if the Bid is ac- ta Fe New Mexican on the undersigned PerNo. D-101-CV-2013cepted, the Bidder November 8, 2013. sonal Representative 02156 will execute the Conat P.O. Box 1575, Santract and file acceptta Fe, New Mexico, CITY OF SANTA FE NOTICE able Performance 87504, or filed with ex rel. and Labor and Mate- Notice of Santa Fe the First Judicial DisSANTA FE POLICE County Meeting rial Payment Bonds trict Court, 225 MonDEPARTMENT, Santa Fe County with fifteen (15) days tezuma Avenue, P.O. Housing Authority after the Notice of Box 2268, Santa Fe, Petitioner, Board Award. New Mexico, 87504. Tuesday, November vs. OWNERS RIGHTS RE- 26, 2013 at 10:00am. DATED: November Legal Conferance SERVED: New Mexi01, 2013. ONE (1) 1987 RED co Supreme Court Room, 102 Grant Ave. TOYOTA TACOMA hereinafter called the For more information, Jack Ellvinger, Per- V.I.N. Owner, reserves the copies of the agenda, sonal Representative JT4RN63R3H0160634 or auxiliary aids or right to reject any or NEW MEXICO LICENSE all Bids to waive any services, contact THE CULLEN LAW NO. MGF 655, (505) 986-6200 formality or techniFIRM, P.C. cality in any Proposal Legal #95921 Attorneys for PersonRespondent, in the interest of the Published in The Sanal Representative ta Fe New Mexican on Owner. 2006 Botulph Road and November 8 2013 P.O. Box 1575 A Mandatory Pre-Bid Santa Fe, New Mexico DALE T. VIGIL, Conference will be Notice of Meeting 87504-1575 held on Thursday, No(505) 988-7114 (ofClaimant. vember 14, 2013 at LEGAL NOTICE IS fice) 10:00 am at the NM HEREBY GIVEN that a (505) 995-8694 (fac- NOTICE Supreme Court, 237 Regular Meeting of simile) Don Gaspar, Santa Fe, the Governing Board lawfirm@cullen.cc TO DALE T. VIGIL: NM. of Santa Fe Community College (SFCC) will Legal #95939 The above-captioned Legal#95859 be held on Tuesday, Published in The San- action has been filed Published in the SanNovember 19, 2013 at ta Fe New Mexican on to seek forfeiture of ta Fe New Mexican 5:00 p.m. in the SFCC November 8 and 15, the above-described November 8, 2013 Governing Board 2013. motor vehicle. If no Room (223), 6401 Riresponse is filed, dechards Ave., Santa Fe, fault judgment may LEGAL NOTICE FIRST JUDICIAL NM 87508. The Govbe entered in favor of DISTRICT COURT erning Board will the Petitioner. The REQUEST FOR STATE OF NEW meet with the Santa name, address and PROPOSALS MEXICO Fe Community ColCOUNTY OF SANTA FE telephone number of lege Foundation Petitioner’s attorney RFP NO: 89-001-14 Board in a Work SesCITY OF SANTA FE ex are: R. Alfred Walker The Board of Educa- sion where no action rel. Assistant City Attor- tion, Zuni Public will be taken on TuesSANTA FE POLICE 19, ney School District, is re- day, November DEPARTMENT, City of Santa Fe questing competitive 2013 at 3:30 p.m. in Petitioner, the President’s Con200 Lincoln Avenue sealed qualificationsP.O. Box 909 based proposals for ference Room (108). vs. Santa Fe, New Mexico Design Professional services for the con- Board meetings are No. D-101-CV-2013- 87504-0909 Telephone: (505) 955- struction of the new open to the public. If 02617 6967 combined elementary you are an individual with a disability who ONE (1) 2000 RED Facsimile: (505) 955- school -Dowa Yalanne is in need of any form ES & A:Shiwi ES. MITSUBISHI GALLANT 6748 of auxiliary aid, servEmail: V . I . N . a w a l k e r @ c i . s a n t a - The Request for Pro- ice or special assis4A3AA46G6YE146380, tance to attend or fe.nm.us posals (RFP) may be Respondent, in the Legal #95797 requested from the participate meeting, please conPublished in The SanDistrict by contacting and ta Fe New Mexican on Martin Romine by tact the President’s Office at 428-1148 at ALL UNKNOWN October 25, Novem- e m a i l : ber 1, 8 2013 martin.romine@zpsd. least 24 hours before CLAIMANTS TO meeting. An org . Additional the ONE (1) 2000 RED documents relating agenda will be availaMITSUBISHI GALLANT to the RFP may be ble from the PresiV . I . N . found on the ZPSD dent’s Office 72 hours 4A3AA46G6YE146380, INVITATION FOR w e b s i t e prior to the meeting. Claimants. BIDS www.zpsd.org ( link located on lower left Legal#95874 NOTICE BIDS WILL BE AC- side of the Published in the SanCEPTED BY THE PE- homepage). ta Fe New Mexican TO ALL UNKNOWN COS INDEPENDENT November 8, 2013 CLAIMANTS TO ONE SCHOOLS, PO BOX non-mandatory (1) 2000 RED 368, PECOS, NM 87552 A MITSUBISHI GALLANT, UNTIL NOVEMBER 18, P r e - P r o p o s a l Notice of NondiscriConference/tour will V . I . N . 