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Survivors struggle for aid
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Three days after Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the region, rescuers face blocked roads and damaged airports as they race to deliver desperately needed tents, food and medicines to the eastern Philippines, where thousands are believed dead. PAge A-3
Microsoft, Sony offer glimpse at next-next generation of gaming. TeCH, A-8
Jimmy Davis, who owns his own plumbing and heating company and has paid for his own insurance through Presbyterian for years, says the insurance company’s move to switch him to a new, more expensive plan doesn’t seem like a good deal. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
‘Faces Never Forgotten’ Santa Fean leads effort to collect photos of all those lost in Vietnam War; New Mexico first to meet goal
Costly plans not optimal fit for some self-insured By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
The federal health insurance exchange could benefit more than half a million uninsured and self-insured New Mexicans. But they won’t know until they can finally enroll, and even then, a few may still find the benefits aren’t worth what they’ll have to pay. Lisa Estrada is a single mom in Santa Fe who makes too much money to qualify for Medicaid. Her middleschool-age daughter is three-fourths American Indian, but she doesn’t qualify for health care under the federal Indian Health Services because the tribes aren’t in the United States. Estrada lost her insurance when she was laid off a year ago, but she kept her daughter insured through Presbyterian Health Care Services. She’s tried seven or eight times to enroll through the new health insurance exchange. “It’s been a nightmare,” Estrada said. “But I’m determined.”
Vietnam War veteran Art Canales on Saturday looks through binders that contain a photo of every service member from New Mexico who died in the conflict. Canales spearheaded the effort to track down the photos for each veteran, and New Mexico was the first state to complete the task. KATHARINE EGLI/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN
Please see PLANS, Page A-4
Canales of Santa Fe. Just two weeks ago, the group collected the final image they were seeking, that of Sgt. Bobby Joe Martinez of Fort Wingate, who died in May 1968 at the age of 22. For several years, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund has pursued a “Faces Never Forgotten” campaign to gather photographs of the 58,286 men and women who gave their lives during the Vietnam War. All will be honored on the memorial fund’s virtual Wall of Faces. The memorial fund is raising money to mount the images in its education center as well. According to Tim Tetz, director of outreach for the memorial fund, about 32,000 photos have been collected nationwide, leaving about 26,000 more to go. While New Mexico is the first to fulfill its goal, Tetz said Friday that Wyoming was just one photo away from becoming the second state, while other states, including South and North Dakota, aren’t far behind. For the most part, the young New Mexican men in the pho-
By Robert Nott The New Mexican
Y
Sipapu slopes slated to open on Saturday By Chris Quintana The New Mexican
There’s good news for winter-sport lovers as Sipapu Ski & Summer Resort — a ski area north of Santa Fe — will open a week earlier than normal, on Saturday. Sipapu, located near Vadito, generally is the first ski resort to open during the winter season, but usually not until the Saturday before Thanksgiving. Mountain manager John Paul Bradley said in a news release that Sipapu has gotten nearly two feet of snow since early October and that crews have since been prepping the mountain for the early opening. Stacey Glaser, a spokeswoman for Sipapu, said one lift definitely will be running by Saturday and a few addi-
Please see SIPAPU, Page A-5
From top, Sgt. Bobby Joe Martinez of Fort Wingate died in Quang Tri Province, Vietnam, at age 22. Martinez’s photo was the last image obtained by volunteers in New Mexico for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund’s ‘Faces Never Forgotten’ campaign. Cpl. Francis Xavier Nava is one of about 18 Santa Feans included in the photo memorial. Pfc. James Michael Moore of Albuquerque died in August 1967 at the age of 19. COURTESY PHOTOS
ou can tell that David Edward Bergfeldt wanted to smile for the color photo snapped in the summer of 1969. He was visiting home in Las Cruces during his second tour of duty in Vietnam. Wearing his dress uniform, he was seated on a couch, his left arm cradling a dog. Bergfeldt likely had darker things on his mind. He died in action in December of that year, three days after his 25th birthday. He is one of roughly 400 New Mexicans who were killed or went missing in action in Vietnam and are being commemorated as part of a Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund project in Washington, D.C. New Mexico is the first state in the country to have successfully collected photos of all of its service members — 398 — who didn’t survive the Vietnam conflict. The effort was driven by a team of about a half-dozen dedicated volunteers led by Arturo
Food-stamp diets increase obesity, ailments among nation’s hungriest By Eli Saslow
The Washington Post
MCALLEN, Texas — They were already running late for a doctor’s appointment, but first the Salas family hurried into their kitchen for another breakfast paid for by the federal government. The 4-year-old grabbed a bag of cheddar-flavored potato chips and a granola bar. The 9-year-old filled a bowl with sugary cereal and then gulped down chocolate milk. Their mother, Blanca, arrived at the refrigerator and reached into the drawer where she stored the insulin
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needed to treat her diabetes. She filled a needle with fluid and injected it into her stomach with a practiced jab. “Let’s go,” she told the children, rushing them out of the kitchen and into the car. “We can stop for snacks on our way home.” The family checkup had been scheduled at the insistence of a school nurse, who wanted the Salas family to address two concerns: They were suffering from both a shortage of nutritious food and a diet of excess — paradoxical problems that have become increasingly interconnected in the U.S., especially in South Texas.
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For almost a decade, Blanca had supported her five children by stretching $430 in monthly food stamp benefits, adding lard to thicken her refried beans and buying instant soup by the case at a nearby dollar store. She shopped for “quantity over quality,” she said, aiming to fill a grocery cart for $100 or less. But the cheap foods she could afford on the standard government allotment of about $1.50 per meal also tended to be among the least nutritious — heavy in preservatives, fats,
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Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com
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u Memorials become particularly poignant for aging World War II veterans. PAge A-2 u Holiday closures, events. PAge A-10
tos appear serious, somber and sometimes scared. One Raton youth, apparently sitting in a bunker somewhere in Vietnam, flashes eyes like those of an animal predator. Another New Mexican in his mid-20s sits in the Vietnam jungle, his machine gun within reach of his right hand. He looks like he is about to kill or be killed. “He looks old,” Canales said, viewing the photo. A lot of the men in the photos look old, actually. Others, however, are images of pre-military youth, straddling motorcycles with girlfriends, clowning around with neighborhood pals or cuddling childhood dogs. You see young men getting married, attending proms, riding bicycles,
Please see FACeS, Page A-5
Stop expecting kids to cooperate Columnist John Rosemond advises that parents, as authority figures, should expect nothing less than obedience from their children. FAMILY, A-9
Obituaries Andrea M. Buonanni, 99, Albuquerque, Nov. 6 PAge A-10
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
NATION&WORLD WWII reunions poignant for dwindling number of veterans
Small but powerful By Dan Sewell
The Associated Press
DAYTON, Ohio aul Young rarely talked about his service during World War II — about the B-25 bomber he piloted, about his 57 missions, about the dangers he faced or the fears he overcame. “Some things you just don’t talk about,” he said. But Susan Frymier had a hunch that if she could journey from Fort Wayne, Ind., with her 92-year-old dad for a reunion of his comrades in the 57th Bomb wing, he would open up. She was right: On a private tour at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force near Dayton, amid fellow veterans of flights over southern Europe and Germany, Young rattled off vivid details of his plane, crewmates, training and some of his most harrowing missions. “Dad, you can’t remember what you ate yesterday, but you remember everything about World War II,” his daughter said, beaming. When Young came home from the war, more than 70 years ago, there were 16 million veterans like him — young soldiers, sailors and Marines who returned to work, raise families, build lives. Over the decades, children grew up, married, had children of their own; careers were built and faded into retirement; love affairs followed the path from the altar to the homestead and often, sadly, to the graveyard. Through it all, the veterans would occasionally get together to remember the greatest formative experience of their lives. But as the years wore on, there were fewer and fewer of them. According to the Department of Veteran Affairs, just a little over 1 million remain. The ones who remain are in their 80s and 90s, and many are infirm or fragile. So the reunions, when they are held, are more sparsely attended — yearly reminders of the passing of the Greatest Generation. u When veterans of the Battle of the Bulge gathered in Kansas City this summer, only 40 came, according to organizers, down from 63 last year and 350 in 2004. u Of the 80 members of Doolittle’s Raiders who set out on their daring attack on Japan in 1942, 73 survived. Seventy-one years later, only four remain; they decided this year’s April reunion in Fort Walton Beach, Fla., would be their last, though they met Saturday for a final toast in honor of those who have gone before them. u A half-century ago, when retired Army First Lt. Frank Towers went to his first reunion of the 30th Infantry Division — soldiers who landed at the beaches of Normandy and fought across France and Germany — he was surrounded by 1,000 other veterans. “Now if I get 50, I’m lucky,” said Towers, who is working on plans for a reunion next February in Savannah, Ga. “Age has taken its toll on us. A lot of our members have passed away, and many of them who are left are in health situations where they can’t travel.” So why persist? “It’s a matter of camaraderie,” Towers said. “We spent basically a year or more together through hell or high water. We became a band of brothers. We can relate to each other in ways we can’t relate to [anyone else]. You weren’t there. These guys were there. They know the horrors we went through.”
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Satellite likely to hit Earth, but in unpopulated region BERLIN — The European Space Agency says that one of its research satellites that ran out of fuel will most likely crash to Earth into the ocean or polar regions. The agency said Sunday the crash is expected to occur Monday. It says “with a very high probability, a re-entry over Europe can be excluded.” Spokeswoman Jocelyne Landeau said the satellite, GOCE, will mostly disintegrate as it comes down and “we will have only a few pieces which could be 90 kilograms at the most.” ESA said Friday that humans are 250,000 times more likely to win the lottery than to get hit by the debris. GOCE was launched in 2009 to map the Earth’s gravitational field. George Williams, left, and Robert Crouse bow their heads as they take part in a memorial ceremony during a Sept. 27 reunion outside the U.S. Air Force Museum at Wright Patterson Air Force base in Dayton, Ohio. TOM UHLMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
uuu
As many as 11,000 people served in the 57th Bomb Wing that flew missions over Germanheld Europe from North Africa and the island of Corsica during most of the war. Hundreds survived, according to wing historians and reunion organizers. Only nine veterans made it to this fall’s event. George Williams, 90, recalled earlier reunions with his comrades, “having a great time yukking it up and talking about things.” No one else from his squadron came to this one. “All of a sudden, it’s lonesome,” said Williams, a native of Visalia, Calif.,
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UNIQUE THIS WEEK Monday, Nov. 11 FRIENDS OF THE WHEELWRIGHT LECTURE: Jeanne Brako and Jackson Clark Jr. discuss the Wheelwright’s Durango Collection exhibit of Pueblo, Navajo and Hispanic textiles, 2-4 p.m. 704 Camino Lejo. WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM OLD CIVILIZATIONS?: A Southwest Seminars lecture by Henry Wright at Hotel Santa Fe, 6 p.m. 1501 Paseo de Peralta.
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who moved after his wife’s death to Springfield, Mo., where his son lives. “All of the people you ran around with are on the wrong side of the grass. You wonder why you’re so lucky.” Williams remembered the tension of his first mission, his hand ready at the tag that would release him to bail out if necessary. It went without incident, and upon their return to base, a flight surgeon measured out two ounces of whiskey for each crewman. “Sixtynine to go,” he said then, because 70 missions was considered the tour of duty. Sometimes on later missions, he would pour the two ounces into a beer bottle to save up for a night when he needed numbing.
Incognito says Martin sent him threatening message MIAMI — Suspended Miami Dolphins guard Richie Incognito says teammate Jonathan Martin sent him a threatening text message only a week before their relationship mushroomed into a harassment case that has prompted an NFL investigation. In an interview with Fox Sports televised Sunday, Incognito said he didn’t take the threat seriously. Incognito said he regrets racist and profane language he used with Martin, but said it stemmed from a culture of “brotherhood” in the locker room, not from bullying. Martin left the team two weeks ago and alleges he was harassed by teammates, including Incognito. Martin is in counseling for emotional issues, and he’ll discuss the case late next week with a special investigator hired by the league. The Associated Press
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PARIS — When Iran appeared close to a preliminary deal with world powers over its nuclear program, France stepped up to say: Not so fast — a surprise move that exposed divisions among the United States and other Western negotiators who had long been in lockstep on the issue. France, analysts say, was motivated by factors including its tough stand against the spread of nuclear weapons, skepticism about Tehran’s trustworthiness, and the longstanding French tradition of speaking out on the world stage. Critics faulted France for alleged grandstanding and seeking closer ties with Iran’s foes. After the Geneva talks ended early Sunday with no deal, diplomats including U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said that progress was nonetheless made and negotiations will continue Nov. 20. He said the U.S. was “grateful” to the French and shared some of their concerns. After the failure of European-led talks with Iran over the nuclear program in the mid-2000s — when America gave Iran the silent treatment — Paris has staked out a hard-line stance. While President Barack Obama has recently sought a breakthrough, France has little to gain politically from an accord, and that gives Paris a freer hand to stick to strategic and security concerns.
RICHMOND, Calif. — More than 90 tons of prepackaged salads and sandwiches by a California catering company are being recalled because a bacterial strain of E. coli has been linked to its products. The USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service says Sunday that Richmond-based Glass Onion Catering recalled the salads and sandwich wraps containing cooked chicken and ham after 26 people in three states were sickened with a strand of E. coli. The products were produced between Sept. 23 and Nov. 6 and were shipped to distribution centers in California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Texas. The Contra Costa Times reports the company has supplied food to Trader Joe’s, Super Fresh Goods and Delish.
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French skepticism, stance on nukes deters deal with Iran
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In brief
Monday, Nov. 11 COWGIRL BBQ: Cowgirl karaoke with Michele Leidig, weekly, 9 p.m. 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Jazz Night with Trey Keepin, 7 p.m. 808 Canyon Road.
GoLF coUrSES QUAIL RUN GOLF COURSE: 3101 Old Pecos Trail. Website is www.quailrunsantafe.com or call 986-2200. TOWA GOLF COURSE AT BUFFALO THUNDER RESORT & CASINO: 17746 U.S. 84/285.
Corrections Website is www.Buffalo thunderresort.com or call 455-9000. MARTY SANCHEZ LINKS DE SANTA FE: 205 Caja del Rio Road. Website is www.links desantafe.com or call 955-4470. SANTA FE COUNRY CLUB: 4360 Country Club Road, No. A. Website is www. santafecountryclub.com or call 471-0601.
PArKS SKATEBOARD PARKS: In De Vargas Park, 302 W. De Vargas St.; Franklin Miles Park, 1027 Camino Carlos Rey. FORT MARCY/MAGER’S FIELD COMPLEX: 490 Washington Ave. 955-2500. GENOVEVA CHAVEZ COMMUNITY CENTER: 3221 Rodeo Road. 955-4000. HERB MARTINEZ/LA RESOLANA PARK: 2240 Camino Carlos Rey. MUNICIPAL RECREATION COMPLEX: 205 Caja del Rio Road. 955-4470. SALVADOR PEREZ PARK AND SWIMMING POOL: 610 Alta Vista St. 955-2604.
VoLUNTEEr DOG WALKERS WANTED: Join our team, get in shape and help homeless dogs. The Santa Fe animal shelter needs volun-
teer dog walkers for all shifts, but especially our Coffee & Canines morning shift from 7 to 9 a.m. For more information, send email to krod riguez@sfhumanesociety.org or call Katherine at 983-4309, ext. 128. AARP TAX-AIDE: Volunteer tax preparers and greeters for the tax season are needed from Feb. 1 to April 15. Volunteers work one or more 4-hour shifts a week. Training will be offered in January for those with tax preparation experience and more extensive training for those with no experience. Volunteers can work at Santa Fe Community College or at the Pasatiempo Senior Center on Alta Vista Street. For more information, send an email to taxhelpsantafe@ gmail.com or ddreschel@ comcast.net or call 670-6835. THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Volunteers are needed to support the Cancer Resource Center at the Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center. 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. ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Five separate resident facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — are operating by St.
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035.
Elizabeth Shelter. Volunteers are needed to help prepare meals at the emergency shelters and perform other duties. Send an email to volunteer@ steshelter.org or call Rosario at 505-982-6611, ext. 108. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. If you can give two-three hours a week to help, call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. It will make a real difference in the lives of homebound neighbors. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www.kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfne wmexican.com.
NATION & WORLD
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Typhoon survivors in Philippines struggle for aid By Jim Gomez
The Associated Press
TACLOBAN, Philippines — Rescuers faced blocked roads and damaged airports on Monday as they raced to deliver desperately needed tents, food and medicines to the typhoon-devastated eastern Philippines where thousands are believed dead. Three days after the Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the region, the full scale of the disaster — the biggest faced by the Philippines — was only now becoming apparent. International aid groups and the U.S military were mobilizing a major international relief mission for a large swath of the country’s already poor eastern seaboard. The winds and the sea waves whipped up were so strong that they washed hulking ships inland, which now stood
incongruously amid debris of buildings, trees, road signs and people’s belongings. Authorities estimated that up to 10,000 people may have died. But the government has been unable to give official death toll yet. Still, officials said after surveying the areas there is little doubt that the death toll will be that high, or even higher. “In some cases the devastation has been total,” said Secretary to the Cabinet Rene Almendras. In Manila’s Vilamor air force base, a contingent of U.S. Marines was preparing to fly in relief supplies in two C-130 transport planes to Tacloban, a city in Leyte province that was badly hit by the storm. From the air, the city resembled a garbage dump punctuated by a few concrete buildings that remained standing. Corpses hung from
A resident looks at houses damaged by Typhoon Haiyan in Tacloban, Philippines, on Sunday. AARON FAVILA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
trees and were scattered on sidewalks. Many were buried in flattened buildings.
Survivors wandered through the remains of their flattened wooden homes looking to sal-
vage belongings or to search for loved ones. Very little assistance had reached the city, residents reported. Some took food, water and consumer goods from abandoned shops, malls and homes. “This area has been totally ravaged,” said Sebastien Sujobert, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Tacloban. “Many lives were lost, a huge number of people are missing, and basic services such as drinking water and electricity have been cut off,” he said. Haiyan hit the eastern seaboard of the Philippines on Friday and quickly barreled across its central islands, packing winds of 147 mph that gusted to 170 mph, and a storm surge of 20 feet. Even though authorities had evacuated some 800,000 people ahead of the typhoon, the death
Every year hundreds of Santa Feans Let Joe do it! Why not you?
Two teens killed in Texas party shooting By Juan A. Lozano
The Associated Press
arranged to have people searched as they entered the home. Sheriff’s spokesman Thomas Gilliland said earlier that deputies were confronted with “mass chaos” when they responded to the call in the residential neighborhood about 25 miles northwest of Houston, adding that “kids were literally everywhere.” He said witnesses reported partygoers jumping from the second floor in their scramble to flee.
Mariah Boulden said the gathering was her birthday party. Boulden, who lives at the residence, said her brother and others were patting down people as they entered the home. Two men refused to be searched and walked away, she said, then apparently hopped a neighbor’s fence and entered through a back gate. “They wasn’t supposed to be here whoever they was,” Boulden said.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 NO MEETINGS SCHEDULED – IN OBSERVANCE OF THE VETERANS DAY HOLIDAY, CITY OFFICES WILL BE CLOSED TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 11:00 AM CITY BUSINESS & QUALITY OF LIFE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue 12:00 PM HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD FIELD TRIP – Historic Preservation Division, 2nd Floor, City Hall 4:00 PM LEAD TASK FORCE – Market Station Conference Room, 500 Market Station, Suite 200 4:45 PM PUBLIC WORKS/CIP & LAND USE COMMITTEE – Market Station Conference Room 5:00 PM ARTS COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 5:30 PM HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD – City Council Chambers
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HOUSTON — Celebratory gunshots fired at a girl’s 18th birthday party triggered more gunfire that left two people dead, two critically injured and nearly two dozen injured in a chaotic scene where people jumped from second-floor windows to escape the shooting at a suburban Houston home, authorities said Sunday. Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia said the gathering Saturday night was openly promoted using multiple social media sites, drew more than 100 people, most of them 17- to 19-yearolds, and became a “birthday party gone wild.” He said it appears partygoers were dancing in the home when someone armed with a pistol shot into the air in celebration. In the ensuing confusion, another person who was armed began firing into the crowd, Garcia said. Young people then streamed into the narrow street to avoid the burst of gunshots that followed shortly before 11 p.m. Saturday. Partygoer Shaniqua Brown — who said she heard about the party through Instagram, a photo-sharing app and website — told The Associated Press it “was not rowdy at all.” She said she first heard gunshots in the house and they continued outside as people fled and sought cover. Authorities have given varying accounts of the number of people injured, but they clarified Sunday that 20 were hurt, with
16 suffering gunshot wounds and four others varying injuries such as a fracture and twisted ankles in the panic to flee. The two people killed, one an 18-year-old male and the other a 16-year-old female, were students at Cypress Springs High School, Garcia said. Authorities are searching for two gunmen, he said, one who’s about 17 years old and the other believed to be about 22. He said party organizers
toll was so high because many evacuation centers — brickand-mortar schools, churches and government buildings — could not withstand the winds and water surges. Officials said people who had huddled in these buildings drowned or were swept away. It inflicted serious damage to at least six islands in the middle of the eastern seaboard, with Leyte, Samar and the northern part of Cebu appearing to bear the brunt of the storm. About 4 million people were affected by the storm, the national disaster agency said. Video from Eastern Samar province’s Guiuan township — the first area where the typhoon made landfall — also showed a trail of devastation similar to Tacloban. Many houses were flattened and roads were strewn with debris and uprooted trees.
