Santa Fe New Mexican, Jan. 28, 2014

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Suits: Minors abused under state custody

State of the Union address

Complaints allege physical and sexual abuse by eight ‘youth care specialists’

Water suit vs. N.M. to proceed

The complaints name eight individual “youth care specialists” at the Youth Diagnostic and Development Center in Albuquerque who have been accused of abusing the children. The complaints also name supervisors of the facility and state Children, Youth and Families Department Secretary Yolanda Berumen-Deines, who the complaints allege allowed “an ongoing gang minded culture and adult prison mentality” at “a facility that was created to diagnose and rehabilitate juveniles.”

By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

Lawsuits filed in state District Court in Santa Fe allege that four Las Cruces children endured food deprivation, physical violence and in some cases sexual abuse while in state custody.

InsIde u Lawmaker proposes paying tuition in exchange for CYFD commitment. Page a-4

The lawsuits say all four plaintiffs were juvenile males who spent between two and four months in “Ivy Cottage” — one of seven residential units that can house up to a dozen juveniles each — at the Youth Diagnostic and Development Center between January

Please see aBused, Page A-7

Democrats hope President Barack Obama’s State of Union speech on Tuesday will be the start of a populist agenda. Page a-3

Supreme Court rules that Texas can proceed with its lawsuit against New Mexico over management of the Rio Grande. Page a-8

Gear up for the ‘Stoner Bowl’ From weed-themed parties and tours, this year’s Super Bowl offers a twist on a sporting event better known for its beer commercials. Page a-2

3 CITY HALL 2014

Two challenge incumbent for District 3 council seat A snowboarder comes in for a landing at Pajarito Mountain Ski Area in 2009. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Club considers handing over Pajarito to Los Alamos County Incumbent Carmichael Dominguez is running for a third term. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Carmichael Dominguez Age: 43 Education: Took classes at NMSU. Associate degree in drafting from Santa Fe Community College. Occupation: Cartographer for New Mexico Department of Transportation. Experience: Former school board member; former city Planning Commission member. Personal: Born in Yuma, Ariz.; raised in Santa Fe. Has two adult sons with wife Deborah Leyba-Dominguez. Portrayed Don Diego De Vargas in 2000 Fiesta de Santa Fe. Likes reading John Grisham novels, listening to ’70s music on satellite radio, being outdoors, working with his father and practicing calligraphy. Campaign information: Call 2312052 or email carmichaeldominguez@yahoo.com.

By Phaedra Haywood

The New Mexican

T

hree candidates are vying for a seat on the City Council representing the southwest-side District 3 for the next four years — incumbent Carmichael Dominguez, repeat candidate Marie Campos and first-time contender Angelo Jaramillo. But no matter which one gets elected, District 3 will be under-represented on the eight-member council in terms of the number of residents per councilor. The district — which includes west-side neighborhoods along Agua Fría Street, the Tierra Contenta subdivision and the Airport Road area — gained more than 13,000 new residents as a result of an annexation that was formalized on Jan. 1. But City Council district boundaries haven’t yet been redrawn. State law requires cities to redraw district boundaries every 10 years after each decennial census. Districts are supposed to be

Pasapick Center for Contemporary arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338. All the News That’s Fit to Print,

Index

Calendar a-2

Angelo Jaramillo, the son former Mayor Debbie Jaramillo, is a firsttime City Council contender.

Marie Campos is a repeat council candidate for District 3, who vied to represent the district in 2010.

Angelo Jaramillo

Marie Campos

Age: 37 Education: Bachelor of Arts (summa cum laude) in police science/English from New Mexico Highlands University. Occupation: State coordinator for 21st Century Community Learning Centers. Experience: Author of two books: The Darker Tales of a City Different and Psalms of Anarchy; former member of the Santa Fe Public Libraries Board and the New Mexico Afterschool Allliance Leadership Council. Personal: Enjoys reading, writing poetry, listening to classical, blues, jazz and East Coast underground hip-hop and metal, as well as the outdoors, gardening, cooking and spending time with his “companera.” Campaign information: Call 4691975; email ajcitycouncil14@g.com; or visit www.ajcitycouncil14.com.

Age: 54 Occupation: President of the Native Hispanic Institute, nonprofit consultant, assistant at Garner Law Firm. Experience: Bachelor of Science-Fine Arts from Excelsior College; Master of Liberal Arts from St. John’s College. Personal: Lives with her father and two adult children in the La Cieneguita neighborhood. Enjoys reading, making art, fishing, camping, gardening, natural healing and sports. Campaign information: Call 6600002; email votemarie@outlook.com; or visit facebook.com/marie.p.campos.1 or mariecampos.com.

divided in such a way that each contains roughly the same number of residents, with variable of about 5 percent. When the City Council district lines were redrawn in 2011, each of the four districts had about 17,000 residents. The annexation of an area that includes about 13,000 residents greatly increased the population within District 3 and made it nearly 50 percent more populous than the other three districts. The district also has the largest population of people who aren’t eligible to vote — including children and immigrants without citizenship, and a significant number of renters and other more transient populations who often don’t vote. In 2012, the last time voters in the district had a chance to elect a new city councilor, only 1,087 of the 7,467 registered voters in the district actually cast ballots. In the adjoining south-side District 4, incumbent Councilor Ron Trujillo is running unopposed. Profiles begin on Page A-5

group show, Spector-Ripps Project Space, through March 30. Icepop, installation by Sandra Wang and Crockett Bodelson of the art collective Scuba, through March 30, Muñoz Waxman Gallery. Call for hours or visit ccasantafe.org.

Classifieds B-6

Comics B-12

Lotteries a-2

Santa Fe City Council districts 3

By Anne Constable

The New Mexican

Please see PaJaRITO, Page A-6 1 2

COmIng uP

By Robert Nott The New Mexican

This is the first of a series examining candidates and ballot questions in the March 4 city election: u Sunday: Charter amendments and Council District 1 candidates u Monday: Council District 2 candidates u Today: Council District 3 candidates u Feb. 3: Mayoral candidate Patti Bushee u Feb. 4: Mayoral candidate Bill Dimas

On OuR WeBsITe u For more on the candidates, a schedule of candidate forums and voter information, go to www.santafenewmexican.com/elections/ city_hall_2014

Obituaries

Times of clouds and sunshine. High 42, low 18.

Ralph A. Armijo, Jan. 23 John L. Montano, 94, Jan. 23

Page B-5

Page a-9

Police notes a-9

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com

State at risk to lose up to $60 million in special-ed funding

4

Today

Opinions a-10

The Mountain Status box on the website of the Pajarito Mountain Ski Area says it all: “WAITING FOR SNOW.” The 750-acre ski area located on the eastern edge of the Jemez Mountains, five miles west of Los Alamos, suspended operations at 4 p.m. Jan. 12 because Mother Nature just isn’t cooperating this season. In fact, she’s been downright stingy in recent years. And that’s the main reason that the Los Alamos Ski Club, which owns the area, is proposing to transfer its assets — the land, equipment, buildings and rolling stock — to Los Alamos County. The nine-member board has called a special membership meeting to discuss dissolving the 70-year-old ski club and turning its holdings over to the county, which already operates a public ice rink, aquatic center and a golf course. Philip Rae, a scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and president of the board, said Monday, “This is

Sports B-1

Time Out B-11

New Mexico could lose more than $60 million in federal funding for violating rules on spending for special-education services, state auditor Hector Balderas warned lawmakers Monday. Balderas testified before the House Education Committee about a special audit he ordered of the Public Education Department’s handling of funds from fiscal years 2010 to 2012. The special audit involves violations of federal requirements prohibiting states from reducing the amount they spend on federally funded programs, including special education. The federal government can withhold future funding when it is determined that states have violated “maintenance of effort” or MOE requirements. Balderas said his office wants to find out why the department didn’t comply and why it took so long to disclose what was happening. Department officials said they have not decreased special-education funding, but that several events

Please see RIsK, Page A-4

InsIde

u Lawmaker wants judicial finance statements online. u Developmentally disabled list grows as does wait for services. Page a-4

Local Business a-12

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Two sections, 24 pages 165th year, No. 28 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

NATION&WORLD

MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000

t -41.23 15,837.88 t -16.41 1,127.72

The Associated Press

CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Australia Britain Canada China Denmark Euro Hong Kong Japan Mexico N. Zealand Russia Singapore So. Africa So. Korea Sweden Switzerlnd Taiwan Thailand

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.8752 1.6574 .9013 .1653 .1832 1.3666 .1288 .009732 .074752 .8243 .0288 .7841 .0899 .000925 .1556 1.1145 .0330 .03038

.8713 1.6507 .9036 .1653 .1833 1.3677 .1288 .009774 .074496 .8252 .0290 .7823 .0901 .000921 .1553 1.1172 .0330 .03045

1.1426 .6034 1.1096 6.0480 5.4600 .7317 7.7663 102.75 13.3776 1.2131 34.6863 1.2754 11.1180 1081.30 6.4277 .8973 30.35 32.92

1.1477 .6058 1.1066 6.0489 5.4557 .7311 7.7632 102.32 13.4235 1.2119 34.5098 1.2783 11.0985 1085.91 6.4398 .8951 30.27 32.85

KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.

Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds

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Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.7829 0.7855 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.2837 3.3043 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1260.50 1267.00 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 19.855 19.800 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2145.00 2155.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 721.65 733.90 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1419.40 1427.10

As Super Bowl pot puns spring up like weeds, some say wrong message sent By Gene Johnson

The Associated Press

CUT OFF AT THE PASS

Multiple avalanches have cut off highway access to the Valdez, Alaska, the city at the end of the trans-Alaska pipeline. The avalanches occurred Friday on the Richardson Highway in the Thompson Pass region of Valdez. The 4,100 residents were told Monday that the highway will be closed until further notice, for at least a week, if not much longer. ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION & PUBLIC FACILITIES PHOTO

In brief

Holder expected to seek death for marathon bomber

NEW YORK — Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, accused in last year’s deadly Boston Marathon bombing that killed three and injured more than 260, will probably face possible capital punishment given the violence of the attack and the evidence against him, former federal prosecutors said. The decision, expected this week, is in the hands of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who must sign off on any attempt to seek execution for a federal capital crime. Holder is almost certain to seek death for the 20-year-old former college student, given the “heinous nature of the crime,” said Michael Kendall, previously a federal prosecutor in Boston and now a defense lawyer at McDermott Will & Emery. “There won’t be a defense that he didn’t plant the bomb; the only thing there can be a real fight about is the death penalty.” Tsarnaev, a Russian immigrant of Chechen descent who is now a U.S. citizen, is accused of plotting with his brother to detonate homemade bombs near the marathon’s finish line on April 15 in the first deadly terrorist attack in the U.S. since Sept. 11, 2001. He pleaded not guilty in July to 30 counts, including the fatal shooting of a university police officer after the attack. A trial date hasn’t been set.

Mexico legalizes vigilantes, captures key cartel leader MEXICO CITY — Mexico essentially legalized the country’s growing “self-defense” groups Monday, while also announcing that security forces had captured one of the four top leaders of the Knights Templar drug cartel, which the vigilante groups have been fighting for the last year. The government said it had reached an agreement with vigilante leaders to incorporate the armed civilian groups into old and largely forgotten quasimilitary units called the Rural Defense Corps.

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Two Calif. girls missing since weekend sleepover alive RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Two Southern California girls who vanished during a weekend sleepover were found near their hometown, police said late Monday. Raylynn Bolt, 12, and Diana Tourdot, 14, were found by police in San Bernardino, about 15 miles away, Riverside police Sgt. David Amador said in a statement Monday night. Police did not say anything about the girls’ condition or provide any other details about them or their reappearance, saying only that they would be returned to Riverside and interviewed by detectives there.

Florida lawmaker Radel busted with cocaine, resigns WASHINGTON — Embattled Rep. Trey Radel, R-Fla., resigned from Congress on Monday, months after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge. A first-term congressman, Radel was arrested and charged with cocaine possession in the fall. After reaching a plea agreement, he underwent substance abuse rehabilitation treatment and returned to Congress this month. Despite calls from state party leaders for him to step down, Radel had said he was committed to returning to work. But on Monday he swiftly changed course and said he would step down. In a letter to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Radel said his personal struggles impeded his ability to serve in Congress.

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Vigilante groups estimate their numbers at 20,000 men under arms. Before dawn on Monday, soldiers and police arrested one of the cartel’s top leaders, Dionicio Loya Plancarte, alias “El Tio,” or The Uncle. National Public Safety System secretary Monte Rubido said the feared drug lord was arrested without a shot being fired. He said federal forces found Loya Plancarte in Morelia, the capital of Michoacan, “hiding in a closet.” The 58-year-old Loya Plancarte had a $2.25 million reward for his capture.

New Mexican wire services

SEATTLE — The way Bryan Weinman sees it, he and his friends already won their Super Bowl bet. Two weeks ago, the nightclub DJ and a few buddies were sitting at a sports bar in Denver, joking about how funny it would be if the Seattle Seahawks and Denver Broncos — the NFL teams from the two states that have legalized marijuana — made it to the big game. They decided to plunk down a $44 wager — the fee for registering the Internet domain www.stonerbowl.org — just before the Seahawks and Broncos won their conference championships. It paid off. They’re now using the site to hawk T-shirts and hats celebrating the coincidence. One shirt features the Vince Lombardi Trophy, reserved for the game’s victors, refashioned into a bong. Another features a spoof of the league’s logo, with the letters “THC” — for marijuana’s active compound — replacing “NFL.” From weed-themed Super Bowl parties to a Denver company’s “Stoner Bowl” tours of recreational pot shops, this year’s Super Bowl offers a twist on a sporting event better known for its beer commercials. Thanks to the recreational marijuana laws passed by voters in 2012, sales of taxed pot to adults over 21 began at Colorado pot shops Jan. 1 and are due to begin in Washington later this year. There have been a slew of predictable, puns, most of which have to do with “bowl” being the part of the pipe where pot goes. The Washington chapter of NORML, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said it would be rooting on the “THC-Hawks.” It made a friendly bet with Colorado NORML for what they’re calling “Bud Bowl XLVIII.” In deference to the importance of good officiating, High Times magazine offered a guide to spotting “Stoner Bowl” party fouls, including the offense of “holding:” “When the violator takes, two, three, maybe eight hits before passing the joint.” Derek Franklin, president of the Washington Association for Substance Abuse and Violence Prevention, said all the attention about the “Weed Bowl or the Bong Bowl, what have you, it drives home the wrong public health message.” He noted that Washington NORML’s Facebook page featured a cartoonish version of the Seahawks logo, with bloodshot eyes and a joint in its beak. “That’s the kind of thing that for kids, it’s going to stick in their heads,” he said. This Super Bowl is “incredible for the ‘Hawks, but tough for those of us in prevention.” Medical marijuana advocates also suggested the joking over the big game underscores a serious issue: The NFL doesn’t allow players, even those in states that have approved medical or recreational marijuana, to use it to ease the pain from playing.

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Punt, pass, puff; time to get ready for ‘Stoner Bowl’

Worldwide fears spark stock sell-off NEW YORK — Shaky economies and plunging currencies in the developing world fueled a global sell-off in stocks Monday as fearful investors pushed prices lower across Asia and Europe, but many of the drops were not as steep as last week. In the U.S. and other countries with healthy economies, investors retreated, although the selling was modest. Major indexes in Hong Kong and Tokyo fell more than 2 percent. The selling spread to Europe and the U.S., as stocks slipped across the board, but the declines were much less than on Friday, when the U.S. market ended its worst week since 2012. Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank, said he was encouraged that the U.S. losses were limited. “We have an accelerating economy and low inflation. The world isn’t falling apart.” The market turbulence was set off last week by a report from China on a downturn in its manufacturing, more evidence that the world’s secondlargest economy is slowing. That’s a big problem for Brazil and other developing countries that depend on exports to that country. Despite Monday’s widespread selling, experts say the troubles in China and elsewhere in the developing world are unlikely to derail a global economic recovery that appears to be gaining momentum.

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Tuesday, Jan. 28 JULESWORKS FOLLIES: At 6 p.m. at Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., the monthly variety show with special guest Joe West. Cost is $7. PIPER LEIGH: At 6 p.m. at Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., the poet reads from and signs copies of My Thin-Skinned Wandering. SENIOR OLYMPICS: From 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., local Santa Fe 50+ Senior Olympics Games Registration is open for adults age 50 and older through Feb. 28. Register at Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center, 1121 Alto St., Monday through Friday. Participate in one or more of 23 sports in March, April and May. Fee is $20. Call Cristina Villa at 955-4725.

NIGHTLIFE Tuesday, Jan. 28 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Argentine Tango Milonga, 7:30-11 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Folk-rock guitarist/singer Sean Healen, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Canyon Road Blues Jam with Tone and Company, 8:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCES: Weekly on Tuesdays, dance 8 p.m., lessons 7 p.m., 1125 Cerrillos Road. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Country band Buffalo Nickle, 7:30 p.m., 100 E. San Francisco St. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Open-songs night hosted by Ben Wright, 7-10 p.m., 1607 Paseo de Peralta. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Bob Finnie,

Lotteries 6:30-10:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St. ZIA DINER: Weekly Santa Fe bluegrass jam, 6-8 p.m., 326 S. Guadalupe St.

SKI rESorTS Be sure to check with individual ski area for conditions before you head to the slopes. SKI SANTA FE: Distance from Santa Fe: 16 miles. Call 982-4429. Visit www.skisan tafe.com or call 983-9155 for snow report. PAJARITO: Distance from Santa Fe: 35 miles. Call 662-5725. Visit www.skipaja rito.com or call 662-7669 for snow report. SIPAPU SKI & SUMMER RESORT: Distance from Santa Fe: 75 miles. Call 575-587-2240. Visit www.sipapunm.com or call 800-587-2240 for snow report. TAOS SKI VALLEY: Distance from Santa Fe: 90 miles. Snowboarding is allowed. Call 575-776-2291. Visit www.skitaos.org or call 776-2916 for snow report. ANGEL FIRE: Distance from Santa Fe: 94 miles. Call 575-377-6401. Visit www. angelfireresort.com or call 800-633-7463, ext. 4222 for snow report. RED RIVER SKI AREA: Distance from Santa Fe: 106 miles. Call 575-754-2223. Visit www.redriverskiarea.com or call 575-754-2223 for snow report. SKI ENCHANTED FOREST CROSSCOUNTRY SKIING & SNOW-SHOE AREA: Distance from Santa Fe: 106 miles. No downhill skiing or snowboarding. Call 800-966-9381. Visit www.enchantedfor estxc.com or call 575-754-2374 for snow report. SKI APACHE: Distance from Santa Fe: 200 miles. Call 575-336-4356. Visit www.skiapache.com or call 575-257-9001 for snow report.

roadrunner 8-10-21-24-32 Top prize: $35,000

Pick 3 8-1-7 Top prize: $500

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.

VoLUNTEEr FOOD FOR SANTA FE: A nonprofit, taxexempt organization provides supplemental food to hungry families. Volunteers are needed to pack and distribute groceries from 6 to 8 a.m. on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Call 471-1187 or 603-6600. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies. If you can give two-three hours a week to help, call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Volunteers are needed to support the Cancer Resource Center at the Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center. Training is for the various shifts that are worked during business hours Monday through Friday. Call Geraldine Esquivel with the American Cancer Society at 463-0308.


NATION & WORLD STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS

Dems hope for start of populist agenda

By Zachary A. Goldfarb

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Democrats consider President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address on Tuesday a launching point for a year of sustained assault on Republicans over a populist economic agenda, part of an effort to focus more on bread-and-butter issues and less on income inequality. Party officials say they hope Obama’s speech will set the stage for Senate and House candidates to confront Republicans on issues such as the minimum wage, unemployment benefits and access to college education. Their minimum goal is to preserve Democratic control of the Senate, because not doing so could cripple what remains of the president’s legislative agenda. In recent weeks, some Democratic lawmakers and strategists have urged the White House to focus less on academicsounding discussions of income inequality and to simplify Obama’s message to reflect the everyday concerns of Americans. White House officials say they have long planned to emphasize such issues. The approach is notable

the State of the Union address with trips to Maryland, Wisconsin and Tennessee before an event later this week focused on long-term unemployment, which is one of the nation’s most persistent economic problems. The president is expected to announce that he will take executive actions to address a wide range of economic challenges, aides said. Republicans are preparing a counterattack, warning that Obama will compromise his ability to get anything done in Congress if he goes it alone. “He can work with us to create President Barack Obama works at his desk Monday in the opportunity and prosperity. Or Oval Office of the White House in Washington ahead of Tueshe can issue press releases,” said day’s speech. JACQUELYN MARTIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio. “That’s the choice the because raising taxes on the lack of good jobs and figures president faces this year.” wealthy to pay for domestic out a satisfying answer will Republican strategist Stuart initiatives was a centerpiece dominate the 2014 election,” Stevens said Obama can no of Obama’s first-term ecosaid Sen. Charles E. Schumer, longer talk about economic probnomic agenda — a move aimed D-N.Y. squarely at shrinking income But, he added, “the American lems without taking responsibility for them. “It’s obviously very inequality. In speeches over people are more concerned difficult and it would be rather the past year, the president has about how they are doing as bounced between wonky disopposed to how someone else is unprecedented to be six years in and to be blaming your predecescussions about inequality and doing. So simply saying, ‘We’re sors or other factors beyond your practical speeches on helping going to raise taxes on the control,” he said. “It just goes the middle class. wealthy’ is not going to be the “My view is that the party kind of answer that satisfies the back to: Are you just doing this to help people or are you just doing that taps into the decline in middle class.” this to score political points?” middle-class incomes and the Obama is planning to follow

U.S. looks to prevent Deal on humanitarian spying on its spying aid for Homs falls apart SYRIA

investigations. The deal with Google Inc., Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc., Facebook Inc. and WASHINGTON — The U.S. LinkedIn Corp. would provide government is looking at ways public information in general to prevent anyone from spyterms. Other technology coming on its own surveillance of panies were also expected to Americans’ phone records. participate. As the Obama administration u Published reports said new considers shifting the collecdocuments leaked by former tion of those records from the NSA contactor Edward Snowden National Security Agency to suggest that popular mapping, requiring that they be stored at gaming and social networking phone companies or elsewhere, apps on smartphones can feed it’s quietly funding research the NSA and Britain’s GCHQ to prevent phone company eavesdropping agency with employees or eavesdroppers personal data, including location from seeing whom the U.S. is information and details such spying on, The Associated Press as political affiliation or sexual has learned. orientation. The reports, pubThe Office of the Director of lished by The New York Times, National Intelligence has paid at the Guardian and ProPublica, least five research teams across said the intelligence agencies get the country to develop a system routine access to data generated for high-volume, encrypted by apps such as the Angry Birds searches of electronic records game franchise or the Google kept outside the government’s Maps navigation service. possession. The project is among u When the New York Times several ideas that would allow the published a censored U.S. government to discontinue stordocument on the smartphone ing Americans’ phone records, surveillance program, computer but still search them as needed. experts said they were able to Under the research, U.S. data extract what appeared to be the mining would be shielded by name of an NSA employee, the secret coding that could conceal Middle Eastern terror group identifying details from outsid- the program was targeting and ers and even the owners of the details about the types of comtargeted databases, according puter files the NSA found espeto public documents obtained cially useful. Since Snowden by The Associated Press and began leaking documents in AP interviews with researchers, June, his supporters have maincorporate executives and govtained they have been careful ernment officials. not to disclose any agent’s idenIn other developments Mon- tity or operational details that day: would compromise ongoing u The Justice Department surveillance. and leading Internet companies agreed to a compromise with the government that would allow the firms to reveal how often they are ordered to turn 2014 Date Books over information about their Sanbusco Center • 989-4742 www.santafepens.com customers in national security By Stephen Braun The Associated Press

take women and children who left the war-torn city about 100 miles north of DamasGENEVA — Hopes faded cus, Syrian state television Monday for a quick win at reported. But there was no peace talks between Syria’s war- mention of permitting the conring factions, with no sign that voy of food, which was readied the Syrian government was pre- days ago, to enter the area. pared to allow a convoy of food The government has given to enter a besieged neighborno indication that the convoy hood in central Homs under the of humanitarian aid will be terms of an agreement brokered allowed to enter and has said by the United Nations. no men may leave the Old City The Syrian government said unless a list of all the men in the Monday it would allow women area is submitted in advance. and children to leave Homs’ U.S. officials monitoring the Old City, where around 2,500 talks in Geneva expressed fruspeople are facing rapidly dete- tration with the slow progress riorating conditions after being on what was supposed to be surrounded by government a quick and easy fix designed troops for nearly two years. to build good will ahead of But the U.N.-brokered plan tougher talks ahead on key calls for food to enter the area, political issues. rather than for women and “Civilians must be allowed to children to evacuate, which come and go freely, and the peowould divide families and ple of Homs must not be forced leave civilian and elderly men to leave their homes and split without help. The governor up their families before receivof Homs, Talal Barrazi, met ing much needed food and Monday with United Nations other aid,” said Edgar Vasquez, a officials to discuss where to State Department spokesman. By Liz Sly

The Washington Post

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City of Santa Fe REGULAR MEETING OF THE GOVERNING BODY JANUARY 29, 2014 CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS AFTERNOON SESSION – 5:00 P.M. 1. CALL TO ORDER 2. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE 3. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG 4. INVOCATION 5. ROLL CALL 6. APPROVAL OF AGENDA 7. APPROVAL OF CONSENT CALENDAR 8. APPROVAL OF MINUTES: Reg. City Council Meeting – January 8, 2014 9. PRESENTATIONS a) Employee of the Month for January 2014 – Stuart Stephenson, Digital Duplicating Center Technician, City Clerk’s Office. (5 minutes) b) Introduction of Law Enforcement Academy Graduates and Lateral Hire. (Chief Ray Rael) (10 minutes) 10. CONSENT CALENDAR a) Request for Approval of Procurement Under State Price Agreement – City-Wide LED Traffic Signal Lights; Econolite Group, Inc. (Rick Devine) b) Request for Approval of Grant Agreements for Senior Services Division; State of New Mexico Aging and Long-Term Services Department. (Ron Vialpando) 1) Request for Approval to Plan, Design, Renovate and Equip Parking Lot at Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center. 2) Request for Approval of Purchase and Installation of Commercial Meals Equipment for City-Wide Senior Centers. 3) Request for Approval of Budget Increase – Grant Fund. c) Request for Approval of Lease Agreement – Allow for Parking of Service Vehicles and Storage of Materials on City Alley Located Along the Southerly Boundary of 1549 Sixth Street; Wayne S. Colmer and Roberta L. Colmer 1998 Revocable Inter Vivos Trust and Colmer Development Company. (Edward Vigil) d) Request for Approval of Sale of Real Estate – Approximately 447 Square Feet Within a Portion of Lot 1, Block 92 of the 1912 Kings Official Map Located at 642 Old Santa Fe Trail; David K. Giles. (Edward Vigil) e) Request to Publish Notice of Public Hearing on February 26, 2014: 1) Bill No. 2014-4: An Ordinance Relating to the City of Santa Fe Housing Code, Chapter 26, SFCC 1987; Amending Subsection 26-1.21 to Include Veterans in the List of Professions to Qualify for Expanded Eligibility Standards for Santa Fe Homes Program (SFHP) Homes. (Councilor Calvert and Councilor Bushee) (Alexandra Ladd) 2) Bill No. 2014-5: An Ordinance Relating to the Santa Fe Homes Program (“SFHP”); Amending Section 14-8.11 SFCC 1987 to Make Permanent the Current Percentage Requirements of the SFHP; Amending Section 26-1 SFCC 1987 to Update the Legislative Findings, to Establish the Schedule for Payments in Lieu of Constructing Units for SFHP Developments with Two Through Ten Total Units, to Make Permanent the Current Percentage Requirements of the SFHP and to Make Various Other Changes to the SFHP Ordinance. (Councilor Wurzburger) (Alexandra Ladd) 3) Bill No. 2014-6: An Ordinance Relating to the Residential Green Building Code; Creating a New Subsection 7-4.3 SFCC 1987, to Establish a Residential Addition and Remodel Green Building Code for Single Family Attached and Detached; Amending Exhibit “A” to Chapter VII to Create a New Chapter 2 to Establish Definitions, to Create a New Item 802.6 Regarding Rough Plumbing for Future Use of Gray Water, to Create New Chapters 11 and 12 to Establish Checklists for Remodeling and Remodeling of Functional Areas and Small Additions and to Create a New Appendix B to Establish Whole Building Ventilation System Specifications. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Ives and Councilor Bushee) (Katherine Mortimer) a) A Resolution Amending the Administrative Procedures for the Santa Fe Residential Green Building Code (“RGBC”) to Grant the Land Use Director the Authority to Make Administrative Changes to the RGBC User’s Guide and to Add Item 802.6 to the User’s Guide; Adopting Administrative Procedures for the City of Santa Fe Residential Addition and Remodel Green Building Code (“RARGBC”); and Directing Staff to Create a User’s Guide for the RARGBC. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Ives and Councilor Bushee) (Katherine Mortimer) 4) Bill No. 2014-7: An Ordinance Relating to Campaign Contributions from City Contractors; Amending the Code of Ethics, Section 1-7 SFCC 1987 and the Campaign Code, Section 9-2 SFCC 1987 to Regulate Conflicts of Interest Arising from Campaign Contributions from City Contractors and for Related Purposes. (Councilor Calvert) (Zachary Shandler) f) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Bushee and Councilor Ives) A Resolution Supporting The Southwest Transit Association’s Position Paper on the Future of Federal Transit Funding; Encouraging Congress to Restore Capital Bus and Bus Facilities Funding to Small Urban Cities to Pre Map-21 Levels; and Calling on the State of New Mexico to Establish a State Transit Fund to Assist Transit Systems Operating Within the State. (Jon Bulthuis) g) Request for Approval of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law for Case #2013-93, Appeal of the September 12, 2013 Decision of the Planning Commission in Case #2013-58 Denying the Request of Aguafina Development, LLC for Preliminary Subdivision Plat Approval and a Variance for Three Tracts of Land Located at 4701 and 4702 Rufina Street and 4262 Agua Fria Street. (Kelley Brennan) h) Request for Approval of Appointment of Precinct Officials (Amended) for the March 4, 2014 Regular Municipal Election. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 11. Case #2013-127. Request for Approval of the Recommendation of the City Attorney Pursuant to Santa Fe City Code §14-3.17(D)(6) that the Governing Body Dismiss the Appeal of Stefanie Beninato from the December 10, 2013 Decision of the Historic Districts Review Board in Case #H-13-080A and Case #H-13080B, 777 Acequia Madre. (Kelley Brennan) 12. Bid No. 14/18/B – Indefinite Quantity Price Agreement for Bulk Fuel. (Robert Rodarte) a) Desert Fuel, Inc. b) Honstein Oil & Distributing, LLC 13. Request for Approval of Amendment No. 2 to Professional Services Agreement – Additional Engineering Services for Cerrillos Road Construction Project – Camino Carlos Rey to St. Michael’s Drive; Parsons Brinckerhoff, Inc. (Desirae Lujan) 14. Request for Approval of Procurement Under State and Cooperative Price Agreements – Nutrition, Transportation and In-Home Support Services for Senior Services Division; Shamrock Foods Company. (Robert Rodarte) 15. Request for Approval of Professional Services Agreement – LEAD Program Services for FY 2013/2014; The Life Link. (Terrie Rodriguez) 16. Request for Approval of O.T.A.B. Annual Grant Program – 2014 Procedures and Application for Lodgers’ Tax Funding Assistance of Special Events; Santa Fe Occupancy Tax Advisory Board. (Jim Luttjohann) 17. Request for Approval of Budget Increase – FY 2013/2014 Rent at Montoya Federal Building. (Marcos Tapia) 18. CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO 2014-____. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Wurzburger, Councilor Bushee, Councilor Ives and Councilor Dominguez) A Resolution Respectfully Requesting that the City of Santa Fe’s Congressional Delegation Support Efforts to Build, Preserve, Rehabilitate and Operate Rental Housing that is Affordable for Low Income Veterans and their Families. (Terri Rodriguez) 19. CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Wurzburger, Councilor Bushee, Councilor Ives and Councilor Dominguez) A Resolution Calling on the State of New Mexico and the Public Regulation Commission to Follow Santa Fe’s Lead in Making New Mexico the Nation’s Solar Power Leader and Set the Goal of Generating Ten Percent of the State’s Energy from Solar by 2020. (Nick Schiavo) 20. Request to Publish Notice of Public Hearing on February 26, 2014: Bill No. 2014-8: An Ordinance Relating to the Single-Use Bag Ordinance, Section 21-8 SFCC 1987; Amending Subsection 21-8.1 to Modify the Legislative Findings Related to Paper Grocery Bags; Amending Subsection 21-8.4 to Eliminate the Requirement that Retail Establishments Collect a Paper Grocery Bag Charge of Not Less than Ten-Cents for Each Paper Grocery Bag Provided to Customers; Amending Subsection 21-8.6 to Establish a 30 Day Implementation Period; and Making Such Other Changes As Are Necessary. (Councilor Wurzburger and Councilor Bushee) (Cindy Padilla) 21. MATTERS FROM THE CITY MANAGER 22. MATTERS FROM THE CITY ATTORNEY Executive Session In Accordance with the New Mexico Open Meetings Act §10-15-1(H)(7) NMSA 1978, Discussion Regarding Pending or Threatened Litigation in Which the City of Santa Fe Is or May Become a Participant, Southside Transit Center Location. (Zachary Shandler) 23. Action Regarding Southside Transit Center Location. (Zachary Shandler) 24. MATTERS FROM THE CITY CLERK 25. COMMUNICATIONS FROM THE GOVERNING BODY EVENING SESSION – 7:00 P.M. A. CALL TO ORDER B. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE C. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG D. INVOCATION E. ROLL CALL F. PETITIONS FROM THE FLOOR G. APPOINTMENTS • Children and Youth Commission • Santa Fe Water Conservation Committee • Division of Senior Services Advisory Board of Directors H. PUBLIC HEARINGS: 1) Request from Blue Corn II, Inc., for a Small Brewers Off-Site A Liquor License to be Located at Draft Station, 60 E. San Francisco Street, Suites 312 and 313. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 2) Request from Santa Fe Hard Cider, LLC for a Wine Wholesaler Liquor License to be Located at Santa Fe Hard Cider, 1730 Camino Carlos Rey North, Unit #103. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 3) Request from Billu, LLC for a Restaurant Liquor License (Beer and Wine On-Premise Consumption Only) to be Located at India Palace Restaurant, 227 Don Gaspar Avenue. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 4) Request from The Signature Gallery for a Waiver of the 300 Foot Location Restriction and Approval to Allow the Dispensing/Consumption of Wine at The Signature Gallery, 102 E. Water Street. This Location is Within 300 Feet of The Church of Antioch at Santa Fe, 207 Old Santa Fe Trail. The Request is for the Monroe Jackson Exhibition to be Held on February 14, 2014 from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 5) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Bushee) A Resolution Authorizing the Establishment of a Hospital Study Group for the Purpose of Gathering Information and Making Recommendations Related to the Current General State of Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. (Kate Noble) (Postponed to February 12, 2014 City Council Meeting) 6) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Ives) A Resolution Calling for the Formation of a Community Health Working Group to Examine the Effects of the Affordable Care Act on the Delivery of Health Care Services to the Santa Fe Community, the Cost of Health Care in Santa Fe and Delivery of Health Care Services to the Indigent. (Kate Noble) (Postponed to February 12, 2014 City Council Meeting) 7) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2014-1: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Bushee) An Ordinance Amending Various Provisions of the City of Santa Fe Animal Services Ordinance, Chapter 5 SFCC 1987. (Johnny Martinez) (Postponed to February 12, 2014 City Council Meeting) 8) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2014-2: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Trujillo and Councilor Bushee) An Ordinance Relating to the Prohibition of the Procurement of Tobacco by Minors; Amending Subsection 16-15.4 SFCC 1987 to Amend the Definition of “Tobacco Product” and Create a New Definition for “Electronic Smoking Device”. (Alfred Walker) (Postponed to February 12, 2014 City Council Meeting) 9) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2014-3: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Trujillo) An Ordinance Relating to Santa Fe Smoke Free Ordinance, Section 10-6 SFCC 1987; Amending Subsection 10-6.2 to Include Findings Relating to Electronic Smoking Devices and Amending Subsection 10-6.3 to Include Definitions for “Electronic Smoking Device” and “Tobacco Product”. (Alfred Walker) (Postponed to February 12, 2014 City Council Meeting) 10) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2013-44: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2014-____. (Councilor Wurzburger) An Ordinance Relating to Impact Fees, Section 14-8.14 SFCC1987; Amending Section 14-8.14(E) to Modify the Amount of Impact Fees Assessed for Residential Developments; and Making Such Other Stylistic or Grammatical Changes that Are Necessary. (Matthew O’Reilly) (Postponed at January 8, 2014 City Council Meeting) (Postponed to February 26, 2014 City Council Meeting) I. ADJOURN Pursuant to the Governing Body Procedural Rules, in the event any agenda items have not been addressed, the meeting should be reconvened at 7:00 p.m., the following day and shall be adjourned not later than 12:00 a.m. Agenda items, not considered prior to 11:30 p.m., shall be considered when the meeting is reconvened or tabled for a subsequent meeting. NOTE: New Mexico law requires the following administrative procedures be followed when conducting “quasijudicial” hearings. In a “quasi-judicial” hearing all witnesses must be sworn in, under oath, prior to testimony and will be subject to reasonable cross-examination. Witnesses have the right to have an attorney present at the hearing. Persons with disabilities in need of accommodations, contact the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520, five (5) days prior to meeting date.