2013, 1:00 PM FOR THE be held on Tuesday, mination Policy as to 4A3AA46G6YE146380: FOLLOWING: 3 November 12, 2013 at Students: The AcadeSCHOOL BUSES, 4 2:00 PM at The Twin my for the Love of Learning, Inc., admits The above-captioned VEHCILES, GYM Buttes HS Cafeteria. students of any race, action has been filed BLEACHERS, DAMcolor, national and to seek forfeiture of AGED PIANO, DAMthe above-described AGED WEIGHT MA- Proposals will be re- ethnic origin to all the privileges, motor vehicle. If no CHINES AND NUMER- ceived no later than rights, response is filed, de- OUS OTHER ITEMS. A 2:00 PM on Thursday, programs, and activiDecember 12, 2013 ties generally accordfault judgment may COMPLETE LIST OF ed or made available be entered in favor of ITEMS IS AVAILABLE Sealed proposals to students at the the Petitioner. The AT THE BUSINESS OFmust hand delivered Academy. It does not name, address and FICE. BID MUST BE to: discriminate on the telephone number of MARKED ON THE OUTbasis of race, color, Petitioner’s attorney SIDE OF THE ENVEZuni Public School national and ethnic are: LOPE INDICATING District origin in administraSPECIFIC ITEM BID IS Attn: Martin Romine R. Alfred Walker FOR. THE BOARD OF P.O. Drawer A, 12 Twin tion of its educational policies, admissions Assistant City EDUCATION RE- Buttes Drive policies, scholarship Attorney SERVES THE RIGHT TO Zuni, NM City of Santa Fe REJECT ANY/OR ALL Phone No: (505) 782- programs, and other A c a d e m y 200 Lincoln Avenue BIDS IN WHOLE OR IN 5511 X 6301 administered proP.O. Box 909 PART WHEN IT IS IN grams. Santa Fe, New Mexico THE BEST INTEREST The Zuni Public 87504-0909 OF THE PECOS INDE- School District’s Telephone: (505) 955- PENDENT SCHOOL Board of Education Legal#95867 6967 DISTRICT. BIDS WILL reserves the right to Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican Facsimile: (505) 955- BE OPENED AT 2:00 reject any and all pro6748 PM AT THE ADMINIS- posals and/or cancel November 8, 2013 E m a i l : TRATION BUILDING. this RFP in its entireawalker@ci.santaSanta Fe County ty. fe.nm.us PLEASE CONTACT THE Health Policy and BUSINESS OFFICE FOR Legal#95873 Planning Commission Legal #95938 FURTHER INFORMA- Published in the San- (HPPC) Seeking MemPublished in The San- TION AND COMPLETE ta Fe New Mexican bers ta Fe New Mexican on LIST OF ITEMS. November 7, 8, 11, November 8, 15 and Santa Fe, NM - No2013 22, 2013. Legal#95953 vember 6, 2013 - SanPublished in the Santa Fe County is seekta Fe New Mexican Los Alamos Public ing members for the FIRST JUDICIAL November 7, 8, 2013 Schools Health Policy and DISTRICT COURT Form 470 Posting for Planning Commission STATE OF NEW E-rate Funding (HPPC). There is a MEXICO INVITATION TO BID current vacancy for a COUNTY OF SANTA FE Educational Consorti- member residing RECEIPT OF BIDS: for within Commission IN THE MATTER OF A Sealed Bids will be re- um PETITION FOR ceived by New Mexi- Telecommunications District 3 (CommisCHANGE OF NAME OF co Supreme Court c/o Services has posted sion District repreregard- sented by Robert NAME OF LIAM M&E Engineering, Inc. information ing Digital Transmis- Anaya). Vacancies BRANNEN, A CHILD. at 1222 Luisa St., sions services re- are also coming up Suite B, Santa Fe, NM Case No.: D-101-CV- 87505 until 2:00 pm quested by the Los for members residing Alamos Public Commission 201302824 (local time) on No- Schools for the E-rate within District 1 (Commisvember 22, 2013 for funding year sion District repreNOTICE OF CHANGE the construction of 7/01/2014 through sented by CommisOF NAME New Mexico Supreme 6/30/2015. This will sioner Danny Court Law Library include paging servCommisTAKE NOTICE that in Floor Replacement ices; cell phone data Mayfield), sion District 2 (Comaccordance with the and Guard Rail Upprovisions of Sec. 40- grade in accordance and internet services; mission District repand long distance resented by Miguel 8-1 through Sec. 40-8- with Drawings, Speci3 NMSA 1978, the fications and other service. All respond- Chavez); Commission ents must be USAC elDistrict 3 (CommisPetitioners Daniel Eu- Contract Documents gene Brannen Jr. and prepared by M & E igible service provid- sion District repreers. sented by Robert Jennifer Elizabeth Engineering. Anaya), and CommisBrannen will apply to regard- sion District 4 (Comthe Honorable Ray- BIDS WILL BE PUBLIC- Information ing the Form 470 apmond Z. Ortiz, District LY OPENED AND plication may be ob- mission District represented by Kathy Judge of the First Ju- READ.