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013 4:00 PM SANTA FE SISTER CITIES COMMITTEE – Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 2nd Floor, Tesuque Room, 201 Marcy Street 5:00 PM CITY COUNCIL – City Council Chambers 7:00 PM CITY COUNCIL - City Council Chambers THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2013 5:30 PM JOINT MEETING OF THE SANTA FE BOARD OF EDUCATION AND CITY OF SANTA FE GOVERNING BODY – Education Services Center (ESC), 610 Alta Vista 6:00 PM SANTA FE RIVER COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2013 NO MEETINGS SCHEDULED
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
Plans: More companies serving individual market under exchange Continued from Page A-1 Jimmy Davis owns a successful Santa Fe plumbing and heating business. At almost 60, he’s five years from qualifying for Medicare and makes too much money to qualify for Medicaid or subsidies offered under the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. He’s paid for his own insurance through Presbyterian for years and claims he only goes to the doctor once a year for a checkup. “I try to take care of myself so I can stay out of the system,” he said. Davis figured he would have to pay more for health insurance under the new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. But he was shocked at how much more he would have to pay Presbyterian Health Care if he chooses one of the plans they offered him recently. Under one plan, his monthly premium would be twice as high; under another, it would be lower but with a $1,500 higher deductible. “They’re not really offering me anything extra that I need,” Davis said. “I know I’m paying extra to help those who do need it.” Davis and Estrada, along with thousands of others in the individual insurance market, have until Dec. 1 to select one of Presbyterian’s new plans. Their other option is to choose a plan from one of the four other companies offering health insurance in New Mexico
by the Affordable Care Act, except maternity care. People have until Dec. 1 to choose this option, and the coverage begins the same day. The second option meets all the Affordable Care Act requirements, including maternity care. Presbyterian subscribers also can choose one of the four other companies offering insurance through the federal health insurance exchange: Blue Cross Blue Shield, Lovelace, New Mexico Health Connections or Molina Health Care. All five companies offer four basic levPresbyterian options els of coverage — bronze, silver, gold and Estrada’s daughter and Davis are platinum. People under age 30 also can among 23,000 New Mexicans statewide get catastrophic-only health care plans. and 2,400 in Santa Fe who are selfBronze pays 60 percent of medical costs; insured through one of Presbyterian silver pays 70 percent; gold pays 80 percent; and platinum pays 90 percent. Health Care’s individual plans. Several All of the plans offer unlimited lifethousand more have individual plans time medical coverage under the Affordthrough Lovelace Health Systems and able Care Act, unlike current plans that Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico. usually cap coverage. These are the people who need Each company’s plans differ a bit in to transition to new insurance plans because their current ones don’t meet all deductibles and covered providers. But one thing is the same among all of them: the requirements of the federal Affordable Care Act, such as unlimited lifetime The out-of-pocket expenses for the benefits and behavioral health coverage. insured can’t be more than $6,350 a year Presbyterian is offering Davis, Estrada — including deductible, copayments, coinsurance and prescription drug costs. and the other current individual poli“That’s a real benefit for people,” said cyholders two options. The first option provides all the health coverage required Neal Spero, vice president of marketing
through the federal health insurance exchange. If they want coverage to begin on Jan. 1, 2014, they must make a decision by Dec. 15. While many people are having trouble using the federal exchange, New Mexico Superintendent of Insurance John Franchini said they should know that the new plans are much better, in many cases, and there are dozens of options. “Only three companies served the individual market in New Mexico before,” Franchini pointed out.
for Presbyterian Health Care. “That’s not the way it used to be calculated in the past.”
The in-between
Davis, 59, owns Four Seasons Plumbing and Heating in Santa Fe. He’s the only employee. He said that after he Trying for coverage received a letter in early October from Presbyterian about changes to his policy, Estrada is the kind of person “Obamhe called and spoke to the same cusacare” is supposed to help. She had to tomer service representative, twice. drop her own insurance after she was His current deductible is $2,500 and laid off, and her new employer does not he pays $232 a month for his premium. offer insurance. So she’s still on her own. Presbyterian’s Option 1, with a $4,000 She’s been trying to enroll through deductible, will cost $345.20 a month. the federal health care exchange, with “That’s still more than 20 to 25 percent no luck so far. She made it as far as the higher than my current premium, and it end of the application last week. “I was almost doubles my deductible. The only excited and ready to sign the application thing I’m really interested in here is chirowhen, boom, up came a screen saying I practic,” he said. The plan “is really not a needed to verify [my daughter’s] citizen- whole lot different than what I have now.” ship. It said I needed to scan my driver’s An Option 2 Silver C plan, with maternity benefits he doesn’t need, license,” she said. “I didn’t have a scanwould cost him $527.15 a month. ner at home, so I had to wait.” He also could choose an individual Roxane Spruce Bly, director of plan under one of the other four comHealthcare Education and Outreach, panies, or drop the insurance and pay a said that if the health exchange system “doesn’t confirm your identity, you may penalty, but he doesn’t want to gamble and go without insurance. be instructed to scan and upload your “The insurance companies know driver’s license.” that,” he said. “They’re like a casino. Estrada doesn’t know yet if she The odds are in their favor. They’re the qualifies for subsidies. But shoppers house, and the house always wins.” can check out a calculator on the Kaiser Family Foundation’s website at kff.org/ Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 interactive/subsidy-calculator to get an or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock. estimate.
Diets: Region’s children have shorter life expectancy than parents Continued from Page A-1 salt and refined sugar. Now Clarissa, her 13-year-old daughter, had a darkening ring around her neck that suggested early-onset diabetes from too much sugar. Now Antonio, 9, was sharing dosages of his mother’s cholesterol medication. Now Blanca herself was too sick to work, receiving disability payments at age 40 and testing her bloodsugar level twice each day to guard against the stroke doctors warned was forthcoming as a result of her diet. She drove toward the doctor’s office on the two-lane highways of South Texas, the flat horizon of brown dirt interrupted by palm trees and an occasional view of the steel fence that divides the United States from Mexico. Blanca’s parents emigrated from Mexico in the 1950s to pick strawberries and cherries, and they often repeated an aphorism about the border fence. “On one side, you’re skinny. On the other, you’re fat,” they said. Now millions more had crossed through the fence, both legally and illegally, making Hidalgo County one of the fastest-growing places in America. “El Futuro” is what some residents had begun calling the area, and here the future was unfolding in a cycle of cascading extremes: Hidalgo County has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation … which has led almost 40 percent of residents to enroll in the food-stamp program … which means a widespread reliance on cheap, processed foods … which results in rates of diabetes and obesity that double the national average … which fuels the country’s highest per-capita spending on health care. This is what El Futuro looks like in the Rio Grande Valley: The country’s hungriest region is also its most overweight, with 38.5 percent of the people obese. For one of the first times anywhere in the U.S., children in South Texas have a projected life span that is a few years shorter than that of their parents. It is a crisis at the heart of the Washington debate over food stamps, which now help support nearly 1 in 7 Americans. Has the massive growth of a government feeding program solved a problem, or created one? Is it enough for the government to help people buy food, or should it go further by also telling them what to eat? Blanca walked her children into the doctor’s office, and they took turns stepping onto the scale: 110 pounds. Seventy-eight. Fifty-five. “Not perfect, but not so bad,” the doctor said. Then a nurse handed him the children’s blood work — a series of alarming numbers that lately read more like averages in this part of Texas. Clarissa needed to watch her sugar, he said. Antonio needed to increase the dosage of his cholesterol medication. “Can I still eat hot Cheetos?” Antonio asked. “Just one bag a day?” “Not anymore,” the doctor said. “One a week?”
A popular local favorite food in McAllen, Texas, is hot Cheetos with cheese sauce poured into the bag, such as this serving, prepared last week by Adriana Gonzalez, that sells for only $1. MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON/THE WASHINGTON POST
“No.” The doctor set down his chart and turned to face Blanca. He had 17 more appointments on the day’s schedule — 17 more conversations like this one. The waiting room was filled with the children of Hidalgo County, 40 percent of them experiencing severe hunger at least once each month and 32 percent of them obese. His challenge was the same one that preoccupied so many in the Rio Grande Valley: How could families who had so little find ways to consume less? “Either you address this now or it will be too late,” he told Blanca. “I can give you medicine, but that’s not the permanent solution.” uuu
There was a time when Terry Canales thought he knew the solution, and it could be accomplished through politics. Canales, a 33-year-old Texas state representative, grew up outside McAllen, surrounded by the poverty and obesity he called “the double deaths” of Hidalgo County. He had waited in line at the area’s ubiquitous drive-thru convenience stores and watched people use their government Lone Star cards to purchase some of South Texas’ most popular snacks, paying $1 for hot Cheetos smothered with cheese or $2 for a Mexican snow cone covered with gummy bears and chile powder. He had seen children use food stamps to buy Red Bull energy drinks by the case, and he had seen some of those same children waiting in line at the medical clinic near his house where 28 people had diabetes diagnosed every day. “We are slowly killing ourselves,” he concluded. So, he took time off from his law practice in 2012 to run for office, spending $500,000 of his own money to win a job that pays $600 a month. He left his wife and three young children at home to spend each week at the Capitol in Austin, where he became one of several lawmakers across the country working to change what people can buy with food stamps. Minnesota wanted to ban candy, New York City hoped to eliminate soft drinks and South Carolina wanted to rule out cookies and cakes. As a model, they heralded the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s own WIC
program, which subsidizes the purchases of only a few hundred essential foods such as milk, cheese and baby formula for young mothers and children under 5. But no state had yet persuaded the USDA, which prohibits purchasing with food stamps only tobacco and alcohol, so Canales decided to start smallest of all. Instead of trying to regulate the estimated $2 billion in junkfood purchases enabled each year by food stamps, he wrote a bill to ban the food-stamp purchase of only one product. That was energy drinks — high in caffeine and higher in sugar, expensive and marketed to children despite offering little nutritional value. “A no-brainer,” he explained as he introduced the bill in a committee meeting last summer. Then he yielded the microphone and waited for rebuttals. The first critic was one he had anticipated, a lobbyist for the Texas Beverage Association, which desperately wanted all of its drinks available for sale to the fastest-growing market in America: the food-stamp market, which has quadrupled from $20 billion to $80 billion in the past 12 years. Companies such as Coca-Cola, Kraft and Mars have spent more than $10 million in the past several years lobbying Congress to keep their products available to those using food stamps. “No clear standards exist for defining foods as good or bad,” the lobbyist said. But next came a litany of speakers Canales hadn’t expected. They were Democrats who shared his ideals and equaled his devotion in the fight against poverty. At previous committee meetings on his other bills, many of them had lined up to speak on his behalf. “Better not to micromanage other people’s diets,” said the director of an interfaith organization. “Opposed,” said the representative of a Texas food bank. “Against,” said the head of an anti-hunger group. For more than half an hour, Canales listened to their concerns about his bill and another proposed by a lawmaker who wanted to eliminate candy and chips: Should government be in the position of telling adults what to eat? And if so, who would be trusted to sort through
the 40,000 items sold in a typical grocery store and divide healthy from unhealthy? If energy drinks were banned, why not also ban canned iced coffee that has twice the caffeine and triple the sugar? Or Gatorade? Or fruit punch? And once every product had been sorted, what if grocery stores decided it was easier not to accept food stamps at all? Or what if food-stamp recipients felt too stigmatized to shop? Wouldn’t lawmakers be better off working to solve the problems of poverty rather than regulating them? How about funding nutrition education, or encouraging more fresh produce in inner-city grocery stores, or building playgrounds and making streets safer so people would exercise? Why not focus on alleviating the stresses of poverty, which so many studies had linked to overeating? “It is unrealistic to expect someone stretching their dollars to be highly worried and focused on nutritional content,” one food policy analyst testified. “They just need to eat.” The committee meeting ended without a vote on Canales’ proposal, and suddenly he, too, felt a little less sure. He did nothing to resurrect his bill, deciding instead to raise money for diabetes awareness and nutrition education. “The more you learn in this job, the more complicated it gets to take a position,” he told his district director a few months after the committee meeting. “What do you want to do about it, boss?” the district director asked. “I don’t ever want to pass a bill and end up regretting it,” he said. “Let’s teach people to make good choices and go from there.” uuu
Later that same afternoon, Luisa Colin and Jessica Rueda grabbed their nutrition brochures and their plastic vegetables and headed toward the Mexican border to do that kind of teaching. They had been working together for three years as nutrition educators, paid in part by the USDA to instill better eating habits in low-income families. Theirs was the government-sponsored solution. “If only people had the basic knowledge,” Colin said. “If they just understand their choices,” Rueda said. The two women drove out of McAllen and into the desert. Two miles from the border, they stopped at a collection of a few hundred ramshackle houses called Little Mexico. The community had no running water and only intermittent electricity. Chickens wandered freely and a donkey stood in an intersection eating trash. Two children ran outside to greet them, and Rueda asked them in Spanish, “Is your mom home? I’d like to talk to her about something.” Her job was to walk through the neighborhood and enroll women in nutrition classes that would improve their diets: better portion sizes, more dark green vegetables and whole grains, fresh fish instead of ground beef, at least 30 minutes of exercise
each day. These were the tenets of their work. Research showed that every $1 spent on nutrition education saved the government $10 in future health care costs. But lately, the USDA had cut funding for nutrition programs by 25 percent and Congress was threatening cuts again. A dozen nutrition workers in Hidalgo County had been steadily reduced to six devoted women who worked 60-hour weeks to keep pace with the rising need. Now, in some of her conversations, Rueda’s goals had become more basic to keep people nourished and living, she said. “How is your nutrition?” she asked one woman in Spanish as they stood together at a front doorway missing its door. “We eat what we can get,” the woman said. “Do you ever eat vegetables?” “Not much. Maybe beans, some salsa.” “Do you exercise?” “No.” “Do you have a fridge?” “Not anymore.” The woman explained that she stored what food she had in an icebox, and that the closest store offering fresh produce was seven miles away. Nobody in Little Mexico exercised outside after 4 p.m., she said, for fear of the dogs and drug cartels that roamed the streets. Rueda started to move on to the next house, but the woman called after her with a question of her own. “Do you have any extra food?” the woman asked. “Anything?” “Yes,” Rueda said. “We can bring you some.” uuu
If education had failed to break the cycle of poverty and obesity, and politics had failed to break the cycle, then the only solution left for one family at the center of the crisis was the most basic solution of all: to eat better, one meal at a time. “It ends today,” Blanca Salas told her son, Antonio, after they came back from the doctor. “I’m on a diet!” he said. “Me, too,” she said. She had attended a nutrition class earlier in the week, and now she held a sheet listing recommended foods in one hand while sorting through her fridge with the other. “Fresh vegetables,” the sheet read, and Blanca found two rotting tomatoes, a package of frozen broccoli and two containers of instant vegetable soup. “Fruit,” the sheet said, and she saw grape-flavored popsicles and three apples. “Dairy”: They had Cool Whip and Nesquik. “Whole grains”: three frozen pizzas and a package of corn dogs. “Healthy Snacks”: a 24-pack of hot Cheetos. She had already exhausted her food-stamp account for the month, and she had nothing else to spend until the next deposit in a few days. This time she would receive about $30 less, like everyone on food stamps, because of stimulus funding that expired Nov. 1. She looked again at the list of recommended foods: fat-free cottage cheese, quinoa, bok choy, chickpeas and dozens of other items. Some she
had never heard of; most she had never encountered in the dollar stores of South Texas. She had been born in the U.S. in the last years when being poor also usually meant being thin. Her parents had lied about her age when she was 11 so she could get a job picking with them in the fields. They ate what they picked, raised their own chickens and boiled rice by the pound. But the sprawl of McAllen edged into the farmland, and Blanca dropped out of school in 10th grade and took a job at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. She had her first baby at 19 and her second a few years later, with a man who soon disappeared to Mexico. She applied for public housing in a community that offered little space to grow her own food, near a commercial road lined with 17 fast-food restaurants. Now, each morning on the way to school, her children rode past signs that advertised “Dollar Menu,” “Ultimate Dollar Menu,” “Dollar Tacos” and “Hot Cheetos, two for a dollar.” For years, Blanca had tried to provide an antidote by forcing the children to sit nearby as she gave herself insulin shots. “You need to look at your future,” she told them. “Is this what you want?” She had tried planning a menu and cooking family dinners, but tailoring meals for five children on a budget exhausted her. They would eat broccoli only if she slathered it with butter and cheese. They would eat Mexican mole sauce only if it came with a hulking side of tortilla chips. The prepackaged diet lunches she splurged on at $3.50 each sometimes came back from school with uneaten turkey and whole-wheat crackers. As her health worsened, she had starting shopping mostly for foods she knew they would eat and prepare themselves. She reasoned it was more important to provide enough than it was to worry about what, exactly, she was providing. Now Antonio came into the kitchen looking for something to eat. “Make a smart choice,” she told him. She watched him grab a bag of Super Mario Brothers Fruit Flavored Snacks and a Coke Zero. “Fruit and diet,” he said. “Good,” she said. They sat together on the living room couch while Antonio did homework and ate his snack. At 3 p.m, they swallowed their cholesterol medication together. At 4, Salas pricked her thumb and tested her blood sugar. Five o’clock came, and she injected her next dosage of insulin. “I’m hungry,” Antonio told her. “Wait for dinner,” she said. He sat next to her for a few more minutes, attempting to be patient, caught in the cycle that has confounded politicians and nutritionists and families in the Rio Grande Valley. Was it more hazardous to go hungry or to eat junk? The choice was left to a 9-year-old boy stuck in a culture that provided him both too much and far too little. “I need to eat,” he said, and he walked back to the kitchen and opened the fridge.
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Faces: Images share stories behind uniform Continued from Page A-1
Mountain manager John Paul Bradley said in a news release that Sipapu has gotten nearly two feet of snow since early October and that crews have since been prepping the mountain to open earlier than usual. COURTESY PHOTO
Sipapu: Ski area first one in state to open Continued from Page A-1 tional trails might also be open. She added that trail availability depends on how much snow the crews can make, as well as on a weather system set to move through the area later this week. Lifts will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and the resort will reopen Nov. 22 for daily service through Dec. 1, after which daily operations will resume again Dec. 6. Early season lift tickets — Nov. 16 through Dec. 12 — run $20 for adults and $15 for those 7 to 20 years old or 60 to 69 years old. Those 70 or older ride for free, as do those 6 years old or younger. Fourthand fifth-grade students can ride for free as well, although they need to bring a report card to verify their grade level. For more information about Sipapu, or to buy tickets, visit sipapunm.com. The Red River Ski Area, a resort about an hour away from Taos, is set to open Nov. 27. The Taos Ski Valley and Ski Santa Fe, as well as Ski Apache in Southern New Mexico, are
Monday has TECH
expected to open Nov. 28, according to an email from George Brooks, executive director of Ski New Mexico. Last year, Sipapu opened Nov. 17, a week before Thanksgiving, which fell on Nov. 22. Ski Santa Fe didn’t open until the second full week of December. The New Mexican has previously reported that Accuweather meteorologists predict Santa Fe will see above-average precipitation and cooler temperatures in December and January. Whether there will be more snow than rain is still uncertain, but one forecaster said the mountains are likely to have more snow than last year. For the Santa Fe area, the National Weather Service forecasts mostly clear skies throughout the week, with low temperatures around 29 degrees to 31 degrees and highs between the low 60s and low 50s. Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.
graduating from high school. Canales, a Vietnam veteran himself — he served in the U.S. Navy — figures they all once had hopes and dreams. Tetz said personal photos of the veterans often have a greater impact on viewers than formal military portraits. “To a lot of people, it may just be another guy in a uniform,” he said. “But if we are able to show the personalities behind them — their wedding photographs, a shot of them holding their baby or playing football — then we can tell the story behind that uniform.”
Tracking down pieces of history In October 2009, the Vietnam Veterans of America Northern New Mexico Chapter 996 initiated the effort to gather the photos. Canales, along with Art DeVargas, Jerry Martinez, Charles Zobac, Eddie Romero and Henry Urioste, went to work tracking them down. The task involved collecting casualty reports from various sources, including the LBJ Presidential Library, connecting with statewide veterans’ organizations and placing cold calls to people who live in the same New Mexico town and have the same last name as the deceased. Canales called them dead phone calls. “They’re really difficult,” he said. “You are talking to family members, friends, loved ones who maybe haven’t talked about the war or their loss for years.
Cpl. Van Etsitty of Gallup died June 1, 1968. His photo is one of hundreds collected throughout the state as part of an effort to pay tribute to those who died in the Vietnam War. The photos can be viewed at the New Mexico Veterans Memorial in Albuquerque. COURTESY PHOTO
And they say to you, ‘Why do you want the photo?’ ” Most of the time people responded, sending in photos, newspaper clippings, obituaries and personal remembrances of the deceased. For instance, attached to a photo of Melvin Carrillo of Roswell (1949-68) is a Post-it note from a family member noting that Carrillo loved boxing and won a local lightweight championship title. He never made it to the regional boxing competition because he was drafted, the note explains. A March 6, 1971, news obituary for Army soldier Thomas Toledo of Jemez Pueblo accompanied his photo. The obituary quotes a family
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member who said of Toledo, “He didn’t want to go to war.” It also stated that Toledo’s letters home “never spoke of anything bad, he always had something good to say.” Toledo was
about 20 when he was killed in action in March 1971. Most of the photos are of men who died at the age of 18, 19, 20 or 21. A few made it into their mid-20s, and the collection includes two veterans who made it to 40. The casualty reports are to the point: “gunshot wound to the head,” or “ground casualty … gun or small arms fire.” A number of the deceased have schools, playgrounds, parks or American Legion posts named after them, Canales said. In Santa Fe, Nava Elementary School is named after Francis Xavier Nava (1946-66). The Marine is one of about 18 Santa Feans included in the photo memorial. The photo search took an emotional toll on many of the volunteers, Canales said. As for how he feels now that the task is complete, he said, “I’m done. I finished my tour. I finished my mission.” He said anyone interested can view all 398 photos at the New Mexico Veterans Memorial, 1100 Louisiana Blvd. SE, in Albuquerque. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
NATION & WORLD
Warsaw climate talks could point way to new deal By Karl Ritter and Monika Scislowska
The Associated Press
WARSAW, Poland — Climate envoys from rich countries, emerging economies and lowlying nations at risk of being swamped by rising seas will meet in Poland for the next two weeks to lay the groundwork for a new global warming pact. Although no major decisions are expected at the conference starting Monday in Warsaw’s National Stadium, the level of progress could be an indicator of the world’s chances of reaching a deal in 2015. That’s the new watershed year in the U.N.-led process after a 2009 summit in Copenhagen ended in discord. Climate change is “very, very scary stuff. And evidence is accumulating weekly, monthly as to how dangerous this will be. So there is a huge urgency that we get on with this,” said
Andrew Steer, the head of the World Resources Institute in Washington. The urgency of the problem was underlined in a recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.N.-sponsored body that provides the scientific basis for the negotiations. The IPCC said in September with more certainty than before that humans are warming the planet, mainly through carbon emissions from the burning of oil, coal and gas. It raised its projections for sea level rise and warned that the Arctic Ocean could be nearly ice-free during summers before mid-century if the world doesn’t act to curb emissions. “Global greenhouse gas emissions need to peak this decade, and get to zero net emissions by the second half of this century,” U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres said Thursday. The hard part is deciding how
to divide those cuts. Since they began in 1992, the U.N. talks have been bogged down by disputes between rich and poor countries over who should do what. For a long time, the U.S. was seen as the biggest foot-dragger — it was the only industrialized country that didn’t join the Kyoto Protocol, a 1997 emissions deal. America’s standing has improved under President Barack Obama, who has increased fuel efficiency standards for cars and trucks, worked to boost energy efficiency in federal buildings, invested in green energy and acted to cut emissions from power plants. While many countries say the U.S. should do more, increasing focus is falling on the world’s top carbon polluter, China, which is under pressure to fuel its economic development in a cleaner way than the U.S. and other industrialized nations did.