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2014 LEGISLATURE

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Lawmaker wants judicial finance statements online By Barry Massey

The Associated Press

New Mexicans would have online access to the financial-disclosure statements of judges under legislation proposed by an Albuquerque lawmaker. Judges and other government officials, including legislators and state agency heads, must file annual financial statements with the secretary of state disclosing their sources of

income of more than $5,000, business interests of $10,000 or more, and other information revealing possible areas where there could be a conflict of interest with their government duties. The financial statements are available in the secretary of state’s office in Santa Fe and can be obtained through a public records request. Sen. Jacob Candelaria, D-Albuquerque, proposes to require the agency to post the judicial disclosures on its

Senator proposes paying tuition in exchange for CYFD’s commitment By Milan Simonich The New Mexican

the cost of the last two years of tuition for certain social workers who are completing a bachelor’s degree, or one year of tuition for those getting a master’s degree. After graduating, recipients of the free tuition would have to work one or two years in CYFD’s protective services division. Padilla said those who sign up would be motivated to complete the assignment, both because of professional pride and as a sure way of entering the workforce without the burden of paying back student loans. Sen. Daniel Ivey-Soto said Padilla had offered wise ideas for improving CYFD. He and other senators on the Rules Committee advanced Padilla’s memorial on a 7-0 vote, saying it was an appropriate call for more detailed information, not a condemnation of an agency whose employees are overworked and underpaid. “I don’t envy the position of people who work for CYFD,” said Ivey-Soto, D-Albuquerque. “They don’t have the resources to be making wise decisions.” Ivey-Soto said Padilla’s memorial could unearth details of the foster-care system, including how emergency placements are handled. “This is a great first step by the Legislature so we’re not doing a knee-jerk reaction” to a child’s death, Ivey-Soto said. CYFD estimated that it would need to use one employee to gather the data and compile the report. Senators were empathetic, but Democrats on the Rules Committee also criticized CYFD for not sending anyone to Monday’s Senate hearing. “I’m very sorry that CYFD is choosing to watch this by webcast,” Ivey-Soto said. Ortiz y Pino was more direct in his criticism, saying CYFD’s leadership had been unresponsive to lawmakers. “Our interim committee had a hard time getting information from the department,” he said. Henry Varela, a spokesman for CYFD, said that was not the case. Varela said the department secretary, Yolanda Deines, and her staff made themselves available to legislators several times in the past year. He said the department needs specific salary reforms to rectify pay disparities. “We look forward to the Legislature supporting this targeted approach that can really impact our ability to recruit and retain caseworkers, rather than small across-the-board pay increases that don’t address the underlying issues in a broken system,” Varela said.

A legislator proposes that New Mexico spend up to $2 million a year to pay college tuition for social workers willing to take on the most demanding of jobs. These students would receive one or two years of state-paid tuition by committing to work for the department responsible for protecting children. Sen. Michael Padilla, who spent parts of his childhood in an orphanage and three foster homes, authored the bill to attract more social workers to the state Children, Youth and Families Department. Padilla, D-Albuquerque, outlined his proposal Monday for the Senate Rules Committee. He also is sponsoring a joint memorial calling on CYFD to prepare a detailed report on foster care in New Mexico. Unlike bills, memorials have no force of law, but they express the Legislature’s sentiment. Padilla said he had been working on his memorial for months before CYFD became the object of headlines because of Albuquerque 9-year-old Omaree Varela’s painful life and violent death. Omaree’s mother has been charged with kicking him to death in December. In turn, CYFD has received scrutiny and criticism because Omaree was not removed from his mother’s home. Senators on the Rules Committee said they considered it unfair to blame investigators and social workers in CYFD’s child protection division. They said these front-line workers have jobs bordering on impossible. “The fault is not with the Children, Youth and Families Department,” said Sen. Gerald Ortiz y Pino, D-Albuquerque. “The fault is with the Legislature, I think.” Ortiz y Pino, whose own career was in social work, said the state offers pitiful salaries to beginning workers in the protective services division. They make $30,000 a year, the same as a starting teacher who gets summers off. “The Legislature has not been on top of this,” Ortiz y Pino said. “People are making seat-of-thepants decisions and burning out after six months.” But he also faulted Gov. Susana Martinez’s administration for its management practices. Ortiz y Pino said CYFD returned $6 million to the state treasury last year. Instead, it could have filled some vacancies or gone to the personnel board and sought better salaries for workers handling cases such as Omaree’s, he said. Padilla said his bill proposes Contact Milan Simonich that taxpayers would cover at 986-3080.

website. They also would be available through state government’s online “sunshine portal.” The goal, he said, is to increase governmental transparency. “I just think that we best preserve public trust by having that information openly accessible to the people,” Candelaria said Monday. Republican Gov. Susana Martinez has agreed to put the proposal on the agenda of the legislative session. By

Legislative roundup Days remaining in session: 23 A Lion he was not: It’s Super Bowl week, and that meant the state Senate was especially excited about the man they confirmed Monday for the Military Base Planning Commission. Senators voted 37-0 for John D. Bledsoe, a retired brigadier general and former combat pilot who once headed the New Mexico Air National Guard. Bledsoe, 61, has a long resume, but the very last line grabbed the attention of the Senate. It said: “Detroit Lions football team member, 1975.” Sen. Bill Payne, R-Albuquerque, spoke publicly on behalf of Bledsoe, who was nominated for the commission by Gov. Susana Martinez. Payne said some people might even want Bledsoe’s autograph because he played pro football. But the Detroit Lions’ alltime roster contained no mention of Bledsoe. We asked him about the discrepancy. Bledsoe said his resume probably was misleading. “I didn’t make the team. I didn’t make the final cut,” Bledsoe said. “I probably shouldn’t have put it on there.” Bledsoe was an offensive lineman at the University of Arizona. He said he tried out for the Lions as a long snapper. He will serve at the pleasure of the governor on the Military Base Planning Commission. It is an important commis-

law, 30-day sessions are limited to the budget, taxes and other measures allowed by the governor. In the past, financial disclosures for all government officials were posted online. However, the secretary of state’s office stopped doing that after judicial officials and others voiced security concerns because the forms list residential addresses, telephone numbers and other personal identifying infor-

sion because of New Mexico’s financial dependency on military bases and the possibility of more federal cutbacks. Overriding vetoes: Last year, the Senate unanimously passed and the House overwhelmingly passed a bill to require annual reports on the fiscal impact of tax breaks and incentives offered by state government, something which is done in other states. But Gov. Susana Martinez vetoed Senate Bill 7, which was sponsored by Sen. Tim Keller, D-Albuquerque, and Rep. Luciano “Lucky” Varela, D-Santa Fe. Keller on Monday made a motion to override the governor’s veto. “Without this bill creating a tax expenditure budget, meaningful tax reform and business incentives are impossible to evaluate,” Keller said in a news release. “The result of this veto is a preemptive strike against meaningful efforts to bring accountability and transparency to our tax and budget.” Last year was the second time Martinez vetoed a taxexpenditure bill. Former Gov. Bill Richardson also vetoed a similar bill. Meanwhile, Sen. Howie Morales, D-Silver City, who is running for governor in the Democratic primary, moved to override Martinez’s veto of last year’s SB 588, which would have created a different evaluation system for teachers and principals. Morales in a statement said the bill was necessary because “educators deserve to be evaluated by those who know that system inside and out.” An override would require a daunting two-thirds vote in

mation, said Ken Ortiz, chief of staff for Secretary of State Dianna Duran. Candelaria said he is surprised to learn that no financial-disclosure statements were available online, and he’ll consider pushing for a change in state law to make clear that all of them should be posted on a government website. “It’s sort of frustrating to hear that they have stopped doing that for the other branches of government,” he said.

both the House and Senate. Archived Legislature webcasts: Ever want to watch the Legislature in action, but something like, say, work, interferes with your schedule and you can’t do it? State Rep. Jeff Steinborn, D-Las Cruces, plans to introduce a rule change that would require the Legislative Council Service to save all the webcasts so those who don’t spend their days and nights at the Roundhouse can watch at their convenience. Rep. Jason Harper, R-Rio Rancho, will cosponsor the measure. “It’s vitally important that the citizens of the state be provided the opportunity to watch our legislative process in action and learn about critical policy issues being discussed,” Steinborn said in a news release Monday. “Technology easily allows us the ability to broadcast and archive these meetings, so folks can watch them at times that fit their schedule.” The decision not to archive came in the early days of webcasting when some legislative leaders argued that saving the videos could result in political “mischief,” such campaign ads containing clips showing lawmakers sleeping, goofing off or casting controversial votes. Steinborn also said he will introduce another measure that would require the Legislative Council Service to webcast all interim committee hearings. “During this last summer, there was increased public interest in following interim committee legislative hearings related to Gov. Martinez’ shake up of the state’s

mental health system,” the news release said. Co-sponsoring this will be Senate President Pro-tem Mary Kay Papen, D-Las Cruces. Senators salivate: Stomachs rumbled on the Senate floor Monday. Senators voting during lunchtime on the confirmation of board members to the New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum heard mouthwatering descriptions of the food the appointees have raised. Appointee Nick Carson’s wheat has traveled all the way from Rincon to Italy, where it became pasta. Undoubtedly, it would pair nicely with the mozzarella from fellow appointee Beverly Idsinga’s dairy in Portales. Paying the cost: Gov. Susana Martinez has signed a measure into law to provide more than $5 million for costs of the 30-day legislative session. The legislation, which is known by lawmakers as the “feed bill,” was signed on Monday. The measure also provides $16 million for the Legislature’s year-round operations. The governor used her lineitem veto powers to eliminate a provision that would have provided flexibility to the Legislative Council Service and others, such as the Legislative Finance Committee, to make adjustments within their budgets next year. Lawmakers can still provide that budget transfer authority as a provision in the state’s main budget when it’s considered later in the session. Staff and wire reports

Developmentally disabled list grows as does service wait By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

Thousands of developmentally disabled New Mexicans will continue to languish for years on a waiting list for services, even if a proposed modest bump in funding is approved by the Legislature. Currently, about 4,000 people receive services through the Developmental Disabilities Medicaid Waiver program, while more than 6,200 are on a waiting list. Developmentally disabled residents of Albuquerque can expect to remain on the list for a decade, and their counterparts in outlying parts of the state face waits of up to eight years. “You sign up tomorrow, 10 years from now if you live in Albuquerque, you’re going to get offered services, if the patterns of allocation continue to be similar to what they look like today,” said Kathy Stevenson, director of the Developmental Disabilities Support Division for the New Mexico Department of Health. Parents Reaching Out is a nonprofit organization that promotes “healthy, positive and caring experiences for families and children” and guides families through the Developmental Disabilities Medical Waiver process. “There is inherent injustice in a system that only supports some,” Wilson said. “It is not anyone’s intent, but the result is the same.”

A task force last year that studied the waits for services determined it would take infusions of about $83 million for three straight years to lower wait times to a maximum of three years. Stevenson recognizes that a budgetary windfall of that magnitude is unrealistic. For the current fiscal year, the Legislature partially funded Gov. Susana Martinez’s $5 million recommendation for the program. It received $4.6 million, which enabled the program to serve 227 more people. “Every time we don’t allocate at least 300 people in a fiscal year, then we go backwards,” Stevenson said. “The waiting list starts to outpace (resources).” Dating to 2007, funding has reached that threshold only twice – this fiscal year and the one before it. This year, the New Mexico Department of Health did not request any additional funds for the program, and Martinez has not recommended any. However, the Legislative Finance Committee has proposed $4.1 million in additional funding. Unless the program can add staff, it will not be able to cut into wait times. “We are currently maxed-out as to the capabilities of our staff to enroll people into the program,” Stevenson said. Members of the Senate Finance Committee expressed frustration about the waiting list. “It appears that we’re not making any progress,” said the committee chairman,

Sen. John Arthur Smith, D-Deming. Other committee members were particularly bothered by $8.5 million in unspent funds that the program returned to the state’s general fund last year and a dozen full-time employee positions that remain unfilled. Stevenson said applications for service that straddle fiscal years while they’re being processed led to the budgeted but unspent funds. State guidelines that require long-dark positions to go unfilled are responsible for the elimination of positions. Family and child advocate Wilson recognizes the complexities facing the program, but objects to it returning money when so many go unserved. Stevenson said she sees some promise in the recommendations generated last year by the task force. The federal Medicaid program provides about 75 percent of the funding for services to the developmentally disabled under the program, but federal guidelines linked to the money limit options for keeping costs low. Stevenson said a shift to a statebased system that provides targeted services and more flexibility in spending could cut into the wait times. “We need to value people. We need to understand that all people have needs and that all people have gifts,” Wilson said. “If we approach our policies with those principles as a given, negotiating solutions will get easier.”

Risk: Balderas says he’s ‘troubled’ by the lack of internal control Continued from Page A-1 — including the recession and that school districts spent less than allocated on special-education programming in those years — led the state to fall below the required level of federal funding. The department requested a waiver for 2010 and 2011 MOE violations. Last summer, the U.S. Department of Education granted the state’s request for the 2010 waiver, but not for 2011. The state has appealed that decision and is awaiting a hearing date. About $34 million in future funding is at risk if the appeal is not granted. In addition, the department might lose another $26.4 million for fiscal year 2012.

Balderas told the committee that his department’s regular annual 2012 audit of the education department, released last summer, resulted in 16 findings, including inadequate internal controls, procurement code violations and noncompliance with the MOE requirements. The latter finding led him to ask the education department to hire an independent auditor to perform a special audit, he said. The education department has been cooperating fully, he noted. Secretary of Education-designate Hanna Skandera said her office became aware of the 2010 problem early in 2011, shortly after Gov. Susana Martinez took office. On Monday, Balderas said the education department

waited nearly 17 months to request an appeal and a few more months before it informed the New Mexico Legislature. Balderas said he is “troubled” by the lack of internal control over the MOE measures and by the lack of communication on the part of the education department. When some of the lawmakers on the committee asked Balderas if he had any advice for them in terms of dealing with potential future penalties, he said he could not comment. But, he warned, “We could have severe legal, financial and administrative consequences,” if the feds don’t grant future waivers.

Evan Blackstone, chief of staff for the state auditor, told the committee that depending on how the federal government responds to the appeal process, the impact could range from “zero to $62 million.” Paul Aguillar, deputy secretary of the education department, told the committee that though no hearing date has been set for the appeal. Lawyers from both sides will meet in Washington, D.C., on April 8 to lay out the legal groundwork. He said the department can take the case on up to the U.S. District Court level. Aguillar said the committee members should be happy with the results of the state auditor’s regular 2013 audit

of the department, due this summer. Balderas said the special audit of the MOE issue should be finished by this summer, as well. Johnny Wilson, executive director of the Albuquerque-based Parents Reaching Out, said the state should have paid more attention to the drop in specialeducation funding. “At least four years after [the first violation] we still don’t know what happened,” he said. “I’m concerned about both transparency and the failure to report the problem.” Balderas said the state’s Human Services Department is also facing similar internal control challenges. If there is no oversight of such problems, he said, “taxpayers may pay a tragic cost.”


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

CITY COUNCIL DISTRICT 3 PROFILE MARIE CAMPOS

Campos pledges to make a difference in day-to-day life of residents By Phaedra Haywood

The New Mexican

Marie Campos says she’s not impressed with incumbent Carmichael Dominguez’s attempts to promote healthier lifestyles in District 3. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

On Our WebSite u For more on the candidates, a schedule of candidate forums and voter information, go to www. santafenewmexican.com/elections/city_hall_2014

Marie Campos says she hasn’t seen much change in District 3 in the four years since she last campaigned to represent the area on the City Council. “Right now, I don’t seem much difference between what’s going on on the south side and what’s going on in any low-income community,” she said. “I don’t really see any changes that really show people’s lives are getting better. We still see all the crime and home break-ins,” she said. The break-ins are actually worse than before.” And she’s not terribly impressed with incumbent Carmichael Dominguez’s attempts to promote healthier lifestyles in the district through a zoning overlay that restricts alcohol sales and advertising. “To me honestly, it seems like a bit of fluff,” she said. “It’s just grandstanding. It’s not going

to have the kind of impact we need to have on our kids. It’s about lifestyle choices and giving opportunities to our youth so they can have a million liquor signs all over and they will choose a healthy lifestyle and choose to raise their family in a healthy way.” If she is elected, Campos said, her main goal would be to “try to help people have a better life on the household level, not some abstract thought that is way out there, but how does it really make a difference in someone’s day-to-day life.” She supports youth workforce development programs and walkable parks to promote healthy living. She says she wants public safety patrols to place more emphasis on controlling property crime and less on parking violations and other “harassment” of area residents. “Another thing to make a healthy community,” she said while eating tacos at La Cocina de Dona Clara on Airport Road recently, “like look at all these telephone pole lines and electric lines. If

we want to be green, why haven’t we converted those into solar energized lighting systems? There are really some basic things we could do to try to bring about a healthier community.” “And there are a lot of holistic industries here,” she said. “Why not include that within tourism — alternative health visitations that can happen? Promote that. We have a lot of people that are into alternative medicine, Chinese medicine, Native American medicine. Why not strategize that along with creative tourism? Why not go in and assess our assets and try to develop them?” She said she wants city contracting protocols that make it easier for smaller contractors to bid on city contracts, even if that means breaking projects up into smaller parts. She said constituents have told her that the contracting process is rife with hidden agendas and conflicts of interest. “Whether it just appears that way or it’s actually true that these

Please see CAMPOS, Page A-6

CITY COUNCIL DISTRICT 3 PROFILE CARMICHAEL DOMINGUEZ

CITY COUNCIL DISTRICT 3 PROFILE ANGELO JARAMILLO

Incumbent city councilor touts experience in bid for re-election

Brash contender not willing to sit idle while community suffers By Phaedra Haywood

By Phaedra Haywood

The New Mexican

The New Mexican

Incumbent City Council candidate Carmichael Dominguez was named after Stokely Carmichael, the civil rights-era activist sometimes referred to as the honorary prime minister of the Black Panther Party. His namesake was known as a provocateur. But Dominguez presents himself as more of an elder statesman. The former school board member says he has gained some traction on the council over the past eight years and says that’s why voters on the city’s southwest side should send him back to City Hall for a third four-year term. “Keeping me in office will be wise because I have the experience,” said the 43-year-old married father of two grown sons. “I have built relationships, not only with the governing body but with members of the community, nonprofit organizations and constituents. I know how to make sure monies get allocated properly, that District 3 residents get their share of revenue. Now is not the time to subject constituents to a learning curve.” One of Dominguez’s proudest accomplishments in his most recent term is the creation of an overlay district, which restricts certain types of alcohol sales and advertising within a four-square-mile area along the Airport Road corridor. The legislation, passed in June, also provides incentives such as reduced permitting fees to attract other types of businesses, including grocery stores, farmers markets and schools, to locate there. “From my perspective, he has a deep understanding of the community, cares deeply about his community and is a very conscientious and thorough strategist,” said Shelley Mann-Lev, substance abuse prevention coordinator for the Santa Fe Public Schools and chairwoman of the Santa Fe Prevention Alliance, which fights youth substance abuse. Mann-Lev said her comments reflect her opinion and are not official endorsements from either of those agencies. “I worked with him on the overlay, and he’s a very creative policymaker,” she said. “Looking at how he can use land-use zoning to promote community health and safety and positive development, from what I’ve seen, that’s unique among lawmakers.” Santa Fe Prevention Alliance Communications Director Maire Claire Voorhees — who worked on the overlay district and another Dominguez initiative aimed at curbing underage drinking at private parties — said she was impressed with the councilor’s follow-through when it came to the implementation of ordinances. Voorhees added that Dominguez also does a lot of research when considering new policies. “He comes to key people first and says, ‘I want to do this, what is your opinion? Is the research behind it?’ ” she said. “He’s very research driven.” “Equality, empowerment and education,” are the buzzwords Dominguez has built his political platform on. Moving forward, he said, he has his sights set on the “empowerment” of community leaders in his district, something he hopes to accomplish by identifying and training leaders “so they can start to advocate for themselves and their communities. I envision an executive committee with a bunch of subcommittees that would advise on policy,” he said. During a recent public forum, Dominguez touched on several other topics related to District 3, including the potential expansion of the Santa Fe Rodeo Grounds. He said he’s not against the project as long as surrounding neighborhoods get to have input and developers are made to deliver on their promises to neighbors concerning traffic and other impacts. He also mentioned the high rate of property crime in the city. His response to that, he said, is to support a community-oriented police chief who will listen to the community. As for job creation, he said, “for me, it’s all about education.” He said he supports the idea of making the mayor a full-time position with a commensurate salary, although he said he opposes amending the city charter to give the mayor hiring and firing power over key city officials, stating that “absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Dominguez has been endorsed by the local branch of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, whose Local

Angelo Jaramillo has written about a dozen plays, produced eight of them and acted in more than 40 stage productions. His love of theater (and reading and writing) is reflected in his manner of public speaking: brash and idealistic with a dramatic flair. During a recent forum, the City Council candidate likened life in the San Ysidro housing development on Santa Fe’s southwest side to “living in the Gaza Strip,” and characterized the city’s unmanned speed-enforcement SUVs as a “cash cow” focused on hassling common folk on their way to work. Asked if he favored a proposed redevelopment of the Santa Fe Rodeo Grounds with an indoor arena in the adjoining south-side District 4, he questioned how the space would be used, saying that if it was “just a matter of riding bulls, roping calves and violating animal rights,” other options should be considered. The native Santa Fean — and son of former Mayor Debbie Jaramillo — says he’s running for office because he believes the people of District 3 are in dire need of someone to “help create a livable, sustainable community for the people who make the Santa Fe economy work.” “If the community where you live is suffering, you as an individual have a responsibility to either do something about it, or you can ignore it like a lot of people do,” he said. “I’m not one of those people who can go on forever in my life ignoring it.” Jarmaillo said he thinks there are two major challenges facing southwest-side residents: “cultural and infrastructural.” “Culturally, there is a very dangerous mentality and a great schism and division between the local Hispanics who grew up in Santa Fe and still claim their ancestry to Spain and all that hype, and the people coming from the south escaping poverty and war and terror in their own countries and looking for new opportunity,” he said. “We’re all part of the same bloodline. We are part of the same ancestry; we share a similar culture. There is no need for this cultural and mental division, and we need to address that in order to bring a great sense of unity amongst the people.” In terms of infrastructure, he said, the area needs economic development, access to grocery stores, health clinics and early-education centers. They key to addressing these issues, the candidate said, is community organization. “I believe that’s where power rests,” he said. “I do want to give power back to the people. The south side is underserved, underdeveloped and under-represented. The diverse populations that live there, socio-economically, ethnically and individually, have great potential. I believe the south side can be a real ballplayer and powerhouse in this town, and I know there are also people on the other side of town who are very interested in the south side. What I want to do is preserve the integrity of what the community has to offer, protect the people that live there and give them the power to take their future in their own hands, create their own community the way they want to see it and not be dumped on.” Jaramillo, 37, said he experienced the contrast between life on the south side and in other parts of the city when he transferred from Santa Fe High to Capital High in his junior year. “At Santa Fe High, I was a star athlete and honor roll student,” he said. “I was learning about Shakespeare and literature and mathematics and everything,” he said. “When I transferred over to Capital High School, the only thing I learned was how to hustle people and watch my back. You had to walk those halls watching your back. Fights would break out constantly, people would jump you, drugs were being distributed. There was a lot of chaos and violence.” Luckily, Jaramillo said, he had a teacher, Ruth Holmes, who saved his life by pulling strings for him to get into a college-level English class, where he says he found his voice and learned to think. “So I went to college,” he said. Jaramillo said he grew up in a household where “open debate” was encouraged, and he got his first taste of political activism as a child, going door-to-door with his mother collecting signatures in opposition to a proposed improvement of West Alameda Street as a traffic artery. Jaramillo has a history of refusing to kowtow

Carmichael Dominguez says he has gained some traction on the council over the past eight years and says that’s why voters on the city’s southwest side should send him back to City Hall for a third four-year term. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

3999 PEOPLE Committee voted in December on endorsements based on candidates’ answers to a questionnaire. He also was endorsed by the Northern New Mexico Group of the Sierra Club’s Rio Grande Chapter, whose political group sent a questionnaire to candidates and did some interviews and other research. A representative said an endorsement must have two-thirds approval from both the seven-member political committee and a nine-member executive committee. Dominguez is deeply entrenched in local political circles. For example, when Dominguez ran unopposed for his second term in 2010, he hired Marlene Montoya — wife of former public employees union president Joseph Anthony Montoya and co-owner of Advantage Asphalt and Seal Coating — as his treasurer. The Montoyas and their business — which received millions of dollars worth of paving contracts from the city and the county over the past decade — have since been indicted on multiple felony fraud and bribery charges for alleged improprieties related to work the company did for Santa Fe County. That same year, the Montoyas and planner Michael Harris contributed $1,000 to Dominguez’s campaign, their company contributed another $300, and City Public Works Director Issac Pino — who at the time was president of Rancho Viejo, a subdivision that gave millions of dollars worth of work to Advantage Asphalt — donated $200. Asked to comment on his connection to the Montoyas — whose cases are still pending in District Court — Dominguez said “They’ll always be friends of mine, but I haven’t spoken to them in a long time.” This year, Dominguez’s campaign treasurer is Bette Booth, longtime chairwoman of the parks advisory board, who said her removal as chairwoman of the volunteer board by the mayor in June was retribution for her asking for an audit of expenses related to a $30 million parks bond. Booth still serves as member of the board. Last summer, the Santa Fe Fiesta Council filed a police report alleging that Dominguez’s wife, Deborah Leyba-Dominguez, who chaired the Fiesta Council’s Arts and Crafts Committee, diverted $5,960 worth of Fiesta Council money into her own checking account over the course of a year. When confronted with the allegations, Leyba-Dominguez wrote the council a check for the amount she was accused of taking. As of Jan. 20, an investigation in to the matter was still pending with the Santa Fe Police Department. Asked to address the allegations, Dominguez responded via email: “To date there has not been a single charge of misconduct of any kind brought against my wife and from day one I have supported her in this unfortunate matter. I will continue to honor and support my wife in spite of the desperate measures during a campaign that have been used in a public forum in order to taint my wife’s reputation of mine.” Dominguez noted that in a city the size of Santa Fe “it’s easy to have less than six degrees of separation” but, he said, “at some point, we all have to run against each other, [and] at some point, you are going to have to make a decision that one of your friends don’t like.” Doing so, Dominguez said, won’t be an issue for him. “I don’t come from a political family,” he said. “I don’t come from the perspective that this is a steppingstone. My parents encouraged me to get involved in the community and my love for the community is what keeps me motivated.”

Angelo Jaramillo says he’s running for office because he believes the people of District 3 are in dire need of someone to ‘help create a livable, sustainable community for the people who make the Santa Fe economy work.’ LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

to authority. In 2000, shortly after finishing college, he was hired to create a theater program at the Northern New Mexico Community College campus in El Rito. When school officials demanded that he tone down the language in a controversial play he planned to stage with students from a nearby high school, he refused, lost his job and staged the play anyway off school grounds. He also clashed with the school administration while working at his alma mater, Capital High, as a regional coordinator for Gear-Up (Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs), in the mid 2000s. “I was accused of trying to create a revolution there,” he said. “It had nothing to do with that. Everyone should be taught that they can control their own education, and these kids weren’t even given that chance, a lot of them.” Asked if he’d ever been arrested, Jaramillo admitted he was pulled over for “erratic driving” and charged with DUI in 1999. “I was 22 years old, and I made an error in judgement,” he said. “I paid my dues. I went through the process, and I never repeated that mistake again.” Jaramillo initially maintained that was his only arrest. When asked about a report that he’d also been arrested on a charge of shoplifting a bottle of cognac from a grocery store in 1995, he said: “Oh yeah. They told me they were going to expunge that charge, but I guess they never cleared those cases. I was 18 years old. That was a different time in my life. I don’t remember the outcome, but I know there was never any follow-up from the court system.” Jaramillo said also was detained “for no reason whatsoever” when police broke up a party he attended when he was 20, but no charges were filed against him because the police had no proof he’d done anything wrong. “They knew I was the mayor’s son,” he said. “It was political.” Only Jaramillo’s DUI charge shows up in online court records. But news reports from the time do mention the other two arrests, and the fact that Jaramillo’s mother told news media that her children were being targeted by police, as well as discriminated against by then-Municipal Judge Fran Gallegos for political reasons, which Gallegos denied. Santa Fe Police Department records also contain a report that Patricia Gallegos, Fran Gallegos’ sister, called police after having a verbal confrontation with Angelo Jaramillo while both were campaigning (she for her sister; he for his mother) on a city sidewalk in 2004. When asked in a voice-mail message about the report, Jaramillo responded with a page-long email that didn’t mention the incident directly but accused The New Mexican of trying to assassinate his character, which he said the newspaper also did to his mother while she was in office. He wrote that “people who control The Santa Fe New Mexican and other like-minded foes are terrified of powerful Hispanic people” and that “It is obvious the wealthy white power structure in Santa Fe is afraid of me and my family.” Patricia Gallegos did not return a call seeking comment. Angelo Jaramillo said in an earlier interview that voters shouldn’t assume that his mother — who had a reputation as polarizing figure in local politics — will guide his decisions. “I’ve had my differences with my mom professionally, ideologically, philosophically and personally,” he said. “That’s a relationship between mother and son. I may ask my mom what experience she has dealing with issues. But they need not worry about anyone controlling me. In the end, I will listen to the people and make sure their voices are heard.”


A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Campos: Pajarito: Los Alamos ski area dates back to the 1930s Got 30% of the vote in 2010 A ski club was organized in 1943, during the Manhattan Project, and in 1944, a not a decision made lightly. The issue is rope tow, fashioned from an automobile that snow has been hard to come by in engine acquired from an AlbuquerNew Mexico the last few years, which puts que junkyard and rope from a defunct financial pressure on the club. We feel that circus, was installed. In 1957, the club to improve the skiing and the infrastrucmoved to its current location where the ture, the best path forward is to turn the snow was presumed to be more reliable. land and ski area over to the county.” Today, the area has six lifts — a quad, Pajarito is not the only ski-related busi- a triple, three doubles and one rope ness facing challenges related to weather tow — 40 trails, 300 ski-able acres and and revenue. Last month, Taos Ski Vala peak elevation of 10,440 feet. Even ley’s founding family announced it was on the busiest day, it has no lift lines, selling the resort to Louis Bacon, a bilaccording to Rae, a sometime ski patrol lionaire conservationist with the capital volunteer. “You don’t find yourself to buy new lifts, rebuild the base area and dodging other people on the slopes. It’s construct a new hotel. And last week, the a remarkably high-quality area when owner of Santa Fe Mountain Sports said we have good snow. But Mother Nature the store would close at the end of the hasn’t been terribly forthcoming in the season largely due to the lack of snow. last few years.” Skiing in the Pajarito area dates at Tom Long, manager of the ski area, least to the 1930s when boys from the said that the club had discussed all the Los Alamos Ranch School would haul possible options and, “it just boiled supplies by sledge to the Cape May down to the fact that this would probcabin for a week of skiing and camping. ably be the best solution.” A new area at Sawyers Hill was cleared There are many details to be worked in 1938 so the boys could ski every out to dissolve the club, a New Mexico weekend. nonprofit, and the Los Alamos County

Continued from Page A-1

Continued from Page A-5 contracts are being repeatedly run through a little contract mafia,” she said, “why isn’t there a website that says these are the contracts, this is who bid on them and this is who got it and why?” Gwen Wardwell, a community organizer and former Sierra Club chairman who has worked on the campaigns of several public officials, including County Commissioner Kathy Holian and City Councilor Chris Calvert, has helped Campos on both of her campaigns. “I would trust her to not be bought, let’s put it that way,” Wardwell said. Campos, is a bookkeeper and assistant at the Garner Law Firm. Before that, she worked for the Institute of American Indian Arts doing “educational outreach,” looking at ways tribes could carry their cultural assets into the marketplace. She also founded a cultural preservation group, the Native Hispanic Institute, which pushed chile farmers in Chimayó to trademark the region’s distinctive strain of the plant. Some people — including Rep. Nick Salazar, who called her “bright” — credit Campos and the organization for spearheading the trademark issue and seeing it through to fruition. But newspaper accounts from the time reported that some locals had reservations about Campos, whom they considered an “outsider,” and complained that she was using the institute to exploit the community for personal gain. Campos originally suggested the institute would hold the chile-trademark, but that plan was scrapped after farmers protested and formed a new group that now owns the trademark. Campos’ use of a $500,000 federal grant that her organization received for a chile-growing project also came under scrutiny when it was revealed that $159,375 of it would be paid to Campos via salary and fringe benefits. Campos defended the allocation of funds, saying the pay she received for her work on the project was “within the average professional scale.” Court records showed Campos had three judgments against her in 2002 for about $6,900 each in connection with money she owed a law firm in New York. When asked about the court actions, Campos said the judgments had been entered without her knowledge while she was out of town and that she later reached a settlement with the firm, which, she said, had made a mistake in the way they billed her. Campos has lived in District 3 for about 16 years — which makes her a relative newcomer in comparison to her opponents, both of whom have lived for more than 25 years in the area. Asked at a recent forum about whether she was in favor of a multimillion dollar expansion of the the Santa Fe Rodeo Grounds in the adjoining District 4 — an idea that has been publicly debated for about a year — she said she hadn’t heard of the plan. Campos captured 30 percent of the vote when she vied to represent the district in 2010, and she thinks she has a better chance of winning this time. “I believe that I have the experience and the ability to really understand on all different multiple levels, what needs to happen in District 3 to make it very livable on the household level.” Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@ sfnewmexican.com.

Wednesday has TASTE You turn to us.