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toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Court, 225 Montezuma, Santa Fe, New Mexico, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State:
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL D I T R I C T
A background check will be required for all applicants chosen to serve on the HPPC.
bed property; if the street address does not match the legal description, then the property being sold herein is the property more particularly described above, not the property located at the street address; any prospective purchaser at the sale is given notice that it should verify the location and address of the property being sold. Said sale will be made pursuant to the judgment entered on September 5, 2012 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the above-described real estate in the sum of $295,623.65 plus interest from November 4, 2011 to the date of sale at the rate of 7.000% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff’s costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.
Anyone interested in being appointed to the HPPC should submit a letter of interest, resume, questionnaire, and conflict of interest form.
At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify.
Please call or send an email requesting questionnaire and conflict of interest form to:
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder’s funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any.
The said Property being more completely described in the Complaint in this cause, reference to which is hereby made; the purpose of which is to bar and estop you, and each of you, from having any lien upon or right or title to the Property, or any portion thereof, adverse to the Plaintiff. YOU AND EACH OF YOU are further notified that unless you serve and file a responsive pleading or motion in said cause, as provided by law, within (thirty) 30 days after service of this Notice upon you or within (thirty) 30 days after the last date of publication of this Notice, if you are not personally served, judgment will be rendered against you, and each of you, by default, and the relief prayed for in the Complaint will be granted. The attorney for Plaintiff is Alexia Constantaras; Montgomery & Andrews, P.A., P.O. Box 2307, Santa Fe, NM 875042307.
To view a Commission District map, please visit the Santa Fe County website at www.santafecountyn m.gov/county commissioners. HPPC members are volunteers appointed by the Santa Fe Board of County Commissioners (BCC) to engage and elicit community input regarding the health care needs of county residents, and to assist the BCC in studying and researching healthcare and related issues. The HPPC generally holds meetings the first Friday of each month at 9:00 am. HPPC members should be of diverse backgrounds, representative of the varied experience with healthcare services, consumption of healthcare services and persons interested in health promotion, disease and behavioral risk prevention, and the provision of healthcare.
Santa Fe County Health & Human Services Division Attention: Marie Garcia 2052 Galisteo Street Suite A Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone #: (505)-9929841 E-Mail: mgarcia@santafecou ntynm.gov Application Deadline is January 8, 2014 at 5 p.m. Legal#95954 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican November 8, December 9, 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. 02496
D-101-CV-2011-
BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP, Plaintiff, v.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any.