Health law’s troubles give GOP a much-needed boost By Charles Babington The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The health care law’s seemingly endless problems are giving congressional Republicans a much-needed boost of energy, helping them to move past the government-shutdown debacle and focus on a theme for next year’s elections. Republicans are back on offense, and more quickly than many had expected, after seeing their approval ratings plunge during last month’s partial shutdown and worrisome talk of a possible U.S. debt default. They pillory administration officials at Capitol Hill hearings. They cite the millions of people getting dropped by insurers despite President
Barack Obama’s promise that it wouldn’t happen. They harp on the program’s flawed enrollment process. Now they’re relishing Obama’s apology to those who are losing health insurance plans he had repeatedly said they could keep. “If the president is truly sorry for breaking his promises to the American people, he’ll do more than just issue a halfhearted apology on TV,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement. Republicans once pinned their health care criticisms largely on computer glitches in the application and enrollment process. Today, they’re accusing Obama and congressional Democrats of much worse, including deceit and incompetence.
Conservative groups are pouring money into ad campaigns reminding voters that many Democrats had promised Americans they could keep their current insurance policies if they wanted. In particular, Republicans hope these efforts will help them with women, who tend to vote Democratic and often make health care decisions for their families and in-laws. In the 2014 elections, “this is going to be a big issue, and it’s not going away,” said Daniel Scarpinato of the National Republican Congressional Committee. “Democrats who voted for Obamacare,” he said, “are pretty desperately running around with their hair on fire, trying to distance themselves, which they’re not going to be able to do.”
Beijing points to the West’s historical responsibility for having pumped carbon into the atmosphere since the industrial revolution took off in Britain in the 18th century. But that argument is losing weight as Chinese emissions surge. U.S. climate envoy Todd Stern noted in a speech last month that the cumulative emissions of developing countries will have surpassed those of developed countries by 2020. Also, “it is unwarranted to assign blame to developed countries for emissions before the point at which people realized that those emissions caused harm to the climate system,” Stern said. Key details of the new treaty remain to be worked out, including whether all or parts of it should be legally binding. It’s also unclear in what form national offers of post-2020 emissions cuts and other climate actions will be presented
and by when. Many key players, including the European Union, are pushing for countries to present their initial offers at a climate summit for world leaders called by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in September next year. “In Warsaw, we must agree to prepare strong pledges for the 2015 deal and to step up emission cuts over the rest of this decade,” EU Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard said. Negotiators will face a host of recurring stumbling blocks, including money to help poor countries convert to cleaner energy sources and adapt to a shifting climate that may lead to disruptions of agriculture and drinking water, and the spread of diseases. In Copenhagen, developed countries agreed to scale up climate financing to $100 billion annually by 2020. Current flows are nowhere near that
level. British charity Oxfam estimates that rich countries have announced contributions of about $16 billion this year, some of it in the form of loans. Tense discussions are also expected on the calls by small island states and other vulnerable countries for compensation for the damage resulting from climate impacts such as rising seas and droughts. Meanwhile, climate activists are concerned about coalreliant Poland’s role as host of the talks and have criticized the Poles for presiding over a coal conference at the same time. The scientific basis for the U.N. climate policy was challenged Sunday at a meeting held by Poland’s right-wing National Movement. Polish and U.S. independent climate activists alleged there is not sufficient proof that carbon gases contribute to the rise in global temperatures or that human activity contributes to climate change.
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by cover letter and resume to: Tamara Hand The Santa Fe New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe 87504; or by email to: thand@sfnewmexican.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
You turn to us. 164 Years of Trust and Reliability in the Santa Fe Community
Lunes, el 11 de noviembre 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-7
EL NUEVO MEXICANO
Memorias de una rebelión
El Juzgado del Condado de Río Arriba, el sitio de la irrupción. FOTO CORTESÍA
De Tom Sharpe
The New Mexican
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menos que tengas mucho tiempo, no le preguntes a Alfonso G. Sánchez sobre la Batalla de Glorieta. El te explicará con detalle la Guerra Civil donde la Unión dio el giro de una retirada a una victoria escabulléndose detrás del enemigo, con la guía de un soldado y leñador local experimentado, para destruir las provisiones de los Confederados y causar su regreso a Texas. Hablará sobre sus 16 acres sobre la Interestatal 25, donde él cree que la batalla tomó lugar y existen tumbas de soldados caídos en la batalla sin identificación y cómo ha estado trabajando en un monumento en memoria a lo que el llama el “Gettysburg del Oeste.” Luego hablará sobre cómo fue despojado de esa propiedad, junto con otros bienes raíces y sus licencias de abogado y de manejo por una decisión injusta del juez al declararlo incompetente debido al Alzheimer. “Mi esposa piensa que tengo demencia por el Alzheimer,” me dijo. “No se si lo puedes ver, pero quiero que vengas … así podrás comprobar si estoy física o mentalmente discapacitado.” Puedes encontrar a Sánchez en su oficina, una cochera convertida al lado de su casa al sur de Santa Fe. Tiene ahí una máquina de escribir, no una computadora. Hay libros de leyes, historia, documentos empolvados, documentos antiguos, archivos viejos, medallas, artefactos y títulos enmarcados, certificados y fotografías. A sus 85 años, Sánchez muestra una buena condición física, fuerte y alerta. Su chaqueta de atletismo de la Universidad de Nuevo México todavía le queda. Lee historia y sabe como sacarle jugo a archivos viejos para obtener información. Tiene la presencia de autoridad del fiscal que alguna vez fue. Su casa está impecable. Su jardín bien cuidado. A pesar de sus diferencias, su esposa, Cecilia Vigil Sánchez, todavía vive con él. El día de mi visita, ella estaba en la Iglesia contando las limosnas del domingo. “Ella es una gran cocinera. Mi ropa está lavada,” dice de Cecilia. “Es una buena mujer. Hemos estado casados por 51 años. El próximo 12 de mayo,
serán 52.” Como muchos que sufren de pérdida de memoria a corto plazo, Sánchez a menudo repite lo que ya te había dicho. Pero su memoria de largo plazo es clara — por ejemplo, recuerda como el activista de cesión de tierras Reies López Tijerina irrumpió en el Juzgado del Condado de Río Arriba en Tierra Amarilla para hacer un arresto ciudadano el 5 de junio de 1967. La primera vez que le pregunté a Sánchez sobre ese día, dijo, “En boca cerrada no entran moscas.” Cuando insistí, dijo que al conocer a Tijerina, tuvo una “percepción extrasensorial … de que este hombre traería problemas.” Mucho antes de la irrupción al juzgado, Tijerina y sus seguidores vinieron a ver a Sánchez cuando fue fiscal del Primer Distrito Judicial para solicitar su ayuda en la incorporación de La Alianza al reclamo de tierras de la gente del área. Si las tierras no era devueltas, Tijerina juró que “la sangre correría como un río,” recuerda Sánchez. “Le dije, ‘¿Reies, sabes con quién estás hablando? Soy el fiscal del distrito. Si intentas algo por ese medio, ¿sabes quién va a detenerte? Está frente a tus ojos. Estoy comprometido con representar a la gente ante cualquier acto fuera de la ley y si vas a tomar algo a la fuerza, tendré que llevarte a juicio.’ ” Sánchez dijo que informantes confidenciales dentro del círculo cercano a Tijerina dejaron escapar planes de insurrección que comenzarían con dinamitar algunos peñascos cerca de Abiquiú para bloquear la U.S. 84. El FBI reportó que agentes de Tijerina estaban comprando armas y municiones, algunas de la ferretería de Richard Cook en Española. Algunos agentes del estado dijeron que hombres de Tijerina estaban montando barricadas y cazando venados y alces para alimentar a los miles que apoyaban la causa y acampaban cerca de Coyote. Y, dijo, los medios continuaban haciendo de Tijerina un héroe: “Ustedes construyeron un monstruo.” Así que la semana antes de la irrupción, Sánchez levantó cargos contra lugartenientes de Tijerina por caza fuera de temporada y violación de una orden de restricción bloqueándolos como “agitadores.” Luego, dice, que fue a la radio a decirle a la gente de Río Arriba que
Tuesday has LOCAL BUSINESS Tuesday, January 15, 2013
LOCAL BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Home sales in Santa Fe rise 23 percent By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican
T
he Santa Fe Association of Realtors will announce the details at its media breakfast Jan. 16, but the news is now official: 2012 was the best year for residential home sales since 2007. Alan Ball, an agent with Keller Williams Santa Fe who keeps monthly sales data, reports residential sales hit 1,641 last year — up 23 percent from 2011. But as we’ve reported here all year, that does not mean all is well with the sellers. Due to distressed short sales and foreclosures, the average sales prices dropped 6 percent in 2012 to $421,577. But the year ended with a bang as December saw 150 sales — and the fourth quarter itself saw three strong months in a row, and that despite the fiscal uncertainties coming from Washington, D.C. uuu
When it comes to brewing, Jami Nordby says, ‘There are so many directions people can go. Imagination is the only limit.’ Nordby owns Santa Fe Homebrew Supply. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
His business is hopping
Knowledge about beer-making given and received at Santa Fe Homebrew Supply
By Chris Quintana The New Mexican
J
ami Nordby doesn’t sell beer — he just sells all the materials a person needs to make it at Santa Fe Homebrew Supply. Nordby stocks wine-making, beercrafting and cheese-curdling materials, though the majority of his business comes from brewers. To that end, he stocks supplies for extract brewing, which he said can be easier but costs more on the ingredients end, and for all-grain-brewing, a more time-intensive process. He said that in the past, beermakers made up 85 percent of his total sales, though he said the recent crop of fruit in the state has sent more winemakers his way. And while he doesn’t have a product he’d call his best-seller, he said he does sell a lot of brewing starter kits and recipe packs that include every ingredient needed for a single batch. To that end, he can also help brewers come up with new recipes or order speciality items. “There are so many directions people can go,” Nordby said at his shop on Thursday. “Imagination is the only limit.” Nordby’s shop is split roughly into two sections: equipment in the storefront and ingredients in the back. In the front, giant glass containers rest on shelves alongside powdered chemicals. Smaller items such as spigots, beer caps and yeast line the smaller shelves. It’s the back of the shop that feels
At Santa Fe Homebrew Supply, 3-foot-tall plastic containers house both local and international grain for all-grain brewing.
more like a brewery. Three-foot-tall plastic containers house both local and international grain for all-grain brewing, and a couple of freezers hold several varieties of green and earthy-smelling hops, another common ingredient in beer making. Nordby can tell which grain will create a chocolate porter or which hops will make a beer more bitter with an ease that comes from years of familiarity with his craft. But it wasn’t always that way for him. The shop was a gamble, Nordby said, especially given that he didn’t have a lot of brewing experience when he began the venture. Nordby said that he had a passion for the craft, but he did it on a small level
— he used to brew in his apartment. But about five years ago, he said, he noticed Santa Fe didn’t have a local brew supply store, so he and a couple of friends financed the store. “We just didn’t know any better,” he said. Part of his success came from an advertising campaign that consumed about 25 percent of his initial budget. From there, people started talking about the shop, which he said kept him in business. His wife also had another child during that five-year period, so he hired some part-time help to keep the doors open during times when he was away. But because the store earnings went to employees, Nordby said, his
inventory declined. He is back at work full time now, and Nordby said he’s working on replenishing his once-expansive stock. In the five years since he started, Nordby said that he’s learned a lot from customers who were experienced brewers, and now he can offer that accumulated knowledge to newbies. John Rowley said he is one of the customers who has benefited from Nordby’s knowledge. “He was a great resource for sure,” Rowley said. “He knows a lot, and he wants to help.” Rowely also is president of the Sangre de Cristo Craft Brewers, a group that Rowley said frequents Homebrew. And though it’s located on the south side of town, Santa Fe Homebrew Supply is still the closet supply store for small brewers in Santa Fe, Rowley said. Before Nordby set up shop in 2007, Santa Fe brewers drove to Albuquerque or farther for supplies. Rowley said that while stores in Albuquerque might have more esoteric supplies, he prefers to avoid the trip and support local business. Rowley also said he recommends Nordby’s store to new brewers. “We got a great thing going here; it’s a really supportive shop,” Rowley said. “I wouldn’t go to Albuquerque unless you absolutely have to. It’s almost too much, and it can be intimidating for a new brewer.” Contact Chris Quintana at cquintana@sfnewmexican.com.
You turn to us.
The restoration project at La Fonda is well under way, and one of the challenges for Jennifer Kimball and her managers is to phase the project so it doesn’t impact visitors. To accomplish that, contractors try to start work at 9 a.m. on the first 100 rooms now under construction. As those rooms come back on line in April or May, the renovation moves to the next 80 rooms with the goal of having all the rooms completely modernized and ungraded by Indian Market weekend. Kimball is also proud that all of the 220 workers will remain employed during the nine-month project and that vacancy rates have not been impacted. Because of the lower supply of rooms, occupancy is close to 100 percent — of course, the $89 a night special La Fonda is offering during the remodeling doesn’t hurt with bargainconscious travelers. Majority ownership in La Fonda still rests with the four daughters of the late Sam and Ethel Ballen — Lois, Penina, Lenore and Marta Ballen. uuu
The National Association of the Remodeling industry’s fourth-quarter Remodeling Business Pulse data of current and future remodeling business conditions has experienced significant growth across all indicators, with forecasting in the next three months hitting its all-time highest level. The significantly positive results have a lot to do with homeowner security, remodelers say. “Remodelers are indicating major growth in the future, with many saying that clients are feeling more stable in their financial future and their employment situations; therefore, they are spending more freely on remodeling needs,” says Tom O’Grady, association chairman and a builder in Drexel Hill, Pa. Growth indicators in the last quarter of 2012 are as follows: u Current business conditions up 2.1 percent since last quarter u Number of inquiries up 3.9 percent since last quarter u Requests for bids up 3.7 percent since last quarter u Conversion of bids to jobs up 3.5 percent since last quarter u Value of jobs sold is up 4.3 percent since last quarter Still, according to the data, expectations for 2013 are even brighter. Two-thirds of remodelers forecasted the next three months positively, and the rating jumped 13.1 percent from last quarter. Drivers of this positive outlook continue to be postponement of projects (81 percent reporting) and the improvement of home prices (51 percent reporting). “Now that the election is over, consumer confidence is starting to grow and so has remodelers’ confidence,” O’Grady says. “NARI members are looking forward to having a well-deserved, productive year
Antiguo fiscal recuerda la irrupción en el Juzgado del Condado de Río Arriba
Alfonso G. Sánchez estudia un periódico de 1862. TOM SHARPE/THE NEW MEXICAN
“este pendejo, este loco, los está engañando” y los convocó a no asistir a la reunión del fin de semana. Sánchez permaneció en Santa Fe ese lunes y envío al asistente del fiscal del distrito a Tierra Amarilla con indicaciones de que el juez acelerara el proceso para levantar cargos. El asistente del fiscal del distrito terminó temprano y se dirigía a Santa Fe cuando vio pasar una caravana de pickups rumbo al tribunal del condado. No regresó. El juez se escondió en un clóset. Los insurrectos rastrearon el tribunal, tomaron rehenes, incluyendo a un reportero y se fueron. El gobernador David Cargo llamó a la Guardia Nacional. Tijerina fue arrestado, culpado y encarcelado.
El levantamiento captó la atención nacional brevemente sobre la cesión de tierras en Nuevo México. A pesar de sus diferencias, Sánchez admite a regañadientes un respeto por la mente “inquisitiva” de Tijerina. Tijerina, ahora 87 y viviendo en El Paso, también al parece sufre de demencia. Alguna vez preguntó a Sánchez si estaría interesado en escribir un libro en conjunto sobre la irrupción al tribunal en Tierra Amarilla. Sánchez dijo que lo rechazó, diciendo que estaban muy viejos para eso. Traducción de Patricia De Dios para The New Mexican.
Crucigrama No. 10695 CRUCIGRAMA NO 10695 Horizontales 1. Excoriación en la boca de los niños a causa de la descomposición de la leche. 6. Parte posterior de cualquier cosa. 11. Dios egipcio del sol. 12. En Madrid, coche de alquiler y tirado por un caballo. 14. Cuarta nota musical. 15. Prontitud, rapidez, velocidad. 17. Tronco de la cola de los cuadrúpedos. 18. Lienzo grande que puede subirse y bajarse en el escenario de un teatro. 20. Hermana religiosa. 21. Unirá con cuerdas. 23. Corriente caudalosa de agua. 24. Arbol venezolano de madera imputrescible. 26. Ovíparo de sangre caliente que generalmente puede volar. 27. Pequeña isla de las rías gallegas. 28. Arbol ebenáceo de madera muy apreciada. 30. Escobajo o racimo de uva. 32. Hace la disección de un cuerpo. 33. Ida de una parte a otra, especialmente cuando se va a lugar notablemente distante. 34. E larga griega. 36. Metal precioso. 37. Símbolo del sodio. 38. Lóbulo carnoso que pende de la parte media y posterior del velo palatino. 41. Antigua lengua provenzal. 42. Estuve obligado a una cosa. 43. Aceite. 45. Igualad con el rasero. 46. Lámina de latón que imita al oro. 47. Contar, relatar. Verticales 1. Bisonte europeo. 2. Símbolo del bario. 3. Nombre de la 13ª letra
www.angelfreire.com
(pl.). 4. Desmenuza una cosa restregándola con el rallador. 5. Hierba labiada, con tallos y hojas pubescentes, y flores de color malva pálido en racimos. 6. Antiguo soldado de caballería alemana. 7. Pueblo de corto vecindario, generalmente sin jurisdicción propia. 8. Gran dios de los semitas. 9. Símbolo del rutherfordio. 10. Símbolo de la amalgama, en la alquimia antigua. 13. Antigua ciudad de Caldea. 15. Armazón, estructura de un objeto. 16. Barcal, especie de artesa pequeña y redonda. 17. De Moab, antiguo reino del Próximo Oriente. 19. Néspera, árbol rosáceo. 22. Parte de un todo. 25. En inglés, “uno”. 27. Aféresis de ahora. 28. Relativo al edén.
O 10694 Solución del No.N10695 SOLUCION DEL
29. El décimo mes del año. 30. Veleta de torre que tiene figura humana o de animal. 31. Juntar dos cosas de suerte que concurran al mismo fin. 35. Símbolo del oro. 39. Relativo a la vía. 40. Alaban. 42. Otorgó. 44. Percibir el sonido.