Council must approve the transfer. “While this is not a done deal by any stretch of the imagination,” Long said, “it seems to have support from local government.” County administrator Harry Burgess said the ski area would fit into the county’s overall economic development plan, and he believes the council will be receptive to the discussion, “although we don’t know all the issues associated with inheriting the ski area.” But, he added, “The last thing we want to do is lose a ski area here.” Over the past year, Burgess said, the club and the county have had some discussions about how they could work together on developing recreational activities in the area. But those discussions have not involved the transfer of the property to the county. According to Rae, the fixed costs for the ski area are about $1 million a year. In a good year, revenues are split between the memberships and season pass holders and day ticket sales. Obviously, when the area isn’t open, it doesn’t sell day tickets.

Pajarito has a limited snow-making operation that allowed it to open its beginner area over the Christmas holiday. The system depends on runoff that in good years flows into a pond at the top of the mountain. That pond is empty, Long said. The club has about 2,000 members, although not all of them are entitled to vote. “As tragic at it is [dissolving the club],” Long said, “I think it will work out very positively for skiing here.” Pajarito will feel less like a club if this proposal goes through, but Rae said he wouldn’t expect any dramatic changes, although the county might be able to undertake some capital improvements that would reinvigorate the facility. Meanwhile, should there be a big snow dump in the next couple of months, Pajarito is prepared to reopen. “The ski area is on standby,” Long said. “We are fully capable of operations as soon as we are able to get some snow.” The members’ meeting is scheduled for at 6 p.m. Feb. 4 at the Crossroads Bible Church on East Road.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Abused: Children say they were denied ‘sufficient amounts of food’ to be taken and eaten by 2012 and April 2012. Two of children from the alleged victims have since Albuquerque” turned 18, while two still are and referred to minors. the practice as Asked to address the com“paying rent.” plaint Monday, Children, Youth Albuquerque and Families spokesman Henry children also Eddie Varela said the agency could not Aragon Jr. were allegedly comment on pending ligation or allowed to personnel issues. steal stamps In all of the cases, the comand mail from victims named in plaints allege the children were the complaint. “regularly denied adequate or The complaint also alleges sufficient amounts of food” to that each of the teenagers was the point that they lost between denied the use of toilet facilities 10 and 20 pounds in a matter for up to five hours at a time of months while housed at the and “forced to urinate” in the facility. same cup they used to drink When the children comfrom, while other children were plained about not having allowed frequent access to the enough of food, they were told: bathroom. “That is too bad! It’s just the One of the complaints alleges way it is here,” according to the that the plaintiff was forced to strip and bend over with his complaints, which allege that buttocks spread while one of state employees at the facilthe “youth care specialists” ity “allowed Plaintiff’s food

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stood behind him “making loud lewd sexual comments … designed to be heard by all” while other children and adults in position of authority laughed. Another teenager was forced to strip and bend over with his buttocks spread while a different employee of the state-run facility stood behind him simulating anal sex and shouting sexual slurs at him while other children watched, according to a complaint. “Defendants Youth Care Specialists have carried out several instances of simulated anal sex with completely nude Las Cruces children,” according to two of the complaints. Employees of the facility also allegedly allowed nine children from Albuquerque to attack three of the children and stood by or helped (by restraining the victims) while the other children beat them. Each of those children were “badly injured

and bleeding after the attack,” according to the complaints. After the incident, the complaint says one of the “Youth Care Specialists” dragged each child to his cell, threw them onto the cement floor. The children were denied medical treatment after the beating, according to the the complaints, and instead were confined to their cells for up to 72 hours in while the defendants “had a pizza party for the children from Albuquerque who had just viciously attacked” them. The New Mexican asked Varela the employment status of the state employees named in the report Monday afternoon, but Varela said he would not be able to provide it by 5 p.m. but could do so Tuesday. One defendant, Eddie Aragon Jr., allegedly attacked one 16-year-old because he thought the child was singing.

SCENE SCENE

Immediately after the first attack on the 16-year-old, the complaint alleges, Aragon entered the cell next door and “violently choked” another plaintiff — described in the lawsuit as a “14-year-old African American child who weighed around 110 pounds — by squeezing his neck and then fiercely punching plaintiff in the face and temple and body” before throwing him to the cement floor. Aragon was arrested by state police at his Albuquerque home a few days later, according to several news reports at the time, but he posted bail and never was formally charged. “We did receive a report on this case in February 2012,” Second Judicial District Attorney’s Office public information officer Kayla Anderson said in a written statement Monday. “After that, our office sent multiple follow-up requests to State

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Police, asking for additional documentation so we could proceed with the case. However we never received anything further. Therefore, on 10-22-13, our office was forced to close the case. We could not proceed with prosecution because we did not receive a completed case from law enforcement.” A supervisor allegedly witnessed the attack by Aragon, according to the lawsuit and news reports at the time. But he was not segregated from the children afterward and was allowed to go into the showers, where he located the 16-yearold he had assaulted previously, shoved him against the shower wall “struck him in the face then pressed his body against the nude child’s genitals” while warning him not to speak to police about the attack, according to the complaint. One complaint also says that two other children housed at the facility said that Aragon ordered them to attack one of the victims named in one of the complaints. Aragon, who was 29 years old at the time the attacks were alleged to have taken place, was the focus of a December 2011 story in the Albuquerque Journal titled “Back in the System, But in a Different Way,” just a few months before the incidents allegedly occurred. The story noted Aragon’s own troubled youth — he did time for an aggravated assault charge at the age of 15, according to the story — and his desire to give back to the community he had once been a part of by working at the state run facility for adjudicated youth. “I’m able to reach out to them in a different way,” Aragon was quoted as saying. “I can relate to them.” The New Mexican requested the initial incident report on the incident that led to Aragon’s arrest from state police spokesman Sgt. Emmanuel Gutierrez at 12:27 p.m. Monday, but the agency wasn’t able to produce the report by close of business. Asked to respond to Anderson’s statement around 4:30 p.m., Gutierrez said he would need more time to research the case before responding. The lawsuits were filed by Santa Fe attorney James A. Hayes, who has offices in Santa Fe and Las Cruces and has specialized in juvenile criminal defense in the past. In them, he accuses the individual actors, supervisors and the state department of Children, Youth and Families with various violations of state and federal law, including “cruel and unusual punishment” and violations of his clients civil rights. Supervisors and Secretary Berumen-Deines also are accused of “failure to train and supervise” and “negligent operation or maintenance of a public building,” among other things. The lawsuits seek compensatory and punitive damages for the plaintiffs as well as court costs and legal fees. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@ sfnewmexican.com.

Farmers to be sentenced in fatal listeria outbreak DENVER — Two Colorado cantaloupe farmers who pleaded guilty to charges stemming from a deadly listeria outbreak in 2011 are set to be sentenced. Eric and Ryan Jensen, the two brothers who owned and operated Jensen Farms in Holly, Colo., are scheduled to appear in federal court Tuesday. They pleaded guilty last year to misdemeanor counts of introducing adulterated food into interstate commerce, which carry penalties of up to six years in prison and $1.5 million in fines. The outbreak traced to tainted fruit from the farm caused 33 deaths and sent scores of people to hospitals. People in 28 states ate the contaminated fruit, and 147 were hospitalized. The Jensens have asked for probation, saying jail time is excessive because justice has been served with the imposition of new food guidelines. The Associated Press


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Downtown LOCAL NEWS nightclub Water suit against N.M. to proceed Rouge Cat closes doors

Texas contends some farmers, residents are being deprived of their share of Rio Grande By Susan Montoya Bryan

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that Texas can proceed with its lawsuit against New Mexico over management of the Rio Grande. Texas contends that groundwater pumping near the TexasNew Mexico border has resulted in Texas farmers and residents being deprived of Rio Grande water. New Mexico argues that downstream users are getting what’s required under a compact between the states and that the

Supreme Court should have let lower courts consider the dispute. New Mexico Attorney General Gary King said Monday he was not surprised by the court’s ruling. “I am confident that the court takes such state-to-state disputes very seriously, and we look forward to being able to tell New Mexico’s side of the story and to have our day in court,” King said. The Supreme Court gave New Mexico 60 days to file a motion seeking the case’s dismissal. Texas would then have an opportunity to respond.

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality first asked the Supreme Court to weigh in more than a year ago, alleging that New Mexico was violating the 1938 Rio Grande Compact that governs how water is shared by Texas, New Mexico and Colorado. King argued that a 2008 agreement between the federal government and two irrigation districts, one in Texas and the other in New Mexico, unfavorably changed the allocation of water for his state. Officials with the Elephant Butte Irrigation District, which serves farmers in southern New Mexico, said the agreement was aimed at heading off a legal battle between the two states that

could ultimately harm Doña Ana County farmers by cutting off their right to use groundwater. Nearly all of New Mexico has been mired in drought for the past several years, leaving stretches of the Rio Grande dry at times and reservoirs along the river at record-low levels. Without any promise for moisture this winter, farmers are still making hard choices about whether to grow staple crops such as chile, onions and pecans. Those farmers who made it through last year had access to wells for irrigating because there was not enough Rio Grande water left for New Mexico. This year, irrigation officials have yet to make predictions about how much water might be allocated.

Venue, known as only gay bar in the City Different, opened in May 2010 By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

Another downtown Santa Fe bar has called it quits. Resident DJ Oona Bender said Rouge Cat, 101 W. Marcy St., had its last night on Saturday. Bender described the decision to close the restaurant and nightclub as a gradual one, but said ultimately the bar’s owner didn’t want to go further into debt. “The irony is that business was just starting to pickup,” Bender said. “We had a good run. It’s just one of those things where we gave it the best we could.” Bender attributed the closure to a lack of the younger demographic in Santa Fe and a still-struggling economy. Bender said she tried to ensure that the Rouge Cat was a favorite for DJs and electronic musicians, and she added that management had put money into a good electrical system for light shows. She said events that had been planned at the Rouge Cat, such as the Valentine’s Day-themed show called “Sex on Vinyl,” will be relocated, though she doesn’t yet know where. The New Mexican reported that the nightclub opened its doors in May 2010. Rouge Cat also held the distinction of being known as the town’s only gay bar, though Bender said the nightclub hadn’t aimed to be a gay bar. Bender also said she doesn’t think the town necessarily needs a gay bar as gay culture becomes more accepted. “The notion of a gay bar is starting to become less necessary,” she said. In 2013, two other downtown bars, the Ore House at Milagro restaurant and bar and the Stats Sports Bar, also closed shop.

Whistle-blower complaint seeks sanctions against PRC Bonal claims he was fired from IT position after reporting co-workers were accessing pornography

PLAYING ASTRONAUT ON MERCURY REPLICA

By Phaedra Haywood

The New Mexican

Samantha Valdez of Santa Fe takes a picture of her son, C.J. Valdez, 4, on an actual-size model of the Mercury capsule built by NASA on display in front of the New Mexico State Capitol during Culture Day on Monday. Project Mercury was the first human spaceflight project for the United States. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

In brief

Man gets prison for assault of tribal officer

Statue of de Vargas returns to downtown park

ALBUQUERQUE — An Albuquerque man has been sentenced to more than two years in federal prison for assaulting a tribal officer at Taos Pueblo. Prosecutors say 22-year-old Dallas Chase Barth was sentenced Monday to a 27-month prison term followed by two years of supervised release. He was arrested in August based on a criminal complaint charging him with assault with a dangerous weapon. According to court filings, Barth took a van belonging to a U.S. Postal Service contractor outside a convenience store in Española. He then led officers on a high speed chase to Taos Pueblo, pursued by two tribal police officers in marked vehicles. Authorities say Barth was arrested after he made a U-turn and drove toward one of the tribal officers, who narrowly escaped injury.

A life-size bronze statue of Spanish conquistador Don Diego de Vargas that was removed from Cathedral Park after it was vandalized was reinstalled Friday after it underwent repairs. The estimated 550-pound statue was lifted from its place on the west end of the downtown park by crane in December and trucked to the Brett Chomer Studio for repair work after the artwork was fractured and nearly toppled over. The statue of the man who led Spanish colonists in reclaiming Santa Fe from Pueblo Indians in 1692 now stands on a reinforced pedestal. Debra Garcia y Griego, executive director of the city Arts Commission, said the city plans to keep a close eye on the statue in an effort to prevent further vandalism. “Both the parks department and the police department are keeping an eye on the sculpture ALBUQUERQUE — A Belen man conand activity in the park,” she said Monday. “So victed in a 2006 fatal accident involving hopefully we’ll have it under close monitoring.” drunken driving has been arrested in Valencia

Man convicted in 2006 accident charged again

County in another fatal accident. Authorities say 27-year-old Jacob Williams has been jailed in lieu of $20,000 bond on charges of vehicular homicide and aggravated driving while intoxicated. KOB-TV reports that the Saturday accident killed 51-year-old Daniel Sanchez and critically injured his 11-year-old daughter. They were thrown from a motorcycle into a roadside field. Williams had been released from prison after serving part of a six-year sentence on convictions of vehicular homicide and driving under the influence. Those convictions stemmed from a 2006 accident in which a motorcyclist was killed and a passenger critically injured.

El Paso woman dies in N.M. skiing accident RUIDOSO — A 23-year-old Texas woman is dead as a result of a skiing accident in Southern New Mexico. Lincoln County Sheriff Robert Shepperd says 23-year-old Jackueline Caballero of El Paso died Saturday afternoon when she lost control and struck a tree while on an intermediate slope at Ski Apache near Ruidoso. Shepperd says the state medical investigator will determine the exact cause of death. Staff and wire reports

Blue Corn proposes tap room at Plaza site By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

The prime commercial spot overlooking the Santa Fe Plaza that formerly housed Marble Brewery could be home to a new tap room as soon as next week. The Santa Fe City Council is scheduled to hold a public hearing Wednesday to consider a request from Blue Corn II Inc. for

a small brewers off-site license to allow beer sales in the space, which includes a second-floor balcony above the San Francisco Street sidewalk. Blue Corn II Inc. and the Santa Fe Arcade building are owned by local businessman Gerald Peters. Marble Brewery — whose owners include Peters’ two sons — vacated the space Dec. 28 after trying unsuccessfully to renew their lease for the location.

The new business will be called The Draft Station and feature beers from Blue Corn Brewery and the Chama River Brewing Company, which Peters also owns, as well as “guest taps” from other New Mexico microbreweries, according to Jim Hargrove, president of Santa Fe Dining, the group that manages Peters’ hospitality holdings, which also include the Rio Chama Steakhouse on Old Santa Fe Trail next

to the Capitol. Hargrove said state law allows breweries to have three off-site liquor licenses and so far Blue Corn Brewery only has its southside Santa Fe location on Rodeo Road permitted as such. The city is scheduled to consider the request at a public hearing set to begin at 7 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall, at the corner of Lincoln Avenue and Marcy Street.

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com

Lawyers for a man who has filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against the Public Regulation Commission have filed a motion accusing the commission of knowingly withholding evidence in the case and are asking the court to impose sanctions on the agency. Maurice A. Bonal — who is the son of a former Santa Fe city councilor, real-estate broker and liquor license broker with the same name — was the Public Regulation Commission’s information-technology systems manager in 2010 when he said that he discovered agency employees were accessing pornography and other inappropriate websites contrary to state policy. According to a Whistleblower Protection Act complaint he filed in 2011, Bonal reported his findings to his superiors at the PRC and shortly thereafter he was fired amid allegations of misconduct and insubordination, which he denied. According to Bonal’s complaint, between the time he reported the inappropriate Internet activity and the time he was fired, PRC Insurance Fraud Bureau chief Ben Montoya (one of the employees whom Bonal had reported as having accessed inappropriate sites) retaliated by opening a criminal background investigation into Bonal. The file associated with that investigation — and the PRC’s alleged failure to produce it in its entirety in response to discovery requests — is the basis for a motion filed by Bonal’s attorneys last week asking the court to sanction the commission. According to that motion, the PRC committed “willful violations” of a discovery order including “submitting false discovery responses” and “false deposition testimony.” The motion accuses the PRC of producing only part of the file when the agency allegedly knew other parts existed, including documents stored in the garage of one of the investigators. The motion also alleges that at least one commission witness lied in a deposition by saying the entire file had been produced. “Based upon the inventory letter … and the presentations by PRC counsel,” the motion alleges, “the defendant PRC had actual knowledge of the the existence [of the] 176 page ‘garage file’ investigation documents 6 days prior to the … deposition, and the Defendant PRC and its counsel deliberately chose not to inform Plaintiff of its existence.” The motion asks District Court to force one PRC witness to address discrepancies between his sworn testimony and the facts (as interpreted by Bonal’s lawyers) and to enter a judgment of liability against the agency, or alternately, to prohibit any testimony about the criminal history investigation during the trial. It also asks the court to impose monetary sanctions against the PRC for attorneys’ fees in the amount of $20,000. PRC spokesman Aurthur Bishop said in an email Friday that the agency “generally” does not comment on litigation, “particularly as it relates to personnel matters.” A ruling by District Judge Raymond Ortiz is pending.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


LOCAL & REGION

Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Solar energy Police: Student blaze an industry apparent suicide attempt thrives in New Mexico By P. Solomon Banda and Steven K. Paulson The Associated Press

By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

The solar industry is alive and growing. More than 1,100 New Mexicans make their living in the solar energy industry now, according to a new report. Nationally, the solar energy industry added more than 18,000 new jobs from September 2012 to November 2013, according to The Solar Foundation. The nonprofit solar advocacy foundation released the National Solar Jobs Census 2013 on Monday. Information in the report was culled by labor market analysts at BW Research from the Solar Energy Industries Association and through direct correspondence with solar businesses around the country. George Washington University and the Interstate Renewable Energy Council advised the report’s authors. The number of jobs added reflects the steady growth in the megawatts of solar energy added across the United States. Cheaper solar photovoltaic prices, new technology and government tax incentives have helped boost the industry. In New Mexico alone, the cost to install solar photovoltaics on houses and businesses declined 15 percent last year, according to the solar association. One of the most interesting findings in the report tallied the reasons why customers purchase solar power. About 70 percent of the solar businesses said their customers told them they were buying solar energy systems to save money and because the price was competitive with power provided by utility companies per kilowatt hour. Few listed energy independence or reducing pollution as the reason they were buying solar power systems. In total, 142,698 people nationally work in the solar industry, according to the report. The industry is expected to continue growing, according to the report, which says that almost half the solar businesses in the country expect to hire more employees this year. Most of those employees worked fulltime on solar-power related jobs, more than half of them as solar installers. Another third of the workers were in marketing or sales, manufacturing and project development. Solar installers earned on average $20 an hour while production and assembly workers averaged $15 an hour. About 20 percent of those hired into solar industry jobs are women and almost 10 percent were veterans, according to the report. In a state-by-state solar industry map developed last year, The Solar Foundation reported 76 solar companies in New Mexico. The state ranked 10th for the number of houses (37,463) powered by the sun. It also ranked 30th on the price of electricity. And according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, even though solar energy capacity has made great gains in the past three years, it is still dwarfed by New Mexico’s reliance on coal, oil and natural gas for energy. Read the report at thesolarfoundation. org. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @StaciMatlock.

WESTMINSTER, Colo. — A 16-year-old boy set himself on fire at a suburban Denver high school on Monday in an apparent suicide attempt that left him critically injured, authorities said. The boy didn’t make any threats before starting the fire in the cafeteria at Standley Lake High School at about 7:15 a.m., Westminster Police Department spokeswoman Cheri Spottke said. A custodian was able to use a fire extinguisher to put out the blaze before it could spread, Spottke said. Several other students were in the cafeteria at the time, but none were injured. Investigators went through the school with bomb detection dogs as a precaution, and no devices were discovered, Spottke said. Investigators are also

talking to students, faculty members and family members to find out what happened, she said. “We don’t have any indication that there’s any threat against the high school. We do believe that this is a suicide attempt,” she said. The boy hasn’t been named. Spottke didn’t know how the student set the fire, which caused extensive smoke in the building. The school was closed for the day and students were sent home, Jefferson County Public Schools spokeswoman Lynn Setzer said. Students without cars were taken by buses to a local middle school, where they were picked up by their parents. No classes will be held at the school on Tuesday either, but the district will provide counseling to students there in the morning. Monday’s incident was the latest to affect a Denverarea school in recent weeks.

In brief

On Thursday, Columbine High School, where two gunmen killed 13 people in 1999, went on high security alert after receiving a series of threatening phone calls. The alert applied to a half-dozen other schools in the area, in the same school district as Standley Lake, but was lifted the same day. On Dec. 13, student gunman Karl Pierson, 17, fatally shot Claire Davis, a 17-year-old classmate, at Arapahoe High School in Centennial before killing himself in the school’s library. Pierson reportedly had threatened a teacher and librarian who had disciplined him last year and allegedly was seeking that teacher when he entered the school, investigators have said. Colorado state lawmakers are considering a bill to spend about $250,000 to continue a hotline students and teachers can use to report threats and bullying anonymously.

Colorado teens visit Roswell after shooting

Settlement reached in police shooting ALBUQUERQUE — The police shooting of an Iraq War veteran in 2010 will cost Albuquerque about $8 million. The Albuquerque Journal reported Monday that a tentative settlement for $7.95 million has been reached with the family of Kenneth Ellis IIII. A jury reached a $10.3 million verdict in the cast last March, but the city appealed. City Attorney David Tourek says the settlement is tentative because it requires a judge’s approval. He says it’s in the best interest of taxpayers because there could have been attorney fees and interest on top of the jury award.

ROSWELL — Students from a Colorado high school who experienced a recent school shooting have visited a New Mexico middle school where a 12-year-old recently opened fire. The Roswell Daily Record reports that students from Arapahoe High School in Centennial, Colo. came to Roswell on Saturday to talk to Berrendo Middle School students about coping with the shooting. Arapahoe saw its own school shooting Dec. 13, when senior Karl Pierson shot student Claire Davis and killed her, before turning the gun on himself. The 15 Colorado teenagers provided Berrendo students with advice for getting through the trauma of a campus shooting. Two Roswell students were wounded when a young gunman entered the crowded middle school gym Jan. 14 and fired three times from a 20-gauge shotgun.

Gallup hospital to end behavior health service Faculty morale called low at New Mexico Tech GALLUP — A financially troubled

hospital in Gallup says its retrenching will include closing its behavior health program. The Gallup Independent reports that the move by Rehoboth McKinley Christian Health Care Services means the hospital will no longer offer its 28-day alcohol detox service. CEO Barry Mousa says the program has been losing money for years and that other agencies now have similar services. Mousa estimates that between 15 and 20 employees will be laid off when the program shuts down at the end of February. Mousa says the hospital also is considering the possibility of downgrading its hospital status to allow it to reduce the number of beds to 25 from 60.

ALBUQUERQUE — A longtime faculty professor at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology says the school has run aground, with faculty members leaving amid low morale and disjointed leadership. Former geophysics professor Richard Aster’ resignation letter says there’s been a steady erosion of collegiality at the Socorro school known as New Mexico Tech. According to the Albuquerque Journal, New Mexico Tech President Daniel Lopez, acknowledges there are morale issues. He blames state budget cuts resulting from the Great Recession. Lopez also says he’s taking steps to give faculty members more voice. The Associated Press

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u A car parked in the 3300 block of Cerrillos Road was vandalized between Friday and Sunday. Police wrote that someone broke the back window, damaged the front window and scratched the side windows. u Police responded to a report of shoplifting at Wal-Mart, 3251 Cerrillos Road, at 5 p.m. Saturday. u A man reported that someone broke his car window in the 3300 block of Cerrillos Road between 8 p.m. Saturday and 7:30 a.m. Sunday. u A burglar broke into a home in the 2800 block of Rufina Street and stole $200 in cash between 6:04 p.m. Friday and 1:45 p.m. Saturday. u City officers responded to an unattended death in the 4100 block of Cerrillos Road at 7:18 p.m. Sunday. u A thief grabbed a wallet from an unlocked car parked in the 100 block of W. Palace Avenue between 9:50 and 10:20 a.m. Monday. u A woman reported that someone entered her art studio in the 1800 block of Second Street and stole her laptop computer between 7:15 a.m. Friday and

12:30 p.m. Sunday. u City officers arrested Chase Smith, 24, 2210 Miguel Chavez Road, on a charge of battery against a household member after his boyfriend told police that Smith had “punched him on top of the head” in an argument between 10:08 and 11:08 p.m. Sunday in the 2200 block of Miguel Chavez Road. u A variety of tools owned by the city’s park division disappeared from the 1100 block of Siler Road between Jan. 18 and Jan. 20. u Jason Smith, 37, 523 Barela Lane, was arrested at 8:41 p.m. Sunday on a charge of shoplifting at Wal-Mart, 3251 Cerrillos Road. u A woman reported that someone stole the battery out of her vehicle while it was parked in the 300 block of Artist Road between 3 and 4 a.m. Friday. u A burglar entered a home in the 2900 block of Alamosa Drive between 3:06 and 3:17 a.m. Monday and stole an Xbox game console. u City officers arrested Sheldon Ontiveros, 31, 704 Katherine Ave., at 12:24 a.m. Monday on charges of aggravated battery against a household member and false

imprisonment. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Someone removed a screen and opened a window at a home on Vista Tesuque between Jan. 20 and Saturday. It’s unclear if anything was stolen.

Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use as the city renegotiates its contract with Redflex Traffic Systems.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 9869111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)

Funeral services and memorials JOHN L. MONTANO John L. Montano passed away suddenly on 1/23/14, just four months to the day before his 95th birthday. He was born on 5/23/1919 in Stanley, New Mexico to Jose Antonio Montano and Eloisa Baros Montano. He had six siblings (Ben, Joe, Henry, Melinda, Mary & Eva) who have all preceded him in death. Prissy, John’s faithful dog, also preceded him in death in 2010. John is survived by his daughter, Kay Johnson (Bill), his son, Tony Montano (Grace), along with his grandson, Shohn A. Montano (Sarah) and granddaughter, Cayleigh A. Montano. He is also survived by sister-in-law, Carmen Montano of Santa Fe, and many nieces and nephews including a special great nephew, Adrian Romero (Karla Kingsbury). John is also survived by two lifelong friends, Charlie P. Anaya and Fidel Sena both residents of Albuquerque. John served in the US Army from 2/42-11/45 during World War II. For a short time he worked for Zia Company in Los Alamos. He then transferred to the Los Alamos National Laboratories and worked in the machine shop there for 31 years before retiring. In honor of John’s wishes there will neither be a funeral mass nor a rosary. A viewing and visitation service will be held at 1:00 PM on 1/30/14 at McGee Memorial Chapel, 1320 Luisa St., Santa Fe, NM. Interment will follow at 3:00 PM with military honors at the Santa Fe National Cemetery with a reception to follow at McGee Memorial Chapel. In lieu of flowers, John requested that donations be made in his memory to Meals on Wheels or to your favorite pet charity. Honorary pallbearers are Charlie P. Anaya, Fidel Sena, Benny Montoya and Phil Casados.

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

RALPH A. ARMIJO

IN LOVING MEMORY

LARRY M. ROMERO 9/21/68 -- 1/28/06

Ralph passed away on January 23, 2014. He leaves this earth to join his daughter Sharon, his parents, Juan G. and Antonia, sisters, Lupita, Agnes & Theresa C. He leaves behind his wife, Balbie, grandson, Daniel and granddaughters, Shelby and Sierra. His family finds peace and comfort in knowing that Ralph prepared every day to join his Heavenly Father. Services for Ralph will be held at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Pecos. Visitation begins at 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 28, 2014, followed by a Rosary at 7:00 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 29, 2014.

Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

Those we love don’t go away, they walk beside us everyday. Love, Lynette, Kayla, Amanda & Demos

Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican. Call 986-3000

Obituary notices: Obituaries can be purchased through a funeral home or by calling our classifieds department at 986-3000, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you need to place a death notice after business hours, please call The New Mexican newsroom at 986-3035. Calendar listing: To get an item on the calendar, deliver your listing to The New Mexican newsroom at 202 E. Marcy St. or mail it to P.O. Box 2048, Santa Fe, 87504. You can send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com or send a fax to 986-9147. The deadline for listings is 5 p.m. Tuesday. Because of space limitations, listings cannot be guaranteed. Web site connection: Visit The New Mexican website at www.santafenewmexican.com and see the calendar and the directories for local events.

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OPINIONS E-XTRA

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

e-Voices Our Web readers speak out: Our View: Martinez focuses on jobs, education, Jan. 21 [Susana] Martinez focuses on Martinez. If she was “ focusing on jobs and children, she would fill the jobs she is able to fill that are vacant according to her own ‘Sunshine Portal.’ That would go a long way toward ending so much unemployment, poverty and hunger, maybe even take New Mexico off its honorary status as a Third World nation.” J.B.

Just because some government job remains un“ filled doesn’t mean that it should be filled. We should

examine those unfilled jobs and see if they should be eliminated instead of filled before we waste taxpayer dollars giving somebody’s lazy cousin a slacker government job. The purpose of government employment should be to provide beneficial services to the taxpayers, not just to serve as de facto welfare for the unemployed, impoverished and hungry.” P.K.

Reports: Dimas outspends rivals in mayor’s race, Jan. 23 Please remember that Bill Dimas took all of the “ $60,000 of public money but refuses to participate

in any public forums, because they are ‘rigged.’ How does he think he will have an open administration and serve us if he refuses to talk to us? Wow, what a concept!” E.P.

LOOKING IN: LUIS REYES

Tri-State rate hike: You have a voice

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n my 21 years as CEO of Kit Carson Electric Co-op, the goal of this cooperative has been to provide the best reliable, safe, electric service at the most affordable cost. Currently we are contesting Tri-State Generation and Transmission’s latest proposed rate increase (nine in 12 years or about 95 percent over that time frame) at the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission. Of your bill for electricity, approximately 70 percent is what Kit Carson is charged by Tri-State to supply us power. Since the merger with Plains Electric, our former electric supplier, in which Tri-State became our sole supplier of electricity, our rates have been raised eight times. Each time, Kit Carson Electric Co-op has protested the increase. Under the settlement approving the merger, the Public Regulation Commission, the New Mexico co-ops and Tri-State agreed that if three state co-ops protested a rate increase and the PRC found just cause in those protests, the PRC would suspend the rates and have a hearing to set rates that are just and reasonable. The state Legislature also enacted a law to allow for three co-ops to challenge rates. In the most recent rate increase proposed by Tri-State, three other co-ops joined the protest. They, along with Kit Carson, represent more than half the total co-op members in New Mexico. In

December 2013, the PRC suspended the rate increase for 2014 and ordered a hearing. Recent comments made by Tri-State representatives at a New Mexico co-op meeting are troubling and directly contradict representations made by the company to state co-ops and the PRC to get the merger they wanted approved. One of the primary purposes of the merger was to bring immediate rate relief, which it did, but also to allow our members to have stable rates, which we have not. Instead, we have been faced with a 95 percent-plus increase in the last 12 years. Another written promise concerned the three co-ops protesting a proposed rate increase, thus triggering the PRC’s limited regulatory jurisdiction and ability to set rates. Now, Tri-State says that it never had any intention of honoring that agreement and will fight to make sure the PRC cannot set rates. This, after Tri-State took tens of millions of dollars from state co-ops and members as the price for joining Tri-State. Tri-State also is suing the PRC in federal court, arguing the state statute is unconstitutional. This amounts to, at a minimum, badfaith bargaining and raised serious questions regarding the ability of rural co-ops members to place any faith in Tri-State. We can’t allow this to happen. We are asking the PRC to look at the validity of the

merger and determine whether the contracts have become voidable. Kit Carson officials estimate the proposed 2014 increase would raise member’s electric bills an average of about 7 percent to 10 percent. As of the end of November 2013, the protests filed by Kit Carson have saved members approximately $1.3 million, or about 7 percent. If the PRC reverses its prior decision that the protests are invalid, Tri-State’s rate increases would be effective immediately. I believe that Tri-State would immediately attempt to recover the lost revenue from 2013 in a new rate feature called the “regulatory charge,” which could double the increase. For the above-mentioned reasons, as well as our need to persuade Tri-State to increase Kit Carson’s percentage for renewable solar power production, we ask you to attend the PRC open meeting at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. Or, contact the PRC and ask commissioners to deny a Tri-State rehearing request and proceed to a rate hearing. Ask also that the PRC investigate the merger and contracts, because TriState has indicated it will not honor the agreement with the PRC, the state and the New Mexico co-ops. Make Tri-State accountable for its promises and actions. Luis Reyes is the CEO of the Kit Carson Electric Cooperative in Taos.

I am sorry, but I am not so terribly impressed by “ Bill Dimas. I have no connection to any of the cam-

paigns, but when a candidate doesn’t want to debate his rivals and take questions from the public, it raises a few question in the back of my mind. Who is he? What is he? Is he all signs and no brain?” P.H.

Bill Dimas does not feed into the politics of de“ bates. Why? They are all set up. You will not find the

working-class people at these forums. Why? Because the forums are 99 percent held … by special interests who have already committed to a certain candidate. The questions are all set up in order for a certain candidate to have all the ‘right’ answers. The room is filled with campaign volunteers rather than the community. Forums are nothing but a sham and don’t even address the real problems of Santa Fe. I mean, plastic bags, water in the river, trails, nightlife — in other words, non-issues? Maybe you have not attended forums before. I have attended them for years, and they do nothing to help choose a candidate. I go by their experience in the city of Santa Fe.” G.M.

Dozens rally in support of gun bill, Jan. 22 Here we go again, another attempt at ‘feel good’ “ legislation that in the end will do nothing to deter

criminals, stop criminal acts, keep innocent victims safe or reduce crime. So-called ‘gun show loophole’ laws have loopholes so big you could drive a truck through them. The largest is that there is nothing in the law that would prevent two people at a gun show agreeing to consummate a firearm sale off of the gunshow property. If I’m a private buyer and I see a gun for sale from a private seller, we just step across the street and conclude the sale in a parking lot. So, there you have it. The question becomes, ‘Why even consider or pass legislation that would have no effect whatsoever on the crime or criminal problem?’ Answer: There is no reason at all to consider or pass this bill.” M.G.

These tools are no more dangerous than your car. “ Should we limit the sale of vehicles from only licensed

dealers? What about giving your child a car? Shouldn’t we use the government to record and decide who deserves to own such a deadly weapon? What about pressure cookers and pocket knives? Surely, we can’t have Americans armed with such implements that they can so easily transfer to criminals!” O.M.

Owner: Sports store ‘swept away’ by drought, Jan. 24 I will miss the best sock collection in Santa Fe, a “ store where most of the employees knew my name,

and a place that would special order if they didn’t have a specific piece of gear for which I was looking. … See you on the ski hill!” C.N.

I’m very sorry to hear this. We need a diversity of outlets, and we need the public to enjoy active, musclepowered sports in the mountains. Climate change is hurting our snowfall along with cyclical drought. We need politicians to get serious about closing coal plants, helping China close all its coal plants and cutting back on our use of oil. Meanwhile, people can get very good service and products at REI and Alpine Sports.” T.R.