PEGGY L. MEYER, NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSING SERVICES OF AMERICA, NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSING SERVICES OF SANTA FE, INC., SANTA FE COUNTY, A POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO, VISTA VERDE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF PEGGY L. MEYER, IF ANY, NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purDefendant(s). chaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real NOTICE OF SALE property subject to rights of redemption. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the under- Jeffrey Lake signed Special Mas- Special Master ter will on November Southwest Support 13, 2013 at 11:30 AM, Group at the front entrance 20 First Plaza NW, of the First Judicial Suite #20 District Court, 225 Albuquerque, NM Montezuma, Santa 87102 Fe, New Mexico, sell 505-767-9444 and convey to the highest bidder for NM11-00657_FC01 cash all the right, title, and interest of Legal #95998 the above-named de- Published in The Sanfendants in and to ta Fe New Mexican on the following descri- October 18, 25, Nobed real estate locat- vember 1 and 8, 2013. ed in said County and State: STATE OF NEW Lot 3, Block 11, of MEXICO "Vista Verde Subdivi- COUNTY OF SANTA FE sion, Phase III" as FIRST JUDICIAL shown on plat thereof DISTRICT recorded on November 20, 1995 in Plat No. D-101-CV-2012Book 321, at Page 16 01389 as Document No. 925511, records of JPMORGAN CHASE Santa Fe County, New BANK, NATIONAL ASMexico. SOCIATION, Also Known as: All of Lot 3 in Block 11 Plaintiff, as shown on plat of survey entitled "Vista v. Verde Subdivision, Phase III", filed for re- NANCY PREISS, cord as Document No. ELDORADO COMMUN926,511 appearing in ITY IMPROVEMENT Plat Book 321, at page ASSOCIATION, INC. 016, records of Santa AND THE UNKNOWN Fe County, New Mexi- SPOUSE OF NANCY co PREISS, IF ANY, Defendant(s).
The address of the real property is 3937 Camino Vista Verde, Santa Fe, NM 87507. Plaintiff does not represent or warrant that the stated street address is the street address of the descri-
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will on November 13, 2013 at 11:30 AM,
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NOTICE OF SALE
Case No. D-101-CV2013-02772 RBS Citizens, N.A., Plaintiff, v. JEFFREY R. MAJOR, DIANA S. MAJOR, and, ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF INTEREST IN THE PREMISES Lot 5, Block 17 of ADVERSE TO THE ELDORADO AT SANTA PLAINTIFF, FE, UNIT 2, as shown Defendants. on plat filed in the office of the County NOTICE OF PENDENCY Clerk, Santa Fe Coun- OF ACTION ty, New Mexico on June 29, 1977, in THE STATE OF NEW Eldorado Plat Book 5, MEXICO TO: The folPage 9 (known as lowing named or desSheet 9), as No. ignated Defendants 404719. against whom constructive service of The address of the re- process is hereby al property is 7 Frasco sought to be obWay, Santa Fe, NM tained, to wit: 87508. Plaintiff does ALL UNKNOWN not represent or war- CLAIMANTS OF INrant that the stated TEREST IN THE PREMstreet address is the ISES ADVERSE TO THE street address of the PLAINTIFF described property; if the street address GREETINGS: does not match the YOU AND EACH OF legal description, YOU are hereby notithen the property be- fied that an action is ing sold herein is the now pending in the property more partic- District Court of the ularly described First Judicial District above, not the prop- of the State of New erty located at the Mexico, in and for the street address; any County of Santa Fe, prospective purchas- and numbered Der at the sale is given 0101-CV-2013-02772, notice that it should on the docket of said verify the location Court, wherein RBS and address of the Citizens, N.A. is Plainproperty being sold. tiff and you and othSaid sale will be ers are the Defendmade pursuant to the ants. judgment entered on September 9, 2013 in The general object of the above entitled said action is to sue and numbered cause, for money due on a which was a suit to promissory note and foreclose a mortgage to foreclose a mortheld by the above gage on the descriPlaintiff and wherein bed premises by judiPlaintiff was cial action, against or adjudged to have a subject to the adlien against the verse claims of you, above-described real and each of you, in estate in the sum of and to the property $332,253.06 plus inter- described in the est from October 31, Complaint in said 2012 to the date of cause, said property sale at the rate of being (hereinafter 5.875% per annum, "the Property"): the costs of sale, in- Unit A of Artistas de cluding the Special Santa Fe Master’s fee, publica- Condominiums as tion costs, and Plain- created by Declaratiff’s costs expended tion of Condominium for taxes, insurance, Ownership and of and keeping the Easements, Restricproperty in good re- tions and Covenants pair. Plaintiff has the for Artistas de Santa right to bid at such Fe Condominiums, sale and submit its filed February 21, bid verbally or in 2005 as Document No. writing. The Plaintiff 1367765 and First may apply all or any Amendment to Declapart of its judgment ration of Condominito the purchase price um Ownership and of in lieu of cash. Easements, Restrictions and Covenants At the date and time for Artistas de Santa stated above, the Fe Condominiums Special Master may and Certificate of postpone the sale to Completion, executed such later date and March 7, 2006, recordtime as the Special ed as Document No. Master may specify. 