Grampo ‘va a’ the store ‘con’ Canutito
U
n domingo por la mañana grampo came up to where Canutito estaba fast asleep en su cama. “Get up, m’hijo,” he said, shaking al muchachito. “Vamos to the store a comprar a few things que tu grama va need para Thanksgiving in a few days. Pero be chur de put on tu heavy jacket y tus gloves porque I don’t Larry Torres want you to Growing up come down con Spanglish el ‘Flying Zoo.’ ” “I think, grampo,” said Canutito stretching out en la cama, “que you mean, el ‘Swine Flu’ no el ‘Flying Zoo’.” “Oh, no hace no never mind,” Grampo Caralampio replied. “La cosa importante es que we go pick up estas cosas de la tienda on this Sunday morning.” “Pero I thought que we had to go a la Misa every Sunday morning, grampo,” Canutito said, putting on his calzones, “o sino es un sin.” “Well, we usually do pero when it comes to shopping para tu grama,” Grampo Caralampio said, “as the saying goes, ‘la primera es obligación y la segunda, devoción.’ ” He could always justify todo. Grampo watched as Canutito put on sus zapatos very slowly como que he wasn’t in any hurry. “Ándale, m’hijo,” he said to him. “You are dragging con aquella pachorra.” “What’s a ‘pachorra,’ grampo?” Canutito asked him. “Es cuando tú estás taking tu sweet time,” grampo replied. “¡Vamos, and make chur de put on una nice camisa. I don’t want people to think que tú eres un ‘Billy Hill.’ ” “I promise to wear una nice shirt,” Canutito agreed, “porque yo no quiero que la people haga think que I am a ‘hillbilly’.” And then he thought to himself, “It’s a good thing que grampo didn’t call me un ‘Vigil, Billy.’ ” “And make chur to go pa’l común, m’hijo,” grampo said. “I had to tell you esto porque en church they say, ‘Speak now or forever hold your pee.’ ” Canutito estaba too sleepy to hacer correct a su grampo. He went to the bathroom y se hizo wash his face con Lava soap. Grama Cuca used to say que era the best thing para quitarle la caspa and it must be true porque he did have any ground-in dirt. He also didn’t have dandruff porque he would wash his hair con Halo shampoo to remove su salvão. He put on un poquito de Dippity-doo, and he was good to go. As grampo watched him get ready, he said, “At least tú te pones Dippity-doo en el cabello. There was una vecina who siempre usaba hair spray en su cabello. Pues, one day she was toda apurada and because she was in such a hurry, she grabbed la medicina de los moscos and used that instead.” “Did she really spray on mosquito repellent en su cabello, grampo?” Canutito asked him. “What happened to her?” “Nada,” Grampo Caralampio replied. “Nomás que she got to work toda dizzy pero since que she was always atarantada anyway, nobody noticed.” Al fin Canutito was ready pa’ir pa’la plaza. Agarró el shopping list de su grama from the top del counter junto de la puerta. He saw que she wanted toda clase de buenas cosas and it was his job to mercarlas. Pero he didn’t mind buying them porque grama era una buena cook. “Grampo,” he said, turning to look at his grandfather, “¿dónde vamos a ir shopping? “Oh, vamos, pa’ ‘Your Home Food Store’ o pa’la tienda del ‘Sahd,’ ” grampo said. “Those stores ya no existen,” Canutito said, “Vamos a tener que ir al Wal-Marte …”
A-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
TECH TABLET REVIEWS
Air put to the test
Small changes make big difference with Apple’s latest iPad By Troy Wolverton
San Jose Mercury News
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pple’s new iPad Air represents a refinement of the company’s tablet concept, not a revolution. But that doesn’t make it any less compelling. You won’t find many new features on the Air, which replaces the more simply named “iPad” as Apple’s full-size flagship tablet. Nor does it work much differently from its predecessors. What you will find, though, is a device that is much thinner, narrower and lighter than previous iPads and is thereby more enjoyable to use. It’s also, thanks to an updated processor, considerably faster, though that fact won’t be as readily apparent. The new Air makes a favorable first impression. I considered its predecessor the best full-size tablet on the market; the Air now seems to have wrested that title away. The distinction between the Air and previous iPads is apparent before you even take it out of its box. The Air’s box is, like the device, narrower and shorter than that for the fourth-generation iPad that preceded it. According to Apple, the Air is 20 percent thinner than its predecessor and about 1.5 centimeters narrower. Thanks to those changes, the new iPad weighs just a pound, down from 1.4 pounds previously. The change is definitely noticeable — and appreciated. The Air’s not as light as Apple’s iPad Mini, but it feels closer to that than it does to the older iPads, which could be unwieldy to hold with one hand and could tire your arm if you held them for a long period, such as when watching a movie. The new Air, by contrast, is much easier on the arms and, because it’s lighter, more portable. I found myself holding it while I brushed my teeth, something that was much more diffi-
TextFiles.com founder and owner Jason Scott uses the CastAR augmented reality 3-D glasses in Portland, Ore. JENESEE GREY/TECHNICAL ILLUSIONS
VIDEO GAMES
Microsoft, Sony offer glimpse at next-next generation By Derrik J. Lang
The Associated Press
An Apple employee holds up the new iPad Air on Oct. 22 in San Francisco. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
cult with the older iPad. The Air, like its predecessors, has a metal case. So, even though it’s lighter, it still feels sturdy. The other big change is its new chip. Apple has outfitted the Air with the same 64-bit A7 chip that debuted on its iPhone 5S smartphone. The new chip offers a big boost in power. On the standard performance tests that I ran, the new Air vastly outperformed its predecessor — and the vast majority of other smartphones and tablets. The Air loaded Infinity Blade 3, a new and graphically rich game, about 10 seconds faster than did the fourth-generation iPad. It also was about 5 seconds or so faster in exporting a 20-second movie from iMovie to the device’s camera roll. But if you’re not into high-end gaming or doing a lot of moviemaking on your device, you probably won’t notice much of a difference in speed. The Air and its predecessor take about the same amount of time to launch their Mail, Web browser and Maps programs.
To be sure, you’ll probably appreciate the speed difference more down the road than now. Future upgrades to iOS are likely to require a 64-bit processor or will run much more slowly on older processors. And over time, developers will probably write more apps that take advantage of the A7’s power. Other changes with the Air are less apparent than its chip. It has a new Wi-Fi radio that includes two antennas rather than just one. This is supposed to give it faster speeds and make it less susceptible to interference. I didn’t test the Wi-Fi antennas thoroughly, but didn’t notice much of a difference. If you choose to get the version of the iPad that includes a cellular radio, you’ll find that the Air is able to access more LTE networks than before on more carriers. More notable are the things Apple didn’t include and didn’t upgrade. Unlike the iPhone 5S, the Air doesn’t have a fingerprint sensor, which Apple calls Touch ID. So if you want to prevent other people from using your tablet,
you’ll have to use a passcode instead of tapping your finger to it. Compared with the Android and Windows tablets available, the iPad has one big shortcoming: It can’t be customized for multiple users. If you plan to share your tablet with your wife or child, they’ll have access to everything you have access to — unless you turn on its customized feature restrictions every time you hand over the device. The Air has the same basic cameras as its predecessor — a 1.2-megapixel one in front and a 5-megapixel one in back. It would have been nice if Apple had upgraded those, given how many people are using their tablets as cameras. Similarly, the Air has the same high-resolution Retina display as its predecessor. It’s not as highresolution as some of its competitors, but it’s a great screen and you probably won’t be able to tell the difference. All told, the changes Apple made to the iPad to create the Air may not sound like much. But all you have to do is pick one up to appreciate the difference.
New Kindle emerges as strong challenger By Anick Jesdanun The Associated Press
NEW YORK — On the heels of Apple’s new, lighter iPad, Amazon has come out with a full-size tablet that weighs even less yet sports a sharper display and a lower price tag. Although Amazon’s Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 hasn’t received as much attention as the iPad Air, it is emerging as the strongest challenger yet to Apple’s device. The new Kindle shares many of the features found in a smaller version that came out Oct. 18. A row of tabs at the top of the screen gives you quick access to Amazon services such as e-books, music, video and shopping. Recently used apps and content appear in the middle so you can return to them quickly. The bottom row has icons for frequently used apps such as email and the camera. Need help? Just hit the “Mayday” button. You’ll be connected within seconds to a live customer-service representative, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. You see the representatives in a video box, but they can only hear you and see what’s on your screen. They also can help guide you by placing orange markers on your screen or taking control of your device completely. I found all the reps to be patient as they walked me through attempts to locate a missing book, play a podcast and download items from the Dropbox storage service. In one case, the representative called my cellphone as promised an hour later to follow up. We never found a solution on Dropbox, though — but more on that later. The best part of the new Kindle is its price. Amazon.com Inc. began shipping it Thursday, starting at $379. That’s cheaper than the new $399 iPad Mini, which has a display that measures 7.9 inches diagonally. The full-size Kindle Fire HDX has an 8.9-inch screen, just short of the iPad Air’s 9.7 inches. Even cheaper is the 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX, which costs $229. If you can afford a $499 tablet and aren’t a heavy user of Amazon services, you might still consider the iPad Air. Yes, the Kindle is lighter, at about
LOS ANGELES — The next generation of gaming is nearly here, but what about the generation after that one? Sony and Microsoft are launching their new superpowered consoles in the coming weeks. However, gamemakers at last week’s Game Developers Conference Next in Los Angeles were already contemplating outside-the-box innovations — from wearable controllers to illuminated living rooms — that might follow the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. Here’s a glimpse at five big ideas pondered at Game Developers Conference Next:
Seeing is believing While the virtual reality headset seemed to go the way of the beeper in 1990s, updated takes on that technology have emerged that could make a big impact on the way players view virtual worlds in the future. Google Glass, Oculus Rift and CastAR are already giving early adopters a peek at images in 3-D or projected in real life — all without a TV screen.
Time warp Games have long explored what’s physically impossible in the real world, like instantly teleporting across space in the first-person puzzler “Portal” or effortlessly bending time in the 2-D platformer “Braid.” With higher definition graphics, new controllers and increased fidelity, expect game designers to continue to push the limits of make-believe reality.
If you build it The success of Skylanders and Disney Infinity has proven gamers want to merge physical and virtual worlds. The next evolution for players might be to create their very own toys or accessories utilizing athome 3-D printing technology. Imagine scanning an old-school Star Wars figure, printing a new version then sending it to a virtual galaxy far, far away.
Touchy subjects Touchscreens have revolutionized the way users interact with devices, but their slick surfaces don’t always make for the best game controllers. Advancements in technology that physically respond to touch — called “haptic touch” — combined with motion detection and augmented reality could bring interfaces imagined in Iron Man and Minority Report to life.
Reality check As handheld devices become more pervasive and projection technology is more accessible, interactivity will likely continue to leap off TV screens, as illustrated earlier this year by Microsoft’s IllumiRoom project, a conceptual system that combined a projector and Kinect sensor to augment areas surrounding a TV screen with dazzling projected visualizations. Amazon.com Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos introduces the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9, right, and Kindle Fire HDX 7 on Sept. 24 in Seattle. AMAZON
0.83 pounds, or 17 percent less than the Air. But I couldn’t really tell the difference holding the two side by side. And yes, the Kindle has a sharper screen, with a resolution of 339 pixels per inch compared with the iPad’s 264 pixels per inch. But I couldn’t really tell the difference watching the Pixar cartoon Monsters University side by side. Where the Air shines is in the build. I find the Air more pleasant to hold because of its curved edges. The Kindle has a soft, rubberlike back, but it doesn’t make up for the boxy edges. The Kindle promises more battery life — at 12 hours, compared with 10 hours for the Air. But I found the two devices drained battery at roughly the same rate when watching Hulu streaming video. In addition, the Air has access to a wide variety of apps available through Apple’s app store. The Kindle uses a modified version of Android and can run a variety of Android apps — but not all of them. In fact, the new Kindle doesn’t run all the Android apps that are supposed to work with Kindles, includ-
ing the app for Dropbox. Many of these apps need to be updated every time a new Kindle device comes out, whereas they simply work when new Android devices are out, just as iPad apps work on new iPads. If you are drawn by the Kindle’s price and don’t mind the limited selection, though, the Kindle is a wonderful option. That’s especially so if you’re a frequent Amazon customer. The Kindle is tied to your Amazon account, making it easy to buy everything from audiobooks to vacuum cleaners with a click or two. You also get Amazon’s recommendations for more things to buy, based on physical and digital purchases you’ve made on Amazon in the past. With a $79-a-year Amazon Prime membership, you also get quick access to thousands of free movies and television episodes and the ability to borrow one e-book a month from a select list. You can download the free Prime video to watch wherever you are. On older Kindle Fires and other devices, you’re limited to streaming, which requires a constant Internet connection.
On the Web u www.gdcnext.com
Out now: Games The following games are among those scheduled for release this week, according to Gamestop.com:
nov. 5 u Call of Duty: Ghosts (Nintendo Wii U, PC, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One; rated M) u Castlevania Lords of Shadow Collection (PlayStation 3, Xbox 360; rated M) u Moshi Monsters Katsuma Unleashed (Nintendo 3DS; rated E) u Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures (Nintendo 3DS; rated E10+) u The Guided Fate Paradox (PlayStation 3; rated T) u Power Rangers Megaforce (Nintendo 3DS; rated E10+) u Ben 10 Omniverse 2 (Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo Wii, Nintendo Wii U, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360; rated E10+)
nov. 7 u Frozen (Nintendo DS; rated E) Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-9
FAMILY Stop seeking cooperation
When should your child start wearing shoes?
O
ne of the most problematic expects them to obey. words in America’s postWhen the relationship is not 1960s parenting language is between equals, the proper word is “cooperate.” obedience. The fact that so many of “I want my children to cooperate,” today’s parents talk in terms of wanta parent tells me. She tells me this ing their kids to “cooperate” reflects in the midst of complaintwo things: ing that her kids rarely First, these parents do do what she asks them to not feel comfortable with do. That’s another probauthority. They are trylematic word: ask. Those ing to avoid being seen by two problematic words go their children as authorhand-in-hand, in fact. Parity figures. So, when they ents who want cooperation communicate expectatend to ask as opposed to tions and instructions they tell. Asking is nice. Telling use persuasive speech as John isn’t. And today’s parents opposed to authoritative Rosemond speech. The symptom are trying their best to be Living With nice. Which, by the way, of this is the ubiquity of Children is why they often suffer “OK?” at the end of a partotal cerebral meltdowns ent’s persuasive sentence, during which they get red as in “Will you please hang in the face and begin screaming like your jacket up in the closet, OK?” lunatics. Their children have no Second, they want to be liked by appreciation for their niceness; they their kids. They act, therefore, as if simply take full advantage of it. the parent-child relationship is peerI tell the above mom that the reato-peer. When they speak to their son her kids don’t obey her is she children, they bend down, grab their wants cooperation. That necessitates knees (i.e., getting down to their kids’ a peer-to-peer relationship. Neighlevel, which is what some magazine bors cooperate. Friends cooperate. article told them to do) and ask their Spouses cooperate. Co-workers kids for cooperation … ending with cooperate. But the CEO of the com“OK?” They look and even sound pany, when he tells two cooperating like they are asking the king for a co-workers what he wants, he’s not favor. In effect, the superior in the looking for cooperation. He wants relationship is the child. them to obey. Two Army privates Why do parents act in this absurd, assigned to the same task will coopcounterproductive fashion? Because erate with one another. But the offithey believe capital letters mean cer who assigned them to the task something. People with capital letis not seeking their cooperation. He ters after their names — mental
In theory, constricting soft feet with Chicago Tribune rigid shoes could prevent the bones from developing properly, Andersen For certain generations, though said. less so today, baby shoes carried such Also, stiffer soles can make walkemotional significance that people ing harder for those just starting out would bronze them to preserve the because their feet are heavier, making memory of a child’s first steps. them more likely to trip, Jana said. But as heart-meltingly cute as they Before a baby starts walking, bare are, tiny sneakers and Mary Janes are feet or socks are best, though any kind not the best way for a toddler to start of shoes can be worn for decoration toddling, child and foot doctors say. or warmth or to help keep the socks So when should a baby start wearon, Andersen said. There’s no harm ing shoes? And what kind? done when shoes encase dangling “It’s a really common question, and feet, as long as they are not too tight or you hear completely opposite suggesuncomfortable or have straps pinching tions,” said Dr. Laura Jana, a pediatrician their flesh, she said. and owner of Primrose School of LegOnce infants start taking steps, acy, a private preschool, in Omaha, Neb. going barefoot is still ideal because “Some say to buy the rigid soles; others they learn to walk and balance better say that kids should go barefoot.” when they can use their toes to grip, While the old thinking held that Jana said. To keep feet clean, warm rigid high-tops helped keep a child’s and protected from the minefield of foot in position and offered stability, things they could step on, use socks doctors today tend to agree that less with rubber grips on the bottom, so is more when it comes to shoes in the that they don’t slip, Jana said. first few years of life. When kids start tottering around “After they start walking, you want outside and need more protection them either barefoot or in the most than socks provide, choose flexible flexible shoe possible so their muscles shoes that you can bend in half and can develop properly,” said Dr. Jane twist, Andersen said. Rubber soles are Andersen, a podiatrist in Chapel Hill, better than leather because they are N.C., and past president of the Ameriless likely to slip. Aim for soft materican Association for Women Podiatrists. als for the upper part of the shoe so that the foot bends easily and the “Flexibility is the most important issue material doesn’t cut into the skin. as they are developing their arch.” The bones in a baby’s foot are soft Closed-toe shoes are best, Jana and don’t finish hardening until a child added, because kids tend to drag their is around 5 years old, though kids’ feet toes and might scratch their toes in keep growing into their teenage years. open-toed shoes. By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz
health professionals, mostly — injected toxic theory into parenting in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and it lives on. Take, for example, Swedish psychologist Kajsa Loenn-Rhodin, one of the authors of a Swedish parenting course called “All Children in the Centre.” Says Loenn-Rhodin: “If you want a child to cooperate, the best way is to have a close relationship so the child will want to cooperate with you.” As do most child mental health “experts,” Loenn-Rhodin proposes that relationship leads to cooperation. Maybe between coworkers, neighbors, spouses and Army privates it does, but not between general and private, CEO and employee, or parent and child. Parents should expect nothing less than obedience and reflect the expectation in their body language (relaxed, not threatening) and speech (straightforward, brief, and lacking “OK?”). Parents who expect less than obedience will get less than obedience. Why should children obey? Because it’s in their best interest, that’s why. This is about the welfare of children, not parents. The best research into parenting outcomes finds, and conclusively so, that the more obedient the child, the happier the child. But then, one doesn’t need research to know that. Contact family psychologist John Rosemond at www.johnrosemond.com.
Discover the Joy of Music Sunday, Nov. 17, 2013 4pm United Church of Santa Fe
Tickets: • Ticketssantafe.com 505-988-1234 • Santa Fe Concert Assoc. 505-984-8759 • At the door
outh? J
General Admission: $10
© 2013 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 29, No. 48
Standards Link: Investigation: Find similarities and differences in common objects.
oys for Tots began in 1947 when Major Bill Hendricks, and a group of Marine Reservists in Los Angeles, collected and distributed 5,000 toys to needy children. The idea came from Bill’s wife, Diane. That fall, Diane handcrafted a Raggedy Ann doll and asked Bill to deliver the doll to an organization which would give it to a needy child at Christmas. When Bill determined that no such agency existed, Diane told Bill that he should start one.
e did. Toys for Tots was so successful that the U.S. Marine Corps adopted it in 1948 and expanded it into a nationwide campaign. That year, Marine Corps Reserve units across the nation conducted Toys for Tots campaigns in every community in which a Marine Reserve Center was located. The Marines have conducted toy drives each year since then.
Standards Link: Mathematical Reasoning: Group objects by common attributes.
toy factory, which began with a truckload of _______________ delivered to the loading dock.
___________ . Toy robots began to __________ off the assembly
Below each gift is a list of words that are similar to the name of the person the gift is for. Can you figure out who should receive each gift? Write one of these names on each tag: Robin, Faith, Rose, Ruby or April.
For more information and to participate in this year’s toy drive, visit www.toysfortots.org
It was a very strange day at the
airbrushes with _____________
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple directions.
pink red magenta purple
Mr. Learny 831 pennies 12 nickels 33 dimes 22 quarters
Standards Link: Number Sense: Solve problems using money.
Cut out these rectangles and arrange them to reveal the answers.
love belief trust hope
Mrs. Shaw 678 pennies 18 nickels 43 dimes 4 quarters
accidentally filled their
Over its lifespan of the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots Program, Marines have distributed more than ______ million toys to more than ______ million needy children.
diamond topaz emerald sapphire
Miss Vivien 432 pennies 46 nickels 87 dimes 15 quarters
Have a friend give you each type of word to fill in the blanks. Then read the story aloud!
Later, the paint department
Standards Link: History: Understand that specific individuals and values had an impact on history.
March September December February
Toys for Tots donates only new toys to needy children. The kids at A+ Academy are collecting coins to buy toys. The amounts they’ve collected are on the jars. Which class collected the most money?
swallow wren finch blue jay
Look through the print or e-edition of your newspaper to find: • A holiday article or photo that is NOT about Christmas • A place you’d like to visit during your vacation • A gift you’d like to receive • A word or phrase that you think best exemplifies this season • A classified advertisement for something holiday-related • A photo that reminds you of winter • A food you’d like to eat during the holidays • A sporting event that will occur during your winter vacation Standards Link: Research: Use the newspaper to locate information from a list.
HENDRICKS MARINES MONEY NEEDY SCAVENGER RESERVE LOCATED TOTS TOYS AGENCY YEAR DOLL RAGGEDY DIANE MAGENTA
Find the words in the puzzle, then in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.
line, while several dolls had a ____________ ____________ where their heads should be.
H D E V R E S E R A S E N I R A M F E T
Production stopped while
O T N R S T O T G N
workers __________________
N A Y D E E N O N E
throughout the factory, searching
E C G D R A E Y E G
for __________________ .
E O O E I
I Y S V A
D L Y C N A C H A M
By the end of the day, there were
L I L D R C N K C E
dozens of _______________
R A G G E D Y E S N
_____________ and shelf after
Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
shelf of _________________ ________________ . “Well, maybe we can ________
Make a Million
Look through the newspaper to find five or more numbers that add up to just about a million. Can you find numbers that will add up to EXACTLY one million? Standards Link: Number Sense: Calculate sums to one million.
In your opinion, what is the best toy ever invented? Give at least three details about that toy that support your opinion.
all these ____________ toys on April Fool’s Day,” said the toy factory chief. Standards Link: Grammar: Understand and use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly.
Complete the grid by using all the letters in the word TOYS in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only be used once in each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you.