LOOKING IN: JEANETTE CASTILLO

Spending big to be part of Super Bowl

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ven in an age of hundreds of satellite and cable TV channels — not to mention Netflix and programming on our smart phones and tablets — the Super Bowl is the one television event that is guaranteed to reach a majority of the American population. If you are advertising a company or a social cause, the NFL’s championship is guaranteed to deliver eyes and buzz. But, just having a commercial seen by millions of Americans is no guarantee of luring customers. In fact, analysis by the advertising research group Communicus suggests Super Bowl ads that will cost at least $4 million for 30 seconds — not to mention additional millions paid for celebrity endorsements and production costs — are not terribly effective. They don’t generate a blip in sales. Even so, advertisers still rush to write big checks to purchase these brief moments of airtime for one reason: to be part of an event that is uniquely American, bringing together every aspect of U.S. culture. Every year, the broadcast features a military flyby and color guard, a self-consciously pop culture halftime show, and of course, the celebration of capitalism that is Super Bowl advertising, in which the very best creative minds in the industry try to

keep us from getting up and heading into the kitchen for more nachos. The commercials feature talking animals, love stories, action-adventure, comedy (always) and Clydesdales (also always). The commercials are mini-narratives that reflect themes currently resonating in our collective psyche. Whether or not it is a flattering reflection is up for debate on an ad-by-ad basis and will be analyzed by the usual suspects. Some ads arguably contribute to an unflattering reflection (for example, see almost every GoDaddy.com ad). Still, for better or for worse, to advertise on the Super Bowl is to associate your brand with the American brand. Another reason these expensive ads sell out months before the event is that for those companies who buy airtime on Super Bowl Sunday, there is a bigger venue and a longer game. For controversial ads, there is also the potential for free replays on news programs, blogs and social media. In fact, critical successes or abject critical failures both hold the promise of making an ad go viral, with YouTube standing by to replay it as often as necessary. Make a big splash during the Super Bowl, and your ad is

guaranteed to have a shelf life that goes far beyond the airtime purchased. According to the study by Communicus, last year’s ads worked best for new product introduction, with Beck Sapphire’s “Singing Goldfish” commercial leading the way. And when you think about it, this makes sense. After all, many viewers are already sipping Budweiser products and crunching Doritos while watching homemade Doritos ads during the game. For new advertisers, the Super Bowl is a chance to run with the big dogs and establish their companies as successful enough to be players in that other gameday matchup, between advertisers and the wallets of football fans across America and around the world. In the end, companies are willing to pay exorbitant fees to get the American audience to associate their brands with the biggest cultural event of the year. They gain credibility just being seen during the same broadcast as such advertising icons as the Budweiser Clydesdales — which can have more long-term significance than whether we run out the next day to buy the latest gadget, or who won the game. Jeanette Castillo is an assistant professor of telecommunications at Ball State University.

LOOKING IN: FRANCIS P. PAGE

Most read stories on www.santafenewmexican.com 1. Police investigating a second suspicious death 2. Police say Santa Fe man’s death was homicide 3. Massive pileup on I-94 kills 3, more than 20 hurt 4. Chefs bring taste of Philadelphia to Santa Fe with Bambini’s food truck 5. Omaha: Behind the signal-calling 6. Owner: Sports store ‘swept away’ by drought 7. Today’s New Mexican, Jan. 26, 2014 8. State police draws scrutiny for investigating its own 9. Meow Wolf contributor remembered for giving nature 10. Santa Fe woman videos would-be burglar

About Looking In Letters to the editor and My Views are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Looking In presents an opportunity for people who read The Santa Fe New Mexican but who live outside its reporting area to comment about things happening in our city and state. Please send such My Views and Letters to letters@sfnewmexican.com.

Bregman needs to apologize to Democrats

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am disappointed and appalled at the remarks made by Democratic Party Chairman Sam Bregman against Democrat Sen. John Arthur Smith of Deming. Bregman basically referred to Sen. Smith as a Democrat in name only and said Smith should change party affiliation. Bregman forgets that the Democratic Party consists of a large tent with numerous opinions and ideas, ranging from extreme liberalism to more conservative ideologies. All must be respected. Many Democrats like myself consider themselves to be “JFK Democrats” or “Blue Dog Democrats.” We are individuals who are conservative on financial issues and are moderate to liberal on social issues. Bregman bashed Smith because the senator has not allowed a vote on a proposed constitutional amendment to take

money out of the state’s approximately $12 billion permanent fund to pay for early childhood education. Smith is being fiscally sound. Smith also has taken more conservative positions on this year’s proposal to raise the minimum wage to $10 an hour statewide because of its effect on rural communities. Earlier, he even sponsored one of Gov. Susana Martinez’s bills to hold thirdgraders back who can’t read. While increasing the minimum wage might be needed, the increases the Democratic Party are pushing are too extreme. They will lead to inflation and cost jobs. I am a Democrat because I support the “working man.” If there are no jobs, then this hurts the country and state on a whole and makes the income gap wider, with more people on welfare. This would lead

to a higher national debt, which is not good for the country. Minimum-wage increases need to be carried out wisely so jobs can be maintained. Holding third-graders back who can’t read is the right thing to do. The only way our children will get ahead is to have a basic level of education. If our children can’t read, then we are setting them up for failure. What’s more, it is a shame that some legislators want to reduce the graduation requirements for our children. That is just wrong. Bregman should remember that he represents the entire Democratic Party of New Mexico, not just the liberal wing of the party. Mr. Bregman, you not only owe Sen. Smith an apology, but also the rest of the party members. Francis P. Page is a Democrat who resides in Albuquerque.


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner

COMMENTARY: LAWRENCE J. KORB AND DOUG BROOKS

Try a Q&A for State of the Union T his Tuesday, a joint session of Congress and those Americans who bother to tune in will be subjected to a presidential infomercial. The State of the Union address, required by the Constitution, once launched government policies and clarified national goals. Today, the event is little more than a pep rally with obligatory standing ovations. There is no proscribed method in the Constitution for how the State of the Union should be delivered to Congress. Until Woodrow Wilson chose to deliver an address in person in 1913, presidents usually just sent letters to Capitol Hill at the beginning of the year. Why not convert this relic into a useful tool that would invigorate American democracy and engage a disengaged electorate? Let’s upgrade the State of the Union to something like “prime minister’s questions:” In parliamentary systems, this is when a prime minister responds in person to elected representatives, usually in a live broadcast. By adopting this format, President Barack Obama could stage a captivating event that the American electorate would find far more interesting. What passes for our political dialogue — surrogates and talking heads — encourages little more than bluster. Direct questions to the president by elected representatives could do much to rekindle our democratic spirit. This wouldn’t need to be a circus: Disrupting the dignity of the event with flippant or ridiculous comments could lead to excoriation, as we have seen in the past. Remember that after he shouted “You lie” during Obama’s 2009 State of the Union, Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., was rebuked by the House and apologized. In 2010, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was criticized after mouthing “Not true” during the address. There have been stinging repercussions when audience members have strayed outside the bounds of decorum, lead-

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Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Second PAC is not a charm

O ing us to believe that propriety would abide in a Q&A. The president could open the State of the Union with a statement of no more than 10 minutes that, as before, would recognize national accomplishments of the past year and outline new initiatives. Then, the floor would be turned over to the vice president, in his role as president of the Senate, and the speaker of the House or the ranking minority leader. They would moderate together. Party leaders could select up to seven of their representatives to ask prepared questions, similar to the town hall format of some presidential debates. Every representative would be allowed to submit questions to party leaders, and some questions might be chosen at random. The result: a candid discussion between the executive and legislative branches. Lawmakers would be able to raise their constituents’ concerns to the level of the presidency — to truly and visibly represent the people. Representatives would be in the spotlight, and their behavior could have the same positive or negative consequences that the president faces after a State of the Union address. Insightful, valid ques-

tions could build a representative’s political credibility, while those less deserving of the office might expose his or her buffoonery. There is no shortage of issues that could and should be addressed by members of both parties and the president. For example, Obama might be asked how long he intends to leave troops in Afghanistan if he can reach a security agreement with Hamid Karzai, what he will do if the Geneva conference fails to end the bloodshed in Syria or what sanctions he is relaxing on Iran as part of the deal to limit its nuclear enrichment program. Every newsworthy topic — National Security Agency surveillance, the Keystone pipeline, fracking, immigration law, whether enough “young invincibles” are signing up for health care, the prospect of future government shutdowns — would be fair game. Changing the State of the Union is risky, but Obama, at least, has the oratory skills and confidence to pull it off and, most important, set a precedent. Done well, the event could inspire the public and energize — or in Obama’s case, re-energize — a presidency.

Is it too much to ask that, at least once a year, we move beyond sound bites to something more substantive and, well, democratic? The president is not royalty, and there are precious few times when he must face his political opposition in an open forum. And while the State of the Union’s current format makes for great inside-the-Beltway entertainment — and even for great drinking games — for the rest of the country, the speech is little more than an opportunity to watch basketball or catch up on Breaking Bad. A new State of the Union could reconnect a disengaged electorate to its government — and celebrate our representative democracy. Lawrence J. Korb is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and an adjunct professor of security studies at Georgetown University. Doug Brooks is president emeritus of the International Stability Operations Association and serves on the board of directors of the AfghanAmerican Chamber of Commerce. Authors’ emails: lkorbamericanprogress.org; doug.brookshoosier84.com.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

City Council isn’t prepared for plastic bag ban

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he City Council should have done its homework before imposing the plastic bag ban on citizens. It appears councilors didn’t take into account potential legal issues, nor did they take into account the fiscal impact the law would have on businesses, as well as city residents. They bought into the idea because a few people complained of “seeing plastic bags flying all over the city and getting stuck on trees and fences,” which I’ve yet to see. I truly believe that if the governing body is intent on passing a law like this, councilors should at least place it on the ballot for the voters to decide in the upcoming election. Does anyone remember when stores used only paper bags? The City Council at the time banned paper bags because of all the trees that were being destroyed. Now we’re going backwards. C. Martinez

Santa Fe

Time for change Most Americans see 2013 as much less than a banner year and look forward to 2014 with optimism for filling the American dream. Where is America on the international scene? Where are the American citizens

of high moral fiber, the John Waynes of America? America at one time had the best educational system in the world. Our national debt is so enormous that it would take every working American paying $123,000 to clear this debit. America has become a cesspool of immorality, with our leaders looking at special interest groups to seek re-election instead of standing on principles that made this country strong. America, much like Rome in it glory days, is decaying from within. Americans have forgotten the God that made us strong, and have elected to divorce ourselves from anything godly and good. If America does not wake up and return to the God of our forefathers, we will harvest the consequences of our decision. It is not too late. Make the changes so urgently demanded, or suffer the consequences. Ted Peperas

Santa Fe

A valuable relationship I was honored to be Democratic Party state chairman and am surprised that some think there’s something sinister about Javier Gonzales having occupied the position.

MAllARD FillMORE

Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell

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.

The truth is that herding cats is far less demanding that leading Democrats. New Mexico’s Democrats have enormous ethnic, political and cultural diversity. Like Santa Feans, each expects rapid responsiveness to his/her needs and concerns. You are daily taught lessons in negotiating unity — the most essential skill our mayor must have. The state chair has the opportunity to work closely on the campaigns, and then the programs, of a very large portion of New Mexico state and federal senators and representatives. There are very few items in the Santa Fe city budget that do not require state or federal assistance. The state chair becomes a trusted collaborator with the president and other national officials. How can this relationship not pay years of dividends for our town? Earl Potter

Santa Fe

nce again, supporters of Javier Gonzales could end up hurting the mayoral candidate more than the folks running against him. Gonzales, who is taking $60,000 in taxpayer money to finance his campaign, now has two political action committees that have committed to supporting his candidacy for mayor of Santa Fe. Should these PACs choose, they could inject thousands of additional dollars into the three-way race for mayor — exactly what public financing is supposed to ensure does not happen. We have heard the reason why these groups exist: to be ready to stand up should other PACs show up. The PACs also are committed to supporting a progressive vision for Santa Fe. They don’t want their favored candidate to be unarmed. So far, they have all the weapons. (Progressive Santa Fe and Santa Fe Working Families are the two groups. To date, Progressive Santa Fe has spent $1,925 on research to a D.C. firm and $782 to BioGeo Creations of Albuquerque for website development. Santa Fe Working Families has zero dollars on hand at its most recent filing.) No other candidate PACs have registered except those supporting Gonzales — and to be clear, the PACs are legal and have a right to join in the debate. The question for voters is whether, after committing their tax dollars to keep money out, they want outside groups in the city race. Gonzales has been clear in disavowing a connection to the PACs. As he told reporter Daniel J. Chacón last week: “What they do, their participation in this, is not my concern. My concern is us taking our message directly out to the voters.” Gonzales needs to repeat his message: He does not want or need these groups. Without the buzz of too much money, Santa Fe residents have the opportunity to talk to all three would-be mayors about not just their visions for the future of Santa Fe, but about what in their characters makes them ready and able to lead. It’s a personal, one-on-one campaign. Because despite all the noise — whether about finance violations, endorsements, outside PACs or outlandish supporters — essential conversations are taking place across town. For that, the candidates deserve praise. The focus on the streets is on issues and character, where it should be. We have seen City Councilor Patti Bushee out knocking on doors, watched City Councilor Bill Dimas and his supporters blanket neighborhoods and observed Gonzales meeting with voters, one house party at a time. If voters aren’t asking questions and demanding answers, they have no one to blame but themselves. Naturally, we believe voters are better served if all three candidates speak out at public forums. Gonzales is there. Bushee is there. Only Dimas has declined to debate his opponents. All of that effort would be wasted if big money from the outside takes over. PACs can register. PACs can exist. But let’s trust that they don’t start advertising, sending out mailers or otherwise dumping money into a race that doesn’t need questionable spending. Such actions would be hard to forgive.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Jan. 28, 1914: Mountainair — The newly organized Anti-Horse Thief association is now at work on its first job. Women may be contributing members and are as much entitled to the same protection as the male contingency. Mrs. Frances Gentry, a contributing member, reported that her house on her homestead had been burglarized and the antis got busy. They think they have already spotted the thief but are hunting more evidence before making complaint. Jan. 28, 1964: Albuquerque — In Albuquerque is a bridge from nowhere to nowhere spanning the Rio Grande. Eventually the bridge will be connected at either end to Interstate 40 (U.S. 66). The reason for the bridge sitting all alone is that the contract for the bridge construction was let before the contract for the new highway. The bridge is now being used by rabbis and other animals to cross the river. Jan. 28, 1989: Los Angeles — A gunman’s rampage in a schoolyard in Stockton, Calif., and a wave of gang killings have dramatically raised the chances for laws banning the sale of military assault guns to the public. Bills to outlaw the manufacture, sale of possession of a variety of rifles and pistols are to be introduced Monday in both houses of the California Legislature.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

LOCAL BUSINESS Couple’s new apparel and accessories company is distinctly New Mexican

The clothing prices range from $60 to $295 at dorsey helman.com, which is expected to go live Feb. 14. And even the fashion models are New Mexicans.

Made in New Mexico

COURTESY PHOTOS

The New Mexican

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anta Fe newlyweds Diane Dorsey and Ronald Helman are embarking this month on another new venture: an online apparel and accessories company. Their luxury, casual clothing will be available on their website, dorseyhelman.com, which is expected to go live Feb. 14. By design, this is a mostly New Mexico operation. The pieces in the clothing collection are sewn in Albuquerque by a women’s collaborative. The minimalist palette and styles are inspired by New Mexico artists such as Agnes Martin, whose former home is near the couple’s studio in Galisteo. The tote bags are made in Silver City by a New Mexico saddle-maker. The coffee mugs are fired here by a New Mexico potter. And Dorsey herself makes one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry using beads from around the world. Yes, the scarves are silk-screened in New York — but they’re hemmed in New Mexico. Even the fashion models are New Mexicans, as are many of those working on the business side of the operation. Nothing they sell is made in China. Dorsey and Helman say they have invested their life savings in their online endeavor. “I wanted to take a risk and make something by myself,” Dorsey said. Helman, 62, is a life coach and jazz trum-

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ince The New Mexican has published stories about business closings the last three Saturdays — Baillio’s, Physicians Plaza Surgery Center and Santa Fe Mountain Sports — it is nice to retrieve some new business announcements from my in box. After 10 years of brewing cider as a hobby, the owners of Santa Fe Cider Works are quickly completing their manufacturing facility at 4363 Center Place, Unit 9. “Santa Fe Cider Works will be New Mexico’s first locally made, hand-crafted hard cider to be released on the market,” said Michelle Vignery, who owns the Bruce business with Jordana “Jordy” Dralle. Krasnow “This is not your typical massBusiness Matters produced bubbly product. We press all of our apples on site and really take the time to work with each batch individually. We use three or more varieties of apples in every press and an authentic English cider yeast in order to create a complex yet balanced product.” The flagship beverage, dubbed “The Cider Different,” finishes out at 7 percent alcohol by volume and is served in 750 ml bottles, said Vignery, a former public schoolteacher. Santa Fe Cider Works will host open house evenings and mini tours at its processing plant on the following dates, and bottles will be available for sale at $14. u 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15 u 4 to 7 p.m. on the following Fridays, Feb. 21, Feb. 28 and March 7. They also will offer cider by the glass at both Second Street Brewery locations starting Valentine’s Day and will sell it at restaurants and liquor stores around Santa Fe. For more information, go to www. santafeciderworks.org. uuu

Diane Dorsey and Ronald Helman, far right, are embarking this month on an online apparel and accessories company.

By Anne Constable

Cider brewery among new businesses

peter who has lived in Santa Fe since 1997. Dorsey, 50, moved here from Columbus, Ohio, five years ago and has a background in arts education. Their clothing collection includes 27 pieces. There are T-shirts, plain or with original graphics, made in cotton modal; simple dresses with a mandarin collar and bell sleeves that can be worn with leggings or heels in a viscose/lycra fabric; and French terry sweatpants. The flowy fabrics, including some with tone-on-tone dots, are custom-made in Los Angeles by Texollini. The pieces come in soft blue (stormy weather), pink (lotus) and off-white (birch), as well as green (kelp), beige (prairie sand), rich brown (peat moss) and black. All items are machine washable. They are made in sizes 1-5, which corresponds to extra small to extra large. All will be sold primarily through the online store. Dorsey and Helman will have no brickand-mortar retail outlet, although Santa Fe Dry Goods, Workshop, the spa at the Inn and Spa at Loretto, as well as Substance in Taos have placed orders for some of the pieces. The clothing prices range from $60 to $295. Helman describes them as the kind of things for “relaxing at home or going out with friends.” The tote bags in butter suede come in both a large ($375) and a purse size ($325). They’re sewn by J.S. Saddlery in Silver City. Each

In brief

Open house at Santa Fe Clay Santa Fe Clay, 545 Camino de la Familia, is hosting an open house for its new addition from 1 to 6 p.m. Feb. 14. The new addition was partially funded by the community through a Kickstarter campaign, which raised some $57,000, said owner Ava Leodas. “This addition will house a new classroom and a new kiln room for our studio. It will also create a beautiful new entrance just off the Railyard Plaza near the water tower,” Leodas said in a news release. For more information, call 984-1122 or go to www.santafeclay.com.

features a mark of a New Mexico bird petroglyph — which is laser-branded on the bags. The same image is used in sterling silver and 18-karat gold pendants. All 1,600 pieces in the clothing collection were sewn at the Southwest Creations Collaborative, an Albuquerque contractmanufacturing business founded by Susan Matteucci, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary. Organized as a nonprofit, it also sews for Sense, a local resort wear company, and makes the kimonos used at Ten Thousand Waves, among other things. The nonprofit helps its 40 employees, many of them immigrant women, to earn GEDs, gain citizenship and offers paid time off for them to go to their children’s schools. On-site child care is available for 25 cents an hour. The family-friendly company also has a grant from the Kellogg Foundation to offer workshops in Albuquerque public schools on what families need to do for their children to be successful and graduate from high school. Dorsey and Helman have “done everything they said they would,” according to Matteucci. “It’s the kind of start-up business we love.” Reorders will depend on online sales, Helman said. On the Feb. 1-2 weekend, the couple is holding an open house from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at their Galisteo studio, 5614B N.M. 41, when items will be 20 percent off.

Raven Hicks has opened Real Martial Arts at 932 Railfan Road, in the Baca Street section of the Railyard. Hicks has been a student of the martial arts since 1981 and teaching martial arts since 1988. He was a Lieutenant in the Canadian Armed Forces and a police officer for the Metropolitan Toronto Police Service. “Real Martial Arts is now offering classes in personal protection and modern combatives. REAL is the only school of its kind in Santa Fe. The program focuses on reality based combat skills so students learn how to defend themselves and their loved ones in a multitude of situations.” Classes are offered at 7 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings. For more information, contact Hicks at raveneagle1212@gmail.com or 913-0199. uuu

The city of Santa Fe’s GRT gravy train seems to have rolled off the tracks in November. Since the new fiscal year started July 1, gross receipts tax revenue had not only bested the year before but had returned to pre-recession levels. The buoyant spending gave the city a $2.9 million increase over the 2012-13 fiscal year. But November gross receipts tax revenue was down 2.27 percent — a loss of $151,544 and the first negative month so far of the 2013-14 fiscal year. The numbers were reported last week. The entire shortfall looks like it can be attributed to one sector — construction, which tumbled 29 percent, a loss of $216,000. So with seven months down, the GRT increase over a year ago is now 5.5 percent, which still gives the city an additional $2.7 million. The biggest spending month in Santa Fe — December — will be reported right around Valentine’s Day. And there is little doubt that with a shorter legislative session and a vanishing ski season, January and February might also show declines. Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com.

Business Calendar Jan. 29: Attracting Your Perfect Customer by Alan Hickman, Perfect Customers Inc., 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Where: Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce: 1644 St. Michael’s Drive. Cost: Chamber Members no-charge, nonmembers $10 Register online at www.santafechamber. com/events. Bring your lunch at 11:45 and be ready to start at noon — the chamber will provide beverages.

Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@sfnewmexican.com.

Santa Fe Brewing Co. in Big Easy Smith’s aids The Food Depot A little bit of Santa Fe is heading to New Orleans. According to NOLA.com, the website of the New Orleans Times-Picayune, Santa Fe Brewing Co. will begin selling its specialty beer in Louisiana at the end of the month. “New Orleans will gain another well-respected craft beer when Santa Fe Brewing Co. arrives in late January. The brewery, founded in 1988, is the oldest in New Mexico.” Brian Lock, the brewery’s president, said in the article: “The craft beer movement is taking hold over the country including New Orleans. I think the sooner we can establish ourselves as a premium craft throughout the country the better off we will be in the long run.” To read more on the story, go to www.nola. com/drink/index.ssf/2014/01/santa_fe_ brewing_co_comes_to_n.html

Smith’s Food & Drug Stores has contributed $13,260 to The Food Depot in Santa Fe as a result of customer support for the company’s recent in-store campaign, Bringing Hope to the Table for the Holidays. One hundred percent of check-stand contributions received were converted to Smith’s gift cards for local food banks to purchase their most-needed items. Bringing Hope to the Table for the Holidays raised in total $156,000 for 39 food banks and pantries throughout Smith’s seven states of operation. In addition to this seasonal support, each day Smith’s stores donate nutritious but unsellable foods to local food banks. “We greatly appreciate the work of our local food banks and their network partners to provide food for so many in need,” said Marsha

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, bkrasnow@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

Gilford, Smith’s vice president of public affairs, “and we are committed to helping them with as many resources as we are able to use.”

La Fonda in Four Diamond club It’s hard to walk through downtown Santa Fe and not stumble across a AAA-rated Four Diamond Hotel. The distinction is the highest given by the travel group and is based on the weekly inspections from 1,200 hotels and restaurants across the United States and Canada. Many Santa Fe hotels have been honored for several years, but new in 2013 is La Fonda, which just underwent a renovation project to give many of the historic rooms new bathrooms and more up-to-date amenities, a major consideration in the ranking. The New Mexican

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Weather B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

WINTER OLYMPICS

Russian activist spotlights corruption By Nataliya Vasilyeva The Associated Press

SOCHI, Russia — An interactive website launched Monday by anticorruption activist Alexei Navalny paints a vivid picture of the suspected cost overruns and conflicts of interest at the Sochi Winter Olympics. Russia has spent about $51 billion to deliver the Sochi Olympics, which run Feb. 7-23, makAlexei ing them the most Navalny expensive games ever, even though as a winter event it hosts many fewer athletes than summer games do. Navalny claims that Russia spent twice as much as necessary to build at least 10 of the Olympic venues — including the Bolshoi Ice Palace, the Fisht Stadium for the opening/closing ceremonies and the speedskating arena. Allegations of corruption have dogged preparations for the Sochi Games for years, as reported by The Associated Press and others. Navalny’s new website — Sochi.FBK.info — combines data gathered during his own investigations along with media reports and other activists’ analysis. Using colorful graphics, the website makes a wide range of data accessible in English and Russian. “Athletes are not the only people who compete in Sochi,” Navalny, who finished a strong second in Moscow’s mayoral election last year, wrote on the website. “Officials and businessmen also took part in the games and turned them into a source of income.”

Serious business: What happens if Brazil doesn’t win the World Cup? Page B-3

B

UNM MEN’S BASKETBALL

Without Kirk, Lobos may turn to Williams

By Will Webber

The New Mexican

Championship teams just find a way. For The University of New Mexico men’s basketball team, the jury is still out on whether it can complete a three-peat in the Mountain West Conference, but there’s little doubt that the Lobos have proven to have a degree of toughness when leaving the friendly confines. Heading into Tuesday night’s nationally televised game at Utah State (12-7, 2-5), New Mexico (15-4, 6-1) sports a 5-0 record in games played on an opponent’s home floor, and is

8-2 in outings outside of Albuquerque. That includes a perfect 4-0 record in MWC games, making it the best start in league play on the road in 30 years. Tuesday’s game is perhaps the biggest challenge to date. Aside from the fact that Utah State’s Dee Glen Smith Spectrum is one of the more daunting places for opponents to play — the Aggies are 234-24 at home under current head coach Stew Morrill — the Lobos must do so without the services of starting center Alex Kirk. The 7-footer missed Saturday’s win at Colo-

University of New Mexico guard Kendall Williams, left, is having a strong encore season after winning the Mountain West Conference’s Player of the Year award as a junior. His scoring is up, and he leads the MWC in steals and assists. He’ll lead the Lobos into Tuesday night’s nationally televised game at Utah State.

Please see LoBos, Page B-3

ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

NFL SUPER BOWL XLVIII

Let it ride

Football betting more popular than ever in Vegas

Please see socHi, Page B-4

AUSTRALIAN OPEN

Wawrinka still stunned he won Open By Jocelyn Gecker

The Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia — After winning the Australian Open, some players have jumped for joy into the Yarra River. Many pop champagne and indulge in late-night celebrations. Most set new goals and start thinking about the Grand Slams they want to win next. This was not the Stan case for Stan WawWawrinka rinka, who woke up Monday morning groggy but sober, and still stunned that he had beaten Rafael Nadal to win his first Grand Slam title. “I still don’t completely realize what’s happened. It still feels like a dream,” Wawrinka told reporters, squinting in the sunlight for the winner’s traditional day-after photo shoot on the banks of the river beside Melbourne Park. Handed a bottle of champagne and told to spray it in celebration, he politely obliged and then put it down. Wawrinka was and still is pessimistic about denting the dominance of Roger Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray — the so-called Big Four who accounted for all but one of the previous 35 major titles. “I really never dreamed about winning a Grand Slam,” he said, clutching his trophy. “I don’t know about doing it again. But I did it, and no one can take it back.” The morning after the biggest day of his career, Wawrinka was more subdued than overjoyed. His night went late but was tame. There was no big dinner or any food at all, no partying, just spending time with his

Please see oPen, Page B-3

Dapo Adebgoyega rides a lift after adjusting lights Monday on radio row at the Super Bowl XLVIII media center in New York. The NFL’s championship game between the Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks is scheduled for Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J. MATT SLOCUM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

seen crowds like we’ve never seen before.” Professional gamblers and oddsmakers alike attribute the rise in wagering to the increase in LAS VEGAS televised games, and the increasing ubiquity of ith the Super Bowl approaching, fans sports analysis. are talking trash, buying snacks, and, Amateur gamblers are more likely to bet on a more than ever, placing bets. game they can watch, because the emotional jourFans bet an unprecedented $99 milney is part of the fun. lion on the Super Bowl last year, and the Nevada The proliferation of sports podcasts, blogs and gambling industry expects to break the record websites, as well as the debates that rage on social again Sunday, barring a snowstorm. Nevada sportsbooks collected record amounts of football wagers media, have all made fans feel more educated and confident in their opinions, according to Kornegay, during the tail end of 2013. who spent last week furiously working with four All of this is changing the role of the humble sportsbook, which casinos used to see as a lowPlease see Bets, Page B-4 profit perk that kept customers from going next door. inside “It’s not just an amenity anymore; it’s not just icing on the cake, it’s part of the meal,” said Jay u NFL backs push for youth concussion protocols. Page B-4 Kornegay, who runs the LVH sportsbook. “We’ve By Hannah Dreier

The Associated Press

w

A stage structure, part of Super Bowl activities on New York’s Times Square, comes together Monday. Up to 13 blocks of Broadway in the heart of Manhattan will close to traffic for four days so the NFL can host a Super Bowl festival called Super Bowl Boulevard, according to the NFL. CRAIG RUTTLE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Super Bowl megastars, All-Pros — and everyone else By Barry Wilner

The Associated Press

JERSEY CITY, N.J. — The names are hardly as familiar as Peyton Manning and Richard Sherman. Yet, for all the megastars and All-Pros in this Super Bowl, there are guys like Jermaine Kearse and Paris Lenon. Like Michael Robinson and Terrance Knighton. Malcolm Smith and Manny Ramirez. Players who have gone from pretty much nowhere on the NFL landscape to the doorstep of a championship. Perhaps no one is more grateful for the opportunity to grab a ring than these men. Some are veterans who fit the term journeymen. Some are youngsters who went in late rounds of the draft — or were ignored altogether. All recognize they will play some

Coach John Fox praises the work

I feel like I’m a natural leader; I think wherever I am, ethic of Knighton, who was buried people just gravitate towards me, and with that it requires a deep on the depth chart in training camp after being signed as a free responsibility to help other guys and bring them along.” Terrance Knighton, Broncos defensive tackle

sort of role in Sunday’s championship game. Some might even sneak into a starring part, the way running back Tim Smith did in 1987 or cornerback Larry Brown did in 1996. “You never know who it might be,” said Knighton, the massive defensive tackle coming off a sensational AFC championship game performance. Knighton could be the poster child for players who graduate from the depths of the NFL — “I did my four years in Jacksonville,” he said — to

Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com

the top of the pro football ladder. He’s been practically unblockable in the last few weeks, rising from obscurity to recognizability as a leader of an improving defense. “Well I think that’s naturally going to happen when you’re in the middle of the defense and you’re the anchor of the defense,” the 335-pound Knighton said. “I feel like I’m a natural leader; I think wherever I am, people just gravitate towards me, and with that it requires a responsibility to help other guys and bring them along.”

agent away from the Jaguars. “I’ll always put it on players,” Fox said of Knighton’s emergence from a who’s-he to a watch-out-for-him performer. “As a coach, we spend a lot of time trying to define players. Basically, our approach is, ‘Don’t let us define you. You are going to be held accountable. It is going to be based on your performance, where you are on the depth chart, how much you are going to play. All of those things, you earn or don’t earn.’ “Really, everything Terrance has done, he did [himself].” Ditto for Seattle’s Kearse, who played at the University of Washing-

Please see staRs, Page B-4

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

thunder 111, Hawks 109

BASKETBALL basketball

Nba eastern Conference

atlantic Toronto Brooklyn New York Boston Philadelphia southeast Miami Atlanta Washington Charlotte Orlando Central Indiana Chicago Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee

W 23 20 17 15 14 W 32 23 21 19 12 W 34 22 17 16 8

l 21 23 27 31 31 l 12 21 22 27 33 l 9 22 27 28 36

Pct .523 .465 .386 .326 .311 Pct .727 .523 .488 .413 .267 Pct .791 .500 .386 .364 .182

Western Conference

Gb — 21/2 6 9 91/2 Gb — 9 101/2 14 201/2 Gb — 121/2 171/2 181/2 261/2

southwest W l Pct Gb San Antonio 33 11 .750 — Houston 29 17 .630 5 Dallas 26 20 .565 8 Memphis 22 20 .524 10 New Orleans 18 25 .419 141/2 Northwest W l Pct Gb Oklahoma City 36 10 .783 — Portland 33 12 .733 21/2 Denver 22 21 .512 121/2 Minnesota 22 22 .500 13 Utah 16 29 .356 191/2 Pacific W l Pct Gb L.A. Clippers 32 15 .681 — Golden State 27 18 .600 4 Phoenix 26 18 .591 41/2 L.A. Lakers 16 29 .356 15 Sacramento 15 29 .341 151/2 Monday’s Games Phoenix 124, Philadelphia 113 Toronto 104, Brooklyn 103 Minnesota 95, Chicago 86 Oklahoma City 111, Atlanta 109 L.A. Clippers 114, Milwaukee 86 Utah 106, Sacramento 99 sunday’s Games Miami 113, San Antonio 101 New York 110, L.A. Lakers 103 New Orleans 100, Orlando 92 Phoenix 99, Cleveland 90 Brooklyn 85, Boston 79 Dallas 116, Detroit 106 Golden State 103, Portland 88 Denver 125, Sacramento 117 tuesday’s Games New Orleans at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Orlando at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Boston at New York, 5:30 p.m. San Antonio at Houston, 6 p.m. Memphis at Portland, 8 p.m. Washington at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m.

Nba CaleNdar

Feb. 14-16 — All-Star weekend, New Orleans. Feb. 20 — Trade deadline, 1 p.m. April 16 — Last day of regular season. April 19 — Playoffs begin. May 20 — Draft lottery. June 5 — NBA Finals begin. June 16 — Draft early entry withdrawal deadline. June 26 — NBA draft.

Nba boxsCores Monday suns 124, 76ers 113

PHoeNIx (124) Tucker 5-11 5-6 15, Frye 1-6 4-4 7, Plumlee 6-15 2-4 14, Dragic 9-13 3-5 24, Green 10-12 6-7 30, Mark.Morris 5-7 3-3 13, Len 2-2 2-2 6, Marc.Morris 1-3 2-2 4, Barbosa 3-5 2-2 9, Smith 1-6 0-0 2. Totals 43-80 29-35 124. PHIladelPHIa (113) Turner 7-12 6-6 21, Young 9-15 2-3 21, Hawes 6-12 4-4 18, Carter-Williams 7-19 7-7 22, Anderson 3-9 2-2 9, Thompson 4-5 0-0 10, Allen 1-2 0-0 2, Wroten 1-6 4-4 6, Williams 1-4 0-0 2, Dedmon 1-3 0-0 2, Brown 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-87 25-26 113. Phoenix 40 22 33 29—124 Philadelphia 26 28 28 31—113 3-Point Goals—Phoenix 9-20 (Green 4-5, Dragic 3-4, Barbosa 1-2, Frye 1-6, Tucker 0-1, Marc.Morris 0-1, Mark.Morris 0-1), Philadelphia 8-20 (Thompson 2-2, Hawes 2-4, Turner 1-1, Anderson 1-3, Carter-Williams 1-3, Young 1-4, Wroten 0-1, Williams 0-1, Allen 0-1). Fouled Out—Hawes. Rebounds—Phoenix 46 (Plumlee 13), Philadelphia 45 (Hawes 9). Assists—Phoenix 25 (Dragic 7), Philadelphia 23 (Carter-Williams 11). Total Fouls—Phoenix 25, Philadelphia 27. Technicals—Turner, Young, Philadelphia defensive three second, Philadelphia Bench. A—10,793.

raptors 104, Nets 103

toroNto (104) Novak 0-5 0-0 0, A.Johnson 2-5 4-4 8, Valanciunas 9-14 2-2 20, Lowry 10-18 7-8 31, Ross 3-9 2-4 10, Salmons 2-6 2-2 6, Patterson 6-11 2-2 15, Hayes 1-2 0-2 2, Vasquez 4-9 2-2 12. Totals 37-79 21-26 104. brooklYN (103) J.Johnson 3-10 5-5 12, Pierce 10-16 6-7 33, Garnett 3-8 0-0 6, Livingston 3-4 3-4 9, Anderson 2-5 0-0 5, Williams 4-11 0-2 9, Blatche 8-11 4-4 20, Kirilenko 2-5 0-0 4, Teletovic 2-6 0-0 5, Terry 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-77 18-22 103. toronto 25 32 25 22—104 brooklyn 26 30 25 22—103 3-Point Goals—Toronto 9-22 (Lowry 4-7, Vasquez 2-4, Ross 2-4, Patterson 1-3, Novak 0-4), Brooklyn 11-24 (Pierce 7-10, Williams 1-2, Anderson 1-3, J.Johnson 1-4, Teletovic 1-4, Blatche 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Toronto 46 (Valanciunas 13), Brooklyn 45 (Garnett 11). Assists—Toronto 21 (Lowry 7), Brooklyn 22 (Williams 11). Total Fouls—Toronto 18, Brooklyn 20. Technicals—Lowry, Garnett, Pierce. A—15,790.