1423528, in the records of Santa Fe NOTICE IS FURTHER County, New Mexico, GIVEN that this sale and as shown and demay be subject to a lineated on the plat bankruptcy filing, a thereof entitled "Plat pay off, a reinstate- and Plans for Artistas ment or any other de Santa Fe condition that would Condominiums, Lot cause the cancella- 53A, Fort Marcy tion of this sale. Fur- Heights, Santa Fe, ther, if any of these Santa Fe County, New conditions exist, at Mexico, 220 Artist the time of sale, this Road" by David E. sale will be null and Cooper, P.S. No. 9052, void, the successful on February 8, 2005, bidder’s funds shall filed March 6, 2006 as be returned, and the Document No. Special Master and 1423107, and recordthe mortgagee giving ed in Plat Book 617, this notice shall not Page 17, in said rebe liable to the suc- cords. cessful bidder for any (Hereinafter "the damages. Property").
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption. Jeffrey Lake Special Master Southwest Support Group 20 First Plaza NW, Suite #20 Albuquerque, NM 87102 505-767-9444 NM11-02572_FC01
WITNESS my hand and the seal of the First Judicial District Court in and for Santa Fe County, New Mexico, on this 4th day of November, 2013. By:DEPUTY CLERK
COURT
Legal#96057 Published in the SanLegal #95818 ta Fe New Mexican Published in The San- on: November 8, 15, ta Fe New Mexican on 22, 2013 October 18, 25, November 1 and 8, 2013.
Friday, November 8, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Crossword
Horoscope The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, Nov. 8, 2013: This year you will be more optimistic and expressive than you have been for quite a while. If you are single, you might feel bowled over by your popularity. Aquarius is a loyal friend. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You could be dealing with someone who thinks he or she is in charge. You might prefer to not take this person on. Tonight: Let the fun begin. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Keep reaching out to someone at a distance. This person might be resistant at first, but you will be able to help him or her see your logic. Tonight: Chat over dinner. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You have an opportunity to reach out to someone you really care about. It is time for a one-on-one conversation. Tonight: Have a discussion over dinner. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You have a great sense of when is and when is not a good time to bend for someone else. A friend or loved one could have pushed you very hard. Tonight: Curb your anger. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Get as much done as possible. You’ll want to free up time earlier than on most Fridays. You will enter a very social period this weekend. Tonight: Sort through your many invitations and requests. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Focus on the lighter side of what is happening. Detach, and you won’t get triggered. Tonight: Make plans that will allow you to work through some of the stress.
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: SCIENCE (e.g., For what does the “S” stand in NASA? Answer: Space.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Which planet is NASA’s Curiosity rover exploring? Answer________ 2. Which comet appears every 76 years? Answer________ 3. In computing, for what is RAM a shortening? Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. In what part of the body is the femur bone? Answer________
5. What is the abbreviated form of deoxyribonucleic acid? Answer________ 6. By what name is the Higgs boson particle popularly known? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. What fruit is identified by malus pumila? Answer________ 8. What is the chemical symbol for the element tin? Answer________ 9. 10 to the power 0 is equal to what number? Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Mars. 2. Halley’s comet. 3. Random-access memory. 4. Leg. 5. DNA. 6. “The God particle.” 7. Apple. 8. Sn. 9. 1.
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher
C-7
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You might have difficulty getting going. So much so, you might decide to cancel plans and assume the role of couch potato. Tonight: You might get a last-minute urge to go out.