A-10
locAl & reGIon
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
Police notes
A high-flow experiment releases water into the Colorado River at Glen Canyon Dam in Page, Ariz., last November. An abundance of sand in the Colorado River is giving federal officials an opportunity to flood the waterway again to spread the sediment throughout the Grand Canyon. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Feds to flood Grand Canyon High-flow experiment to distribute excess sediment along canyon
monsoons. It’s enough to spread across a football field 690 feet deep. Most of the sediment once deposited throughout the Grand Canyon now is trapped behind the dam near the Arizona-Utah border. The intent By Felicia Fonseca of the flooding is to mimic pre-dam The Associated Press conditions. “The idea is to see if we can react FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — An abunwhenever conditions are right, dance of sand in the Colorado River whenever there’s a lot of sediment is giving federal officials an opportunity to flood the waterway to spread load in the river,” said Anne Castle, the sediment throughout the Grand assistant secretary for water and science at the U.S. Department of the Canyon, creating sandbars and beaches for campers as well as pro- Interior. “Whether we can reverse or at least stabilize the net loss in tection for archaeological sites. sediment that has been occurring in The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation the river below Glen Canyon Dam.” oversaw a similar high-flow experiThe bypass tubes at Glen Canment from Glen Canyon Dam last November. The difference in the one yon Dam will be opened Monday around noon, sending water rushing starting Monday is that three times through the Grand Canyon for five as much sediment is available from
In brief
Navajo Council to mull junk food tax FARMINGTON — A proposed sales tax on junk food is headed to the Navajo Nation Council for consideration. The legislation calls for an additional 2 percent tax on sweetened beverages, chips, candy, cookies and pastries bought on the reservation, which spans parts of New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. The revenue would be used to build wellness centers, parks, basketball courts, trails, gardens and picnic grounds. It would also help
to sponsor health education classes. Supporters tell The Farmington Daily Times the tax would help reduce diabetes and encourage people to buy healthy foods. Opponents argue the tax would push consumers to buy junk food in stores off the reservation. The measure is sponsored by Delegate Danny Simpson. He’s also sponsoring legislation to remove the sales tax on vegetables, fruit, water and other foods.
Land Office earned $68M in October The State Land Office says it earned $68 million in revenue in October, marking the third-highest monthly revenue in the agency’s history.
days. River rapids that normally would be challenging might be easier to navigate, and those that typically are straightforward might become more difficult. Floating tours between Glen Canyon Dam and Lees Ferry will cease for five days, and opportunities for trout fishing will be limited. The National Park Service has told river rafters and hikers to make sure their equipment is secured. The flow won’t be at full capacity because two of the power units at the dam are down. It won’t alter the amount of water sent between Lake Powell and Lake Mead near the Arizona-Nevada border either. Monthly adjustments will be made to account for the flood, officials said. Releases will return to normal Nov. 16. Land Commissioner Ray Powell says the revenues were driven largely by oil and gas royalties. He says the funds are critically important to the state’s public schools, universities and hospitals, all of which are beneficiaries of the state land trust. More than $58 million of October’s revenues were distributed to public schools. Colleges and universities got about $1.8 million, and more than $1.3 million went to hospitals. The State Land Office is responsible for managing trust lands to generate income for 22 beneficiaries. The agency also is charged with taking care of the lands so they are healthy and productive for the future. The Associated Press
The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u A man reported that someone stole two firearms from his unlocked vehicle in the 2100 block of Calle Tecolote between 1 and 2 a.m. Friday. u Brandon Crozier, 23, of Colorado Springs was arrested on charges of falsely obtaining services between 8:45 and 9:14 p.m. Friday at Applebee’s Neighborhood Grill, 4246 Cerrillos Road. u Joe Pacheco, 45, 1502 Kachina Road, was arrested on charges of assault and assault against an officer after he reportedly kicked a chair in a home on Kachina Road between 6:02 and 6:10 p.m. Saturday. u A man reported that someone broke into his home between noon and 6 p.m. Saturday in the 300 block of Sena Street. u Officers arrested two female juveniles at Sears, 4250 Cerrillos Road, after they allegedly took $108 worth of clothing from the department store between 3:02 and 3:10 p.m. Saturday. u A woman staying at the La Quinta Inn, 4298 Cerrillos Road, reported that someone stole a credit card and $200 in cash from her room
DWI arrest u Steve Trujillo, 7401 Elk Trail, was arrested on a charge of drunken driving after officers smelled a “strong” alcoholic odor when they stopped him for a broken tail light violation at N.M. 599 and Airport Road at 7:39 p.m. Saturday.
Speed SUVs u The locations of the Santa Fe Police Department’s mobile speedenforcement vehicles were not available Sunday.
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 Youth Emergency Shelter/Youth Shelters: 438-0502 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Police and fire emergency: 911
How they voted By Targeted News Service
WASHINGTON — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.
House votes There were no key votes in the House this week.
Senate votes Senate vote 1
Mississippi district judge: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Debra M. Brown to serve as U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Mississippi. A supporter, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., cited Brown’s experience as a partner at the Phelps Dunbar law firm and shareholder in the Wise Carter Child & Caraway law firm, as well as her record of community service and endorsement by many prestigious groups. Wicker said: “Our country needs judges who have a record of professional excellence, integrity and public service. Ms. Brown has demonstrated this throughout her career.” The vote, on Nov. 4, was unanimous with 90 yeas. Yeas: Sen. Martin Heinrich,
Parade, other Veterans Day events scheduled The New Mexican
Veterans Day observances scheduled for Santa Fe on Monday, Nov. 11, include a parade and a ceremony at the Veterans’ Memorial on West De Vargas Street at Galisteo Street. The city will host the parade, which is scheduled to begin at 10:30 a.m. at Fire Station No. 1 on Murales Road and proceed down Bishops Lodge Road and Washington Avenue, then wind around the Plaza before following Old Santa Fe Trail to Water Street and onto Don Gaspar Avenue before ending at the Veteran’s Memorial on West De Vargas Street for the 11 a.m. ceremony. Some streets will be temporarily blocked for the event. The ceremony will be followed by a noon luncheon at American Legion Post 1 on Berry Avenue. More than 20 New Mexico communities, including Española, Taos, Los Alamos and
between 4:30 and 5 p.m. Saturday. u Someone stole bags containing clothing and jewelry, worth a total of $4,300, from a room at El Paradero Bed and Breakfast, 220 W. Manhattan St., between 10:04 and 10:20 p.m. Saturday. u A jewelry box containing about $500 in valuables was stolen from a home in the 100 block of Michelle Drive between 2 and 6:33 p.m. Saturday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u County deputies responded to a death at a home on Tusa Drive on Saturday. Foul play is not suspected. u A woman on Pueblo Garcia Road reported Saturday that an iPhone worth $650 that UPS was supposed to deliver to her home never came. u Someone stole a tile saw worth $150 from a home in the 300 block of N.M. 76 between 11:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Thursday. u A man reported that someone stole his 16-foot trailer from his home on Little Bear Lane between 3 and 10 a.m. Saturday.
was 43 yeas to 55 nays. Nays: Heinrich, Udall
D-N.M., Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.
Senate vote 2
Senate vote 3
Religious exemption from gay rights bill: The Senate has rejected an amendment sponsored by Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., to the Employment NonDiscrimination Act (S 815). The amendment would have applied the bill’s exemption for religious groups to all hospitals, schools, charities and other organizations owned by or affiliated with a religious group covered by the exemption. Toomey said the exemption would strike “a good, sensible balance between the equality in the workforce that is the principle motivation for this bill and the religious freedom I feel very strongly about and I think many of my colleagues do as well.” An opponent, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said: “In potentially allowing secular commercial businesses to discriminate in hiring and other employment practices on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, this amendment threatens to gut the fundamental premise of ENDA that all workers should be treated equally and fairly.” The vote, on Nov. 7,
Sexual orientation and employment discrimination: The Senate has passed the Employment NonDiscrimination Act (S 815), sponsored by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. The bill would bar employers and unions from engaging in employment discrimination on the basis of an individual’s actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity. Merkley said the bill would “break the chains of discrimination that hold back millions of LGBT Americans from the full promise of liberty — liberty, that freedom to participate fully in our society, in the public square to the voting booth, to the school, to the workplace; liberty, that quality deeply rooted in our national journey and embedded in our Declaration of Independence.” An opponent, Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., said it would limit the rights of freedom of religion and freedom of speech by forcing religious individuals and faith-based groups into compliance. The vote, on Nov. 7, was 64 yeas to 32 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall
Funeral services and memorials
VeterAnS DAy cloSUreS Hours of operations at a number of offices and institutions will be affected by the observance of Veterans Day on Monday, Nov. 11: u Most federal, state, city and county government offices will be closed, except for emergency personnel operations. u Most banks and financial institutions will be closed. u Post offices will be closed and regular mail delivery will be suspended. u All city of Santa Fe recre-
Albuquerque, plan events. The Department of Veterans’ Services has a schedule of celebrations around the state on its website, www.dvs.state.nm.us. On-street parking meters in downtown Santa Fe will be free on Veterans Day, and a number of restaurants and stores
ation centers will be closed. u Santa Fe Trails buses will operate a Saturday schedule from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. u New Mexico Rail Runner Express passenger trains will operate on a Saturday schedule. u The North Central Regional Transit District’s Blue Bus system will not be in service, nor will New Mexico Park & Ride provide service. u Santa Fe County Solid Waste Transfer Stations are closed Monday as part of
nationwide will offer discounts for military veterans. The Santa Fe National Forest will continue to waive entrance fees through the extended Veterans Day holiday weekend. The fee waiver does not apply to campgrounds. No fees will be charged at Battleship Rock
their regular schedule. u City trash and recycling curbside collections will follow the regular schedule. u City parking facilities will operate on normal hours and regular fees will apply. However, on-street parking meters will be free in observance of Veterans Day. u Santa Fe Public Schools will be open. u State museums are closed Mondays at this time of year. The New Mexican
and Spanish Queen picnic areas in the Jemez Ranger district. The Forest Service urges visitors to check on individual site closings ahead of time as some recreational centers are closed for the season. Visit www.fs.usda.gov/santafe for details.
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.
ANDREA M. BUONANNI Age 99, a longtime resident of Albuquerque, NM, peacefully passed away in her sleep on Wednesday, November 6, 2013. She is survived by her daughter, Linda Chanez and husband Rudy Chanez of Alamogordo, NM and Agnes A. Rivera of Albuquerque, NM; 18 grandchildren; 34 greatgrandchildren; and numerous great-greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Buonanni was preceded in death by her parents, Justinanio Leyba and Sara O’Bannon; six brothers and sisters; former husbands, John D. Marquez of Alamogordo, NM and Emil Buonanni of Albuquerque, NM; son, Roy C. Marquez of Jacksonville, FL; daughter, Elouise M. Stogden of Tularosa, NM; two grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. Rosary will be recited Tuesday, November 12, 2013, 7:00 p.m., at FRENCH - Wyoming, 7121 Wyoming Blvd NE, with visitation beginning at 5:00 p.m. Mass will be celebrated Wednesday, November 13, 2013, 10:00 a.m., at Risen Savior Catholic Community, 7701 Wyoming Blvd. NE. Interment will follow at Sunset Memorial Park, 924 Menaul Blvd. NE. Pallbearers will be Richard James Marquez, Rudy S. Chanez, Robert Chanez, Ernest Stogden Sr., Ernie Stogden Jr., Anthony Stogden, Kevin Riveraand Robert Anthony Silva. Please visit our online guestbook for Andrea M. Buonanni at www.FrenchFunerals.com FRENCH - Wyoming 7121 Wyoming Blvd. NE (505) 823-9400
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
A-11
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
A choice between life and death
I COMMENTARY: BARBARA SHELLY
Increase pay to fix food stamp clash
T
he problem with food stamps isn’t that too many people have them. It’s that too many people need
them. More than 47 million Americans are seeing their monthly benefits cut by 5.5 percent, beginning this month. That’s about $36 less for a family of four to purchase milk, cereal, fruits and veggies and other essentials. People often are shocked to hear that 1 in 6 Americans receives benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. In Missouri, for example, about 15 percent of the population uses food stamps; in Kansas, 11 percent. (Editor’s note: In New Mexico, the figure is about 21 percent.) This doesn’t mean people are greedy or lazy or gaming the system. A little of that goes on, and is eagerly seized upon by people who are convinced that everybody who is poor is on the take. But the lion’s share of food stamp recipients are
working parents. They simply don’t earn enough to feed their families. It’s no secret that wages are stagnant. The median income for working-age households dropped 12.4 percent from 2001 to 2011, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. The American economy grew more than 18 percent in that period, but mostly just the people at the very top of the income ladder saw the benefit. We have an upside-down, inside-out economy, and nobody is doing enough to fix it. Businesses and corporations sit on record profits but refuse to hire new workers or reward their staffs properly. CEOs receive obscene bonuses while millions of people labor at or near the minimum wage. Too many people compete for low-paying jobs, while goodpaying jobs go wanting because employers can’t find people with the right skills because we’re not investing in education the way we should.
The food stamp cuts are partly because a temporary boost in payments as part of the 2009 federal stimulus law has expired. Congress’ abysmal failure to pass a new farm bill is also part of the mix. There’s no question this will cause hardship for people, including children and disabled and elderly adults. On the other hand, the boost was intended to be temporary. I get frustrated with the people on one side who want to make excessive food stamp usage permanent, and I get frustrated with people on the other side who want to knock it back and leave people hungry. Instead of fighting over food stamps, we should be fighting for fair wages. Barbara Shelly is a columnist for the Kansas City Star. Readers may write to her by email at bshellykcstar.com.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Church shouldn’t be in election mix
T
he archbishop is telling parishioners how to vote in the Albuquerque elections. If the church wants to engage in politics, then it should lose its taxexempt status. Ross Bishop
Santa Fe
Less than average Average: The result obtained by adding several quantities together and then dividing this total by the number of quantities. I would think that 50 percent of third-graders score above the national average and that a significant percentage of people who compile these reports score well below the national average in simple arithmetic. William Johnston
Santa Fe
A music masterpiece Recently, there was a coming together of several things that make me appreciate living in Santa Fe. (I am an Albuquerque transplant).
Tough competition
One of them is the wonderful environment of the Lensic Performing Arts Center, which has become an essential part of Santa Fe’s culture. The other is the Santa Fe Symphony Orchestra & Chorus. Its recent performance was fabulous, fun and informative. In collaboration with the Santa Fe Institute, it presented The Majesty Of Music And Mathematics. It was an experience unique to Santa Fe. Santa Fe Institute’s Cris Moore provided the context with examples of how mathematical patterns interplay with music. The Santa Fe Symphony Orchestra & Chorus beautifully expressed these ideas with its playing and singing — sometimes playing short examples of what Moore was talking about, and then with whole, wonderful pieces. The vibrations that are described by mathematical symbols were brought to life. Feeling the vibrations of strings and wind of the orchestra is exhilarating. It was so thrilling to hear and see the unfolding of this masterpiece as it progressed instrument by instrument to its crescendo!
As a past coach at Santa Fe High School, I believe it must be hard now for the school to have an athletic director from Capital High looking over its sports program. We are in the same district, and Coach Bill Moon is currently involved in his football season. A temporary athletic director should be at each school until one is hired. Then when the schools do hire one, it would be nice for the head coaches to know which middle school will feed their high school. Right now, Ortiz Middle School goes to Capital, and the rest are split up. Coaches would have better programs if they could implement their programs at the middle school level, as well as have a say in who would coach the middle school teams. This is a big reason why the two high schools have a hard time competing. These student athletes deserve better.
Roberto Gallegos
Sig Rivera
Santa Fe
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
Santa Fe
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ndiana hunter Tim Bowers made his own choice. Under sedation after a hunting accident, the 32-year-old was allowed to become conscious so he could decide what kind of medical treatment to receive. He was choosing between life and death. After falling 16 feet from a tree while deer hunting, Bowers injured his spine and was paralyzed from the shoulders down. Doctors did not think he would ever breathe on his own again. His family asked that Bowers be awoken from his induced sleep to consider his choices. He told the doctors to take no extra measures to keep him alive. Bowers died last Sunday, just hours after his breathing tube was removed. To his family, their loved one got to leave the world on his own terms. “We just asked him, ‘Do you want this?’ And he shook his head emphatically no,” his sister, Jenny Shultz, told reporters. Many people who suffer life-threatening injuries do not receive that opportunity. They are not conscious, and by the time they wake up, decisions to prolong their lives with ventilators or feeding tubes have been made. By then, it can be too late to stop treatment. One man’s brave decision reminds us that people — while still healthy — should make their wishes known to their families and friends. Have conversations about death, accidents and life. People should also sign living wills to direct what kind of care they want and leave medical directives with loved ones. That way, the family does not have the burden of making a decision. They will know the decision has been made. At the same time, this case raises some concerns. Is the day of an accident too soon to decide, basically, to die? Should a person whose body is shattered have to make that important a choice without more time to consider? Patients have the right to refuse life support, courts have ruled. Deciding so quickly is unusual, to say the least. Bowers was told his prognosis. A life spent paralyzed, breathing only with assistance. He could not hold his baby, or hug his wife. He would never be able to help his father on the family farm or cross the woods in search of a deer. The life he loved was over. He chose to let nature take its course, spending the last hours of his life surrounded by family and friends. He chose the departure he wanted from this life. Not everyone will be awake to choose their treatment. But with a living will and medical directives, wishes can be respected, even if people are too damaged to speak.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Nov. 11, 1913: Hewett controversy: Mr. Edgar L. Hewett, sometimes called “the foremost archaeologist of America,” is, indeed, the right man to head the School of American Archaeology in Santa Fe, according to Mr. F.C. Lummis, Los Angeles litterateur, and the Santa Fe Woman’s Club. But, it seems that Mr. Edgar L. Hewett is distrusted as a scientist by such eminent authorities as Prof. Dixon of Harvard, Prof. Dorsey of Chicago University, Prof. Tozzer of Harvard, Prof. Boas of Columbia and Dr. Herbert J. Spinden of the American Museum of Natural History. Other items connected with this “imbroglio” started by Mr. Hewett when he tried to direct the Chamber of Commerce’s affairs, will be printed in later issues. Nov. 11, 1963: Los Alamos — The first International Peace Film Festival will be held in Los Alamos this weekend. Sixteen films will be shown at the Centre Theatre on Saturday and Sunday. Robert W. Kunce, manager of the Centre Theater and festival director, explains that the festival was conceived along three lines. The primary purpose is to encourage the motion picture industry of all nations to further the cause of world peace. Secondly, to show the peaceful uses to which the U.S. is putting its nuclear resources. Third is to spotlight the center of the cultural Southwest. Nov. 11, 1988: An elderly woman who went Wednesday to the County Treasurer’s Office to question a drastic increase in her taxes was the first to literally break down and cry, but lots of other property owners have been stopping in to complain. Little can be done. The woman was looking at a tax bill of more than $300 compared to a $36 bill last year. The complaints were triggered by county property valuations that were updated this summer at the command of the state Legislature. State law required the values be updated to cover a six-year gap in the figures on which valuations are based. Bills are based on market values.
DOONESBURy
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
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
Mostly sunny and mild
Tonight
Mainly clear
Tuesday
Cooler with times of clouds and sun
32
63
Wednesday
Thursday
Times of clouds and sun
52/31
Mostly cloudy
53/32
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Friday
Partly sunny and breezy
56/27
Humidity (Noon)
Saturday
Humidity (Noon)
Sunday
Mostly sunny
55/29
Humidity (Noon)
A couple of p.m. thundershowers
54/29
56/18
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
21%
50%
51%
56%
44%
31%
30%
33%
wind: NNW 6-12 mph
wind: E 6-12 mph
wind: SE 7-14 mph
wind: WSW 4-8 mph
wind: WNW 6-12 mph
wind: SW 10-20 mph
wind: WNW 8-16 mph
wind: W 8-16 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 64°/31° Normal high/low ............................ 57°/28° Record high ............................... 70° in 2005 Record low .................................. 0° in 1950 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.70”/10.62” Normal month/year to date ... 0.24”/12.29” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.36”/10.16”
New Mexico weather
666
40
The following water statistics of November 7 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.267 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 2.280 City Wells: 0.472 Buckman Wells: 2.092 Total water produced by water system: 6.111 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.084 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 66.7 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.23 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
Santa Fe 63/32 Pecos 62/31
25
Albuquerque 65/42
25
87
56
412
Clayton 65/28
25
Las Vegas 63/31
285
Clovis 71/33
54 60
25
54 285 380
180
Roswell 73/42
Ruidoso 64/38
25
70
Truth or Consequences 68/44 70
180
Las Cruces 71/46
54
70
Hobbs 72/47
285
Carlsbad 72/48
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
Sun. High: 76 .................................. Deming Sun. Low 14 ............................... Eagle Nest
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 73/32 s 66/39 pc 57/17 s 70/39 s 73/43 s 62/19 s 65/26 s 62/30 s 59/26 s 69/36 s 64/24 pc 76/34 s 65/38 pc 65/29 s 68/36 s 66/19 pc 66/25 pc 70/36 s 74/36 s
Hi/Lo W 71/45 pc 65/42 s 56/21 pc 72/46 pc 72/48 pc 57/25 s 64/28 pc 65/28 pc 58/34 pc 71/33 pc 63/27 s 73/44 s 64/41 s 62/29 s 72/39 pc 63/22 s 63/25 s 72/47 pc 71/46 s
Hi/Lo W 65/39 pc 56/43 pc 49/21 pc 56/39 c 56/40 c 54/29 pc 51/26 i 42/31 i 53/29 pc 38/29 c 61/33 pc 71/44 pc 55/42 pc 62/35 pc 48/35 c 63/31 pc 58/30 pc 50/34 c 65/41 pc
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 68/25 75/34 59/40 67/36 67/36 64/25 56/20 67/38 70/38 64/39 75/35 70/32 73/40 61/25 71/36 72/31 75/41 63/35 64/24
W s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s r s s pc
Hi/Lo W 63/31 pc 76/48 s 60/37 s 69/38 s 71/35 pc 66/27 pc 55/21 pc 67/36 s 73/42 pc 64/38 pc 69/36 pc 70/42 s 70/42 s 58/24 pc 68/44 s 69/35 pc 73/45 s 63/36 s 63/25 s
Hi/Lo W 44/26 c 75/46 pc 53/33 pc 61/37 pc 42/31 c 46/24 i 51/22 pc 58/35 pc 52/37 sh 49/32 pc 43/34 c 68/42 pc 64/41 pc 53/23 pc 65/39 pc 41/34 r 68/44 pc 55/33 pc 63/33 pc
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for November 11
By Jessica Herndon
380
State extremes
City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Today’s UV index 70
380
Alamogordo 71/45
AccuWeather flu index
‘Thor’ bashes box office with $86M opening
Today.........................................1, Low Tuesday.....................................0, Low Wednesday...............................1, Low Thursday...................................2, Low Friday ........................................3, Low Saturday ...................................2, 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
60 60
Sunday’s rating ...................... Not available 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 58/24
Española 64/41 Los Alamos 60/37 Gallup 63/22
Raton 66/27
64 84
10
Water statistics
285
64
Farmington 62/29
Area rainfall
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.14”/8.16” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.10”/15.64” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.67”/11.24” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.21”/15.50” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.92”/10.44”
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
Sunrise today ............................... 6:36 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 5:00 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 1:31 p.m. Moonset today ........................... 12:36 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:37 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 4:59 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 2:06 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 1:39 a.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:38 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 4:59 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 2:40 p.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 2:41 a.m. Full
Last
New
First
Nov 17
Nov 25
Dec 2
Dec 9
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 38/30 70/49 61/39 47/31 43/15 59/35 58/42 72/52 73/39 49/35 52/42 49/45 65/56 68/30 49/42 32/24 62/23 81/71 75/53 48/37 56/37 75/49 83/52
W sn pc s c c pc c pc pc s s pc pc pc pc sn pc pc pc s pc s s
Hi/Lo 32/12 64/45 56/38 32/27 21/2 62/42 53/35 69/46 60/38 43/23 56/29 49/27 72/47 61/25 45/24 21/-3 63/27 82/66 78/55 52/26 53/23 78/53 78/57
W pc pc s c c pc s s s r pc sn pc pc sn c s s pc pc pc s pc
Hi/Lo 20/8 64/36 43/27 56/43 36/17 57/36 41/29 70/41 56/30 34/20 38/23 37/24 52/31 53/34 37/22 6/-5 62/26 82/66 72/40 39/21 37/18 78/55 80/58
W s s c pc s c c pc s sf sf sf c pc c s pc s pc sf pc pc pc
Rise 5:12 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 1:28 a.m. 8:59 p.m. 6:12 a.m. 3:06 p.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 4:17 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 2:14 p.m. 11:20 a.m. 4:54 p.m. 3:28 a.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013
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
Chris Hemsworth in a scene from Thor: The Dark World.