Clippers 114, bucks 86

l.a. ClIPPers (114) Barnes 1-9 0-0 3, Griffin 8-13 4-5 20, Jordan 4-5 0-1 8, Collison 5-6 3-4 15, Redick 4-8 3-3 14, Crawford 9-16 2-2 25, Green 5-6 2-2 13, Hollins 1-2 0-0 2, Dudley 2-5 0-0 4, Turkoglu 2-4 0-2 6, Bullock 1-3 0-0 2, Mullens 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 43-79 14-19 114. MIlWaUkee (86) Middleton 7-15 0-0 14, Ilyasova 6-22 3-4 16, Henson 5-10 1-2 11, Knight 3-12 3-4 9, Antetokounmpo 3-7 2-4 8, Ridnour 1-3 0-0 2, Butler 4-8 0-0 11, Raduljica 4-6 3-4 11, Wolters 1-6 2-4 4. Totals 34-89 14-22 86. l.a. Clippers 32 32 20 30 —114 Milwaukee 25 16 20 25 —86 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 14-28 (Crawford 5-9, Redick 3-4, Turkoglu 2-2, Collison 2-3, Green 1-1, Barnes 1-6, Mullens 0-1, Dudley 0-1, Griffin 0-1), Milwaukee 4-22 (Butler 3-6, Ilyasova 1-6, Antetokounmpo 0-1, Wolters 0-1, Middleton 0-3, Knight 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— L.A. Clippers 54 (Jordan 18), Milwaukee 50 (Henson, Ilyasova 8). Assists—L.A. Clippers 29 (Collison 7), Milwaukee 24 (Knight 7). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 25, Milwaukee 15. Technicals—Griffin, Middleton, Milwaukee defensive three second. A—11,126.

atlaNta (109) Carroll 7-14 1-2 15, Millsap 9-19 4-4 23, Ayon 3-5 0-0 6, Mack 6-14 0-0 15, Korver 5-9 1-1 14, Williams 3-8 3-3 10, Brand 0-4 0-0 0, Schroder 4-6 0-0 10, Scott 6-9 2-2 16. Totals 43-88 11-12 109. oklaHoMa CItY (111) Durant 15-25 6-8 41, Ibaka 4-8 0-0 9, Perkins 2-2 2-4 6, Jackson 7-17 2-2 18, Sefolosha 2-6 0-0 5, Lamb 5-8 2-2 14, Adams 1-2 0-2 2, Collison 4-7 0-0 8, Fisher 3-7 0-0 8, Jones 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-82 12-18 111. atlanta 32 25 30 22—109 oklahoma City 26 24 29 32—111 3-Point Goals—Atlanta 12-25 (Mack 3-5, Korver 3-7, Schroder 2-2, Scott 2-3, Millsap 1-2, Williams 1-3, Carroll 0-3), Oklahoma City 13-25 (Durant 5-7, Lamb 2-4, Fisher 2-4, Jackson 2-5, Ibaka 1-1, Sefolosha 1-3, Collison 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Atlanta 50 (Ayon 10), Oklahoma City 41 (Perkins 7). Assists—Atlanta 25 (Mack 7), Oklahoma City 23 (Jackson, Collison, Durant 5). Total Fouls—Atlanta 17, Oklahoma City 12. Technicals— Ibaka, Oklahoma City defensive three second. A—18,203.

timberwolves 95, bulls 86

MINNesota (95) Brewer 5-8 0-0 11, Love 8-17 14-14 31, Pekovic 0-1 1-2 1, Rubio 3-8 3-4 9, K.Martin 3-9 1-2 8, Turiaf 6-7 2-3 14, Budinger 5-7 0-0 12, Barea 2-7 0-0 4, Shved 1-3 1-1 3, Cunningham 1-4 0-0 2, Dieng 0-2 0-0 0, Mbah a Moute 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-73 22-26 95. CHICaGo (86) Dunleavy 4-11 0-0 10, Boozer 9-24 2-2 20, Gibson 4-8 2-2 10, Augustin 6-15 3-4 19, Butler 5-12 4-4 16, Snell 1-7 0-0 2, Mohammed 3-5 3-4 9, James 0-3 0-0 0, C.Martin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-85 14-16 86. Minnesota 23 31 18 23—95 Chicago 20 26 19 21—86 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 5-17 (Budinger 2-2, K.Martin 1-2, Brewer 1-2, Love 1-7, Rubio 0-1, Barea 0-3), Chicago 8-24 (Augustin 4-9, Butler 2-4, Dunleavy 2-6, Snell 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 48 (Love 8), Chicago 50 (Boozer 14). Assists—Minnesota 20 (Barea 7), Chicago 20 (Augustin 6). Total Fouls— Minnesota 14, Chicago 25. A—21,637.

Jazz 106, kings 99

saCraMeNto (99) D.Williams 5-13 6-8 17, Outlaw 3-9 2-2 10, Thompson 7-10 5-6 19, I.Thomas 4-13 2-2 10, Thornton 5-15 0-3 11, McLemore 6-12 1-1 14, Acy 0-0 2-2 2, Gray 0-3 0-0 0, Fredette 4-8 0-0 8, Landry 1-2 0-0 2, McCallum 2-5 2-2 6. Totals 37-90 20-26 99. UtaH (106) Jefferson 2-5 1-2 7, M.Williams 5-10 4-4 16, Favors 5-12 7-8 17, Burke 3-10 1-1 8, Hayward 4-13 3-4 12, Burks 2-10 5-6 10, Kanter 6-8 4-6 16, Lucas III 0-2 2-4 2, Rush 0-0 0-0 0, Evans 4-8 6-12 14, Garrett 1-2 1-2 3, Gobert 0-0 1-4 1. Totals 32-80 35-53 106. sacramento 22 28 20 29—99 Utah 20 30 31 25—106 3-Point Goals—Sacramento 5-22 (Outlaw 2-3, D.Williams 1-2, McLemore 1-5, Thornton 1-6, McCallum 0-1, I.Thomas 0-2, Fredette 0-3), Utah 7-20 (Jefferson 2-3, M.Williams 2-5, Burks 1-2, Hayward 1-3, Burke 1-5, Lucas III 0-1, Garrett 0-1). Fouled Out— Landry. Rebounds—Sacramento 57 (D.Williams 15), Utah 68 (Favors 12). Assists—Sacramento 15 (I.Thomas 6), Utah 20 (Hayward 6). Total Fouls— Sacramento 36, Utah 23. Technicals—. A—16,663.

NCaa basketball Men’s top 25

Monday’s Games No. 9 Villanova 65, Georgetown 60 No. 17 Duke 80, No. 18 Pittsburgh 65 No. 23 Oklahoma 88, No. 8 Oklahoma State 76 tuesday’s Games No. 4 Wichita State vs. Loyola of Chicago, 6 p.m. No. 7 Michigan State at No. 15 Iowa, 5 p.m. No. 11 Kentucky at LSU, 7 p.m. No. 20 Creighton vs. St. John’s, 7:02 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No. 1 Arizona at Stanford, 7 p.m. No. 2 Syracuse at Wake Forest, 7 p.m. No. 6 Kansas vs. No. 16 Iowa State, 7 p.m. No. 14 Wisconsin vs. Northwestern, 7 p.m. No. 19 Saint Louis vs. Richmond, 6 p.m. No. 21 UMass at St. Bonaventure, 5 p.m. No. 22 Memphis at UCF, 5 p.m. No. 24 Ohio State vs. Penn State, 5 p.m. thursday’s Games No. 3 Florida at Mississippi State, 5 p.m. No. 10 Michigan vs. Purdue, 7 p.m. No. 12 Louisville vs. No. 13 Cincinnati, 5 p.m. Friday’s Games No games scheduled. saturday’s Games No. 1 Arizona at California, 8:30 p.m. No. 2 Syracuse vs. No. 17 Duke, 4:30 p.m. No. 3 Florida vs. Texas A&M, 2 p.m. No. 4 Wichita State vs. Evansville, 1 p.m. No. 5 San Diego State vs. Colorado State, 5:05 p.m. No. 6 Kansas at No. 25 Texas, 2 p.m. No. 7 Michigan State vs. Georgetown at Madison Square Garden, 1 p.m. No. 8 Oklahoma State vs. Baylor, Noon No. 9 Villanova at Temple, 2 p.m. No. 11 Kentucky at Missouri, 11 a.m. No. 12 Louisville vs. UCF, 7 p.m. No. 14 Wisconsin vs. No. 24 Ohio St., 10 a.m. No. 15 Iowa at Illinois, 5:30 p.m. No. 16 Iowa St. vs. No. 23 Oklahoma, 2 p.m. No. 19 Saint Louis vs. George Mason, 12:30 p.m. No. 21 UMass at Saint Joseph’s, 4 p.m. No. 22 Memphis at SMU, Noon sunday’s Games No. 10 Michigan at Indiana, 11 a.m. No. 13 Cincinnati vs. South Florida, 10 a.m. No. 18 Pittsburgh vs. Virginia, 10:30 a.m.

Men’s division I

Monday’s Games east Colgate 75, Lafayette 68 Duke 80, Pittsburgh 65 Towson 76, Hofstra 58 Villanova 65, Georgetown 60 south Alcorn St. 70, Alabama A&M 64, OT Bethune-Cookman 58, Howard 47 Coppin St. 70, NC A&T 54 Hampton 67, SC State 56 NC Central 53, Morgan St. 52 NJIT 65, Delaware St. 59, OT Norfolk St. 56, Savannah St. 49 Southern U. 68, Alabama St. 55 William & Mary 74, Coll. of Charleston 63 southwest MVSU 81, Prairie View 72 Oklahoma 88, Oklahoma St. 76 Texas Southern 72, Ark.-Pine Bluff 71 Far West Portland St. 92, E. Washington 83

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD Men’s aP top 25 Poll

rec Pts Pvs 1. Arizona (63) 20-0 1,623 1 2. Syracuse (2) 19-0 1,561 2 3. Florida 17-2 1,436 6 4. Wichita St. 21-0 1,435 5 5. San Diego St. 18-1 1,337 7 6. Kansas 15-4 1,272 8 7. Michigan St. 18-2 1,251 3 8. Oklahoma St. 16-3 1,067 11 9. Villanova 17-2 1,063 4 10. Michigan 15-4 1,050 21 11. Kentucky 15-4 896 14 12. Louisville 17-3 891 12 13. Cincinnati 19-2 793 15 14. Wisconsin 17-3 763 9 15. Iowa 16-4 722 10 16. Iowa St. 15-3 684 16 17. Duke 16-4 549 18 18. Pittsburgh 18-2 517 20 19. Saint Louis 18-2 464 19 20. Creighton 17-3 445 — 21. UMass 17-2 353 13 22. Memphis 15-4 262 23 23. Oklahoma 16-4 203 25 24. Ohio St. 16-4 143 17 25. Texas 16-4 142 — others receiving votes: UConn 67, Gonzaga 51, UCLA 39, Virginia 18, George Washington 5, Green Bay 5, Kansas St. 5, Minnesota 5, SMU 3, American U. 1, Harvard 1, Louisiana Tech 1, New Mexico 1, Southern Miss. 1.

Usa today top 25 Poll

rec Pts Pvs 1. Arizona (31) 20-0 799 1 2. Syracuse (1) 19-0 769 2 3. Wichita State 21-0 724 4 4. Florida 17-2 694 6 5. San Diego State 18-1 653 7 6. Michigan State 18-2 621 3 7. Louisville 17-3 552 9 7. Kansas 15-4 552 11 9. Villanova 17-2 509 5 10. Oklahoma State 16-3 497 12 11. Kentucky 15-4 433 14 12. Iowa 16-4 386 10 13. Wisconsin 17-3 368 8 14. Michigan 15-4 346 25 15. Cincinnati 19-2 323 16 16. Duke 16-4 298 18 17. Pittsburgh 18-2 279 19 18. Iowa State 15-3 268 17 19. UMass 17-2 265 12 20. Creighton 17-3 229 24 21. Saint Louis 18-2 218 20 22. Memphis 15-4 155 22 23. Ohio State 16-4 118 15 24. Gonzaga 18-3 114 21 25. Oklahoma 16-4 85 25 others receiving votes: Texas 41, Virginia 26, UCLA 22, UConn 18, George Washington 8, Baylor 6, Kansas State 6, Southern Miss. 6, Colorado 5, Toledo 5, SMU 1, Stephen F. Austin 1.

Women’s aP top 25

Monday’s Games No. 2 Notre Dame 87, No. 8 Maryland 83 No. 4 Stanford 86, Southern Cal 59 No. 19 Purdue 80, Illinois 68 tuesday’s Games No. 1 UConn at Temple, 5 p.m. No. 5 Louisville at Rutgers, 7 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No. 9 Baylor vs. Texas Tech, 6 p.m. No. 11 Oklahoma State at TCU, 6 p.m. No. 20 W. Virginia vs. No. 24 Iowa St., 5 p.m. No. 25 Middle Tennessee at Southern Mississippi, 6 p.m., ppd., weather thursday’s Games No. 2 Notre Dame vs. Virginia Tech, 5 p.m. No. 3 Duke at Miami, 5 p.m. No. 4 Stanford vs. No. 21 California, 9 p.m. No. 6 North Carolina vs. Syracuse, 5 p.m. No. 7 South Carolina vs. Mississippi, 5 p.m. No. 8 Maryland at No. 18 N.C. State, 5 p.m. No. 10 Tennessee vs. Arkansas, 5 p.m. No. 12 Penn State at No. 19 Purdue, 4 p.m. No. 13 Kentucky at Georgia, 7 p.m. No. 14 LSU vs. Mississippi State, 6 p.m. No. 16 Vanderbilt at Missouri, 6 p.m. No. 17 Texas A&M at Auburn, 5 p.m. No. 22 Gonzaga vs. Santa Clara, 7 p.m. Friday’s Game No. 15 Arizona State vs. Oregon State, 6:30 p.m. saturday’s Games No. 1 UConn at Cincinnati, Noon No. 9 Baylor vs. Texas, 5:30 p.m. No. 11 Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, 1 p.m. No. 20 West Virginia at TCU, 6 p.m. No. 22 Gonzaga vs. San Francisco, 3 p.m. No. 24 Iowa State vs. Kansas State, 7 p.m. No. 25 Middle Tennessee at Tulsa, 11:30 a.m. sunday’s Games No. 2 Notre Dame at No. 3 Duke, Noon No. 4 Stanford at No. 21 California, 2 p.m. No. 5 Louisville vs. South Florida, Noon No. 6 North Carolina vs. Miami, Noon No. 7 South Carolina vs. Missouri, 1 p.m. No. 8 Maryland at Syracuse, 10 a.m. No. 10 Tennessee at Alabama, 2:30 p.m. No. 12 Penn State at Northwestern, Noon No. 13 Kentucky vs. No. 14 LSU, 10 a.m. No. 15 Arizona State vs. Oregon, 1 p.m. No. 16 Vanderbilt vs. No. 17 Texas A&M, Noon No. 19 Purdue at Michigan State, 11:30 a.m. No. 23 Florida State at Wake Forest, Noon

Women’s division I

Monday’s Games east Mount St. Mary’s 64, CCSU 62 Robert Morris 67, Fairleigh Dickinson 58 Sacred Heart 84, Bryant 78 St. Francis (Pa.) 84, LIU Brooklyn 76 Wagner 73, St. Francis (NY) 62 Midwest Cleveland St. 76, Valparaiso 66 Missouri St. 75, Illinois St. 72 Purdue 80, Illinois 68 SE Missouri 79, SIU-Edwardsville 71 Wichita St. 83, Indiana St. 63 Far West Stanford 86, Southern Cal 59 southwest Prairie View 77, MVSU 59 Texas Southern 75, Ark.-Pine Bluff 51 south Alcorn St. 63, Alabama A&M 60 Belmont 71, Morehead St. 65 Coppin St. 59, NC A&T 50 Davidson 69, W. Carolina 65 Delaware St. 79, Wesley 37 Furman 73, UNC-Greensboro 64 Georgia Southern 68, Appalachian St. 59 Hampton 78, SC State 47 Howard 47, Bethune-Cookman 45 Jacksonville St. 69, Austin Peay 65 NC Central 50, Morgan St. 48 Notre Dame 87, Maryland 83 Savannah St. 79, Norfolk St. 47 Southern U. 60, Alabama St. 44 Tennessee St. 78, E. Kentucky 63 Tennessee Tech 81, Murray St. 65 UT-Martin 103, E. Illinois 84 Wofford 68, Elon 65

HOCKEY HoCkeY

NHl eastern Conference

atlantic GP Boston 51 Tampa Bay 52 Toronto 54 Montreal 52 Detroit 52 Ottawa 52 Florida 52 Buffalo 51 Metro GP Pittsburgh 53 N.Y. Rangers 54 Carolina 52 Columbus 52 Philadelphia 53 New Jersey 53 Washington 52 N.Y. Islanders 55

W 33 31 27 27 23 22 21 14 W 37 28 24 26 25 22 23 21

l ol Pts GF Ga 15 3 69 153 113 16 5 67 155 128 21 6 60 155 168 20 5 59 128 134 18 11 57 135 144 20 10 54 147 165 24 7 49 127 158 30 7 35 97 147 l ol Pts GF Ga 14 2 76 171 128 23 3 59 139 138 19 9 57 134 147 22 4 56 152 148 22 6 56 142 158 20 11 55 127 132 21 8 54 148 154 26 8 50 157 185

Western Conference

Central GP W l ol Pts GF Ga Chicago 54 32 10 12 76 190 149 St. Louis 51 35 11 5 75 177 119 Colorado 52 33 14 5 71 153 137 Minnesota 54 28 20 6 62 129 133 Dallas 53 24 21 8 56 154 157 Winnipeg 54 25 24 5 55 152 158 Nashville 54 23 23 8 54 132 163 Pacific GP W l ol Pts GF Ga Anaheim 54 39 10 5 83 182 130 San Jose 53 34 13 6 74 165 126 Los Angeles 54 30 18 6 66 133 113 Vancouver 54 27 18 9 63 137 138 Phoenix 52 24 18 10 58 151 160 Calgary 52 18 27 7 43 119 165 Edmonton 55 17 32 6 40 144 190 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Monday’s Games Boston 6, N.Y. Islanders 3 Carolina 3, Columbus 2 Pittsburgh 3, Buffalo 0 Colorado 4, Dallas 3 Edmonton 4, Vancouver 2 Los Angeles 1, San Jose 0 sunday’s Games Florida 5, Detroit 4, SO N.Y. Rangers 7, New Jersey 3 Winnipeg 3, Chicago 1 Edmonton 5, Nashville 1 Vancouver 5, Phoenix 4, OT tuesday’s Games Florida at Boston, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at Toronto, 5 p.m. Detroit at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Ottawa at Columbus, 5 p.m. Washington at Buffalo, 5:30 p.m. Carolina at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. New Jersey at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Nashville at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Chicago at Calgary, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at Anaheim, 8 p.m. Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers vs. N.Y. Islanders at Bronx, NY, 5:30 p.m. San Jose at Edmonton, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Vancouver, 8:30 p.m.

NHl CaleNdar

Jan. 29 — NHL Stadium Series: New York Rangers vs. New York Islanders at Yankee Stadium. Feb. 9 — Olympic break begins. Feb. 12 — Olympic men’s hockey tournament begins: Sochi, Russia. Feb. 23 — Olympic men’s hockey gold-medal game: Sochi, Russia. Feb. 26 — NHL regular season resumes.

NHl sUMMarIes Monday Penguins 3, sabres 0

buffalo 0 0 0—0 Pittsburgh 0 2 1—3 First Period—None. Penalties—Tallinder, Buf (delay of game), 10:00; Glass, Pit (high-sticking), 13:22. second Period—1, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 26 (Gibbons, Crosby), 5:44. 2, Pittsburgh, Engelland 4 (Adams, Glass), 12:05. Penalties—Megna, Pit (high-sticking), 7:13. third Period—3, Pittsburgh, Glass 3 (Adams, Crosby), 19:32 (en). Penalties—Kunitz, Pit (slashing), 9:14. shots on Goal—Buffalo 5-11-8—24. Pittsburgh 15-10-9—34. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 0 of 3; Pittsburgh 0 of 1. Goalies—Buffalo, Miller 13-20-3 (33 shots-31 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 29-12-1 (24-24). referees—Tom Kowal, Kelly Sutherland. linesmen—John Grandt, Pierre Racicot. a—18,563. t—2:15.

bruins 6, Islanders 3

boston 1 3 2—6 N.Y. Islanders 1 2 0—3 First Period—1, Boston, Eriksson 6 (Paille, Krug), 7:47. 2, N.Y. Islanders, Nielsen 18 (Okposo), 15:29. Penalties—Boychuk, Bos (interference), 12:10; Hickey, NYI (tripping), 16:41; Chara, Bos (roughing), 20:00. second Period—3, Boston, Marchand 17 (Bergeron, Smith), 4:50. 4, N.Y. Islanders, Grabner 9 (Okposo, Hickey), 8:20. 5, Boston, Smith 17 (Thornton, Marchand), 12:21. 6, N.Y. Islanders, Okposo 23 (Grabner), 15:08. 7, Boston, Soderberg 7 (Lucic, Iginla), 19:27. Penalties—Okposo, NYI (cross-checking), 13:00; Hamilton, Bos (hooking), 16:01; Bergeron, Bos (tripping), 20:00. third Period—8, Boston, Bergeron 14 (Marchand), 2:17. 9, Boston, Chara 12 (Marchand, Hamilton), 8:12. Penalty—Campbell, Bos (tripping), 14:35. shots on Goal—Boston 18-9-10—37. N.Y. Islanders 12-17-8—37. Power-play opportunities—Boston 0 of 2; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 5. Goalies—Boston, C.Johnson 9-3-0 (37 shots-34 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Poulin 11-16-1 (36-30), Nabokov (11:48 third, 1-1). a—13,819. t—2:33.

avalanche 4, stars 3

Colorado 2 1 1—4 dallas 1 2 0—3 First Period—1, Colorado, MacKinnon 18 (Talbot, Barrie), 1:40. 2, Colorado, McGinn 12 (O’Reilly, Duchene), 15:57. 3, Dallas, Ja.Benn 20 (Seguin), 17:27. Penalties—Mitchell, Col (hooking), 19:34; Cole, Dal (interference), 19:37. second Period—4, Dallas, Seguin 22 (Ja.Benn, Goligoski), 1:02 (pp). 5, Colorado, Stastny 15 (Landeskog), 17:57 (pp). 6, Dallas, Seguin 23 (Goligoski, Gonchar), 18:13. Penalties—Holden, Col (tripping), :36; Roussel, Dal (unsportsmanlike conduct), 3:53; Dallas bench, served by Whitney (too many men), 16:22. third Period—7, Colorado, Tanguay 4 (Landeskog, Talbot), 4:13. Penalties—Guenin, Col (holding), 1:54; Bordeleau, Col (delay of game), 9:22. shots on Goal—Colorado 10-8-3—21. Dallas 12-19-13—44. Power-play opportunities—Colorado 1 of 2; Dallas 1 of 4. Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 26-9-5 (44 shots-41 saves). Dallas, Lehtonen 20-15-8 (21-17). a—11,678. t—2:26.

Hurricanes 3, blue Jackets 2

Columbus 2 0 0—2 Carolina 0 0 3—3 First Period—1, Columbus, MacKenzie 5 (Tyutin, Tropp), 2:25. 2, Columbus, Umberger 14 (Johansen, Foligno), 2:42. Penalties—Horton, Clm (slashing), 11:55. second Period—None. Penalties—Wisniewski, Clm (hooking), 15:39. third Period—3, Carolina, E.Staal 13 (Semin, Faulk), 11:18. 4, Carolina, E.Staal 14 (Tlusty), 12:18. 5, Carolina, Jo.Staal 11 (Lindholm, Skinner), 14:05. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Columbus 7-9-8—24. Carolina 7-17-11—35. Power-play opportunities—Columbus 0 of 0; Carolina 0 of 2. Goalies—Columbus, Bobrovsky 1713-2 (35 shots-32 saves). Carolina, Khudobin 11-3-0 (24-22). a—13,641. t—2:17.

oilers 4, Canucks 2

edmonton 2 0 2—4 Vancouver 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Edmonton, Perron 20 (Gagner, Yakupov), 9:11. 2, Vancouver, Schroeder 1 (Booth), 12:33. 3, Edmonton, Perron 21 (Yakupov), 17:34. Penalties—Burrows, Van (interference), 12:49; Joensuu, Edm (holding), 14:28; Kesler, Van (tripping), 18:55. second Period—4, Vancouver, Schroeder 2 (Bieksa, Stanton), 2:39. Penalties—Smyth, Edm (holding), 9:29; Bieksa, Van (hooking), 12:23. third Period—5, Edmonton, Joensuu 3 (Smyth, Hall), 2:20. 6, Edmonton, Perron 22, 18:51 (en). Penalties—Perron, Edm (roughing), 7:19; Hamhuis, Van (roughing), 7:19. shots on Goal—Edmonton 5-7-8—20. Vancouver 9-9-9—27. Power-play opportunities—Edmonton 0 of 3; Vancouver 0 of 2. Goalies—Edmonton, Bryzgalov 4-8-3 (27 shots-25 saves). Vancouver, Luongo 19-12-6 (19-16). referees—Mike Leggo, Darcy Burchell. linesmen—Don Henderson, Jay Sharrers. a—18,910. t—2:30.

kings 1, sharks 0

los angeles 0 1 0—1 san Jose 0 0 0—0 First Period—None. Penalties—Stuart, SJ (holding), 5:36; Fraser, LA (roughing), 11:53; Burns, SJ (roughing), 11:53. second Period—1, Los Angeles, Kopitar 15 (Carter, Muzzin), 17:56. Penalties—Regehr, LA (interference), 1:55; Boyle, SJ (holding), 6:03; Kopitar, LA (roughing), 8:52; Thornton, SJ (hooking), 8:52; Mitchell, LA (hooking), 19:05. third Period—None. Penalties— Voynov, LA (cross-checking), 4:47; Thornton, SJ (hooking), 5:04; Pavelski, SJ, double minor (high-sticking), 10:08. shots on Goal—Los Angeles 8-5-8—21. San Jose 4-5-14—23. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 0 of 5; San Jose 0 of 3. Goalies—Los Angeles, Quick 15-9-2 (23 shots-23 saves). San Jose, Stalock 7-3-0 (21-20). referees—Chris Lee, Trevor Hanson. linesmen—Kiel Murchison, Shane Heyer. a—17,562. t—2:26.

FOOTBALL Football NFl PlaYoFFs super bowl

sunday’s Game at east rutherford, N.J. Denver vs. Seattle, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)

sUPer boWl tICket PrICes

2014—$2,600 to $500 Metlife Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J. 2013—$1,250 to $650 Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans 2012—$1,200 to $600 Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis 2011—$1,200 to $600 Cowboys Stadium, Arlington, Texas 2010—$1,000 to $500 Sun Life Stadium, Miami 2009—$1,000 to $500 Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Fla. 2008—$900, $700 University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Ariz. 2007—$700, $600 Dolphin Stadium, Miami 2006—$700, $600 Ford Field, Detroit 2005—$600, $500 ALLTEL Stadium, Jacksonville, Fla. 2004—$600, $500, $400 Reliant Stadium, Houston 2003—$500, $400 Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego 2002—$400 Superdome, New Orleans 2001—$325 Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Fla. 2000—$325 Georgia Dome, Atlanta 1999—$325 Pro Player Stadium, Miami 1998—$275 Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego 1997—$275 Superdome, New Orleans 1996—$350, $250, $200 Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, Ariz. 1995—$200 Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami 1994—$175 Georgia Dome, Atlanta 1993—$175 Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif. 1992—$150 Metrodome, Minneapolis 1991—$150 Tampa (Fla.) Stadium

sUPer boWl PlaYer sHares

Winner-loser 2014—$92,000-$46,000 2013—$88,000-$44,000 2012—$88,000-$44,000 2011—$83,000-$42,000 2010—$83,000-$42,000 2009—$78,000-$40,000 2008—$78,000-$40,000 2007—$78,000-$40,000 2006—$73,000-$38,000 2005—$68,000-$36,500 2004—$68,000-$36,500 2003—$63,000-$35,000 2002—$63,000-$34,500 2001—$58,000-$34,500 2000—$58,000-$33,000 1999—$53,000-$32,500 1998—$48,000-$29,000 1997—$48,000-$29,000 1996—$42,000-$27,000 1995—$42,000-$26,000 1994—$38,000-$23,500 1993—$36,000-$18,000 1992—$36,000-$18,000 1991—$36,000-$18,000

sUPer boWl ad rates

30-second commercial 2014—$4,000,000 2013—$3,800,000 2012—$3,500,000 2011—$3,100,000 2010—$2,900,000 2009—$2,800,000 2008—$2,700,000 2007—$2,600,000 2006—$2,500,000 2005—$2,400,000 2004—$2,300,000 2003—$2,100,000 2002—$1,900,000 2001—$2,100,000

GolF GOLF

PGa toUr FedexCup standings

through Jan. 26

Pts 1. Jimmy Walker 1,233 2. Chris Kirk 931 3. Harris English 896 4. Zach Johnson 810 5. Webb Simpson 795 6. Ryan Moore 714 7. Dustin Johnson 639 8. Brian Stuard 613 9. Patrick Reed 583 10. Scott Stallings 530 11. Jason Bohn 455 12. Charles Howell III 450 12. Gary Woodland 450 14. Ryo Ishikawa 425 15. Jordan Spieth 406 16. Charley Hoffman 392 17. Ryan Palmer 387 18. Scott Brown 369 19. Chris Stroud 355 20. Graham DeLaet 352

Money $2,417,833 $1,777,358 $1,816,397 $1,699,450 $1,690,417 $1,690,350 $1,598,750 $1,213,823 $1,154,250 $1,128,421 $889,780 $846,112 $1,042,877 $854,673 $831,555 $730,604 $763,468 $661,910 $772,818 $815,667

INterNatIoNal World Golf ranking

through Jan. 26 1. Tiger Woods 2. Adam Scott 3. Henrik Stenson 4. Phil Mickelson 5. Justin Rose 6. Rory McIlroy 7. Zach Johnson 8. Matt Kuchar 9. Sergio Garcia 10. Jason Day 11. Steve Stricker 12. Ian Poulter 13. Jason Dufner 14. Dustin Johnson 15. Brandt Snedeker 16. Jordan Spieth 17. Graeme McDowell 18. Charl Schwartzel 19. Webb Simpson 20. Luke Donald

USA AUS SWE USA ENG NIR USA USA ESP AUS USA ENG USA USA USA USA NIR SAF USA ENG

10.83 8.93 8.79 7.03 6.78 6.38 6.33 5.97 5.82 5.42 5.32 4.87 4.83 4.78 4.75 4.73 4.73 4.54 4.35 4.31

TRANSACTIONS traNsaCtIoNs baseball american league

CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with INF Elliott Johnson on a minor league contract.

National league

CINCINNATI REDS — Agreed to terms with INF Chris Nelson on a minor league contract. COLORADO ROCKIES — Named Jerry Weinstein offensive coordinator, Ron Gideon supervisor for Tulsa (Texas), Don Sneddon manager for Modest (Cal), Mark Brewer pitching coach for Asheville (SAL) and Duane Espy supervisor for Tri-City (NYP).

american association

AMARILLO SOX — Signed OF Brian Wuest. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Signed OF Bryan Sabatella. Released C Jonathan Cisneros. LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Signed RHP Jake Meiers. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed INF Casey Haerther.

atlantic league

LONG ISLAND DUCKS — Signed LHP Eric Niesen and RHP Casey Barnes.

Frontier league

GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Signed OF Xavier Macklin. JOLIET SLAMMERS — Signed OF Darian Sandford to a contract extension. TRAVERSE CITY BEACH BUMS — Signed LHP Nate King.

basketball National basketball association

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS — Assigned G Lorenzo Brown to Delaware (NBADL).

Football National Football league

ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed coach Mike Smith and general manager Thomas Dimitroff to one-year contract extensions through the 2016 season and president Rich McKay to a four-year extension through May 2019. BALTIMORE RAVENS — Named Gary Kubiak offensive coordinator. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Named Jim O’Neil defensive coordinator, Chris Tabor special teams coordinator, Brian Angelichio tight ends coach, Bobby Babich assistant secondary coach, Chuck Driesbach linebackers coach, Brian Fleury assistant linebackers coach, Jeff Hafley secondary coach and Shawn Mennenga assistant special teams coach. NEW YORK GIANTS — Named Danny Langsdorf quarterbacks coach, Sean Ryan wide receivers coach and Kevin M. Gilbride tight ends coach. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Promoted Mike Dawson to assistant defensive line coach. Named Bill Musgrave quarterbacks coach and Michael Clay defensive quality control coach.

arena Football league

ORLANDO PREDATORS — Named Siaha Burley offensive coordinator.

HoCkeY National Hockey league

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recalled F Brandon Pirri from Rockford (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Assigned G Petr Mrazek to Grand Rapids (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Recalled F Colton Sissons from Milwaukee (AHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Sent D Matt Donovan and G Anders Nilsson to Bridgeport (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES — Recalled D Connor Murphy from Portland (AHL). Assigned F Jordan Szwarz to Portland.

soCCer Major league soccer

CHIVAS USA — Signed D Fejiro Okiomah and D Donald Toia. NEW YORK RED BULLS — Acquired D Richard Eckersley from Toronto FC for a 2017 fourth round MLS SuperDraft pick. PHILADELPHIA UNION — Acquired MF Maurice Edu from Stoke City FC on a one-year loan with an option to purchase.

ColleGe NCaa

ARMSTRONG ATLANTIC — Named Calvain Culberson baseball coach.

ColleGe

NCAA OF NEW JERSEY — Named Dr. Sharon Beverly assistant vice president for student affairs and executive director of athletics and recreation. COLORADO STATE — Announced men’s basketball F Chane Behanan enrolled at the school and will be eligible play end of the fall term. DOANE — Named Josh Littrell offensive coordinator. GEORGETOWN — Announced senior basketball C Moses Ayegba was suspended by the NCAA for one game for violations related to pre-enrollment rules. STANFORD — Named Peter Hansen inside linebackers coach.