Younger sis needs to empower herself
Dear Annie: My older brother and I are both in our mid-30s and have not gotten along for 20 years. He has been verbally, psychologically and at times physically abusive toward me. He has a ferocious temper, and if I say anything he doesn’t like, he lambastes me. I try to avoid him, but since the birth of my nephew (the cutest baby ever), that is not always possible. I like his wife and adore my nephew. Before a visit, I have trouble sleeping at night. I feel anxious and dread the hours passing in anticipation. When I get there, I try to stay silent and enjoy the baby, not doing anything that might make him lash out. I wish there was a way to heal my relationship with my brother. He doesn’t believe he’s done anything hurtful and thinks I should just “get over it.” I wish I could. Is there something I could do? — Little Sister in Need Dear Little Sister: Can you create a tougher skin? You need to stop taking your brother’s anger personally. His comments have nothing to do with your intelligence, your personality or your opinion on any subject. It’s about his need to be in control of every situation, and at the bottom of that need is fear. Empower yourself. Learn to smile indulgently and ignore him or say calmly, “I guess we simply disagree.” If you can create a different dynamic by refusing to be your brother’s favorite target, your entire relationship could evolve. Enlist his wife’s help to keep visits pleasant. Whenever possible, see your nephew when your brother isn’t around. And they may both love it if you offer to take the baby for an hour or so. Win-win. Dear Annie: I know you have heard this before, but please tell major retailers to stock good-looking clothes for women size 3X and larger — not those horrid blouses
Sheinwold’s bridge
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You are all smiles and seeing life from a Friday point of view. How you deal with a very assertive friend might surprise him or her. Tonight: Mosey on home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21) HHHH Deal with a money matter as quickly as possible. You could be pondering an important decision. If you can take the weekend to mull over this issue, do. Tonight: Go with the most fun option. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You might have been toying with the idea that you would like to do something silly. Tonight: Be clear about your plans in order to avoid a misunderstanding. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You might want to be a couch potato just for a day. Everyone, including you, needs time off to do what he or she wants — even if that is doing nothing. Tonight: Catch a second wind. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Use the daylight hours to the max, when success seems to travel with you. Your unusual creativity and charisma draw many people toward you. Tonight: Vanish. Let others wonder where you are.
Cryptoquip
Chess quiz
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.
BLACK FORCES MATE Hint: Expose the king. Solution: 1. … Rxf4ch! 2. gxf4 Qg2 mate! [adapted from Siebrecht-Vallejo Pons ’13].
Today in history Today is Friday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 2013. There are 53 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Nov. 8, 1988, Vice President George H.W. Bush won the presidential election, defeating Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.
Jacqueline Bigar
Hocus Focus
with prints that look like they came from my grandmother’s closet. I would love to buy a top that has sleeves that fit and a neckline that’s not trying to be sexy and to have choices in enough styles that I don’t have to buy four of the same item in different colors. We have money to spend on nice clothes if they were offered. Stores manage to sell affordable clothes for skinny girls, so how about the rest of us? And please don’t tell us to go to specialty stores. I would like to find clothes in my size in any store. Wake up, corporate America! Americans are getting bigger. You can make lots of money if you offer decent clothes for big women. — I Need Nice Clothes, Too Dear Need: Actually, there are more stores carrying larger sizes than ever before. And the selections range from inexpensive to pricey. There also are multiple places online to find larger sizes. There may not yet be the same variety of styles and selections as there are for smaller sizes, but it’s much more inclusive than it used to be. The market will go where the money is. It just takes time. Dear Annie: I sympathize with “Regrets in Paradise,” the 57-yearold woman who is in an unhappy marriage to a 61-year-old man. She discovered after they married that he isn’t the same guy and simply wants her to take care of him. I am a 75-year-old widow of six years. I have observed that most men my age are interested in women 20 years younger. I think they are looking for a “nurse with a purse,” and I am better off as I am. For more than 50 years, I waited on my husband and took care of him through his last illness. He was the father of my two children, and I would have done anything for him, but I have no intention of going through that again. — Better Off Single
Jumble
C-8 THE NEW MEXICAN Friday, November 8, 2013 WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
PEANUTS
LA CUCARACHA
TUNDRA
LUANN
RETAIL
ZITS
STONE SOUP
BALDO
KNIGHT LIFE
GET FUZZY
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
ROSE IS ROSE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PARDON MY PLANET
BABY BLUES
NON SEQUITUR