WALT DISNEY STUDIOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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 57/42 69/45 85/75 49/39 42/33 75/61 61/44 65/51 85/63 62/43 83/58 46/45 57/43 71/41 55/41 65/35 71/66 78/59 64/51 52/47 48/18 60/36 66/41
W s s c pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc c c s s s c s pc r pc pc s
Hi/Lo 59/33 67/41 83/73 39/23 29/15 76/58 54/37 68/33 82/63 54/38 87/58 50/29 59/46 58/41 57/27 65/41 76/57 70/58 64/53 59/45 28/9 52/36 58/39
W pc pc pc sf c pc s pc pc s s pc c s pc pc pc pc pc c c s s
Hi/Lo 39/27 45/30 83/72 33/22 29/19 74/40 41/30 42/23 81/64 42/30 90/63 37/21 58/48 46/30 38/21 62/43 71/41 71/58 67/50 55/47 31/15 41/27 45/30
W sn pc sh c s pc pc pc pc c pc sf r c pc pc pc pc pc r s pc c
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 Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 89 ........................ Anaheim, CA Sun. Low: 9 ............... Bodie State Park, CA
On Nov. 11, 1987, an early-season snowstorm clobbered the Washington, D.C., area with 17 inches of snow. The snow was accompanied by thunder and lightning.
Weather trivia™
Q: What is a broken spectre? shadow cast upon fog or low clouds A: Abeneath the observer
Weather history
Newsmakers BURBANK, Calif — More than a thousand people picketed ABC’s Burbank headquarters over the weekend to protest a Jimmy Kimmel Live show in which a youngster said the United States could resolve its debt to China by killing everyone in the Asian country. Jimmy Kimmel and ABC have apologized for the Oct. 16 “Kids Table” segment, and the network says it will not air again. Kimmel began by asking a panel of children how the United States should resolve its $1.3 trillion debt to China. After one youngster shouted, “Kill everyone in China,” Kimmel replied, “That’s an interesting idea.”
Redford honored for contributions to Utah
Robert Redford
Hi/Lo 50/39 72/50 67/63 93/79 72/55 53/28 46/39 66/50 79/62 77/63 86/70 77/45 45/40 48/34 52/44 73/61 88/72 80/75 71/55 71/60
W r pc r pc pc s sh sh c pc pc pc sh r sh pc pc t s pc
Hi/Lo 48/45 65/61 74/58 95/78 55/52 55/37 45/37 70/47 73/59 80/61 84/70 72/52 45/41 54/41 43/29 72/60 84/69 80/73 74/59 72/60
W c r r pc pc s c c pc s pc s pc sh s t t c s s
Hi/Lo 51/42 70/59 77/58 95/79 64/55 57/31 46/39 69/47 79/61 81/61 87/71 69/48 45/42 50/39 49/39 75/59 84/70 78/71 73/58 71/60
W r r pc c pc s c c s s pc pc r pc pc t t c 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 66/56 50/39 64/45 68/55 41/37 50/43 79/56 50/44 48/37 86/69 66/57 70/46 46/38 84/75 41/38 66/59 70/54 48/36 54/41 46/37
W pc s s r c r s pc sh pc r c s t sh r r c pc r
Hi/Lo 64/54 54/45 64/48 69/53 41/27 45/34 79/53 48/44 47/29 89/78 56/50 77/50 45/28 86/77 37/32 66/59 55/43 53/45 45/35 44/26
W s r s t sf pc s c c s r s s t s r sh c c pc
Hi/Lo 70/55 54/41 68/46 64/51 34/23 42/32 78/51 53/38 41/33 94/73 66/51 84/52 48/28 86/75 44/37 72/57 52/43 51/43 43/36 44/31
W s pc s t pc pc s r s t pc s pc t sh t c r s pc
Today’s talk shows
Network picketed over joke on Kimmel’s show
Jimmy Kimmel
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
SALT LAKE CITY — Robert Redford has been honored by Utah’s governor for his onand off-camera contributions to the state. Gov. Gary Herbert expressed gratitude to the 77-year-old Redford at a Saturday night gala in Salt Lake City. Redford is the owner of the Sundance ski resort and the founder of the Sundance Film Festival and Sundance Institute. The Associated Press
3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Rebel Wilson (“Super Fun Night”); guest DJ Adam Lambert. 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 KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show
8:00 p.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. KCHF The Connection With Skip Heitzig FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan Astronaut Chris Hadfield; Avril Lavigne. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show TBS Pete Holmes Show Guest Eric Andre. 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Astronaut Chris Hadfield; Avril Lavigne. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Singer Kelly Clarkson; Lyle Lovett performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Zooey Deschanel; Chris Elliott; Frank Turner performs.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS Pete Holmes Show Guest Eric Andre. 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actor LL Cool J; TV personality Carrie Keagan. 12:00 a.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! Chelsea Lately Comic Sarah Tiana; comic Ross Mathews; chef Sam Morgante. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Billy Crystal; Evan Rachel Wood; Cher Lloyd and Skee Lo. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly
The Associated Press
BOx OffiCe
Superheroes continue to defeat their foes at the box office. Disney’s Thor: The Dark World, earning $86.1 million, dominated the weekend box office as it opened domestically at No. 1, according to studio estimates Sunday. Starring Chris Hemsworth, the Marvel superhero sequel earned $109.4 million when it opened internationally last weekend and $94 million internationally this weekend. “It’s an extraordinary thing,” said Dave Hollis, executive vice president of distribution at Walt Disney Studios. “These guys at Marvel have been some of the most consistent when it comes to making movies and creating big events that drive a ton of people to the movie theater. They overdelivered on expectations.” However, some observers were expecting the weekend total to reach over $100 million. In limited theaters Thursday evening, Thor: The Dark World brought in $7.1 million overnight. Surpassing the ticket sales of Thor, which scored $65.7 million when it opened in May of 2011, Thor: The Dark World marks a record for a Disney November opening, topping the $70.5 million The Incredibles earned in 2004. But, come Nov. 22, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is predicted to take the No. 1 spot. “We have a great little stretch of time prior to Hunger Games,” Hollis said. “Yes, Hunger Games will do a whole bunch of business, but that’s not to say we don’t expect to still be a relevant option for consumers that weekend and onto the Thanksgiving weekend that follows.” Paramount hidden-camera comedy Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa held the secondplace slot at the box office for the second weekend in a row, earning $11.3 million during its third weekend, with a domestic total reaching more than $78 million. “Audiences can’t get enough of these films,” said box-office analyst Paul Dergarabedian of Rentrak. “They are like that
1. Thor: The Dark World, $86.1 million ($94 million international). 2. Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa, $11.3 million ($3.4 million international). 3. Free Birds, $11.2 million ($1 million international). 4. Last Vegas, $11.1 million. 5. Ender’s Game, $10.2 million ($4 million international). 6. Gravity, $8.4 million ($26.3 million international). 7. 12 Years a Slave, $6.6 million. 8. Captain Phillips, $5.8 million ($7.7 million international). 9. About Time, $5.1 million ($3.1 million international). 10. Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2, $2.8 million ($7.7 million international).
guilty pleasure. It’s completely unique compared to everything else out there.” Relativity Media’s 3-D animated kiddie flick Free Birds, soared into third place with $11.2 million in its second weekend. CBS Films’ Last Vegas, featuring an all-star cast including Michael Douglas, Robert De Niro, Morgan Freeman and Kevin Kline, took fourth place in its second weekend. Last weekend’s box office champ, the sci-fi adaptation Ender’s Game, starring Harrison Ford, Asa Butterfield and Viola Davis, dropped to fifth place in its second weekend. “Once Thor opened, it presented a pretty healthy competitor to all of the movies in the marketplace,” Dergarabedian said. “We’re starting this process of the holiday movie season, which dollar for dollar, is just as important as the summer movie season. In a seven- to eight-week period, we are talking about close to 20 percent of the total-year box office.”
TV
top picks
1
7 p.m. on CBS How I Met Your Mother In this new flashback episode, the gang considers the future of the love triangle involving Ted, Robin and Barney (Josh Radnor, Cobie Smulders, Neil Patrick Harris). Lily (Alyson Hannigan) and Robin subject Barney to a series of challenges in “Platonish.” Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad) guest stars. 7 p.m. on The CW Hart of Dixie Zoe and Joel (Rachel Bilson, Josh Cooke) go looking for a place to live and find one that’s perfect, except for one thing: It’s owned by some members of Zoe’s extended family, and she’s not sure she wants to deal with them. Lemon (Jaime King) gets an intriguing offer. Lavon (Cress Williams) wonders why AnnaBeth (Kaitlyn Black) is so eager for him to go out of town in the new episode “Family Tradition.” Scott Porter also stars. 8 p.m. on PBS JFK: American Experience The television landscape is filled with remembrances of John F. Kennedy this month, the 50th anniversary of his assassination. This two-part film paints a rich portrait of the man who became the 35th president of the United States via interviews with
2
3
scholars, journalists, relatives and members of his administration. Part 2 airs Tuesday. 8 p.m. on CBS Mike & Molly Molly (Melissa McCarthy, pictured) has decided on a new career: She wants to be a crime novelist. And as it happens, she’s married to a guy who fights crime for a living. She decides to do some research by riding along with Mike (Billy Gardell, pictured) while he’s working. If the fact that this is a sitcom doesn’t give you an idea how this turns out, the title of this new episode is “The First and Last Ride-Along.” 10 p.m. on HBO Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1 The statistics are sobering: Suicide has claimed more veterans than combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, and it claims another every 80 minutes, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. This documentary focuses on the front line of that battle: the Veterans Crisis Line. Sometimes responders are able to talk a distressed veteran out of taking his life, but often their job is to keep him on the line while arranging for emergency help.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Prep schedule B-3 NFL B-4 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
B
NBA: Spurs crush Knicks 120-89, secure fourth straight win. Page B-3
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
VOLLEYBALL
Kentucky rolls past Northern Kentucky
Lady Horsemen make cut for state tourney
Randle lifts top-seeded Wildcats in rout of Norse
St. Michael’s earns final seed in Class AAA bracket By James Barron
The New Mexican
The St. Michael’s volleyball team didn’t have to do the talking. The Lady Horsemen had Brian Gurule and Jessica Woodward in
their corner. The pair was a key part to St. Michael’s earning the 12th and final seed in the Class AAA bracket of the State Volleyball Tournament, which was released on Sunday. Despite a 7-15 record and a lackluster performance in the District 5AAA semifinal at Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory, St. Michael’s saw its season extended.
Steve Long, the Lady Horsemen head coach, said much of the credit deserves to go to Gurule, the head coach at Santa Fe Indian School and Woodward, Hope Christian’s head coach, for lobbying for his team. Gurule was the district representative in charge of giving the New Mexico Activities Association, which handles seeding and selection, the coaches’ input regarding that.
“They had to go fight the battles, and they did that,” Long said. St. Michael’s made it on the strength of its overall schedule, with matches against six of the seven top teams in AAA plus a match with Santa Fe High, the District 2AAAA Tournament champion and the No. 9 seed in the AAAA tournament.
Please see ToURney, Page B-3
By Gary B. Graves
The Associated Press
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Northern Kentucky had no illusions about pulling off the impossible against No. 1 Kentucky on Sunday. But had the Norse made a few early layups, coach Dave Kentucky 93 Bezold believed it N.Kentucky 63 could have slowed the Wildcats’ momentum instead of allowing them to get rolling toward a 93-63 rout. “I may be crazy to say this, but when we had two or three wide-open layups in the first couple of minutes and didn’t make them, I thought that relaxed Kentucky a little bit,” said Bezold, whose team shot 21 of 64 from the field (32.8 percent) including 9 of 35 from beyond the arc. “When you don’t make those shots against tremendous teams when you are outsized and really out-talented, it’s really difficult to control tempo and it really allows those guys to be relaxed when they shoot the basketball. … I thought that was the difference in the game.” Daniel Camp’s 13 points led Northern Kentucky in the first meeting between the schools located 83 miles apart. Tyler White added 12 points, and Todd Johnson had 10 for the Norse.
NFL NEW ORLEANS 49, DALLAS 17
Saints topple Cowboys
Please see RoLLs, Page B-3
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Florida St. takes 2nd in BCS standings
Saints quarterback Drew Brees passes under pressure from Cowboys defensive end Everette Brown during the first half on Sunday in New Orleans. The Saints beat Dallas 49-17. BILL HABER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Quarterback Brees passes for 392 yards, four touchdowns in prime-time win at Superdome
By Ralph D. Russo
By Brett Martel
The Associated Press
Florida State took firm hold of second place in the BCS standings behind top-ranked Alabama and grabbed the inside track to the national championship game. The Seminoles were second last week, but seemed likely to get passed by Oregon if the Ducks could have remained unbeaten. Stanford, however, handed Oregon its first loss of the season Thursday night and Florida State benefited. The Seminoles (.9619) are a solid second in the USA Today coaches’ poll and Harris poll, and second in the computer rankings that make up the final third of a BCS average. Ohio State (.8926) is third in the polls but fourth in the computers. The Buckeyes are closer to fourth-place Stanford (.8689) than Florida State. Unbeaten Baylor (.8618) is fifth, not far behind the Cardinal (.8689). But Florida State and Alabama appear headed for a BCS championship game matchup if they can avoid being upset. “Just win,” BCS analyst Jerry Palm of CBS.com said about Florida State. “They control their own destiny now. Just win.” Florida State’s 51-14 victory against Clemson in the middle of October sent the Seminoles surging past Ohio State in the polls. Palm said that it’s likely if Alabama or Florida State — or both — stumble it would be Ohio State or Baylor moving into the top two spots and not one-loss Stanford. Unbeaten Fresno State of the Mountain West moved up to No. 14. The Bulldogs need a top-12 finish to secure the so-called BCS buster bid as an automatic qualifier from a non-AQ conference. Undefeated Northern Illinois of the Mid-American Conference is 15th.
The Associated Press
N
Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning fumbles as he is hit by Chargers outside linebacker Tourek Williams during the third quarter on Sunday in San Diego. The Chargers recovered the fumble and scored a touchdown a few plays later. DENIS POROY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Manning keeps Broncos rolling By Bernie Wilson
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Peyton Manning and the Broncos sent a big “get well soon” message to coach John Fox. What could Broncos 28 possibly make Chargers 20 Fox feel better than a 28-20 win against San Diego? Manning threw for 330 yards and four touchdowns, three to Demaryius Thomas, as he effi-
Today on Tv u Miami at Tampa Bay, 6:25 p.m., ESPN
ciently led Denver through their first game since Fox had heart surgery. Fox had his aortic valve replaced last Monday in Charlotte, N.C., and was released Friday to his offseason home there, where he’ll continue his recovery and begin rehab soon. Fox planned to watch the game
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com
on TV there, a team spokesman said. If he watched, he probably didn’t like seeing Manning hurting his right ankle when he was hit by Corey Liuget in the closing minutes, but the QB stayed in the game. With interim coach Jack Del Rio in charge, Manning kept the Broncos (8-1) rolling. He threw touchdown passes of 11, 7 and 34 yards to Thomas on consecutive drives spanning the second
Please see RoLLing, Page B-4
EW ORLEANS — Nothing like nighttime in New Orleans to bring out a prolific performance from Drew Brees and the Saints. Brees completed 34 of 41 passes for 392 yards and four touchdowns, and the Saints beat Dallas 49-17 on Sunday night. The Saints (7-2) had an NFL-record 40 first downs and a franchise-record 625 total yards in what marked their 12th straight prime-time victory in the Superdome. Brees connected with Kenny Stills on a 52-yard touchdown pass, with Marques Colston on a 22-yard scoring strike, with running back Pierre Thomas for a 1-yard score and with running back Darren Sproles for a 28-yard scoring play with 5 seconds left in the first half. Sproles also had a 3-yard touchdown run, and Mark Ingram added a 4-yard scoring run en route to a career-high 145 yards rushing. DeMarco Murray had 82 yards rushing on 13 carries and a touchdown for Dallas (5-5), highlighted by his 35-yard scamper on a fake reverse. That set up his 7-yard scoring run, which gave Dallas a short-lived 10-7 lead early in the second quarter. Dallas did not score again until Tony Romo’s 21-yard touchdown pass to Terrance Williams in the last minute of the third quarter. The Cowboys’ porous pass defense entered the game already having set an NFL record by allowing four quarterbacks to throw for more than 400 yards this season. Brees was on track to become the fifth, but fell just short after the Saints decided to stop throwing with a big lead in the fourth quarter. At one point, Brees strung together 19 straight completions, tying his personal best and franchise record.
Please see ToPPLe, Page B-4
inside u Injuries take toll on 49ers as Panthers keep reign as NFC champions. Page B-5
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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
canadiens 4, islanders 2
HOCKEY Hockey
NHL eastern conference
Atlantic GP Tampa Bay 16 Toronto 17 Detroit 18 Boston 16 Montreal 18 Ottawa 17 Florida 18 Buffalo 19 Metro GP Pittsburgh 17 Washington 18 N.Y. Rangers 17 Carolina 17 New Jersey 17 N.Y. Islanders 18 Columbus 16 Philadelphia 16
W 12 11 9 10 9 7 3 3 W 11 9 9 6 5 6 6 5
L oL Pts GFGA 4 0 24 54 39 6 0 22 51 40 5 4 22 45 48 5 1 21 45 30 8 1 19 48 40 6 4 18 53 51 11 4 10 37 64 15 1 7 33 61 L oL Pts GFGA 6 0 22 50 40 8 1 19 57 52 8 0 18 39 46 7 4 16 32 48 7 5 15 35 44 9 3 15 51 60 10 0 12 41 46 10 1 11 26 44
Western conference
central GP W L oL Pts GFGA Colorado 16 14 2 0 28 54 28 Chicago 18 12 2 4 28 66 49 St. Louis 15 11 2 2 24 52 34 Minnesota 18 10 4 4 24 48 40 Nashville 17 8 7 2 18 37 54 Dallas 17 8 7 2 18 46 52 Winnipeg 19 8 9 2 18 50 55 Pacific GP W L oL Pts GFGA Anaheim 19 15 3 1 31 66 45 Phoenix 18 12 4 2 26 60 56 San Jose 17 10 2 5 25 63 41 Vancouver 20 11 7 2 24 54 54 Los Angeles 17 11 6 0 22 50 41 Calgary 17 6 9 2 14 47 61 Edmonton 19 4 13 2 10 48 75 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Sunday’s Games Winnipeg 5, San Jose 4, SO Montreal 4, N.Y. Islanders 2 New Jersey 5, Nashville 0 N.Y. Rangers 4, Florida 3 Chicago 5, Edmonton 4 Colorado 4, Washington 1 Anaheim 3, Vancouver 1 Saturday’s Games Minnesota 3, Carolina 2, SO Phoenix 4, Washington 3, SO Philadelphia 4, Edmonton 2 Ottawa 3, Florida 2 Boston 3, Toronto 1 Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2, OT Columbus 5, N.Y. Islanders 2 St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1 Chicago 5, Dallas 2 Los Angeles 5, Vancouver 1 Monday’s Game Tampa Bay at Boston, 11 a.m. Tuesday’s Games Los Angeles at Buffalo, 5 p.m. Nashville at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m. Columbus at Washington, 5 p.m. Colorado at Carolina, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Ottawa, 5:30 p.m. Winnipeg at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Anaheim at Florida, 5:30 p.m. Phoenix at St. Louis, 6 p.m. San Jose at Calgary, 7 p.m.