SPORTS SOCCER WORLD CUP

What happens if Brazil doesn’t win? By John Leicester

SCOREBOARD Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. UNM MeN’S BASKeTBALL 9:05 p.m. on ESPNU — New Mexico at Utah State MeN’S COLLeGe BASKeTBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN — Michigan St. at Iowa 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — West Virginia at Baylor 5 p.m. on ESPNU — Missouri at Arkansas 7 p.m. on ESPN — Kentucky at LSU 7 p.m. on ESPNU — Virginia at Notre Dame 7 p.m. on FS1 — St. John’s at Creighton 9 p.m. on ESPNU — New Mexico at Utah St. NHL HOCKeY 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Washington at Buffalo SOCCeR 12:55 p.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Everton at Liverpool

Today on radio UNM MeN’S BASKeTBALL 9:05 p.m. on KVSF-AM 1400/KKOB-AM 770 — New Mexico at Utah State

A man wearing a mask holds a sign Saturday that reads in Portuguese, ‘For a better world! Get out FIFA, Change the World’ during a protest against the upcoming World Cup soccer tournament in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. SILVIA IzQUIERDo/THE ASSoCIATED PRESS

A kid of six in 1950, former player Barcimio Sicupira recalled how “my dad punched the radio and broke it in half” after Alcides Ghiggia scored in the 79th minute. Rubens Minelli, who became a national championship-winning coach, was playing an amateur tournament that July 16 afternoon, his attention focused not on his game but on the unfolding drama being broadcast by radio from Rio de Janeiro. “Everybody was sad, they couldn’t believe what happened,” he said in an interview. “It was a national disgrace.” For a sporting mega-event like the World Cup to become truly memorable, host nation success can be vital. Jessica Ennis, Greg Rutherford and Mo Farah put the wow into

Continued from Page B-1 rado State with what UNM is officially calling “an undisclosed leg injury.” What his future status is remains a mystery, but it is likely he will not return to action until at least the Lobos’ return from the current road trip. Kirk’s absence forced head coach Craig Neal and his staff to get creative with their starting lineup against CSU. In Kirk’s place was 7-foot freshman Obij Aget. Mostly, though, it was a mix-n-match rotation that finally paid dividends. Neal instituted a four-guard lineup against Colorado State that made things easier for senior point guard Kendall Williams to drive to the basket. Neal said that the same lineup will be used in greater detail against Utah State. That look allowed the Lobos to run the 2-3 zone on defense more than they typically do, a sign that Utah State will see plenty of zone as well as man-to-man. “It’s hard for a 6-9 guy [Cameron Bairstow] to cover to [the] corner,” Neal said. “When we play the 2-3 zone with Cam and Alex, it’s hard. But when we’ve got four guards out there you can almost play a shell defense; four out with one guy playing the lane.” That one guy in the lane was usually Bairstow. Against Colorado State, he completely shut down Rams forward J.J. Avila, holding him to 1-for-12 shooting and nearly 11 points below his team-leading scoring average. Bairstow will, as usual, be put to the

the 2012 London Games when they all won gold for Britain on “Super Saturday” at the Olympic Stadium. Australian Cathy Freeman did the same for the Sydney Olympics in winning the 400 meters. If Brazil triumphs in July, one imagines the nation of carnival will treat the World Cup to street parties even more epic and delirious than when France became the last host to win in 1998. The ghost of 1950 would be exorcised. And if that doesn’t happen? Ron DelMont, managing director of FIFA’s office in Brazil, believes Brazilians are too enamored with soccer to turn their backs on the World Cup should their team tumble out early. “We expect that Brazil will

make it to the final. But let’s just say that it doesn’t happen. Every indication that we’ve had so far about the tournament in Brazil is that it will be a celebration of football, irrespective,” he said. “There will be still a lot of enthusiasm about what happens, whoever the eventual winner will be. Brazil, because of the culture and the love that it has for football, is going to defy all the other previous host cities … It will still be a celebration all the way to the end.” Fernandes seconded that. “How will people react if we lose along the way? They won’t react well,” he said. “But they’re also football fans … Interest will continue in the World Cup if Brazil is eliminated. But that ghost will continue to haunt us.”

test again against Utah State. That much is expected when you average 20.3 points and grab 6.9 rebounds a game. He will see a lot of Aggies center Jarred Shaw and forward Kyle Davis. Shaw is the team’s leading scorer (15.2 points) and trails only Davis in rebounding, averaging 7.8 to Davis’s 8.6. There is little doubt that Kirk’s ability to clog the lane and alter shots will be missed. This could, however, be a game where UNM’s four-guard lineup comes in particularly handy. As San Diego State learned the hard way with an overtime escape against Utah State last Saturday, the Aggies’ perimeter players can light things up when they get into a flow. To that end, Neal lauds the play of Williams. The MWC’s leader in assists and steals, he is largely overlooked as a defender. “I’ll take that kid — anybody in the country I’ll take him,” Neal said. “He’s been through the wars with us and been through the wars with our program.” While Bairstow’s play is certainly garnering him serious consideration for MWC player of the year honors, Neal said it’s not wise to overlook Williams — something that is too easily overdone, for some reason. The reigning MWC player of the year is averaging more points, more rebounds, more assists and fewer turnovers than he did last season, yet somehow finds himself flying under the proverbial radar in what is becoming a brilliant encore campaign. “Cam’s been one of the best players in

UP NeXT Tuesday: New Mexico (15-4, 6-1 MWC) at Utah State (12-7, 2-5), 9:05 p.m. TV: ESPNU (Comcast 261; DirecTV 208) Radio: KVSF-AM 1400, KKoB-AM 770 Internet: Live audio stream at www.utah stateaggies.com

players before winning a major. As a result, Wawrinka rises to a career-high ranking of No. 3, moving five spots up from No. 8. The 28-year-old becomes Switzerland’s highest-ranked player for the first time in his career, overtaking 17-time Grand Slam-winner Federer, his friend and mentor, who started the Australian Open at No. 6 and was expected to drop to No. 8 despite reaching the semifinals. “Everything that’s happened is quite crazy,” Wawrinka said. “When you’re No. 3 and you win a Grand Slam, journalists expect you to say, ‘Now I want

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DirecTV: Ch. 208; Dish Network: Ch. 141 Fox Sports 1 — Comcast: Ch. 38 (Digital, Ch. 255); DirecTV: Ch. 219; Dish Network: Ch. 150 NBC Sports — Comcast: Ch. 27 (Digital, Ch. 837): DirecTV: Ch. 220; Dish Network: Ch. 159 CBS Sports — Comcast: Ch. 274; (Digital, Ch. 838); DirecTV: Ch. 221; Dish Network: Ch. 158 ROOT Sports — Comcast: Ch. 276 (Digital, 814); DirecTV: Ch. 683; Dish Network: Ch. 414

PREP SCORES Boys basketball Cliff 84, Cloudcroft 47

Girls basketball Artesia 56, Ruidoso 34 Los Lunas 60, Santa Fe 29 Lovington 46, Texico 20

PREP SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, call 986-3060 or email sports@sfnewmexican.com.

Today Boys Basketball — Santa Rosa at Monte del Sol (at GCCC), 6 p.m. Desert Academy at Mountainair, 6:30 p.m. N.M. School for Deaf at Walatowa, 6:30 p.m. Bernalillo at Capital, 7 p.m. Los Alamos at Española Valley, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Mora at Santa Fe Preparatory, 7 p.m. Peñasco at Pecos, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Mora at Santa Fe Preparatory, 5 p.m. N.M. School for Deaf at Walatowa, 5 p.m. Coronado at Dulce, 5 p.m. Peñasco at Pecos, 5:30 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Piedra Vista, 6 p.m. St. Michael’s at Socorro, 6:30 p.m.

Wednesday Boys Basketball — Abq. St. Pius X at St. Michael’s, 7 p.m. West Las Vegas at Taos, 7 p.m. Raton at Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Española Valley at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Capital at Bernalillo, 7 p.m.

Thursday the conference, by far,” Neal said. “But if you look at what Kendall Williams has done every day, night in, night out, making plays, scoring what he’s scoring, his stats are better — he goes unrecognized. I mean, he’s not getting any publicity. He got a lot last year and his stats are five more points a game, he’s leading the conference in assists, he’s guarding the [opponent’s] best player.” NOTeS u The Lobos trail the all-time series with Utah State, 19-4. However, the schools have not played one another since the fallout of Lobogate in 1979. That’s the only time they’ve met in the last 52 years. u The Aggies’ loss to San Diego State was their first MWC setback at home. That leaves SDSU, up to No. 5 in this week’s Associated Press Top 25 poll, as the only team without a home loss in conference play — and the regular season has almost two-thirds of the way to go. u The school record for best road start in conference play is 5-0 by the memorable 1977-78 team that started 24-3, climbed as high as No. 5 in the polls, won the WAC title and then lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament to Cal State Fullerton.

Open: Wawrinka rises five spots to No. 3 team and having a Skype session with his wife and 3-yearold daughter in Switzerland. Now, he says he’s looking forward to taking some time after the Davis Cup next weekend to reflect on “what happened” in Melbourne. Here’s what happened. Wawrinka won his first Grand Slam. On his way to the title, he upset No. 2-ranked Djokovic in the quarterfinals and then beat No. 1-ranked Nadal in the final, despite having never beaten either before. He became the first man in 21 years to beat the top two

Northern New Mexico

ON THE AIR

Lobos: Kirk out with undisclosed injury

Continued from Page B-1

B-3

Local results and schedules

The Associated Press

SAO PAULO, Brazil — Ask Brazilians how their national team will fare at the World Cup and chances are they will predict a run at least to the July 13 final, if not a win. Understandable optimism, given that Brazil will be playing at home and has won more World Cups (five) than any other soccer power. But what if the host nation is booted out early? Very possible with defending champion Spain or 2010 runner-up the Netherlands looming for Brazil in the first knockout game and a tough path beyond that. Are Brazilians good losers? Would they sour the tournament mood in defeat? Or swallow their disappointment with a few moraleboosting caipirinha cocktails, crank up the samba and party on? Like a kid who picks his scabs, Brazil has never allowed the wound of its last World Cup loss at home to fully heal. That was way back in 1950, before most Brazilians alive today were born. But the national pain of Brazil 1, Uruguay 2 has been handed down from one generation to the next like an heirloom. Seemingly everyone knows about the stunned silence of 173,000-plus who packed Maracana Stadium expecting to see Brazil lift the trophy, how fans wept and never forgave goalkeeper Moacir Barbosa for letting Alcides Ghiggia score Uruguay’s winner past his lefthand post. “We carry this trauma. It’s really a trauma,” Deputy Sports Minister Luis Fernandes. “Probably around 90 percent of the Brazilian population wasn’t born in 1950, and we still carry this trauma. I wasn’t born in 1950, and this trauma, I’ve been socialized, brought up in terms of this trauma.”

Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

to be No. 1.’ But I feel it’s so far for me, so far from my level. That’s why it’s not my goal.” Relentlessly aggressive on the court, Wawrinka gives the impression off-court that he doesn’t want to revel in his success for fear of jinxing it. Occasionally, he allows himself to be proud. “Now I know I can beat everybody. The big stage in a Grand Slam doesn’t matter,” said Wawrinka, but added that he’s in the same position as Juan Martin del Potro, whose title at the 2009 U.S. Open is the only one of the past 35 majors not won by the Big Four. “Since [del Potro] won

the U.S. Open, everybody wants him to win another Grand Slam. But it’s not that simple.” He doesn’t like to think too far ahead, but indulged one question about what it will be like to walk through the halls of Rod Laver Arena next year and see his picture up on the walls with the other champions. “First thing I will do, I’m going to come back and take a picture of myself,” Wawrinka said. “Again it’s a dream. It’s big. When I see all those champions, for me, they’re the real champions. To be there is just something crazy.”

Boys Basketball — Santa Fe Waldorf at N.M. School for Deaf, 6:30 p.m. Jemez Valley at Desert Academy (at GCCC), 6:30 p.m. Tse’ Yi’ Gai at Coronado, 6:30 p.m. Escalante at Questa, 6:30 p.m. Monte del Sol at Mora, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Santa Fe Waldorf at N.M. School for Deaf, 5 p.m. Jemez Valley at Desert Academy (at GCCC), 5 p.m. Tse’ Yi’ Gai at Coronado, 5 p.m. Monte del Sol at Mora, 5:30 p.m. Dulce at Escalante 5:30 p.m. Capital at Albuquerque Academy, 7 p.m. Hot Springs at Santa Fe Indian School, 7 p.m. Taos at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Raton, 7 p.m.

Friday Boys Basketball — Dulce at Coronado, 5 p.m. Questa at Mesa Vista, 7 p.m. Bernalillo at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Capital at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Navajo Prep, 7 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Abq. Sandia Preparatory, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Questa at Mesa Vista, 5:30 p.m.

Saturday Boys Basketball — Capital at Abq. St. Pius X, 2 p.m. Albuquerque Menaul at Desert Academy (at GCCC), 2 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Dulce, 2:30 p.m. Mesa Vista at Escalante, 5:30 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Tse’ Yi’ Gai, 5:30 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Taos, 7 p.m. Pecos at Monte del Sol (at Christian Life), 7 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Peñasco, 7 p.m. Estancia at McCurdy, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Mesa Vista at Escalante, 4 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Tse’ Yi’ Gai, 4 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Peñasco, 5:30 p.m. Pecos at Monte del Sol (at Christian Life), 5:30 p.m. Questa at McCurdy, 6 p.m. Santa Fe High at Bernalillo, 7 p.m. Los Alamos at Capital, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.

NeW MeXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com


B-4

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

NFL

League backs youth concussion protocols

BASEBALL COMMENTARY

Legislation provides for grant program

New Tigers manager won’t forget that his players are still people

By Samantha Henry

By Jeff Seidel

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Legislation for federal funding to help protect student athletes from concussions got the National Football League’s backing Monday in the shadow of the stadium where the Super Bowl will be played this weekend. NFL Senior Vice President Adolpho Birch joined two New Jersey lawmakers in support of legislation drafted following the 2008 death of a New Jersey high school football player. The proposal by Sen. Robert Menendez and Rep. Bill Pascrell involves national concussion guidelines under development for schools and youth sport programs by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The legislation would authorize a five-year grant program to bring those guidelines to school sports programs nationwide. The bill would authorize $5 million in first-year funding, with additional funds to be provided as necessary for the remaining four years. It would be used to help states train athletic staff and help ensure schools have adequate medical staff coverage and can implement the CDC guidelines expected to be established by next year. Birch, the NFL’s senior vice president of labor policy and government affairs, joined the lawmakers for a news conference at an East Rutherford high

Alex Avila. He visited Anibal rad Ausmus walked into Sanchez the Tiger Den at Comin Orlando erica Park on Thursday when he was afternoon and spotted Andy in Florida for Dirks. the winter “Hey,” Ausmus said. “How meetings. He Brad Ausmus you doing?” had lunch Dirks started talking about with Justin a deer hunting trip he took to Verlander in Richmond, Va., Alaska. It was the first time and he met up with Austin they really had talked in perJackson and Ian Kinsler. son, and those relationships “I made a little circuit,” Auswill play an important role in mus said. “Sometimes, I was his success as Tigers manager. able to hook up. Sometimes, “I think a huge factor in they were out of town. It’s managing, especially in the nice to put a face to a name. game of baseball, is rememThey are human beings.” bering that these guys are Over the past few months, not just assets receiving payAusmus has written down at checks,” Ausmus said. “These least four lineups, not countguys are human beings. When ing the arrows he wrote in the you are a human being, emomargins, giving him options tions play into it, especially of moving different players over the course of a 162-game into different spots. season. It’s easy to look at the “I’ve parsed this out on statistics and say, ‘You should paper several ways,” he said. have done this. You should “Then, I have the arrow that have done that.’ says, ‘I could put this guy “But sometimes, the human here.’ ” side of baseball needs to be Nothing is set in stone. “It’s taken into account when you all subject to change,” he said. are putting a lineup together, So who will bat leadoff? when you are putting a roster Will it be Jackson or Kinsler? together.” “The truth is, I don’t know As he talked, Ausmus what I’m going to do,” he said. offered an interesting glimpse “I’m not overly concerned into how he will manage. about it. I have options in my Yes, he will look at all kinds mind.” of statistics. Rejoice, saberI don’t think he was being metric crowd! coy. But he also will make deci“I don’t have to know,” he sions based on something said. Not yet. Because he far more complicated. The doesn’t really know his playhuman side of baseball. ers yet.” Which is based on gut feelOne thing is certain. Miguel ings and knowing personaliCabrera will bat third and ties. Rejoice, old-schoolers! Victor Martinez will bat Ausmus has spent the fourth. The biggest question past few months studying is, according to Ausmus, who the Tigers’ statistics. He has will bat fifth and sixth. watched videotape of playWhich brings us back to the ers, read internal scouting human side of baseball. reports and talked to players “You can take all the numand coaches about certain bers and the computer would players and the clubhouse spit it out this way,” he said. atmosphere. But he also is trying to meet “But it doesn’t mean that’s the way it’s always going to be.” the players. To start building those bonds. That’s the part of baseball He went out to eat with he loves. The human side.

Detroit Free Press

The Associated Press

B

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., and U.S. Congressman Bill Pascrell Jr., D-N.J., center, listen to Becton High School football quarterback Karriem Royster speak Monday about the experience of getting a concussion during a game. JENNIFER BROWN/NORTHJERSEY.COM

school a little over a mile from MetLife Stadium, which will host the Super Bowl on Sunday. Several student athletes from the Harry P. Becton Regional High School’s Wildcats football squad — a few of whom spoke about concussions suffered during play — joined them at the podium. “In the NFL, player health and safety is a priority for us,” Birch said. “But we need to be clear that it’s not just our players who we’re thinking about, and who we’re worried about, it’s all players, it’s athletes at all levels, in all sports. We believe that youth sports should be a particular focus.”

The NFL’s support for the legislation comes as it tries to settle a lawsuit by thousands of its former players over its handling of concussions. The two sides have negotiated a proposed $765 million deal to settle thousands of lawsuits consolidated in federal court in Philadelphia. Amid concerns the fund may not last the promised 65 years, plaintiffs’ lawyers are preparing for a fairness hearing expected sometime this year. Menendez said federal funding was needed at the school sports level “to ensure that every child who takes the field is properly protected and that their parents have peace of mind.”

The Contact Act was drafted following the October 2008 death of Montclair High School football player Ryne Dougherty. The 16-year-old Dougherty suffered a brain hemorrhage and died after his family said he was prematurely returned to action following a concussion. The Contact Act hasn’t been enacted, but Pascrell said he hoped the CDC guidelines and the NFL’s endorsement would help get it passed. “They were a reluctant partner in the beginning,” Pascrell said of the NFL, “but they’ve jumped into this in a very positive way.”

Stars: Supporting roles lead to big plays ence was, but he’s better because of it.” Broncos linebacker Lenon’s confidence ton but went undrafted in 2012. He made had to be waning at various points in his all of three catches that season after catch- 12-year career. ing on with the Seahawks, and his job was He was on the 0-16 Lions of 2008, eight anything but secure when Percy Harvin years after he was not selected in the draft. was acquired in a trade, and with Sidney He was cut by Carolina in 2000, worked Rice, Golden Tate and Doug Baldwin in for the post office and then wound up in the receiving corps for 2013. the XFL — if anybody remembers that All Kearse did was go from afterthought short-lived league. to touchdown threat, and his 35-yard catch Yet here he is, a backup to middle linefor the winning score against San Franbacker Wesley Woodyard who gets snaps cisco keyed Seattle’s NFC title win. in the regular defense, and plays some Some credit Kearse undergoing Lasik special teams. eye surgery last winter with his becomLenon learned a lot from all that losing ing a force, but coach Pete Carroll can’t confirm that. He can confirm that Kearse’s with the Lions. By applying those lessons, importance has steadily risen this season. well, he’s managed another half-decade in the NFL. “I don’t know for a fact that it changed “When you’re in a situation like that, things, but it sure seems like it did,” Caryou have a certain amount of guys that roll said of the surgery. “He has great athleticism, great hand-eye coordination, but pack it in,” Lenon said. “That’s difficult for me, because I’m not that type of person. he has been over the top since he came I’m going to compete until the end. That’s back from that. So, subjectively I would say that it had an impact, but he was good the most difficult part of being in a situation like that. anyway. “Now, it’s a complete reversal.” “He has been extraordinary for us in so And a great place to be after you’ve many ways, but it seems like it gave him confidence. I don’t know what the differbeen mired in the other side.

Continued from Page B-1

Sochi: Putin rejects corruption claims New England quarterback Tom Brady is sacked by Broncos defensive tackle Terrance Knighton during the AFC Championship game Jan. 19 in Denver. CHARLIE RIEDEL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bets: Casinos looking to fantasy players Continued from Page B-1 staffers to figure out hyper-specific data points like the number of receptions Denver running back Knowshon Moreno is likely to have. Proposition wagers, in which gamblers bet on elements of the game aside from the final score, account for as much as 60 percent of Super Bowl bets in Nevada. Johnny Avello, who runs the luxurious sportsbook at Wynn, where the chairs are made of fine leather and the carpet is thick enough to pass out on, believes the stigma is also falling away from the pastime. Avello, who speaks with a Goodfellastype Brooklyn accent even though he grew up in upstate New York, says this is the biggest change he’s seen in the past decades. “Even Al Michaels on [Sunday] Night Football will say, ‘Wow, they covered the spread,’ ” he said, grinning in disbelief. When casinos figure out how to attract fantasy sports players to the Strip, profits may soar even farther. Some of this growth was hidden by the recession. People scale back on gambling before other discretionary spending, and the handle— the total amount of money wagered — plummeted in 2009. It was the only fiscal year of the past ten that saw a decline in sports betting. Oddsmakers believe the previous Super Bowl record, set in 2006, would have been upended years before 2013 if not for the

hard times. Last fall, gamblers set records in September, October and November. In November, the last month for which statistics have been released, sportsbooks handled $490 million in wagers. On Sunday, the Super Bowl will be played outdoors at a site with cold weather for the first time, and the industry is worried that snow could throw off the handle when the Seahawks meet the Broncos, favored to win by 2.5 points, in New Jersey. Casual gamblers might be spooked, unable to predict how the weather would affect their favored team. The surge in betting means that sportsbooks are now expected to contribute to the bottom line. So while casinos are throwing elaborate parties for Super Bowl weekend, selling table service and luxurious suites, don’t expect to get so much as a free bottle of water at the sportsbook. At Wynn, a customer has to bet $150 before the book will think about giving out a drink ticket. Books remain less profitable per square foot than table games, where the house always wins. An oddsmaker’s goal is to neither win nor lose on the games, but to get equal money coming in on both sides — and clean up in commissions. This commission, also known as the vigorish or juice, amounts to about 4.5 percent of the handle at most Strip sportsbooks. Don’t start wringing your hands for the

struction projects. This has proven extremely difficult to President Vladimir Putin do, because the games were has rejected claims about not covered by Russian laws rampant corruption in Sochi, on tenders and procurement, saying the inflated prices were making officials unaccountdue to the honest mistakes of able for the money spent. investors who underestimated Olympstroi was given free the costs. rein by Putin to “determine “If anybody has got this the ground rules for selecting information, please show this investors and contractors” for to us,” Putin said in a recent Olympic venues. This created television interview. “But so fertile ground for corruption far we haven’t seen anything in the allocation of funds, except speculation.” according to Ivan Ninenko, A 2012 report by the govdeputy director of Transparernment’s Audit Chamber ency International in Moscow. found about $500 million in Olympstroi “is even less “unreasonable” cost overruns transparent than companies in the preparations for the in [Russia’s] state-owned secSochi Olympics. tor, where corruption is rife,” Auditors found that the he said. work of some staff members The total amount of state at Olympstroi, the state com- contracts overseen by Olymppany in charge of Sochi constroi was about 700 billion struction, between 2008 and rubles, or $22 billon, accord2010 was “conducive to incur- ing to Deputy Prime Minister ring unreasonable cost overDmitry Kozak, the governruns.” At least three criminal ment official in charge of the investigations against Olymp- games. stroi employees have been A website Navalny set up in opened, but none of them has 2010, called Rospil, has monireached court. Olympstroi tored thousands of Russian has since changed its manage- state contracts and appealed ment. to law enforcement agenThe Sochi Organizing Com- cies to get the murky ones mittee would not comment annulled. Rospil has been sucMonday on Navalny’s new cessful in overturning nearly website. 130 contracts worth nearly When asked about it, $2 billion in taxpayer money. Thomas Bach, president of Not for the Sochi Games, the International Olympic though. Committee, said the IOC “Opportunities for public stands “against any form of control are very limited” for corruption.” Sochi contracts, said Kon“Whenever there have been stantin Kalmykov, who works concerns and accusations and for Navalny. All it takes is a information in the past, they presidential or government have been passed on to the decree to award a contract to organizing committee,” Bach a specific firm. said. “If there were regular pubNavalny does not seem lic control in place, that would to provide solid evidence be a big factor in saving funds of how money was stolen and increasing efficiency of during the many Sochi conspending,” Kalmykov said.

Continued from Page B-1

sportsbooks, though. They’ve only lost twice on the Super Bowl in the past 20 years. And they have another advantage. While betting is becoming more popular, the physical books are becoming smaller. That’s in large part because of the demise of one sport in particular: horse racing. In days past, racing aficionados would hang around the books and watch contests from morning till night, with new ones starting every four minutes. For the past decade, football has represented nearly half of the sportsbook handle, with most gamblers buying their tickets well ahead of the games. “If you walk in to any sportsbook, 99 percent of the time the place is mostly empty,” said RJ Bell of Las Vegas, Nev.based Pregame.com. Anjelko Markobis, 22, is one of the rare young men who still like to hang out in that smoky, mahogany environment. He spent a recent afternoon at the Wynn sportsbook. He switched between watching a soccer game he had $100 riding on and monitoring the shifting Super Bowl line on a huge LED screen, bantering with his friends about whether he should have placed his bet when it was still at 1.5. Markobis used to spend his free time with Blackjack, but now focuses on sports betting, placing three major bets a week. “It’s more entertaining,” he said, “to watch a game than sit at a table.”


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

The weather

For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Times of clouds and sun

Tonight

Wednesday

Mainly clear

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Mostly sunny and not Mostly sunny; breezy Partly sunny, breezy as cool in the p.m. and pleasant

18

42

52/28

61/37

Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)

54/24

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Sunday

Partly sunny

Monday

Partly sunny

50/25

Humidity (Noon)

Rain and drizzle possible

49/24

50/15

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

24%

37%

16%

30%

29%

29%

38%

28%

wind: N 6-12 mph

wind: NNE 4-8 mph

wind: NW 7-14 mph

wind: W 10-20 mph

wind: WNW 12-25 mph

wind: SW 6-12 mph

wind: W 6-12 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Monday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 44°/24° Normal high/low ............................ 46°/20° Record high ............................... 61° in 2003 Record low .................................. 4° in 1963 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.52”/0.52” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00”

New Mexico weather 64

The following water statistics of January 23 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.284 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 3.010 City Wells: 13.440 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 5.638 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.077 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 64.0 percent of capacity; daily inflow 0.97 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

285

64

Farmington 45/15

666

40

Pecos 39/17

25

Albuquerque 48/24

56

25

Clayton 30/16

AccuWeather Flu Index

25

Las Vegas 31/16

Today.........................................2, Low Wednesday...............................2, Low Thursday...................................4, Low Friday ........................................2, Low Saturday ...................................2, Low Sunday ......................................1, Low The AccuWeather Flu Index™ combines the effects of weather with a number of other known factors to provide a scale showing the overall probability of flu transmission and severity of symptoms. The AccuWeather Flu Index™ is based on a scale of 0-10.

54

40

40

285

Clovis 31/13

54

60 60

87

412

Santa Fe 42/18

Monday’s rating ........................... Moderate Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA

64

Taos 36/6

Española 47/24 Los Alamos 41/22 Gallup 46/10

Raton 28/8

64 84

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 39/16

Ruidoso 39/24

25

70

Truth or Consequences 57/26 70

Las Cruces 59/25

54

70

70

380

380

Hobbs 37/18

285

Alamogordo 56/17

180 10

Water statistics

Air quality index

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Area rainfall

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/0.04” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................. Trace/Trace Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.08”/0.08” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00”

Carlsbad 41/17

0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

285

10

Sun and moon

State extremes

Mon. High: 63 ............................. Lordsburg Mon. Low 12 ..................................... Grants

State cities City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 52/32 pc 50/29 pc 40/18 sn 48/28 s 54/31 s 46/12 pc 43/20 pc 27/16 sn 44/24 pc 37/19 s 50/17 s 63/41 pc 49/28 pc 51/19 pc 37/27 s 55/14 pc 56/12 pc 45/25 s 57/40 pc

Hi/Lo W 56/17 pc 48/24 pc 32/8 pc 40/17 pc 41/17 pc 35/7 pc 34/10 pc 30/16 sf 42/13 pc 31/13 pc 45/13 pc 62/22 pc 47/24 pc 45/15 pc 37/17 pc 46/10 pc 48/13 pc 37/18 pc 59/25 pc

Hi/Lo W 52/34 s 55/32 s 44/22 s 61/40 s 57/36 s 40/19 s 54/26 s 58/35 s 45/26 s 55/33 s 50/27 s 58/30 s 54/31 s 51/26 s 62/34 s 51/28 s 54/27 s 54/33 s 55/35 s

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni

Hi/Lo 35/17 63/39 42/25 53/30 35/20 30/17 34/16 51/31 47/27 48/21 36/23 57/36 57/33 45/16 60/39 34/19 60/43 45/30 53/13

W sn pc s pc pc pc sn pc s pc pc pc pc sn pc pc pc s pc

Hi/Lo W 31/16 pc 64/33 s 41/22 pc 51/20 pc 33/15 pc 28/8 pc 30/8 pc 49/21 pc 39/16 pc 39/24 pc 37/18 pc 59/26 s 55/22 pc 36/6 pc 57/26 pc 33/18 pc 60/26 pc 43/22 pc 46/13 pc

Hi/Lo W 56/35 s 61/40 s 51/32 s 57/30 s 55/34 s 57/26 s 41/17 s 55/26 s 60/30 s 52/40 s 61/37 s 57/36 s 56/30 s 47/22 s 56/34 s 63/34 s 56/37 s 52/31 s 51/28 s

Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Weather for January 28

New

First

Full

Last

Jan 30

Feb 6

Feb 14

Feb 22

The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 49/31 61/45 47/21 26/8 0/-10 25/22 47/23 70/43 64/45 6/-5 13/8 15/14 52/32 21/15 21/4 25/12 54/26 74/65 62/53 10/2 18/4 68/42 69/52

W pc pc pc c s sn sh pc pc c pc sn pc sn sf s s sh pc sn pc pc s

Hi/Lo 38/28 36/20 18/8 30/25 6/-4 28/28 20/13 38/26 31/18 1/-6 9/0 6/-3 36/18 28/17 3/-5 23/4 50/17 77/67 34/27 6/0 22/12 67/44 76/55

W pc sn pc pc s c pc i sn pc pc c pc pc pc s s c sn pc s s pc

Hi/Lo 36/25 35/16 24/12 40/12 21/-7 42/29 22/13 34/17 35/11 19/15 20/10 14/7 47/32 57/33 14/8 17/-2 57/30 78/67 44/27 20/12 44/25 68/50 77/56

W pc pc pc sn c i pc sn pc s s s s pc s pc s s pc s pc s s

Rise 8:04 a.m. 5:13 a.m. 11:15 p.m. 3:15 p.m. 1:42 a.m. 9:55 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:54 p.m. 3:46 p.m. 10:44 a.m. 5:44 a.m. 12:11 p.m. 10:19 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 Yesterday Today Tomorrow

City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC

Hi/Lo 19/16 52/23 82/62 -1/-3 -6/-16 65/57 44/25 28/21 76/60 46/25 75/56 23/15 41/32 64/36 18/10 41/22 60/44 69/58 59/48 42/35 0/-9 46/21 54/29

W pc pc pc c pc sh c sn sh pc pc sf c c pc pc pc pc c c s i pc

Hi/Lo 16/5 25/12 81/67 -2/-5 -3/-8 35/27 18/12 30/16 78/56 18/11 73/49 8/-3 48/41 22/11 16/10 38/29 38/24 69/53 61/53 48/43 5/-5 16/8 20/13

W pc c pc pc pc i pc pc c pc s pc r sn s pc i pc pc r s pc pc

Hi/Lo 25/15 34/22 82/64 16/12 20/3 36/24 22/15 47/25 59/44 23/14 74/50 13/3 53/38 30/11 36/24 48/33 49/31 69/54 61/53 49/41 27/3 24/10 28/15

W s s c s pc c pc s c pc s pc r sn pc sh pc pc c r c pc pc

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Ice

Cold front

Warm front

Stationary front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Mon. High: 85 ......................... McAllen, TX Mon. Low: -31 ....................... Brimson, MN

On Jan. 28, 1922, the roof of the Knickerbocker Theatre in Washington, D.C., collapsed after a 25-inch snowfall. More than 100 people were killed instantly.

Weather trivia™

is the coldest national capital in Q: What the world?

A: Ottawa, Canada.

Weather history

Newsmakers NEW YORK — Proving nothing is impossible in the world of daytime television, Rosie O’Donnell is coming back to The View — at least for a day. The show announced Monday that O’Donnell will be a guest on the daytime gabfest on Feb. 7. O’Donnell’s tenure as a panelist on the ABC show seven years ago was notably stormy. O’Donnell said after leaving that she had experienced something like posttraumatic stress disorder, and show creator Barbara Walters said she resented the way O’Donnell dumped on the show.

Billy Joel begins residency in Madison Square Garden

Billy Joel

Hi/Lo 41/38 50/45 68/54 88/66 63/51 49/23 27/10 68/45 86/64 66/54 87/73 59/47 30/21 45/36 45/39 81/55 84/61 68/59 59/48 84/70

W sn pc pc pc pc s sf sh pc pc s pc sn r r s pc s pc pc

Hi/Lo 41/34 54/50 69/48 90/72 45/44 40/21 34/19 68/47 81/70 65/50 87/72 60/30 34/27 42/40 44/26 73/56 85/63 71/62 52/43 81/69

W c r t s s s c sh r s pc s c sh pc pc s s c pc

Hi/Lo 39/26 60/44 68/47 91/72 55/41 46/24 26/19 67/48 86/70 70/50 87/71 57/39 29/25 44/36 40/29 74/56 84/65 71/62 60/42 81/69

W c r pc s pc s c c pc s pc s sn pc sn t t s s pc

City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 57/52 48/36 52/46 75/49 26/5 12/1 74/50 46/37 28/18 88/79 48/34 77/54 41/18 84/75 32/23 81/64 45/34 39/34 25/21 41/37

W pc sh pc s c sn pc sh sf s r s s pc sn pc s c sf sn

Hi/Lo 55/46 48/39 48/36 73/46 7/4 4/-12 72/49 45/36 34/22 92/75 50/33 86/57 36/19 84/75 27/23 84/68 57/39 46/41 34/25 43/24

W sh sh sh pc pc s pc sh c s sh s pc pc pc s s r c pc

Hi/Lo 54/46 43/34 46/32 69/42 11/4 -1/-14 71/47 39/37 29/21 92/76 52/48 90/55 43/30 86/75 25/17 88/70 54/44 46/38 34/27 40/27

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Today’s talk shows

Rosie O’Donnell coming back to ‘View’ as guest

Rosie O’Donnel

City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima

NEW YORK — Billy Joel has begun his residency at Madison Square Garden with an energetic show that covers a wide swath of his musical catalog. Joel and his band came out to thunderous applause Monday night and launched into “Miami 2017,” a song Joel wrote in the early 1970s about post-apocalyptic New York City. Throughout his set, he covered many of his signature songs. The Associated Press

3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Jake Bugg performs. 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 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste María Celeste conduce este espacio donde informa al televidente sobre el acontecer diario, presenta videos dramáticos e insólitos, además ofrece segmentos de interés. KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury James’ baby-mamas feud; when Vontrese became pregnant, her boyfriend said she was too fat and left.

FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:15 p.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 8:00 p.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show CNN Piers Morgan Live 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Wanda Sykes; Thomas Haden Church; Dwight Yoakam performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actor Eric Stonestreet; Bastille performs. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Actress Anna Faris; Motley Crue performs. CNN Anderson Cooper 360

Thomas Bangalter, left, and Guy-Manuel de HomemChristo of Daft Punk perform at the 56th annual Grammy Awards at Staples Center on Sunday in Los Angeles. MATT SAYLES/INVISION

Grammy win for Daft Punk boosts pride in France By Angela Charlton

Sunrise today ............................... 7:07 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 5:28 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 4:50 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 3:22 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 7:07 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 5:29 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 5:45 a.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 4:32 p.m. Sunrise Thursday ......................... 7:06 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 5:30 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ....................... 6:35 a.m. Moonset Thursday ........................ 5:44 p.m.

National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles

Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

B-5

FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actor Mark Wahlberg; actress Michaela Conlin. 12:00 a.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! Chelsea Lately Comedian Greg Fitzsimmons; actress heather McDonald; actor Ian Karmel; actress Gabrielle Union. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Seth Meyers; Joe Buck; Liv Warfield performs. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show Memorable guests return to reveal how their lives have changed. CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly

The Associated Press

PARIS — They’re helmeted, mute and mysterious, and they’re suddenly the pride of France. Duo Daft Punk did something no other French music group has done: Brought home four Grammy Awards in one night. Congratulations poured in Monday from French media, tweeters and bloggers — and even the U.S. Embassy in Paris. “See, France is capable of winning!” said commentator JeanJacques Bourdin on BFM-TV. The multiple wins for the electronic music pioneers Sunday night were a rare bit of good news in France amid bleak reports on unemployment (stuck around 11 percent) and the president’s personal life (complicated). The men behind the masks, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter, kept their French accents carefully concealed at the Grammys. The two, who only appear in public behind helmets, left it to Pharrell Williams to accept their awards. While those in the French masses celebrate Daft Punk’s repeated trips to the podium at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, French officialdom has been strangely silent. Daft Punk’s work didn’t get a single nomination for the 2013 French music awards Victoire de la musique. Perhaps that’s because, as critic Pierre Siankowski put it, “We have a problem in France with the mainstream.” Something as universally popular as the never-get-it-out-of-your-head “Get Lucky” isn’t seen as “real art.” That wasn’t a concern for the Recording Academy voters, who handed Daft Punk and Williams the trophy in every category they were nominated in at the Grammy Awards: Album of the year for Random Access Memories. Record of the year for funk-electronic anthem “Get Lucky.” Best pop duo or group performance. And best dance or electronica album. Random Access Memories also won for non-classical engineered album, an award that went to their engineer. Daft Punk, produced by Columbia Records in the U.S., broke into the global sound consciousness with their 1997 album Homework and its hit “Around the World.” They went on to win Grammys in 2007 for best dance recording and best electronic dance album. Then, they reached for something radical: live instruments. Their combination of real musicians, R&B rhythms and electronic expertise is seen as the key to the success of Random Access Memories. Siankowski, the chief editor at pop culture weekly Les Inrockuptibles, isn’t afraid to be a fan, praising them for “intelligent music … that goes against the grain.” And something wwwabout those helmets all over French TV on Monday looked familiar. Henri Guaino, speechwriter for ex-President Nicolas Sarkozy, couldn’t resist drawing a parallel with the helmeted man pictured in a gossip magazine this month sneaking out of the presidential palace on a motorcycle to meet his actress paramour. The magazine says the man was President Francois Hollande, a claim neither he nor the actress has denied. Guaino quipped on BFM that the images provided “good publicity” for Daft Punk.

TV

top picks

1

7 p.m. on FOX, NBC, PBS, ABC, CNBC CNN CSPAN FNC CBS State of the Union 2014 It’s been an eventful — and contentious — year for President Barack Obama and Congress, so the president will have plenty of material for this year’s State of the Union address to the Senate, the House and the American people. As for where to watch it, you have plenty of choices, so feel free to go with the network whose after-speech commentators you prefer. 7 p.m. on CBS NCIS Parsons (Colin Hanks) gains a new perspective on Gibbs (Mark Harmon) and the team after an explosion at a black-tie affair in the nation’s capital. DiNozzo and McGee (Michael Weatherly, Sean

2

Murray) take the risky step of investigating the case as civilians in “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot.” Pauley Perrette and David McCallum also star. 7 p.m. on The CW The Originals After making a grisly discovery in the Cauldron, Klaus (Joseph Morgan) asks Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) for help, but he refuses. Rebekah (Claire Holt) discovers the remnants of a sacrifice and realizes it’s the work of a warlock from their past. Elijah and Hayley (Daniel Gillies, Phoebe Tonkin) go in search of Rebekah after getting a tip that she might be in trouble. Leah Pipes also stars in the new episode “Dance Back From the Grave.” 8 p.m. on The CW Supernatural Dean and Sam (Jensen Ackles, Jared Padalecki) go to see Garth (DJ Qualls) after getting word that he’s in the hospital. It isn’t a happy reunion, however, as Dean, still feeling guilty about Kevin, angrily confronts Garth about disappearing and demands to know where he’s been — which only causes him to flee again in the new episode “Sharp Teeth.” 8 p.m. TBS Cougar Town Andy (Ian Gomez) urges Ellie (Christa Miller) to break out her alter ego, Charming Ellie, for the town’s Buccaneer Week, and Jules (Courteney Cox) is delighted with her friend’s new persona. Laurie (Busy Philipps) starts baking risque cakes in an effort to get more business in the new episode “The Trip to Pirate’s Cove.” Josh Hopkins also stars.

3

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B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

sfnm«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 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR SALE 202 E. Marcy Street, Santa Fe

LOTS & ACREAGE

CITY MOBILE HOME LOT FOR SALE 45’ X 112’. City of Santa Fe water and sewer provided.

SANTA FE 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

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

when you buy a

2014 Pet Calendar for $5!

Substantial Renovation in 2006. Zoned BCD (Business Capitol District) Approximately 29,511 square feet- East Marcy, East Palace Subdistrict.

Moriarty. Two 40 acre Farm-Land Parcels with irrigation and domestic wells, water and mineral rights. Owner Finance. 505-471-0365, 505310-0566.

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE Office, retail, gallery, hospitality, residential, etc. Pueblo style architecture, computer controlled HVAC, cat 6, water catchment, brick and carpet flooring, Cummins diesel back-up electricity generator, multiple conference rooms, vault, climate controlled server room, power conditioners, privacy windows, double blinds on windows, break room, outdoor break area, executive offices, corporate reception, close proximity to restaurants, parking garages and the convention center. Paved parking for 100+ spaces. Parking ratio = 1:275 which includes the offsite parking across the street.

100% of sales donated to SFAS.

CONTACT JOHN HANCOCK 505-470-5604

Barker Realty 505-982-9836 FARMS & RANCHES 146.17 AC. 1 hour from Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Electricity, views of Sangre De Cristo Mnts and Glorieta Mesa. $675, acre, 20 year owner financing. Toll Free 8 7 7 - 7 9 7 - 2 6 2 4 newmexicoranchland.net

LOTS & ACREAGE

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839

1,900 sq.ft. Warehouse, 600 sq.ft Office Space, reception area, two offices, kitchen, security, fenced yard, On-site parking. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2511.

2 BEDROOM 1 office 1 bath southside house. Yard is completely enclosed, large covered patio. $1,100 monthly plus deposit. No pets, no smoking. 505-660-0084.

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

RETAIL OFFICE SPACE - 1000 SQFT Open, Bright, Versatile, Fresh Remodel, Parking, Near prominent businesses. St Michaels Dr area. Expandable if need more room. $12 per sq.f.t + utilities. 505-670-9443.

2 BEDROOM, 2 bath in Jaconita on Highway 502. $900 monthly plus utilities. $900 security deposit. 505-4552336

1425 PASEO DE PERALTA, 1 bedroom, full kitchen, bath. Tile throughout. Free laundry. $735 utilities paid. No Pets! 505-471-4405

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

1 BEDROOM, affordable & attractive. Rancho Siringo. Vigas, tile, fireplace, laundry. No pets. $680 includes water. 505-310-1516 1 BEDROOM, with extra office- Exercise Room on Juanita Street. Pet negotiable. Laundry room. $740 includes water. 505-310-1516 2 BEDROOMS. $1250, UTILITIES INCLUDED. HILLSIDEWALK TO PLAZA. FIREPLACE, PRIVATE PATIO. SUNNY, QUIET. OFF-STREET PARKING. 505-685-4704. NON- SMOKING, NO PETS.

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, RUFINA LAN E. Laundry facility on site, cozy fire place, enclosed patio. Near Walmart. $625 monthly. One month free rent. No application fees.

CUTE 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX, firplace 1875 Calle Quedo B off Pacheco. $750. No pets, year lease. Nancy Gilorteanu Realtor, 983-9302.

PASSIVE ACTIVE SOLAR HOME on 2 Acres. Salida Colorado. 3 Bedrooms 3.5 Baths, Office, Gourmet Kitchen, Adobe Brick & Tinted Concrete, Green House, Energy Star Certified, 2 CG, 3337SF. $1,260,000.00. Call Carol NOW 970-846-5368. Western Mtn Real Estate. www.WesternMtn.com

RESORT TIMESHARING PUEBLO BONITO Emerald Bay Timeshare (Mazatlan Mexico) for sale. Presidential Suite for use 1 week per year anytime except Christmas-New Years week. 21 years left on contract. Price firm at $18,000. Contact John at 505-4383793.

»rentals«

360 degree views, Spectacular walking trails, Automated drip watering, Finished 2 car garage, 2 BDR, 2 ½ bath plus office.

COMMERCIAL SPACE

Cozy studio, $750 monthly, $500 deposit, includes utilities, washer, dryer. saltillo tile, great views. No smoking or pets. Call 505-231-0010.

OUT OF STATE

JHancock@SantaFeRealEstate.com

Now Showing Rancho Viejo Townhome $232,500

2014 KARSTEN 16X80 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH FOR SALE. $56, 062 + tax. Movein ready!

Easy Qualify 4.5% APR, 10 year payoff Call Tim 505-699-2995. Shown by appointment only

986-3000 FSBO TOWNHOUSE, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, and garage. $179,900. Close to schools, available immediately. Owner - Broker. Please call 505-850-5005.

1085 Calle Nueva Vista $67,500 Seller, Tim Monaco 505-699-2955

APARTMENTS FURNISHED

$945. SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, ZIA VISTA. Looks new! Incredible Sangre Mountain views! Sunny! Gated. Fireplace. Quiet. Nonsmoking. 505-204-2210

Love is in the air and we have specials to spare! Call our friendly new management team at Las Palomas Apartments- Hopewell St reet at 888-482-8216 for a tour of one of our sunny Studios or large 2 Bedrooms. We’ve made a lot of changes- you’ll be amazed! Se habla español.

CHARMING 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 2 S T O R I E S , high ceilings, courtyard, yard, fruit trees, hot tub. 2 car garage. Red brick, carpet. washer & dryer, dishwasher, central heat, air. $1,550. 505-204-0421. GREAT SHORT term rental. Washer dryer. Fully Furnished. $1,750, monthly includes utilities, Dish, WIFI, Free long distance calls. Nancy 505-6703971.

PRIVATE COMPOUND 1 bedroom, 1 bath apartment. Private patio, carport parking, laundry facility, no pets, nonsmoking. $650 plus deposit. 505-3102827

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. EFFICIENCY CASITA 530 sq.ft. Fully furnished, full kitchen, deck, sunlit hills. $700 monthly plus propane. $500 deposit. Available now. 505-9835445

HOUSES FURNISHED BEAUTIFUL ADOBE Casita, fully furnished, Pojoaque. 1 bedroom, 2 bath. No smoking, No pets. $675 monthly, $300 deposit. Call 505-455-3902.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

Just Reduced! 3 beds, 2 baths, over 1,600 square feet, kiva fireplace, tile floors, large gameroom or office, convenient location, only $220,000. Jefferson Welch, 505-577-7001

STATELY OPEN C O N C E P T , 3400+ Sq.Ft. 1+ acres, unlimited water. Tennis court, hot tub, sauna, gazebo, fountains & ponds. 3+ Bedrooms, 2 Baths (master suite). Nichos, bancos, view. CHAPMAN REALTY: 505-983-8100.

GREAT NEW MEXICO PROPERTIES BIG MOON RANCH NORTHERN NEW MEXICO 988 ACRES. $720,000.00 CALL OWNER, So can you with a802-236classified ad1314 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800

Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED

2 bedroom, 1 bath, on-site laundry, close to parks $600 plus utilities

COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES

2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $850 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

CHARMING CONDO

2 bedroom, 2 bath, granite counters, washer, dryer, upgraded appliances, access to all amenities $925 plus utilities

1+ ACRE . Nice touches; tile in dining room, kitchen & baths; nichos; kiva fireplace; flagstone patio with portal; 2 car garage; fenced, pets ok. Convenient highway access for Albuquerque commuters. Available now. Open this weekend. $1600 monthly. 210-426-6366. 1 car garage, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, yard, new carpet. 2642 Calle Primavera. No-smoking. $,1215 monthly, deposit $1000. 505-473-0013. 2 BEDROOM 1 bath. Fenced yard, $995 monthly. Please call 505-6901803. Available for showing Monday through Wednesday.

5-PLEX CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ON CAMINO CAPITAN

this unit is a one bedroom loft, fireplace, and fenced back yard $650 plus utilities ADOBE, WALK TO PLAZA, SOUTH CAPITAL. Hardwood floors, vigas, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fenced. Pets okay. Very private. 505310-3399 Calle Miquela. 3 bedroom townhome. 2 bath. 2 car garage, private backyard. Non-smoker, small dog considered. $1,250 plus utilities. 505-235-7151.

YOU LIKE THESE RESULTS.

575-694-5444

(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.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

3 bedroom, 1 bath, wood & tile floors, enclosed backyard, additional storage on property $995 plus utilities

www.facebook.com\santafetown house

Quaint Southside Townhome

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Custom Home 2.5 acres. Solar exposure, city lights, ridge above city. 360 views. $1900. John, 505-989-7172.

GUESTHOUSES

Can also be used as u n f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t . $850 monthly. All utilities included. Reserved parking. Call 505-471-1238 additional details.

OUTDOOR PATIO. All tile floors. Washer, Dryer. Parking. Rent $925 including heat, water. Call Sheilah Motelet Realty, Cat considered. Santa Fe 505-660-7045.

3 bedroom 2 bath, 2 car garage on cul-de-sac in Nava Ade. Built in 2000, club house with pool yards away, washer, dryer, gas fireplace, 18ft ceilings, security systems. No pets, non-smoking. Year lease $1,650 monthly, $1,650 security deposit. 505913-0505, 505-438-0501.

ZIA VISTA, top floor. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. 1 year lease. Available 3/1/14 $900 monthly. Sign by 2/6/14; 50% off first month. 432-847-9510

OFFICE- STUDIO NEAR RAILYARD

ONE BEDROOM, one bath apartment. Twenty minutes North of Santa Fe. $600 monthly plus deposit, utilities. Quiet safe area. 505-929-1237

2 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS, double garage, washer, dryer. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golfing, lake. South of Santa Fe. $875. 505-359-4778

CLASSIFIEDS GETS RESULTS. Call to place an ad 986-3000

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! CHIMNEY SWEEPING

CLEANING A+ Cleaning

Homes, Office Apartments, post construction. House and Pet sitting. Senior care. References available, $18 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.

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!

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

FIREWOOD

HANDYMAN

Dry Pinon & Cedar

Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load.

505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!

986-3000

HANDYMAN

LESSONS

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877

INTRODUCTORY FLYING LESSONS. 3 HOURS GROUND SCHOOL, 3 HOURS FLYING. $250. LET’S HAVE FUN! PLEASE CALL 505-577-7552.

WE GET RESULTS!

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

PLASTERING TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583

40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED BEAUTIFUL, UPDATED HOUSE. 2 bedroom 2 bath +bonus room, sunroom, garage. Washer, dryer, kiva fireplaces. Wood floors. Landscaping. Pets-negotiable. No smoking. $1425 monthly! Available now. 720-235-8458. http://rentsantafe.blogspot.com/

WAREHOUSES 1500 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE. $900. 10x10 overhead door. Bathroom, skylights, large office, 12’ ceilings. 1364 Rufina Circle. Sharp, Clean. Available NOW. 505-480-3432

CANYON ROAD- 700 BLOCK. HOME, OFFICE OR STUDIO. 2000 square feet: 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. Fireplaces, radiant heat, tile floors, parking. Enclosed yard. $2300 plus utilities. (505-989-9494 COZY 1 bedroom plus Loft. Refrigerator, 2 car garage, enclosed backyard. No Pets. $885 monthly, $700 deposit. 480-236-5178. EASTSIDE ADOBE, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Available now. Sunroom, carport, and storage unit. $1100 includes water. First, last, deposit. 505467-8345

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

to place your ad, call

986-3000

EDUCATION

MEDICAL DENTAL

Holy Cross Catholic School is now accepting applications for a Kindergarten teacher, immediate hire, for the last semester of the 2013-2014 school year who has a NM Certification K-8 or Early Childhood/ BA Degree. If interested please contact school office at 505-753-4644.

HYGEINIST, FULL-TIME for busy progressive office. Please send cover letter and resume to drparker@richardparkerdds.com

VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOLS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A

IS

WAREHOUSE WORK SPACE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 2000 sq.ft. Workshop, art studio, light manuafacturing. Siler Road area. $1470 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505670-1733.

»announcements«

IN HOME CARE

Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271

PERSONAL ASSISTANT: Bathe, dress, feed, medical care, house clean for disabled 155lb man. Communication skills, responsible, PC skills. $18 hourly. jobapppa@gmail.com.

INTENSIVE CASE MANAGER Provide in-depth case management services to homeless patients, with special attention and understanding of the needs and circumstances related to homelessness. Require Bachelor’s degree in Human Services and prefer bilingual in Spanish-English. Send resume by email to mpopp@lfmctr.org

LAMCC seeks LPN / RN

3 DAYS a week Santa Fe, Los Alamos office. Non-smoker nonsmoking household, no weekends.

Email resume:

jperkins@cybermesa.com or call Julie at 505-662-4351.

MANAGEMENT NEWLY REMODELED, CENTRALLY L O C A T E D . 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH DUPLEX . Large yard, front & back. $1150 monthly, utilities included, $1000 deposit. Prefer long term. Pets negotiable. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 505-204-1685. RAILYARD, DOWNTOWN, CHARMING SOUTHWESTERN CASITA. 1 bedroom, office, laundry. Spacious flagstone great room, chateau fireplace. Walled courtyard. $995 Lease. 505-8984168.

LIVE IN STUDIOS 1 BEDROOM, 1 bath, perfect for 1 person. $550 monthly all utilities included, plus deposit. Available 2/1. Between Siringo and Llano. 505-5701413.

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

FOUND FOUND BLACK and white cat at St. Francis and Llano St. Contact, Santa Fe Animal Shelter.

LOST REWARD FOR THE RETURN OR INFORMATION pertaining to 1 black plastic garbage bag that contained literary writings, some clothing, left off the Dale Ball Trail between 1/2013 5/2013. Bruce Becker, 505-670-1682. Jeremiah Camp.

»jobs«

S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906

HIGH-END RESIDENTIAL CUSTOM HOME DESIGN-BUILDER IN SANTA FE SEEKS E S T IM A T IN G PURCHASING MANAGER . Position includes estimating large and small residential construction projects, material take offs, contracting subcontractors and suppliers, entering contracts and prices into Sage Master Builder software, purchasing materials and managing subcontracts. 5 years experience as a purchasing manager and/or construction estimator required. Construction experience and proficiency in Sage Master Builder, Adobe, Auto Desk Design Review and Microsoft Excel a plus. Please mail all resumes to: P O Box 9035, Santa Fe, NM 87504-9035. Santa Fe Railyard Stewards invites applications for the position of Executive Director. Visit www.railyardpark.org for more information and minimum qualifications.

MEDICAL DENTAL

MANUFACTURED HOMES

1,000 SQ.FT, OFFICE, RETAIL. AVAILABLE NOW. $775 monthly. 3022 Cielo Court, Unit C. Spacious, lots of windows. Call Richard, 505-670-1490.

ADMINISTRATIVE ATTENTION PARALEGALS:

227 EAST PALACE

If you are a top-notch litigation paralegal with solid experience, a great job with good benefits awaits. Send résumé, cover letter and references to Comeau, Maldegen, Templeman & Indall, P.O. Box 669, Santa Fe, NM 87504 or to Paula Cook at pcook@cmtisantafe.com

GREAT RETAIL SPACE! Water Street Store Front

AUTOMOTIVE

Three room, 600 sq.ft., professional space, good light, ideal share. Faces Palace Avenue, assigned parking. Lease 505-820-7657

Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!

Please call (505)983-9646. RETAIL SPACE SEASONAL PLAZA RETAIL Month-Month Call Southwest Asset Management, 988-5792.

STORAGE SPACE 10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Roll-up doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-474-4450. airportcerrillos.com

A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 12x24 for Only $195.00. Call to reserve yours Today!!!

Children’s Behavioral Health program seeks full time Therapist with clinical experience working with children 0-6. LISW/LPCC, NM Licensure. Must have dependable transportation for home visitation. Bilingual strongly preferred. Fax (505) 747-0421 or jobs@lascumbres-nm.org.

IGNITION INTERLOCK TECHNICIAN 40 Hours weekly. $12+ hourly based on experience. Description: Installation of ignition interlocks, customer service, computer work, auto wiring experience. Clean driving record, NO alcohol or drug related offences for the last 4 years. 505-9291237

DRIVERS TEMPORARY DELIVERY Drivers, Flower Designers needed for Valentine’s Day. Apply at Rodeo Plaza Flowers, 2801 Rodeo Road, Suite A2. No phone calls.

EDUCATION DESERT ACADEMY OF SANTA FE,

a college preparatory independent IB World School grades 7-12, is seeking qualified candidates for the following positions for the 2014 season: * Part Time Head Varsity Girls’ Soccer Coach * Part Time Assistant Girls’ Soccer Coach Please submit cover letter & resume to: lgildes@desertacademy.org

BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details

SALES MARKETING NM’S 2ND largest insurer seeks entrepreneurial candidates with a strong desire to be successful and respected business owners in their community. Award winning training from the University of Farmers. Subsidy packages available for building your agency. For more information, please contact 954-1612.

TRADES MAINTENANCE POSITION available; skilled in carpentry, exterior trim, painting, electrical, roofing, stucco, must read and write English and keep good records. 30 to 40 hours per week Monday - Friday with some on-call for emergencies. Pay dependent on experience. Submit resume: 3 Nuevo Milenio Santa Fe NM 87507.

»merchandise«

MIGUEL MARTINEZ "Girl From Galisteo (1991)" Original oil pastel; Not a lithograph. Beautifully framed. $12,500, Offer. Serious inquires only. Approx. 40"x34". (505) 690-1190.

BUILDING MATERIALS PLYWOOD. CABINET GRADE. 4’x8’ sheets. Never used. Different thicknesses. 505-983-8448

STEEL BUILDING Allocated Bargains. 40x60 on up. We do deals! www.gosteelbuildings.com Source# 18X. 505-349-0493

COLLECTIBLES MERRY FOSS former latin american ETHNOGRAPHIC and ANTIQUE dealer moving to mexico! Selling her personal collection, household furniture and all contents. By appointment 505-795-7222 or 505-699-9222.

WANTED: WARHOL-HARING Lichtenstein, Hockney, S. Fairey, etc. Buying signed works.

310-259-9188 or zyart@pacbell.net FIREWOOD-FUEL

APPLIANCES

Therapist, Clinician:

FIREWOOD, MISCELLANEOUS Cedar, pinion ponderosa. 1/2 cord delivered $120. 508-444-0087 or 505-2179198.

MAYTAG Atlantis over-sized washer and dryer. $200 each. 505-471-6748 or 505-366-3734.

FURNITURE

ART

2 COUCHES for sale, 1 with a hide-abed. $40 each. 505-204-0456.

email

CSR - Part Time

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

XRANM has an opening in patient scheduling, reception, 1-5pm, M-F in Santa Fe. HS-GED, prefer medical office, customer service experience. Excellent salary. Send resume to resumes@xraynm.com, fax: 505-9983100. EOE

Needed for Santa Fe Estate To live on property Excellent salary and paid vacations 505-660-6440

DENTAL ASSISTANT OR STERILIZATION TECH wanted for busy practice. Full time, Monday - Thursday. Experience preferred. Salary DOE. Email resume to: admin@childs2thdr.com

GET NOTICED!

email

Santa Fe Community Infant Program. Infant, parent mental health program seeks Full-Time therapist. Clinical experience working with children. Bilingual preferred. LISW/LPCC, NM Licensure. Dependable transportation for home visitation. Fax (505) 747-0421 or jobs@lascumbres-nm.org

CLEAN 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH HOME in Tesuque area 12 min. from downtown Santa Fe. $900 per month + deposit. No smoking, no pets. Credit check & references required. Call 505-321-2402 or 505-220-7254.

OFFICES

Therapist

ART

Women’s Clothing store is seeking experienced high energy sales asscociates. Must be hi end fashion savvy. Bring resume to Pinkoyote.

CALL 986-3000

HEALTH TEACHER. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505-989-6330 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: Felisa@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! RETAIL

HEAD DENTAL ASSISTANT Rare Opportunity!!! Progressive Taos Dental Office has immemdiate opening for Full-time certified head dental assistant,

B-7

FULL-TIME MAID

YARD PERSON NEEDED Drug Test Required. Apply in person at Empire Builders, 1802 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM

2002 INDIAN Market blue ribbon winning painting by museum artist Shonto Begay... 50x72 framed beautifully... have to sell, $8450.00 firm... Santa Fe. 505-471-4316

REFINISHED KITCHEN SIDEBAR. Solid walnut top. 52"Wx20"D. $250 OBO. 505-685-4911, 577-1275. SIMMONS BEAUTYREST, CALIFORNIA KING. Box Springs & Frame. Good condition. $150. 505-983-3948


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

sfnm«classifieds FURNITURE

»cars & trucks«

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING.

to place your ad, call

986-3000

4X4s

4X4s

2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon. 44,325 miles, 6spd Manual, 3 Piece Hardtop, 6 Disc CD, Sirius Radio. Excellent Condition! $23,995. 505-474-0888.

2012 Toyota Tundra Double Cab 4x4, rare TRD Rock Warrior, new BFG A/T tires, good miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, HOT! $30,981. Call 505-216-3800.

CLARK CUSTOM Flatbed, 6 1/2 x 7 ft. Good condition, $500 OBO. 505-9131559.

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2007 Acura MDX AWD

Sweet CarFax certified one owner, 75k miles. Gorgeous Nimbus grey metallic with ebony black leather, accident free, smoke free, all wheel drive. 3 month/3000 mile warranty included!! $19,995. Call 877-2322815.

2010 Audi Q7 3.6L quattro - Another pristine Lexus trade-in! Only 39k miles, AWD, well-equipped with panoramic roof, new tires, clean CarFax, significantly undervalued at $33,212. Call 505-2163800.

sweetmotorsales.com IMPORTS

DOMESTIC

Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

MONTANA HAND-CRAFTED CUSTOM BLUE PINE LOG BED Excellent condition, includes head board, foot board and side boards with heavy metal support frame and bolts. Fits double mattress. It’s gorgeous! One owner. $450 OBO. 520-906-9399.

CALL 986-3000 2013 CADILLAC ATS 2.0 Turbo, Motor Trends Car of the Year, Loaded with Bose Surround, Sunroof, Heated Leather Seats, Back up camera & many more options. Showroom condition, 7k miles, Thousands Less than new!! $28,500 call 575-770-2236.

2004 Audi A4 Quattro. Recent lowmileage trade-in, 1.8L turbo, AWD, loaded, clean CarFax and super nice. $10,621. Call 505-216-3800.

2010 Land Rover LR2 HSE SUV. 21,627 miles, Climate Comfort Package, Bluetooth, Sirius Radio. One Owner! The BEST 4X4 BY FAR! $25,995. 505-474-0888. 2010 BMW 535Xi AWD. Recent trade-in, factory CERTIFIED with warranty & maintenance until 3/2016, fully loaded, clean CarFax $24,432. Call 505-216-3800. 1995 MITSUBISHI Montero. 2nd owner, great SUV with new computer and fuel pump. 264,000 miles. $2,300 OBO. Please call 505-231-4481.

So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

CITY OF SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO RESOLUTION NO. 2013-108 INTRODUCED BY:

»animals«

2013 CHEVROLET Spark Hatch. Incredibly low miles! 4,404 miles. Factory warranty. Great gas saver! $13,599. Schedule a test drive today.

Mayor Coss Councilor Ives A RESOLUTION CALLING FOR A SPECIAL ELECTION TO BE HELD IN THE CITY OF SANTA FE ON MARCH 4, 2014, IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE REGULAR MUNICIPAL ELECTION, FOR THE PURPOSE OF VOTING IN FAVOR OR AGAINST AMENDMENTS TO THE SANTA FE MUNICIPAL CHARTER. Section 1. PURPOSE AND DATE OF ELECTION. A special municipal election shall be held in conjunction with the regular municipal election on Tuesday, March 4, 2014 for the purpose of voting in favor or against amendments to the Santa Fe Municipal Charter. Section 2. CHARTER AMENDMENTS TO BE SUBMITTED. The following proposed Charter amendments shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the City of Santa Fe:

PETS SUPPLIES

Get Your Male Dog or Cat Fixed for

ONLY $20

Santa Fe Animal Shelter & Humane Society presents

2012 CHEVROLET Cruze. 49,535 miles. One owner, no accidents. This car is fully loaded! $16,999. Schedule a test drive today.

HAPPY NEUTER YEAR In association with

Must mention this ad when making appointment. 505-474-6422 JANUARY ONLY GERMAN SHEPHERD, beautiful female 1 year old, imported from Germany. AKC and German registered Champion Pedigree, all generations xrayed. Great guard dog or breeder. 505-660-4505.

LOVE FOR YOUR FAMILY FORD TEMPO 1994. One owner. Records of maintenance. 129,000 miles. 6 cylinder, 5 speed. AM, FM cassette. Great condition. $2000 OBO. 505-3101812 So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

4X4s

VALENTINE POMERANIAN PUPPIES, gorgeous, registered, first shots, $500-$900. Ready by Valentine’s Day. Gorgeous rare grey Poodle, female, $450. 505-901-2094, 505-753-0000.

»garage sale«

2012 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited. 3 piece Hardtop, Automatic Transmission. 15,077 miles. Excellent Condition! One Owner! $29,995. 505-474-0888.

BACK ON THE RACK’S SANTA FE STORE IS CLOSING. FINAL WEEK INVENTORY LIQUIDATION SALE! 75% off - Today thru Sunday 2/2/14. 10am to 5pm. Furniture, collectibles, jewelry, art, housewares, books, dvds/cds, vinyl, tools, Fixtures, Displays, Shelving, Bookcases, etc. EVERYTHING must go!! 1248 Siler Road.

CHARTER AMENDMENT 4 Independent Citizens’ Redistricting Commission Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article VI, Section 6.03, to include the establishment of an independent citizens’ redistricting commission who shall review and revise district boundaries at least every ten years following the decennial census and requiring that the governing body adopt an ordinance to establish a procedure for the appointment and deliberations of the commission. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r CHARTER AMENDMENT 5 Campaign Contribution Limits Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article IV, to create a new Section 4.07, to mandate that the governing body shall have an ordinance that limits the amount of campaign contributions that can be accepted by candidates. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r CHARTER AMENDMENT 6 Timely Disclosure of the Purpose of Tax Increases or Bond Measures Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article IV, to create a new Section 4.08, to mandate that the governing body shall have an ordinance that ensures that the city shall provide and disseminate in a timely manner the purposes of proposed expenditures for any tax increase or bond measure that requires ratification by the voters. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r

2006 FORD-F150 CREW CABXLT 4X4. Two Owner, Local, Carfax, Vehicle Brought up To Date With Services, Drive Ready, Most Options, Working, Transport Crew Truck, Affordable $13,750, WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com PAUL 505-983-4945

ESTATE SALES

CHARTER AMENDMENT 2 Neighborhood Preservation Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article II, Section 2.04, to establish a policy on neighborhood preservation. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r CHARTER AMENDMENT 3 Support for Local Business, the Local Economy and a Living Wage for All Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article II, to create a new Section 2.07 to establish a policy in support of local business, an enduring local entrepreneurial spirit and the rights of all to earn a living wage. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r

petsmartcharities.org

Manny, a handsome gentleman, is a 1-year-old Chihuahua mix who is looking for his new life partner. He loves other dogs and people and would love nothing more than to offer you unconditional love. Call PAWS at 505-466-0091 for more information about adoption.