NHL ScoriNG LeAderS
Through Nov. 9 Scoring Steven Stamkos, TB Sidney Crosby, Pit Ryan Getzlaf, Anh Alexander Steen, StL Alex Ovechkin, Was H. Zetterberg, Det N. Backstrom, Was Henrik Sedin, Van Phil Kessel, Tor Corey Perry, Anh Bobby Ryan, Ott Jiri Hudler, Cgy Kyle Okposo, NYI
GP 16 17 18 15 15 18 17 19 17 18 17 17 17
G 14 8 10 14 13 10 5 3 10 10 9 6 5
NHL cALeNdAr
A PTS 9 23 15 23 12 22 7 21 7 20 10 20 15 20 17 20 9 19 9 19 10 19 13 19 14 19
Nov. 11 — Hockey Hall of Fame induction, Toronto. Nov. 12 — NHL general managers meeting, Toronto. Nov. 29 — NHL Thanksgiving Showdown: New York Rangers at Boston Bruins Dec. 1 — Signing deadline for Group 2 free agents. Dec. 19-27 — Holiday roster freeze. Dec. 24-26 — Holiday break. Dec. 26Jan. 5 — IIHF World Junior Championship, Malmo, Sweden.
NHL SuMMArieS Sunday devils 5, Predators 0
Nashville 0 0 0—0 New Jersey 1 2 2—5 First Period—1, New Jersey, Jagr 5 (Harrold, Greene), 1:30. Penalties—Clune, Nas (holding), 2:26; Tedenby, NJ (unsportsmanlike conduct), 5:41; Gaustad, Nas (holding), 19:58. Second Period—2, New Jersey, Janssen 2 (Carter, Zidlicky), 2:54. 3, New Jersey, Zidlicky 2 (Gelinas, Henrique), 8:37 (pp). Penalties—Brunner, NJ (hooking), 5:05; Jones, Nas (hooking), 8:32; Brunner, NJ (tripping), 12:20; Spaling, Nas (boarding), 16:55. Third Period—4, New Jersey, T.Zajac 2 (Jagr, Zubrus), 12:57. 5, New Jersey, Tedenby 1 (Loktionov, Bernier), 19:16. Penalties—Carter, NJ (slashing), 2:51; Zidlicky, NJ (slashing), 10:32; Carter, NJ (high-sticking), 15:29. Shots on Goal—Nashville 6-4-5—15. New Jersey 7-12-4—23. Power-play opportunities—Nashville 0 of 6; New Jersey 1 of 4. Goalies—Nashville, Hutton 4-3-1 (23 shots-18 saves). New Jersey, Brodeur 4-3-2 (15-15). referees—Brad Meier, Kyle Rehman. Linesmen—Matt MacPherson, Tim Nowak. A—12,964. T—2:23.
rangers 4, Panthers 3
Florida 1 1 1—3 N.y. rangers 1 1 2—4 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, Miller 1 (Kreider, McDonagh), 9:49. 2, Florida, Barkov 4 (Versteeg, Gilbert), 19:33 (pp). Penalties—Kreider, NYR (charging), 12:03; Bergenheim, Fla (tripping), 16:02; Boyle, NYR (hooking), 19:16. Second Period—3, Florida, Campbell 1 (Gilbert, Versteeg), 11:20. 4, N.Y. Rangers, Dorsett 2 (Boyle, Del Zotto), 13:58. Penalties—None. Third Period—5, N.Y. Rangers, Richards 6 (Hagelin), :46. 6, N.Y. Rangers, Zuccarello 2 (Richards, Stepan), 6:16 (pp). 7, Florida, Campbell 2 (Fleischmann, Bjugstad), 12:57. Penalties—Thomas, Fla, served by Bergenheim (roughing), 1:40; Miller, NYR (goaltender interference), 1:40; Versteeg, Fla (hooking), 4:39; Kulikov, Fla (holding), 5:32; Kreider, NYR (cross-checking), 18:45. Shots on Goal—Florida 9-11-7—27. N.Y. Rangers 11-9-9—29. Power-play opportunities—Florida 1 of 3; N.Y. Rangers 1 of 3. Goalies—Florida, Thomas 2-5-0 (29 shots-25 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 6-6-0 (27-24). referees—Greg Kimmerly, Mike Leggo. Linesmen—Derek Amell, Derek Nansen. A—18,006. T—2:26.
N.y. islanders 0 1 1—2 Montreal 0 3 1—4 First Period—None. Penalties—Eller, Mon (hooking), 13:00; McDonald, NYI (tripping), 15:10. Second Period—1, Montreal, Gallagher 8 (Galchenyuk, Eller), 1:46. 2, N.Y. Islanders, Bouchard 3 (Tavares), 7:23 (pp). 3, Montreal, Eller 6 (Galchenyuk, Subban), 16:14 (pp). 4, Montreal, Bournival 5 (Diaz, Plekanec), 19:04 (pp). Penalties—Plekanec, Mon (face-off violation), 3:59; Bouillon, Mon (holding), 7:12; Grabner, NYI (delay of game), 14:34; Hickey, NYI, double minor (high-sticking), 16:36. Third Period—5, N.Y. Islanders, Nelson 2 (Tavares, Nielsen), 4:10 (pp). 6, Montreal, Galchenyuk 3 (Eller, Gallagher), 10:37. Penalties—Desharnais, Mon (hooking), 3:44; Hickey, NYI (hooking), 17:24; Carkner, NYI, misconduct, 19:25. Shots on Goal—N.Y. Islanders 10-88—26. Montreal 10-10-11—31. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Islanders 2 of 4; Montreal 2 of 5. Goalies—N.Y. Islanders, Poulin 1-4-0 (31 shots-27 saves). Montreal, Price 7-7-1 (26-24). referees—Ghislain Hebert, K. Pollock. Linesmen—Mark Shewchyk, A. McElman. A—21,273. T—2:32.
Blackhawks 5, oilers 4
edmonton 0 2 2—4 chicago 1 1 3—5 First Period—1, Chicago, Saad 4 (Pirri, Seabrook), 18:23. Penalties—None. Second Period—2, Edmonton, Nugent-Hopkins 5 (Perron, Larsen), :54. 3, Edmonton, Yakupov 2 (Larsen, Eberle), 8:55 (pp). 4, Chicago, Shaw 4 (Saad), 17:18. Penalties—Hall, Edm (delay of game), 2:08; Saad, Chi (elbowing), 7:44; Jones, Edm (high-sticking), 10:51. Third Period—5, Chicago, Bickell 5 (Rozsival, Kane), 5:33. 6, Edmonton, Perron 4 (Hall, Larsen), 7:58 (pp). 7, Chicago, Kruger 2 (Smith, Oduya), 11:44. 8, Chicago, Keith 1 (Seabrook, Sharp), 13:39 (pp). 9, Edmonton, Eberle 4 (N.Schultz, Hall), 18:32 (sh). Penalties—Leddy, Chi (hooking), 7:27; Joensuu, Edm (holding), 9:10; N.Schultz, Edm (interference), 12:59; Yakupov, Edm (roughing), 17:16. Missed Penalty Shot—Gagner, Edm, 4:13 second. Shots on Goal—Edmonton 6-10-7—23. Chicago 11-13-12—36. Power-play opportunities—Edmonton 2 of 2; Chicago 1 of 5. Goalies—Edmonton, Dubnyk 3-8-1 (36 shots-31 saves). Chicago, Crawford 11-2-3 (23-19). referees—Ian Walsh, Brian Pochmara. Linesmen—Steve Barton, Darren Gibbs. A—21,185. T—2:35.
ducks 3, canucks 1
Vancouver 0 1 0—1 Anaheim 0 2 1—3 First Period—None. Penalties—Garrison, Van (highsticking), 3:11. Second Period—1, Anaheim, Perry 11 (Beauchemin), 8:30. 2, Vancouver, Sestito 1 (Richardson, Kassian), 14:09. 3, Anaheim, Bonino 5 (Etem, Perry), 19:09. Penalties—Fowler, Ana (slashing), :30; Beauchemin, Ana (high-sticking), 15:54. Third Period—4, Anaheim, Cogliano 5 (Smith-Pelly), 19:39 (en). Penalties—Tanev, Van (delay of game), :22. Shots on Goal—Vancouver 13-167—36. Anaheim 5-11-7—23. Power-play opportunities—Vancouver 0 of 2; Anaheim 0 of 2. Goalies—Vancouver, Lack 2-2-0 (22 shots-20 saves). Anaheim, Andersen 6-0-0 (36-35). referees—Frederick L’Ecuyer, Don Van Massenhoven. Linesmen—Brad Lazarowich, Brian Murphy. A—17,174. T—2:30.
Avalanche 4, capitals 1
Washington 0 1 0—1 colorado 1 1 2—4 First Period—1, Colorado, Bordeleau 2 (McLeod, Cliche), 2:50. Penalties—Alzner, Was (hooking), 5:45. Second Period—2, Washington, Ward 8 (Grabovski), 15:48. 3, Colorado, Holden 1 (Landeskog, Stastny), 16:16. Penalties—Chimera, Was (unsportsmanlike conduct), 4:25; Talbot, Col (tripping), 8:52. Third Period—4, Colorado, Parenteau 6 (Duchene, Johnson), 8:12. 5, Colorado, Landeskog 6 (Johnson), 18:20. Penalties—Sarich, Col (hooking), 4:02; Colorado bench, served by MacKinnon (too many men), 5:06; Sarich, Col (interference), 12:55; Ovechkin, Was (roughing), 14:50. Shots on Goal—Washington 4-1614—34. Colorado 12-16-9—37. Power-play opportunities—Washington 0 of 4; Colorado 0 of 3. Goalies—Washington, Holtby 7-6-0 (37 shots-33 saves). Colorado, Varlamov 9-2-0 (34-33). referees—Paul Devorski, Mike Hasenfratz. Linesmen—Mike Cvik, Thor Nelson. A—17,625. T—2:28.
Jets 5, Sharks 4, So
San Jose 2 1 1 0—4 Winnipeg 0 3 1 0—5 Winnipeg won shootout 1-0 First Period—1, San Jose, Boyle 3 (Pavelski, Marleau), 14:04 (pp). 2, San Jose, Hertl 10 (Demers, Hannan), 15:20. Penalties—Hannan, SJ (highsticking), 1:09; Ladd, Wpg (tripping), 13:50; Kane, Wpg (goaltender interference), 19:27. Second Period—3, Winnipeg, Frolik 4 (Halischuk), 6:12. 4, San Jose, Wingels 5 (Hertl, Braun), 6:53. 5, Winnipeg, Byfuglien 1 (Clitsome, Tangradi), 8:38. 6, Winnipeg, Clitsome 2 (Ladd, Little), 17:19. Penalties—Hannan, SJ (interference), 12:21; Byfuglien, Wpg (delay of game), 20:00. Third Period—7, San Jose, Boyle 4 (Couture, Thornton), 3:59 (pp). 8, Winnipeg, Ladd 5 (Little, Clitsome), 18:17. Penalties—Halischuk, Wpg (tripping), 3:19; Bogosian, Wpg (holding), 11:05; Demers, SJ (hooking), 11:49; Wheeler, Wpg (tripping), 12:15. overtime—None. Penalties—None. Shootout—San Jose 0 (Couture NG, Wingels NG, Boyle NG), Winnipeg 1 (Wheeler NG, Little NG, Ladd G). Shots on Goal—San Jose 9-12-103—34. Winnipeg 15-17-10-4—46. Power-play opportunities—San Jose 2 of 6; Winnipeg 0 of 2. Goalies—San Jose, Niemi 9-2-5 (46 shots-42 saves). Winnipeg, Pavelec 6-7-2 (34-30). referees—Dave Jackson, Dan O’Halloran. Linesmen—Lonnie Cameron, Kiel Murchison. A—15,004. T—2:48.
Timberwolves 113, Lakers 90
BASKETBALL BASkeTBALL
NBA eastern conference
Atlantic Philadelphia Toronto Boston New York Brooklyn Southeast Miami Atlanta Charlotte Orlando Washington central Indiana Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit Chicago
W 4 3 3 2 2 W 4 3 3 3 2 W 7 3 2 2 2
L Pct 3 .571 4 .429 4 .429 4 .333 4 .333 L Pct 3 .571 3 .500 3 .500 4 .429 4 .333 L Pct 0 1.000 4 .429 3 .400 3 .400 3 .400
Western conference
GB — 1 1 11/2 11/2 GB — 1/2 1/2 1 11/2 GB — 4 4 4 4
Southwest W L Pct GB San Antonio 6 1 .857 — Houston 4 3 .571 2 Dallas 4 3 .571 2 Memphis 3 3 .500 21/2 New Orleans 3 4 .429 3 Northwest W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 5 1 .833 — Minnesota 5 2 .714 1/2 Portland 4 2 .667 1 Denver 1 4 .200 31/2 Utah 0 7 .000 51/2 Pacific W L Pct GB Phoenix 5 2 .714 — L.A. Clippers 4 3 .571 1 Golden State 4 3 .571 1 L.A. Lakers 3 5 .375 21/2 Sacramento 1 5 .167 31/2 Sunday’s Games San Antonio 120, New York 89 Oklahoma City 106, Washington 105, OT Phoenix 101, New Orleans 94 Minnesota 113, L.A. Lakers 90 Saturday’s Games Toronto 115, Utah 91 Indiana 96, Brooklyn 91 Cleveland 127, Philadelphia 125,2OT Boston 111, Miami 110 Atlanta 104, Orlando 94 L.A. Clippers 107, Houston 94 Memphis 108, Golden State 90 Dallas 91, Milwaukee 83 Portland 96, Sacramento 85 Monday’s Games San Antonio at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Memphis at Indiana, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Orlando at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago, 6 p.m. Toronto at Houston, 6 p.m. Denver at Utah, 7 p.m. Detroit at Portland, 8 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.
NBA calendar
Jan. 6 — 10-day contracts can be signed. Jan. 10 — Contracts guaranteed for rest of season. 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.
NBA BoxScoreS Sunday Spurs 120, knicks 89
SAN ANToNio (120) Belinelli 3-4 2-2 9, Duncan 1-4 9-11 11, Diaw 1-1 2-2 4, Parker 8-12 1-2 17, Green 8-11 2-2 24, Ginobili 4-10 0-0 9, Splitter 2-4 0-0 4, Leonard 7-10 3-4 18, Mills 4-11 5-5 15, Ayres 0-3 0-0 0, De Colo 2-2 0-0 5, Joseph 1-1 2-2 4, Baynes 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 41-76 26-30 120. NeW york (89) Anthony 5-10 6-8 16, Shumpert 1-5 1-2 3, Bargnani 5-10 5-6 16, Prigioni 1-1 0-0 3, Felton 3-10 0-0 7, J.Smith 1-9 2-2 5, World Peace 5-11 2-2 13, Udrih 3-9 0-0 6, Stoudemire 1-5 0-2 2, Hardaway Jr. 3-7 4-5 11, Aldrich 1-2 0-0 2, Murry 2-3 1-2 5. Totals 31-82 21-29 89. San Antonio 35 26 29 30 —120 New york 17 28 15 29 —89 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 12-28 (Green 6-9, Mills 2-7, De Colo 1-1, Belinelli 1-2, Leonard 1-3, Ginobili 1-6), New York 6-22 (Prigioni 1-1, Bargnani 1-2, World Peace 1-3, Hardaway Jr. 1-4, Felton 1-5, J.Smith 1-5, Shumpert 0-1, Udrih 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 57 (Duncan, Green 10), New York 41 (Anthony 8). Assists—San Antonio 22 (Parker 6), New York 16 (World Peace, J.Smith, Aldrich 3). Total Fouls—San Antonio 19, New York 22. Technicals—New York Coach Woodson. A—19,812.
Thunder 106, Wizards 105, oT
WASHiNGToN (105) Ariza 7-13 0-5 15, Nene 5-6 4-10 14, Gortat 4-9 3-5 11, Wall 3-13 3-3 10, Beal 13-23 2-2 34, Webster 3-10 1-1 8, Harrington 4-10 0-0 11, Maynor 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 40-88 13-26 105. okLAHoMA ciTy (106) Durant 12-23 8-9 33, Ibaka 11-18 3-4 25, Perkins 0-3 1-2 1, Westbrook 4-16 2-2 13, Sefolosha 4-8 0-0 8, Adams 0-3 1-2 1, Jones 2-4 0-0 5, Jackson 6-10 0-0 12, Lamb 2-6 3-3 8, Fisher 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-92 18-22 106. Washington 24 18 31 23 9—105 oklahoma city27 10 28 31 10—106 3-Point Goals—Washington 12-29 (Beal 6-8, Harrington 3-6, Ariza 1-2, Wall 1-5, Webster 1-7, Maynor 0-1), Oklahoma City 6-20 (Westbrook 3-7, Jones 1-2, Durant 1-4, Lamb 1-4, Jackson 0-1, Fisher 0-1, Ibaka 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 51 (Gortat 8), Oklahoma City 65 (Durant 13). Assists—Washington 23 (Wall 8), Oklahoma City 21 (Durant 6). Total Fouls—Washington 19, Oklahoma City 20. Technicals—Nene 2, Westbrook 2, Oklahoma City delay of game, Oklahoma City defensive three second 2. Ejected—Nene, Westbrook. A—18,203.
Suns 101, Pelicans 94
NeW orLeANS (94) Aminu 3-6 2-2 8, Davis 5-13 4-5 14, J.Smith 9-12 4-4 22, Holiday 8-17 0-0 16, Gordon 5-14 2-2 14, Evans 0-3 0-0 0, Morrow 7-11 0-0 16, Stiemsma 0-1 0-0 0, Roberts 1-5 0-0 2, Thomas 1-4 0-0 2, Rivers 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 39-88 12-13 94. PHoeNix (101) Tucker 1-5 0-0 2, Frye 1-6 1-2 3, Plumlee 4-9 0-0 8, Bledsoe 7-11 8-9 24, Green 6-12 2-2 15, Dragic 4-9 3-6 12, Mark.Morris 9-12 4-4 23, Goodwin 3-7 0-0 6, Marc.Morris 3-7 0-0 8, Christmas 0-0 0-0 0, Kravtsov 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-78 18-23 101. New orleans 16 22 27 29—94 Phoenix 19 23 29 30—101 3-Point Goals—New Orleans 4-13 (Gordon 2-4, Morrow 2-4, Aminu 0-1, Holiday 0-2, Roberts 0-2), Phoenix 7-22 (Marc.Morris 2-2, Bledsoe 2-3, Mark.Morris 1-1, Dragic 1-3, Green 1-5, Tucker 0-2, Frye 0-2, Goodwin 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— New Orleans 50 (Davis 12), Phoenix 45 (Plumlee 12). Assists—New Orleans 20 (Holiday 7), Phoenix 14 (Bledsoe 6). Total Fouls—New Orleans 20, Phoenix 16. A—13,154.
MiNNeSoTA (113) Brewer 6-9 4-6 17, Love 8-17 5-5 25, Pekovic 6-14 2-3 14, Rubio 5-9 0-0 12, Martin 11-23 2-2 27, Cunningham 1-4 0-0 2, Barea 4-8 1-1 9, Shved 1-1 1-2 3, Price 1-1 0-0 2, D.Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Dieng 0-1 0-0 0, Muhammad 0-1 0-0 0, Hummel 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 44-90 15-19 113. L.A. LAkerS (90) Young 3-9 2-2 8, Gasol 5-12 1-3 11, Kaman 4-10 0-0 8, Nash 0-3 2-2 2, Blake 7-11 0-0 19, Johnson 2-10 0-0 5, Farmar 1-7 2-2 4, Meeks 6-10 2-2 16, Hill 3-5 1-3 7, Henry 1-8 0-4 2, S.Williams 3-7 0-0 8. Totals 35-92 10-18 90. Minnesota 47 20 23 23 —113 L.A. Lakers 23 25 28 14 —90 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 10-20 (Love 4-9, Martin 3-5, Rubio 2-2, Brewer 1-3, Barea 0-1), L.A. Lakers 10-26 (Blake 5-7, S.Williams 2-5, Meeks 2-6, Johnson 1-2, Farmar 0-1, Nash 0-2, Young 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Minnesota 62 (Love 13), L.A. Lakers 53 (Gasol 11). Assists—Minnesota 29 (Rubio 14), L.A. Lakers 24 (Blake 8). Total Fouls—Minnesota 15, L.A. Lakers 16. Technicals—L.A. Lakers delay of game 2. A—18,997
AUTO RACING AuTo rAciNG
NAScAr SPriNT cuP Advocare 500
Sunday At Phoenix international raceway Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (9) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 312 laps, 140.7 rating, 48 points, $258,186. 2. (7) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 312, 122.2, 43, $171,715. 3. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 312, 121.9, 42, $182,326. 4. (11) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 312, 107.3, 41, $131,135. 5. (8) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 312, 102.6, 39, $137,630. 6. (19) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 312, 93.5, 38, $132,074. 7. (4) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 312, 96, 37, $137,693. 8. (10) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 312, 94.8, 36, $122,185. 9. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 312, 107.8, 36, $117,268. 10. (17) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 312, 92.3, 35, $128,068. 11. (12) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 312, 106.5, 34, $136,176. 12. (27) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 312, 73.8, 32, $131,121. 13. (18) Greg Biffle, Ford, 312, 84.4, 32, $97,610. 14. (5) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 312, 110.2, 31, $125,121. 15. (16) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 312, 80.6, 29, $124,885. 16. (13) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 312, 81.3, 28, $110,851. 17. (15) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 312, 69.7, 27, $88,210. 18. (36) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 312, 73.7, 27, $106,205. 19. (21) Aric Almirola, Ford, 312, 67.5, 25, $116,396. 20. (6) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 312, 79.4, 24, $119,368. 21. (23) Carl Edwards, Ford, 312, 91.1, 24, $113,660. 22. (26) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 311, 59.6, 22, $104,968. 23. (14) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 311, 70.4, 21, $113,576. 24. (33) David Gilliland, Ford, 311, 62.9, 21, $94,493. 25. (22) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 311, 56.5, 0, $86,660. 26. (20) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 311, 67, 18, $105,099. 27. (30) Casey Mears, Ford, 311, 57.1, 17, $99,818. 28. (2) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 311, 63.6, 17, $94,710. 29. (35) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 311, 45.1, 15, $77,285. 30. (42) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 310, 41.6, 14, $90,318. 31. (25) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 309, 47.9, 0, $94,082. 32. (39) Michael McDowell, Ford, 308, 39.4, 12, $73,860. 33. (32) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 302, 33.2, 11, $73,735. 34. (38) Timmy Hill, Ford, 285, 28.9, 10, $73,610. 35. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 282, 46.5, 9, $81,485. 36. (28) Josh Wise, Ford, brakes, 280, 35.7, 0, $73,330. 37. (24) Reed Sorenson, Ford, engine, 266, 36.3, 0, $73,199. 38. (43) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, engine, 193, 30, 0, $68,150. 39. (37) David Reutimann, Toyota, accident, 187, 45.7, 5, $64,150. 40. (29) Cole Whitt, Toyota, accident, 142, 39.5, 0, $60,150. 41. (31) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, engine, 129, 42.1, 3, $64,150. 42. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, brakes, 63, 27.9, 0, $52,150. 43. (41) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, brakes, 29, 26.3, 0, $48,650. race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 105.733 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 57 minutes, 3 seconds. Margin of Victory: 1.796 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 49 laps. Lead Changes: 23 among 13 drivers. Top 10 in Points 1. J.Johnson, 2,384; 2. M.Kenseth, 2,356; 3. K.Harvick, 2,350; 4. Ky.Busch, 2,327; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,321; 6. J.Gordon, 2,304; 7. G.Biffle, 2,301; 8. C.Bowyer, 2,297; 9. J.Logano, 2,287; 10. Ku.Busch, 2,285. NAScAr driver rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
TENNIS TeNNiS
ATP WorLd Tour Barclays ATP World Tour Finals
Sunday At London Purse: $6 million (Tour Final) Surface: Hard-indoor Singles Semifinals Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Roger Federer (6), Switzerland, 7-5, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Stanislas Wawrinka (7), Switzerland, 6-3, 6-3. doubles Semifinals David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco (6), Spain, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (4), Brazil, 7-6 (10), 7-5. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (2), Brazil, 4-6, 6-4, 10-8.