CHARTER AMENDMENT 1 Water Protection and Conservation Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article II, Section 2.03, to include in the environmental protection policy statement a provision that would mandate the governing body to protect, preserve and enhance the city’s water resources through regulation, conservation and relating development to water availability. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r

CHARTER AMENDMENT 7 Independent Audit Committee Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article IX, to create a new Section 9.04, to mandate that the governing body shall have an ordinance that establishes an independent audit committee. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r CHARTER AMENDMENT 8 Mayor’s Voting Powers Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Article V, Section 5.01, to allow the mayor to have a vote on all matters that come before the governing body. Effective Date: May 5, 2014 In Favor Of r Against r CHARTER AMENDMENT 9 Governance: Full-time Mayor; Regulating the Relationships Between the Mayor, the City Councilors and the City Manager and Defining the Authority of Each Proposing to amend the Santa Fe Municipal Charter, Articles V, VI and VIII to: • Establish mayor as a full-time position whose salary shall be set by an independent salary commission to be established by city ordinance. Until such commission is created and sets the salary for mayor, the mayor’s salary shall be $74,000; • Give the mayor supervisory authority over the city manager, city attorney and city clerk and the authority to suspend and fire the city manager, city attorney and city clerk, without council approval; • Allow the city manager to be removed by a vote of six councilors at a regularly scheduled meeting; • Remove language that requires the mayor to perform other duties compatible with the nature of the office, as the governing body may from time to time require; • Require the mayor to work with city staff to prepare an annual budget for review and approval by the finance committee and the governing body; • Require the mayor to identify his/her legislative agenda for each upcoming year and require the governing body to consider and take action on the mayor’s legislative agenda; • Require that the city manager have the necessary administrative and managerial skills to manage the municipality and have the authority to hire and fire all city employees, except for the city attorney and city clerk; Effective Date: March 12, 2018 In Favor Of r Against r

1998 HONDA CRV, manual transmission. 212,000 miles, runs good, all service records. New brakes, tires, and radiator. Please call 505-9834863. So can you with a classified ad

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

Section 3. CLOSING OF REGISTRATION BOOKS. Only qualified electors of the City of Santa Fe may vote in the special municipal election. A qualified elector is any person whose affidavit of voter registration has been filed by the Santa Fe County Clerk on or before the twenty-eighth (28th) day prior to the election, who is registered to vote in a general election precinct established by the Santa Fe Board of County Commissioners that is wholly or partly within the City of Santa Fe boundaries, and who is a resident of the City of Santa Fe. Registration books for this election will be closed at 5:00 p.m. on February 4, 2014. Section 4. POLLING PLACES AND CONSOLIDATION OF PRECINCTS. The following polling places shall be used for the conduct of the special municipal election and qualified electors of the City of Santa Fe may vote at the polling places listed below between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. on March 4, 2014. DISTRICT #1 POLLING PLACE Consolidated Precincts 8, 30 Ft. Marcy Complex, 490 Bishops Lodge Road Consolidated Precincts 9, 28 Montezuma Lodge, 431 Paseo de Peralta Precinct 10 Ft. Marcy Complex, 490 Bishops Lodge Road Consolidated Precincts 11, 20 Gonzales Community School, 851 W. Alameda Consolidated Precincts 21, 83 Gonzales Community School, 851 W. Alameda Precinct 22 Montezuma Lodge, 431 Paseo de Peralta Precinct 24 Academy at Larragoite, 1604 Agua Fria Street Consolidated Precinct 25, 33 Aspen Community Magnet School, 450 La Madera Consolidated Precincts 26, 27 Tierra Encantada Charter School @ Alvord, 551 Alarid Street Precinct 32 Academy at Larragoite, 1604 Agua Fria Street DISTRICT #2 POLLING PLACE Consolidated Precincts 36, 47 Acequia Madre Elementary School, 700 Acequia Madre Consolidated Precincts 37, 54 Capshaw Middle School, 351 W. Zia Road Consolidated Precincts 41, 42, 43 Public Schools Administration Building, 610 Alta Vista Street Precinct 44 Wood Gormley, 141 E. Booth Street Consolidated Precincts 45, 46 Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Santa Fe, 107 W. Barcelona Precinct 48 Elks BPOE 460 Lodge, 1615 Old Pecos Trail Precinct 52 E.J. Martinez Elementary School, 401 W. San Mateo Road Precinct 53 Pasatiempo Senior Center, 664 Alta Vista Street Precinct 55 Elks BPOE 460 Lodge, 1615 Old Pecos Trail DISTRICT #3 POLLING PLACE Consolidated Precincts 12, 67 Sweeney Elementary School, 4100 S. Meadows Road Consolidated Precincts 31, 66 Salazar Elementary School, 1231 Apache Avenue Precinct 34 Salazar Elementary School, 1231 Apache Avenue Consolidated Precincts 62, 75 Ortiz Middle School, 4164 S. Meadows Road Consolidated Precincts 64, 80 Sweeney Elementary School, 4100 S. Meadows Road Consolidated Precincts 86, 89 Southside Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive DISTRICT #4 POLLING PLACE Precinct 29 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Consolidated Precincts 35, 74 Nava Elementary School, 2655 Siringo Road Consolidated Precincts 38, 56 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Consolidated Precincts 39, 49 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Precinct 50 Nava Elementary School, 2655 Siringo Road Consolidated Precincts 51, 76 Chaparral Elementary School, 2451 Avenida Chaparral Precinct 77 Chaparral Elementary School, 2451 Avenida Chaparral Precinct 78 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road ABSENTEE VOTER PRECINCT (All Districts) Office of the City Clerk, Room 215, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue EARLY VOTER PRECINCTS (All Districts) Office of the City Clerk, Room 215, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue Section 5. ABSENTEE VOTING. Absentee voting by mail will begin on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 and close at 5:00 p.m. on Friday, February 28, 2014. Absentee ballots may be cast in person beginning on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 until 5:00 p.m. on Friday, February 28, 2014. Absentee voting will be conducted in the office of the City Clerk, during the regular hours and days of business, Monday through Friday. Applications for absentee ballots may be obtained only from the office of the City Clerk. All applications for absentee ballots must be completed and accepted by the City Clerk prior to 5:00 p.m., Friday, February 28, 2014. After 5:00 p.m. on February 28, 2014, all unused absentee ballots will be publicly destroyed by the City Clerk. The City Clerk will accept completed absentee ballots delivered by mail, or in person by the voter casting the absentee ballot, their caregiver or the voter’s immediate family, until 7:00 p.m. on March 4, 2014. Section 6. EARLY VOTING. Early voting will be conducted in the office of the City Clerk, during the regular hours and days of business, Monday through Friday. Early voting will begin at 8:00 a.m. on Wednesday, February 12, 2014 and close at 5:00 p.m. on Friday, February 28, 2014. All applications for early voting ballots must be completed and accepted by the City Clerk prior to 5:00 p.m., Friday, February 28, 2014. After 5:00 p.m. on February 28, 2014, all unused early voting ballots will be publicly destroyed by the City Clerk. Section 7. CANVASS OF THE ELECTION RESULTS. The City Clerk shall complete the canvass of the election results no later than 5:00 p.m. on March 7, 2014, to certify the results of the election and take any other necessary action relating to the election. PASSED, APPROVED and ADOPTED this 11th day of December, 2013. ATTEST:

DAVID COSS, MAYOR

YOLANDA Y. VIGIL, CITY CLERK APPROVED AS TO FORM: KELLEY A. BRENNAN, INTERIM CITY ATTORNEY

Legal #96212 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican January 7,14,21,28 2014


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MUNICIPALIDAD DE SANTA FE, NUEVO MEXICO RESOLUCION NUM. 2013-108 INTRODUCIDA POR: Mayor Coss Councilor Ives RESOLUCION QUE CONVOCA UNA ELECCION EXTRAORDINARIA QUE TENDRA LUGAR EN LA MUNICIPALIDAD DE SANTA FE EL DIA 4 DE MARZO 2014, CONJUNTAMENTE CON LA ELECCION MUNICIPAL ORDINARIA CON EL FIN DE VOTAR A FAVOR O EN CONTRA DE LAS ENMIENDAS DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL MUNICIPAL. RESUELVASE POR LOS GOBERNANTES DE LA MUNICIPALIDAD DE SANTA FE: Apartado 1. PROPOSITO Y FECHA DE LA ELECCION. Tendrá lugar una elección extraordinaria que tendrá lugar en la municipalidad de Santa Fe el día 4 de marzo 2014, conjuntamente con la elección municipal ordinaria con el fin de votar a favor o en contra de las enmiendas de la carta constitucional municipal. Apartado 2. ENMIENDAS A LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL QUE SE VAN A SOMETER. Las enmiendas a la Carta Constitucional a continuación se someterán a los votantes calificados de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe:

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ENMIENDA 1 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Conservación y Protección de Agua Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Articulo II, Apartado 2.03, con el fin de incluir una disposición en la declaración de la política de protección medioambiental que obligaría al cuerpo gobernante a proteger, resguardar y realzar los recursos de agua municipales por medio de la regulación, conservación y relacionar el desarrollo a la disponibilidad de agua. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 2 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Preservación del Vecindario Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo II, Apartado 2.04, con el fin de establecer una política sobre la preservación de vecindario. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 3 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Apoyo para los Negocios Locales, la Economía Local y un Salario Digno para Todos Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo II, con el fin de crear un nuevo Apartado 2.07 para establecer una política que apoye a los negocios locales, a un espíritu empresarial perdurable local y al derecho de todos de ganar un salario digno. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r

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ENMIENDA 4 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL La Comisión Independiente de Ciudadanos para la Redistribución Electoral Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo VI, Apartado 6.03 con el fin de incluir la fundación de una comisión independiente de ciudadanos para la redistribución electoral que revisará y actualizará los linderos de los distritos por lo menos cada diez años después del censo decenal y requerirá que el cuerpo gobernante adopte una ordenanza para establecer un proceso para el nombramiento y las deliberaciones de la comisión. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 5 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Limites de Contribuciones de Campaña Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo IV, con el fin de crear un nuevo Apartado 4.07 que ordene que el cuerpo gobernante tenga una ordenanza que limite la cantidad de contribución de campaña que los candidatos puedan aceptar. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 6 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL La Divulgación Oportuna de los Propósitos de los Aumentos o Medidas de Bonos Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo IV, con el fin de crear un nuevo Apartado 4.08 para ordenar que el cuerpo gobernante tenga una ordenanza que asegure que la municipalidad proporcionará y diseminará de manera oportuna, los propósitos de los gastos propuestos para cualquier aumento de impuestos o medida de bono que requieran la ratificación por los votantes. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 7 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Comité de Auditoría Independiente Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo IX, con el fin de crear un nuevo Apartado 9.04 para ordenar que el cuerpo gobernante tenga una ordenanza que establezca un comité de Auditoría Independiente. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r ENMIENDA 8 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Poder de Voto del Alcalde Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Artículo V, Apartado 5.01, con el fin de permitirle al alcalde tener un voto en todos los asuntos que se presenten ante el cuerpo gobernante. Fecha de Vigencia: 5 de mayo, 2014 A Favor r En Contra r

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ENMIENDA 9 DE LA CARTA CONSTITUCIONAL Gestión Pública: Alcalde de Tiempo Completo; Regula las funciones entre el Alcalde, los Concejales Municipales y el Administrador Municipal y define la autoridad de Cada Uno Propone enmendar la Carta Constitucional de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe, Apartados V, VI y VIII para: • Establecer al alcalde como empleado de tiempo completo cuyo salario se fijará por una comisión independiente que determina salarios que se establecerá por ordenanza municipal. Hasta el momento que se cree la comisión y se fije el salario para el alcalde, el salario del alcalde será de $74,000; • Proporcionarle al alcalde la autoridad supervisora sobre el administrador municipal, el abogado municipal, la escribana municipal y la autoridad de suspender o despedir al administrador municipal, al abogado municipal y a la escribana municipal sin la autorización del consejo; • Permitir que el administrador municipal sea removido por un voto de seis concejales en una reunión ordinaria; • Remover el lenguaje que le requiere al alcalde desempeñar otros deberes compatibles con la índole de su puesto, como el cuerpo gobernante puede requerir de vez en cuando; • Requerir que el alcalde colabore con el personal municipal para preparar un presupuesto anual para que sea revisado y aprobado por el comité de finanzas y el cuerpo gobernante; • Requerir que el alcalde identifique a su agenda legislativa para cada año entrante y requerir que el cuerpo gobernante considere y tome una decisión sobre el agenda legislativo del alcalde; • Requerir que el administrador municipal posea todas las destrezas administrativas y gestoras necesarias para dirigir la municipalidad y que posea la autoridad de contratar y despedir a todos los empleados municipales, menos al abogado municipal y la escribana municipal. Fecha de Vigencia: 12 de marzo, 2018 A Favor r En Contra r Apartado 3. CIERRE DE LOS LIBROS DE REGISTRO. Sólo votantes calificados de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe tendrán el derecho de votar en la elección extraordinaria de la Municipalidad. Votante calificado es toda

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persona cuya declaración jurada haya sido archivada por la Escribana del Condado de Santa Fe en o antes de la vigésima octava (28 ava) fecha antes de la elección, que está registrado/a para votar en el recinto electoral de la elección general establecida por los Comisionados del Condado de Santa Fe que está total o parcialmente dentro de los linderos de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe y quien es residente de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe. Los libros de registro para la elección se cerrarán a las 5:00 p.m. el 4 de febrero 2014. Apartado 4. Lugares de Votación y Consolidación de Recintos Electorales. Los sitios de votación a continuación se usarán con el fin de llevar a cabo la elección municipal extraordinaria y los votantes calificados de la Municipalidad de Santa Fe tendrán el derecho de votar en los lugares de votación listados más abajo entre las 7:00 a.m. y las 7:00 p.m. el día 4 de marzo 2014. DISTRITO #1 Recintos Electorales Consolidados 8, 30

LUGAR DONDE VOTAR Fort Marcy Complex, 490 Bishops Lodge Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 9, 28 Montezuma Lodge, 431 Paseo de Peralta Recinto Electoral 10 Fort Marcy Complex, 490 Bishops Lodge Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 11, 20 Gonzales Community School, 851 W. Alameda Recintos Electorales Consolidados 21, 83 Gonzales Community School, 851 W. Alameda Recinto Electoral 22 Montezuma Lodge, 431 Paseo de Peralta Recinto Electoral 24 Academy at Larragoite, 1604 Agua Fria Street Recintos Electorales Consolidados 25, 33 Aspen Community Magnet School, 450 La Madera Recintos Electorales Consolidados 26, 27 Tierra Encantada Charter School @ Alvord, 551 Alarid Street Recinto Electoral 32 Academy at Larragoite, 1604 Agua Fria Street DISTRITO #2 LUGAR DONDE VOTAR Recintos Electorales Consolidados 36, 47 Acequia Madre Elementary School, 700 Acequia Madre Recintos Electorales Consolidados 37, 54 Capshaw Middle School, 351 W. Zia Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 41, 42, 43 Public Schools Administration Building, 610 Alta Vista Street Recinto Electoral 44 Wood Gormley, 141 E. Booth Street Recintos Electorales Consolidados 45, 46 Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Santa Fe, 107 W. Barcelona Recinto Electoral 48 Elks BPOE 460 Lodge, 1615 Old Pecos Trail Recinto Electoral 52 E. J. Martínez Elementary School, 401 West San Mateo Road Recinto Electoral 53 Pasatiempo Senior Center, 664 Alta Vista Street Recinto Electoral 55 Elks BPOE 460 Lodge, 1615 Old Pecos Trail DISTRITO #3 LUGAR DONDE VOTAR Recintos Electorales Consolidados 12, 67 Sweeney Elementary School, 4100 S. Meadows Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 31, 66 Salazar Elementary School, 1231 Apache Avenue Recinto Electoral 34 Salazar Elementary School, 1231 Apache Avenue Recintos Electorales Consolidados 62, 75 Ortiz Middle School, 4164 S. Meadows Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 64, 80 Sweeney Elementary School, 4100 S. Meadows Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 86, 89 Southside Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive DISTRITO #4 LUGAR DONDE VOTAR Recinto Electoral 29 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 35, 74 Nava Elementary School, 2655 Siringo Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 38, 56 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 39, 49 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road Recinto Electoral 50 Nava Elementary School, 2655 Siringo Road Recintos Electorales Consolidados 51, 76 Chaparral Elementary School, 2451Avenida Chaparral Recinto Electoral 77 Chaparral Elementary School, 2451Avenida Chaparral Recinto Electoral 78 Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road RECINTO ELECTORAL DE VOTANTES EN AUSENCIA (Todos los Distritos) Oficina de la Escribana de la Municipalidad, Sala 215, Ayuntamiento 200 Lincoln Avenue RECINTO ELECTORAL DE VOTANTES POR ANTICIPADO (Todos los Distritos) Oficina de la Escribana de la Municipalidad, Sala 215, Ayuntamiento 200 Lincoln Avenue Apartado 5. VOTACION EN AUSENCIA. Votación en ausencia por correo empezará el martes, 28 de enero 2014 y cerrará a las 5:00 p.m. el viernes, 28 de febrero 2014. Pueden emitir boletas en ausencia personalmente a partir del martes, 28 de enero 2014 hasta las 5:00 p.m. el viernes, 28 de febrero 2014. La votación en ausencia se llevará a cabo en la oficina de la Escribana de la Municipalidad, durante horas laborables y los días laborables, de lunes a viernes. Solicitudes para obtener boleta en ausencia se puede obtener solamente de la oficina de la Escribana de la Municipalidad. Todas las solicitudes para obtener boleta en ausencia tienen que completarse y aceptarse por la Escribana de la Municipalidad antes de las 5:00 p.m. el viernes, 28 de febrero 2014. Después de las 5:00 p.m. el 28 de febrero 2014 todas las boletas en ausencia no usadas se destruirán públicamente por la Escribana de la Municipalidad. La Escribana de la Municipalidad aceptará boletas en ausencia completadas entregadas por correo o personalmente por el votante que emita la boleta en ausencia, su cuidador/a o un familiar cercano, hasta las 7:00 p.m. el 4 de marzo 2014. Apartado 6. VOTACIÓN POR ANTICIPADO. La votación por anticipado se llevará a cabo en la oficina de la Escribana de la Municipalidad, durante horas laborables y los días laborables de lunes a viernes. La votación por anticipado se llevará a cabo entre las 8:00 a.m. el miércoles, 12 de febrero 2014 y las 5:00 p.m., el viernes, 28 de febrero 2014. Todas las solicitudes para boletas de anticipado tienen que completarse y aceptarse por la Escribana de la Municipalidad antes de las 5:00 p.m. el viernes, 28 de febrero 2014. Después de las 5:00 p.m. el día 28 de febrero 2014 todas las boletas de anticipado no usadas se destruirán públicamente por la Escribana de la Municipalidad. Apartado 7. ESCUDRIÑO DE LOS RESULTADOS DE LA ELECCIÓN. La Escribana de la Municipalidad completará el escudriño de los resultados de la elección a más tardar las 5:00 p.m. el día 7 de marzo 2014 con el fin de certificar los resultados de la elección y para tomar cualquiera otra acción relacionada con la elección. ACEPTADA, APROBADA y ADOPTADA este día 11 de diciembre 2013.

DAVID COSS, ALCALDE DOY FE: YOLANDA Y. VIGIL ESCRIBANA DE LA MUNICIPALIDAD APROBADA RESPECTO A FORMA: KELLEY BRENNAN ABOGADA DE LA MUNICIPALIDAD INTERMEDIA

Legal #96213 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican January 7,14,21,28 2014


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014

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living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators

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TRUCKS & TRAILERS

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y

Obituaries Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Friday, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 offiup for work Santa Fe, not showingfrom top department Sarah Martinez leave for Erlinda Ursula was to e-mails New Mexican. Esquibel Feb. 2 just who according said “Ollie” by The Lucero, 85, Mahesh agency about to return to Oliver Phillip cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one 4 sion in at and who was expected Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were “Trudy” on “essential” that afternoon Gertrude Santa Fe, next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday Lawler, 90, ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees Feb. 3 “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, 28 pages Two sections, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department Terrell No. 38 By Steve The resulting and Revenue 162nd year, No. 596-440 Mexican a day of personal Taxation The New Publication B-7 state employsome state will be docked for Local business for natural employees after “nonessential” B-8 Time Out confuLast week, home to ease demand 986-3010 was some Late paper: sent Sports B-1 983-3303 ees were utility crisis, there A-11 Main office: a Police notes gas amid A-12

up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked

Index Managing

2013 Subaru Impreza Limited Sport - REALLY, why would you buy new? Just 5k miles, heated leather, original MSRP $25k, clean CarFax. $21,871. Call 505-216-3800.

Mercedes-Benz C230 Sport

Absolutely cherry, 87k miles. Loaded, heated seats, moonroof, 6 CD changer, spotless inside and out. Clean title, no accidents, includes 3 month, 3,000 mile warranty. Sweet price only $11,900. Call 877232-2815.

2011 Toyota RAV4 - Just 27k miles! 4 cyl, 4WD, recently serviced with new tires AND brakes, 1 owner clean CarFax, pristine! $18,821. Call 505-216-3800.

sweetmotorsales.com

2008 TOYOTA HIGHLANDERSPORT AWD. Another One Owner, Carfax, 84,000 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Service Records, New Tires, Manuals, Third Row Seat,Moon-Roof, Loaded. Soooo Beautiful, Pristine, $20,750. W E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Calendar editor: Rob

A-2

Classifieds

Dean, 986-3033,

B-9

Comics B-14

Lotteries A-2

Design and

headlines:

Opinion

Cynthia Miller,

m

cmiller@sfnewmexican.co

rdean@sfnewmexican.com

2010 CHEVROLET Camaro Coupe 2SS. Immaculate condition, inside and out, low miles! 6,531 miles. $26,999. Schedule a test drive today. 2012 FLAT BED TRAILER. 14,000 pounds. GVW, 18’x8’ extra heavyduty. Loading ramps, tool box & spare. Bumper hitch. $5,000 OBO. 808-346-3635

VANS & BUSES SUVs 2007 Subaru Forester Premium

Ultra clean, all wheel drive Forester. Premium package has heated seats, panoramic moon roof, power windows, locks and driver’s seat, cruise control and more. Get a sweet deal on this Subie. Only $9,995. Price includes 3 month, 3000 mile limited warranty. Call 877-232-2815.

sweetmotorsales.com

2010 Toyota Prius II - Merely 20k miles! 1 owner clean CarFax, excellent condition and 50+ mpg $17,493. Call 505-216-3800.

2000 NISSAN MAXIMA, V-6, automatic, 1 family owner, 113k miles, loaded, leather, clean, no accidents, can you with classified ad $3,450So cash. Call Billa at 505-955-0686.

So can you with a classified ad

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

IN THE PROBATE COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

LEGALS

Legal#96379 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: January 28 and February 4, 2014

NO. 2013-0172 NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE Notice is hereby givOF GIFFORD PHILLIPS, en that on Thursday Deceased. January 30, 2014 the New Mexico State NOTICE TO CRED- Agency for Surplus ITORS Property will open Store Front OperaNOTICE IS HEREBY tions to the public GIVEN that the under- from 9:00am to signed has been ap- 4:00pm; at 1990 pointed co-personal Siringo Rd., Santa Fe, representative of this NM 87505. estate. All persons Items for sale will inhaving claims against clude: this estate are re- Vehicles ranging from quired to present $700.00 to $5,000 their claims within Computer equipment two months after the ranging from $10 to date of the first publi- $300 cation of this Notice Office furniture rangor the claims will be ing from $5 to $300 forever barred. Grab Bags $45.00 Claims must be pre- Items are subject to sented either to the change. All items are co-personal repre- used items they are sentative at Post Of- "as-is" "where-is" fice Box 4160, Santa with no guarantee or Fe, New Mexico warrantee. Inspec87502-4160, or filed tion of items will be with the Santa Fe on day of sale. All County Probate sales are final no reCourt. funds or exchanges. DATED: January 17, Only Cash, 2014 debit/credit cards or Cashiers Checks will /s/James L. Phillips be accepted; sorry no Co-Personal Repre- personal checks. For sentative of the Es- questions please call tate of Gifford Phil- our office 476-1949. lips, deceased Legal #96350 Published in The SanAddress: 74141 Desert ta Fe New Mexican on Tenaja Trail January 27, 28, 29 Indian Wells, CA 2014 92210-7013 Tel: (415) 627-8114 Notice of a Public Meeting CUDDY & MCCARTHY, Notice of Public LLP Meetings Concerning James S. Rubin Scoping for PreparaP.O. Box 4160 tion of an EnvironSanta Fe, New Mexico mental Impact State87502-4160 ment on Continued (505) 988-4476 Implementation of Attorneys for Co- the 2008 Operating Personal Representa- Agreement for the Rio tive

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Continued...

2007 Chevrolet Tahoe LTZ - Recent trade-in, loaded, leather, buckets, moonroof, DVD, new tires & brakes, super clean! $17,851. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Honda Odyssey EX-L - Recent Lexus trade-in! Just 22k miles, new tires, leather, navigation, one owner clean CarFax, super nice! $28,472. Call 505-2163800.

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS

2011 Volkswagen Tiguan S 4Motion - Just 27k miles! AWD, new tires, 1 owner clean CarFax, turbocharged, truly immaculate! $19,971. Call 505-216-3800.

LEGALS

to place legals, call

986-3000

LEGALS

LEGALS

Project area is from Elephant Butte Dam in New Mexico to El Paso/Hudspeth County Line, Texas. The public is invited to comment on the scope of the EIS, potential alternatives, and issues to be addressed in the EIS.

identifying themselves as representatives or officials of organizations or businesses, available for public disclosure in their entirety. If you have any questions, please contact Ms. Graham at 505-4623560. Legal #96336 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on January 27, 2014.

BACKGROUND: The Bureau of Reclamation is preparing an environmental impact statement (EIS) will be prepared for the proposed continued implementation of the 2008 Operating Agreement over its entire remaining term (through 2050) for the Rio Grande Project in New Mexico and Texas. The Operating Agreement is a written detailed description of how Reclamation allocates, releases from storage, and delivers Rio Grande Project water to users within the Elephant Butte Irrigation District (EBID) in New Mexico, the El Paso County Water Improvement District No.1 (EPCWID) in Texas, and to users covered by the 1906 international treaty with Mexico. In addition, this EIS proposes to evaluate the environmental effects of renewing San Juan Chama Project storage contracts under authority of the Act of December 29, 1981, Pub. L. 97-140, 95 Stat. 1717, providing for storage in Elephant Butte Reservoir. The

PUBLIC SCOPING INPUT In addition to your presence at this public meeting, you may submit written comments as described below. To be most helpful, comments should be as specific as possible and sent to Reclamation at the following address: Bureau of Reclamation, Albuquerque Area Office, Attention: Rhea Graham, ALB-103, 555 Broadway NE, Suite 100, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102. E-mail comments may be sent to rg ra ha m @ u sb r. go v by February 14, 2014. Comments, including names and home addresses of respondents will be made available for public review upon request although individuals may request that we withhold their home address from public disclosure, which we will honor to the extent allowable by law. There also may be circumstances in which we would withhold a person’s identity from public disclosure, as allowable by law. Please state your request to withhold names or addresses prominently at the beginning of your comment. We will make all submissions from organizations or businesses, and from individuals

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g Grande Project, New Mexico and Texas (Action by February 14, 2014) Dates/Locations of meetings: January 30, at 555 Broadway Ave, N.E., Suite 100, Albuquerque, NM from 3:00p.m. to 5:00p.m. January 31, at 530 South Melendres St, Las Cruces, NM from 6:00p.m. to 8.00p.m. February 1, at 10737 Gateway West Suite 350 El Paso, Texas from 9:00a.m. to 11.00a.m.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on February 12th 2014 at 9:30am at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 875 W. San Mateo Rd. Santa Fe NM 87505 505-986-1546 The personal goods stored therein by the following may include, but are not limited to general household, furniture, boxes, clothes, and appliances. B06 Partricia Griffin PO Box 1165 Santa Fe, NM 87504 E21 Edward Landeros C/O Desire Landeros 1801 Espinacitas #158 Santa Fe, NM 87505 Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Extra Space Storage reserves the right to bid. Sale is subject to adjournment.

LEGALS

toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com LEGALS

j q Legal #96312 tions based proposPublished in The San- als for Design Servta Fe New Mexican on ices - On Call. January 21, 28 2014 The Request for Proposal (RFP) may be reviewed at www.cybercardinal.c NOTICE OF PUBLIC om, or by contacting SALE OF PERSONAL the District. PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that the under- Proposals will be resigned will sell, to ceived no later than February satisfy lien of the Thursday, owner, at public sale 27, 2014 3:00 p.m. proposals by competitive bid- Sealed ding on Feb. 12th at must be delivered to: 9:45am at the Extra Vegas City Space Storage facility Las Schools located at: ATTENTION: Mari 900 W. San Mateo Hillis, Finance DirecSanta Fe NM 87505 tor 505-986-9068 The personal goods 901 Douglas Avenue stored therein by the Las Vegas, New Mexifollowing may in- co 87701 clude, but are not lim- (505) 454-5700 ited to general household, furniture, boxes, The Las Vegas City clothes, and applian- Schools’ Board of Education reserves the ces. 1074 Mary Meredith right to reject any all proposals 10 Town Plaza #310 and and/or cancel this Santa Fe, NM 1080 Mary Meredith RFP in its entirety. 10 Town Plaza #310 Legal#96395 Santa Fe, NM Purchases must be Published in the Sanmade with cash only ta Fe New Mexican and paid at the time January 28, 30, Februof sale. All goods are ary 4, 5, 2014 sold as is and must be removed at the STATE OF NEW time of purchase. Ex- MEXICO tra Space Storage re- COUNTY OF SANTA FE serves the right to FIRST JUDICIAL bid. Sale is subject to DISTRICT adjournment. Legal #96317 Case No. D-101-CVPublished in The San- 2013-02571 ta Fe New Mexican on January 21, 28 2014 CITIMORTGAGE, INC. DOING BUSINESS AS CITICORP MORTGAGE, REQUEST FOR Plaintiff, PROPOSALS v. RFP NO# 2014LVCSNATHAN C. DSO1 GABALDON AKA NAGABALDON, The Board of Educa- THAN ANAYA, tion, Las Vegas City CHRISTINE CONTENTA Schools’ District, is TIERRA THE requesting competi- CORPORATION, SPOUSE tive sealed qualifica- UNKNOWN OF NATHAN C.

Continued...

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LEGALS GABALDON AKA NATHAN GABALDON, IF ANY AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CHRISTINE ANAYA, IF ANY,

LEGALS

By: /s/ __Steven J. L u c e r o __ Electronically Filed Steven J. Lucero 20 First Plaza NW, Defendants Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM NOTICE OF SUIT 87102 Telephone: (505) 848STATE OF New Mexico 9500 to the above-named Fax: (505) 848-9516 Defendants Christine Attorney for Plaintiff Anaya and The Unknown Spouse of NM13-03047_FC01 Christine Anaya, if any. Legal #96328 Published in The SanGREETINGS: ta Fe New Mexican on January 14, 21 and 28, You are hereby noti- 2014. fied that the abovenamed Plaintiff has filed a civil action New Mexico against you in the The above-entitled Court Health Insurance Exand cause, the gener- change (NMHIX) is al object thereof be- soliciting responses qualified ing to foreclose a from mortgage on proper- offerors that are able ty located at 6867 Ca- to provide Independmino Rojo, Santa Fe, ent Verification and (IV&V) NM 87507, Santa Fe Validation County, New Mexico, services during the said property being Design, Development more particularly de- and Implementation (DDI) of the NMHIX scribed as: system. The ContracLot 151 of SILVERADO tor should be able to whether SUBDIVISION, PHASE assess 2, as shown on plat NMHIX and its partners are on track to filed in the office of the County Clerk, implement the requiSanta Fe County, New site technology for Mexico on March 14, the NMHIX in time for 2003, in Plat Book 525, enrolling consumers Pages 050-050b, as into qualified health Document No. plans (QHPs) by October 1 2014, as well 1254,119. as meeting all the Unless you serve a other specified repleading or motion in quirements for Exresponse to the com- changes under the plaint in said cause Affordable Care Act. on or before 30 days More information can found at: after the last publica- be tion date, judgment http://www.nmhix.co m / v e n d o r by default will be ene m p l o y m e n t tered against you. pportunities/vendorRespectfully Submit- opportunities/. ted, THE CASTLE LAW Legal#96255 Published in the SanGROUP, LLC ta Fe New Mexican January 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, February 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, Continued... 4, 2014


Tuesday, January 28, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

TIME OUT Horoscope

Crossword

The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2014: This year you spend more time alone than you ever would have anticipated. You might get bored or dislike being by yourself, but these periods will be essential to your growth. Capricorn can be a burden at times. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH When you realize what is going on, you might abruptly head in a different direction. Opportunities are likely to come forward. Tonight: A must appearance. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You will be on top of your game if you can incorporate a broader view with a better understanding of others. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation that sounds too good to be true. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH A partner will play a strong role in today’s happenings. You could be startled by what happens in a meeting and/or with this person. Tonight: Opt for togetherness. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Defer to others. You will have little choice, as you clearly want to do something else. View others’ demanding ways as a gift of sorts. Tonight: Sort through your many offers. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH The unexpected pops in and out of your life. You could be in the midst of some significant alterations. You might see others’ reactions toward you change as a result. Tonight: Live it up. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Your creativity will allow greater giveand-take in a volatile situation. Your perspective could change radically, which might affect your decision making. Tonight: Be more childlike.

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: HEARTS (e.g., In this 1944 film, Cary Grant speaks with a cockney accent. Answer: None But the Lonely Heart.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. How many chambers are there in the human heart? Answer________ 2. In the card game Hearts, how is the winner determined? Answer________ 3. Which song contains the lyrics “Lost control and tumbled overboard”? Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Which band featured sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson? Answer________

5. Which song contains the lyrics “Get your chin up off the floor”? Answer________ 6. In which film does Alan Arkin portray a deaf mute named John Singer? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Which composer’s heart was returned to his homeland after his death? Answer________ 8. On which novel is the film Apocalypse Now based? Answer________ 9. What book by Dee Brown is a history of the treatment of Native Americans? Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Four. 2. Lowest score at the completion of the game. 3. “Heart and Soul.” 4. Heart. 5. “You Gotta Have Heart.” 6. The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter. 7. Frederic Chopin. 8. Heart of Darkness. 9. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.

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

B-11

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Tension could build to an unprecedented level. A personal matter needs to be a higher priority. Your sensitivity will help calm someone down. Tonight: Surprises head your way.

Birth control secret isn’t fair to spouse Dear Annie: I’m 46 years old, college educated, with no children. I recently celebrated my 20th wedding anniversary. It’s not what I would call a good marriage. My husband occasionally has fits of anger and has been verbally abusive. More than eight years ago, I had a miscarriage. My husband wanted to keep trying. He repeatedly has said that he can’t imagine a life without children. I told him that having children is not going to happen, and that if he wants a divorce over this, I won’t fight him. He is welcome to find someone else to have children with. What I did not tell him is that soon after the miscarriage, I started taking birth control pills and continue to do so. I feel guilty that I might have misled him in that he may think there is a chance for children, although I would hope that at my age he would be past that. My question is: Should I tell him about the birth control? I’m not sure what it would accomplish. I’m afraid of his reaction to finding out, and divorce terrifies me. — Torn Between What is Right and What is Safe Dear Torn: Regardless of what you may have told your husband eight years ago, if you allowed him to have the impression that you were willing to get pregnant again, then obviously, you have been dishonest. This was grossly unfair to him. But you cannot undo the past, and with your husband’s anger issues, we can understand why there seems no point in telling him now. But a marriage that isn’t good to begin with is not likely to get better without professional assistance. Decide whether divorce terrifies you so much that you are willing to live like this for another 40 years. Dear Annie: My husband’s sister chooses not to take turns hosting family get-togethers. She has a beautiful home, but claims she does not have any “social living space.” She

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You’ll head in the right direction regarding a decision you’ve made. A loved one might react in an unexpected way that could stop you in your tracks. Tonight: Have a long-overdue conversation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Understand what is happening financially. Listen to others’ feedback, but avoid taking any risks for now. Tonight: Your treat. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH In face of a changing situation, your attitude remains steady. Being steadfast allows others to open up and share where they are coming from. Tonight: Beam in whatever you want. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HH Take news with a grain of salt. You might not be ready for a big shock, but in some way, you could be responsible for that reaction. Tonight: Early to bed. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Zero in on what you want and why you want it. A question could provoke an overreaction. No risk-taking, please. Tonight: Meet up with friends. Jacqueline Bigar

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 TO PLAY Hint: Simplify. Solution: 1. … Rxb7ch! 2. Kxb7 f3! (Black will end up a queen ahead) [Schaefer-Postny ’13].

Today in history Today is Tuesday, Jan. 28, the 28th day of 2014. There are 337 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Jan. 28, 1986, the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, killing all seven crew members, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe.

Hocus Focus

lives next door to her parents, so either they host, or we do it at our home. Her parents even host her children’s birthday parties. She just gets to show up. There is a lot of time, energy, planning, preparation and cost associated with having everyone over, and I feel she should reciprocate. However, my husband and in-laws do not see this as a problem. Am I asking too much? — Olympia, Wash. Dear Olympia: You are right that your sister-in-law should reciprocate, but it doesn’t matter. She isn’t going to do it. Your choice is simply which get-togethers you host and which belong to your in-laws. If you remove your sister-in-law from the hosting equation, you will be less resentful. You can cut back on the number of times you do this or ask your sisterin-law to reciprocate by cooking a dish or bringing the appetizers, but you cannot force her to open her home. Dear Annie: I want to thank “Still Suffering” for the gut-wrenching letter she wrote about being abused by her uncle. Any of us who have lived for years with the feelings of guilt and shame caused by being molested by a relative could have written that letter. When I was 10, I was molested by my older brother for several years. I am now in my 70s and have never fully recovered from the damage it caused. For years, I kept my filthy little secret. Last year, my brother died, and I did not go to his memorial service. Since then, I have told several family members. None of them was surprised, and all were supportive of me. Although I am overwhelmed with the love and support, I will take this scar to my grave. I hope that others who are victims of molesters will seek help and speak up early and not wait for the pervert to be out of their lives forever. — Feeling Better Now

Jumble


B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, January 28, 2014 WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

THE ARGYLE SWEATER

PEANUTS

LA CUCARACHA

TUNDRA

RETAIL

STONE SOUP

KNIGHT LIFE

DILBERT

LUANN

ZITS

BALDO

GET FUZZY

MUTTS

PICKLES

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PARDON MY PLANET

BABY BLUES

NON SEQUITUR


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