COLLEGE coLLeGe
GoLF GOLF
No. 1 Alabama (9-0) beat No. 10 LSU 38-17. Next: at Mississippi State, Saturday. No. 2 Oregon (8-1) lost to No. 6 Stanford 26-20, Thursday. Next: vs. Utah, Saturday. No. 3 Florida State (9-0) beat Wake Forest 59-3. Next: vs. Syracuse, Saturday. No. 4 Ohio State (9-0) did not play. Next: at Illinois, Saturday. No. 5 Baylor (8-0) beat No. 12 Oklahoma 41-12, Thursday. Next: vs. No. 25 Texas Tech at Arlington, Texas, Saturday. No. 6 Stanford (8-1) beat No. 2 Oregon 26-20, Thursday. Next: at Southern Cal, Saturday. No. 7 Auburn (9-1) beat Tennessee 5523. Next: vs. Georgia, Saturday. No. 8 Clemson (8-1) did not play. Next: vs. Georgia Tech, Thursday. No. 9 Missouri (9-1) beat Kentucky 48-17. Next: at Mississippi, Saturday, Nov. 23. No. 10 LSU (7-3) lost to No. 1 Alabama 38-17. Next: vs. No. 11, Texas A&M, Saturday, Nov. 23. No. 11 Texas A&M (8-2) beat Mississippi State 51-41. Next: at No. 10 LSU, Saturday, Nov. 23. No. 12 Oklahoma (7-2) lost to No. 5 Baylor 41-12, Thursday. Next: vs. Iowa State, Saturday. No. 13 South Carolina (7-2) did not play. Next: vs. Florida, Saturday. No. 14 Miami (7-2) lost to Virginia Tech 42-24. Next: at Duke, Saturday. No. 15 Oklahoma State (8-1) beat Kansas 42-6. Next: at Texas, Saturday. No. 16 UCLA (7-2) beat Arizona 31-26. Next: vs. Washington, Friday. No. 17 Fresno State (9-0) beat Wyoming 48-10. Next: vs. New Mexico, Saturday, Nov. 23. No. 18 Michigan State (8-1) did not play. Next: at Nebraska, Saturday. No. 19 UCF (7-1) beat Houston 19-14. Next: at Temple, Saturday. No. 20 Louisville (8-1) beat UConn 31-10, Friday. Next: vs. Houston, Saturday. No. 21 Wisconsin (7-2) beat BYU 2717. Next: vs. Indiana, Saturday. No. 22 Northern Illinois (9-0) did not play. Next: vs. Ball State, Wednesday. No. 23 Arizona State (7-2) beat Utah 20-19. Next: vs. Oregon State, Saturday. No. 24 Notre Dame (7-3) lost to Pittsburgh 28-21. Next: vs. BYU, Saturday, Nov. 23. No. 25 Texas Tech (7-3) lost to Kansas State 49-26. Next: vs. No. 5 Baylor at Arlington, Texas, Saturday.
Sunday At Sea island resort (Seaside course) St. Simons island, Ga. Purse: $5.5 million yardage: 7,005; Par: 70 Final Chris Kirk, $990,000 66-66-68-66—266 B. Baird, $484,000 63-70-67-67—267 Tim Clark, $484,000 67-67-71-62—267 S. Brown, $227,333 66-68-68-66—268 Brian Gay, $227,333 63-72-66-67—268 J. Senden, $227,333 66-67-68-67—268 M. Every, $171,417 67-68-69-66—270 W. Simpson, $171,417 65-68-71-66—270 M. Kuchar, $171,417 68-68-68-66—270 G. Chalmers, $121,917 68-68-72-64—272 B. Harman, $121,917 67-68-70-67—272 R. Karlsson, $121,917 68-68-71-65—272 D. Smmrhys, $121,917 69-66-69-68—272 J. Kokrak, $121,917 69-65-69-69—272 K. Stadler, $121,917 68-68-65-71—272 B. d Jonge, $85,250 67-71-70-65—273 Z. Johnson, $85,250 70-68-68-67—273 H. Slocum, $85,250 67-71-69-66—273 B. Todd, $85,250 68-67-67-71—273 T. Immlmn, $68,750 67-72-70-65—274 K. Kisner, $68,750 65-73-70-66—274 R. Garrigus, $52,800 65-74-67-69—275 C. Hoffman, $52,800 66-73-68-68—275 S. Langley, $52,800 66-71-68-70—275 G. McNeill, $52,800 62-76-68-69—275 B.Weekley, $52,800 67-69-73-66—275 H. English, $39,050 68-70-71-67—276 C. Howell III, $39,050 69-70-66-71—276 S.-Yul Noh, $39,050 65-70-73-68—276 D. Toms, $39,050 68-73-68-67—276 C. Tringale, $39,050 70-69-68-69—276 K. Chappell, $31,831 65-68-74-70—277 Ben Curtis, $31,831 68-69-72-68—277 R. Knox, $31,831 70-71-69-67—277 J. Rollins, $31,831 65-76-66-70—277 S. Appleby, $26,469 68-70-71-69—278 C. Campbell, $26,469 70-70-71-67—278 B. Garnett, $26,469 67-72-67-72—278 T. Potter, Jr., $26,469 67-67-72-72—278 W. Austin, $19,800 68-73-68-70—279 A. Baddeley, $19,800 68-71-70-70—279 W. Claxton, $19,800 65-71-71-72—279 L. Glover, $19,800 69-72-68-70—279 D. Hearn (28), $19,800 74-66-70-69—279 D. Lee (28), $19,800 70-71-70-68—279 T. Matteson, $19,800 71-69-70-69—279 C. Villegas, $19,800 66-74-72-67—279 E. Axley, $13,671 71-70-68-71—280 J. Hahn, $13,671 69-72-73-66—280 J.J. Henry, $13,671 67-72-72-69—280 P. Perez, $13,671 68-71-72-69—280 M. Putnam, $13,671 68-73-72-67—280 M. Wilson, $13,671 70-71-68-71—280 J. Broadaway, $13,671 72-68-75-65—280
NcAA FooTBALL The AP Top 25 Fared
NcAA uSA Today Top 25 Poll
rec Pts Pvs 1. Alabama (58) 9-0 1,546 1 2. Florida State (4) 9-0 1,485 3 3. Ohio State 9-0 1,401 4 4. Baylor 8-0 1,376 5 5. Stanford 8-1 1,307 6 6. Clemson 8-1 1,164 7 7. Oregon 8-1 1,162 2 8. Missouri 9-1 1,083 9 9. Auburn 9-1 1,069 10 10. Oklahoma State 8-1 965 11 11. Texas A&M 8-2 898 13 12. South Carolina 7-2 830 15 13. Louisville 8-1 653 16 14. Fresno State 9-0 646 17 15. UCLA 7-2 641 18 16. Michigan State 8-1 620 19 17. Oklahoma 7-2 510 8 18. LSU 7-3 476 12 19. Central Florida 7-1 468 21 20. Wisconsin 7-2 460 22 21. Northern Illinois 9-0 445 20 22. Arizona State 7-2 262 24 23. Miami (Fla.) 7-2 228 14 24. Texas 7-2 176 NR 25. Minnesota 8-2 91 NR Others receiving votes: Georgia 44; Nebraska 43; Ball State 22; Duke 22; Virginia Tech 15; Louisiana-Lafayette 7; Cincinnati 6; Mississippi 6; Southern California 6; Texas Tech 5; Washington 5; Arizona 4; Notre Dame 2; Buffalo 1.
NcAA BASkeTBALL Top 25 Fared
Sunday 1. Kentucky (2-0) beat Northern Kentucky 93-63. Next: vs. Michigan State, Tuesday. 2. Michigan State (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 1 Kentucky, Tuesday. 3. Louisville (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Hofstra, Tuesday. 4. Duke (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 5 Kansas, Tuesday. 5. Kansas (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 4 Duke, Tuesday. 6. Arizona (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Long Beach State, Monday. 7. Michigan (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. South Carolina State, Tuesday. 8. Oklahoma State (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Utah Valley, Tuesday. 8. Syracuse (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Fordham, Tuesday. 10. Florida (1-0) did not play. Next: at No. 20 Wisconsin, Tuesday. 11. Ohio State (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Ohio, Tuesday. 12. North Carolina (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Holy Cross, Friday. 13. Memphis (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Austin Peay, Thursday. 14. VCU (1-0) did not play. Next: at No. 24 Virginia, Tuesday. 15. Gonzaga (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Colorado State, Monday. 16. Wichita State (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Western Kentucky, Monday. 17. Marquette (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Grambling State, Tuesday. 18. UConn (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Yale, Monday. 19. Oregon (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Western Carolina, Wednesday. 20. Wisconsin (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 10 Florida, Tuesday. 21. Notre Dame (2-0) beat Stetson 8049. Next: vs. Indiana State, Sunday. 22. UCLA (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Oakland, Tuesday. 23. New Mexico (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. Charleston Southern, Sunday. 24. Virginia (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 14 VCU, Tuesday. 25. Baylor (1-0) did not play. Next: vs. South Carolina, Tuesday.
SOCCER Soccer
NorTH AMericA MLS Playoffs coNFereNce cHAMPioNSHiP eastern conference
Leg 1 — Saturday, Nov 9 Sporting KC 0, Houston 0 Leg 2 — Saturday, Nov. 23 Houston at Sporting KC, 5:30 p.m.
Western conference
Leg 1 — Sunday’s Game Real Salt Lake 4, Portland 2 Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 24 Real Salt Lake at Portland, 7 p.m.
PGA Tour The McGladrey classic Par
euroPeAN Tour Turkish Airlines open
Sunday At Montgomerie Maxx royal Belek, Turkey Purse: $7 million yardage: 7,100; Par: 72 Final V. Dubuisson, Fra 67-65-63-69—264 J. Donaldson, Wal 68-67-68-63—266 Justin Rose, Eng 70-66-67-65—268 Tiger Woods, USA 70-63-68-67—268 R. Jacquelin, Fra 67-72-62-68—269 Ian Poulter, Eng 66-66-68-69—269 H. Stenson, Swe 64-68-69-69—270 Marc Warren, Sco 69-70-66-65—270 B. Wiesberger, Aut 68-72-66-64—270 Ross Fisher, Eng 68-68-70-65—271 Justin Walters, SAf 66-66-70-69—271 Paul Casey, Eng 66-73-67-66—272 G. Coetzee, SAf 66-71-68-67—272 Julien Quesne, Fra 67-69-68-68—272 Thomas Aiken, SAf 71-67-66-69—273 D. Fichardt, SAf 64-73-71-65—273 Chris Wood, Eng 69-70-65-69—273 Thomas Bjorn, Den 64-72-71-67—274 A. Canizares, Esp 67-68-66-73—274 Rob. Derksen, Ned 67-69-69-69—274 M. Kiefer, Ger 66-73-68-67—274 Joost Luiten, Ned 72-70-65-67—274 Garth Mulroy, SAf 70-69-66-69—274 Richie Ramsay, Sco 70-69-71-64—274 M. Kaymer, Ger 69-68-68-70—275 F. Molinari, Ita 69-68-71-67—275
LPGA Tour LPGA Mizuno classic
Sunday At kintetsu kashikojima Golf course Shima, Japan Purse: $1.2 million yardage: 6,506; Par: 72 Final Teresa Lu, $180,000 70-68-64—202 Chella Choi, $109,773 69-69-66—204 Mamiko Higa,$70,617 70-66-70—206 Yuki Ichinose, $70,617 70-66-70—206 Y. Yoshida, $45,075 74-65-68—207 Shiho Oyama, $45,075 68-68-71—207 A. Fujimoto, $33,957 70-67-71—208 S. Feng, $26,945 72-71-66—209 Stacy Lewis, $26,945 71-68-70—209 Eun-Bi Jang, $26,945 69-69-71—209 K. Nakamura, $21,786 69-73-68—210 Jiyai Shin, $21,786 69-72-69—210 Esther Lee, $18,030 70-72-69—211 C. Matthew, $18,030 71-71-69—211 H. Nomura, $18,030 72-69-70—211 A-Rm Hwang, $18,030 71-68-72—211 Erina Hara, $13,168 71-73-68—212 Mayu Hattori, $13,168 76-68-68—212 Jenny Shin, $13,168 72-71-69—212 S. Yokomine, $13,168 72-71-69—212 Mina Harigae, $13,168 73-69-70—212 Hee-Won Han, $13,168 69-71-72—212 Brittany Lang, $13,168 70-70-72—212 J. Granada, $13,168 71-68-73—212 Miki Saiki, $13,168 73-66-73—212 Junko Omote, $13,168 69-69-74—212 Yuri Fudoh, $10,217 73-69-71—213 So Yeon Ryu, $10,217 71-71-71—213 Rui Kitada, $10,217 71-70-72—213 M. Jutanugarn, $9,075 75-70-69—214 Kumiko Kaneda, $9,075 71-70-73—214 Britt.Lincicome, $9,075 69-68-77—214 Lala Anai, $7,257 72-72-71—215 Yuko Fukuda, $7,257 71-72-72—215 Mika Miyazato, $7,257 71-72-72—215 Kaori Ohe, $7,257 71-72-72—215 Ritsuko Ryu, $7,257 73-70-72—215 Vicky Hurst, $7,257 71-71-73—215 Na-Ri Lee, $7,257 69-72-74—215 Eun-Hee Ji, $7,257 74-66-75—215 H. Young Park, $5,770 75-67-74—216 Karrie Webb, $5,770 72-70-74—216 Lisa McCloskey, $5,770 73-67-76—216
AuSTrALiAN PGA Tour Australian PGA championship
Sunday At royal Pines resort Gold coast, Australia Purse: $1.25 million yardage: 7,378; Par: 71 Final Adam Scott, Aus 65-67-71-67—270 Rickie Fowler, USA 63-72-71-68—274 Jack Wilson, Aus 68-71-69-68—276 Cameron Percy, Aus 69-73-67-68—277 Michael Wright, Aus 69-70-68-71—278 Jason Norris, Aus 67-74-71-67—279 Kang Ji-man, Kor 72-68-70-69—279 Grth Paddison, NZl 68-67-73-71—279 Nathan Green, Aus 66-69-73-71—279 Ashley Hall, Aus 68-69-71-71—279 Stphn Leaney, Aus 68-73-69-70—280 Mrc Leishman, Aus 69-71-68-72—280 D. McKenzie, Aus 65-69-72-74—280 J. Scrivener, Aus 70-67-76-68—281 David Klein, NZl 72-69-72-68—281 Mat. Goggin, Aus 73-70-69-69—281 Scott Hend, Aus 72-68-71-70—281 Peter Cooke, Aus 70-74-67-70—281 N. Holman, Aus 69-71-70-71—281 Nick Flanagan, Aus 75-68-67-71—281
SPORTS NBA
San Antonio crushes Knicks
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
By Brian Mahoney
Local results and schedules
NEW YORK — Even with his team leading the Western Conference, Gregg Spurs 120 Popovich Knicks 89 said Sunday morning his Spurs were playing C-plus or B-minus basketball, adding there was “not much” he liked about their start. The Spurs, he said, were winning because of “good fortune,” “corporate knowledge” and because “they’re older than dirt.” Apparently, Popovich is as tough on his pupils as he is on those sideline reporters, though a 120-89 rout of the Knicks bumped up their grades. “I thought tonight we played a good, solid B-plus, A-minus game,” Popovich said. “There were some good things out there.” Just not from the team in orange. Coach Mike Woodson said the Knicks played with no pride, even with one of the NBA’s marquee franchises making its lone visit to Madison Square Garden. Danny Green had 24 points and a career-high 10 rebounds in the Spurs’ fourth straight victory. Kawhi Leonard scored 18 points, and Tony Parker had 17 in a game that was close for about 3 minutes. San Antonio scored the first 10 points, led by as many as 37, and was in complete control in between. “It was embarrassing for us to come here on our home court and lose a game like this,” Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony said. “It wasn’t about losing the game, it was just how we lost the game. We didn’t compete today, and it showed out there on the court.” Tim Duncan took just four shots but finished with 11 points and 10 rebounds as San Antonio (6-1) shot 54 percent. The Spurs spoiled the season debut of Knicks guard J.R. Smith, last season’s Sixth Man
ON THE AIR
The Associated Press
B-3
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. BOXING 8 p.m. on FS1 — Middleweights, Fernando Guerrero (25-2-0) vs. Raymond Gatica (13-1-0); junior welterweights, Fidel Maldonado Jr. (15-2-0) vs. Luis Ramos Jr. (23-1-0), in San Antonio, Texas MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. on FSN — North Texas at Oklahoma FS1 — Mo.-Kansas City at Creighton 9 p.m. on ESPN2 — BYU at Stanford 11 p.m. on ESPN2 — W. Kentucky at Wichita St. 1 a.m. on ESPN2 — Akron at Saint Mary’s (Cal) 3 a.m. on ESPN2 — New Mexico St. at Hawaii NFL 6:25 p.m. on ESPN — Miami at Tampa Bay TENNIS 1 p.m. on ESPN2 — ATP World Tour Finals, championship, in London
The Spurs’ Tim Duncan, right, moves past the Knicks’ Amare Stoudemire during the first half on Sunday at Madison Square Garden in New York. SETH WENIG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
of the Year. Suspended the first five games of the season for violating the NBA’s antidrug program, Smith shot 1 of 9 and scored five points in 20 minutes. Anthony and Andrea Bargnani both scored 16 for the Knicks, who were outrebounded 51-33 and fell to 2-4 after a 6-0 start last season. “I’m not worried but we do have to figure it out,” Anthony said. “Whatever it is we have to figure out quickly, but as far as being worried, I’m not worried about that. But we need to figure it out.” The Spurs scored just 76 points a victory over Golden State on Friday, but had everything working offensively right from the opening tip Sunday. Green hit two 3-pointers in the 10-0 start, Marco Belinelli’s 3 made it 17-4, and the Spurs hit 13 of 18 shots while opening a 35-17 lead after one quarter, matching their highest-scoring period of the season. The lead grew to 24 points in the second, the Spurs repeatedly moving the ball to an open player before the Knicks knew
what was happening. San Antonio was making roughly two of every three shots for much of the first half and took a 61-45 lead into the locker room after shooting 62 percent. “We just played our game, and we made shots,” Parker said. “When you make shots it helps, and the ball movement was great.” THUNDER 106, WIZARDS 105 In Oklahoma City, Kevin Durant scored 33 points, including a tying 3 late in regulation and the go-ahead foul shots in overtime that sent the Thunder past Washington. John Wall missed a driving layup attempt at the buzzer for Washington, which was seeking its third straight win. Bradley Beal scored a career-high 34 points for the Wizards. Oklahoma City trailed 92-82 with 3:26 left with the fourth quarter, but went on a 14-4 run. Durant capped the burst with a straightaway 3-pointer with 13.6 seconds left. SUNS 101, PELICANS 94 In Phoenix, Eric Bledsoe scored 24 points, and Markieff Morris came off the bench to
score 23 as the Suns beat New Orleans. Morris shot 9 of 12, and has gone 30 for 38 from the field over his past three games while averaging 24.7 points in that span. Gerald Green scored 15, and Goran Dragic added 12 for the Suns, who have won four of five. Suns coach Jeff Hornacek became the first coach in franchise history to win his first four home games. TIMBERWOLVES 113,LAKERS 90 In Los Angeles, Kevin Martin scored 27 points, Kevin Love had 18 of his 25 points during Minnesota’s 47-point first quarter, and the Timberwolves snapped a 22-game losing streak against the Los Angeles Lakers. Ricky Rubio had 12 points, 14 assists and 10 rebounds for the Timberwolves, who hadn’t beaten the Lakers since March 6, 2007. Minnesota took a 28-point lead during the highest-scoring quarter in franchise history and maintained a healthy advantage all night in their first win over the Lakers at Staples Center since Dec. 2, 2005.
Tourney: Demonettes earn 2AAAA spot Continued from Page B-1 The Lady Horsemen had just wins over 1-19 SFIS (four times), 3-18 Hot Springs (twice) and 1-19 Capital. Long felt if his team played well in the district semifinal against Sandia Prep, the seventh seed, it might have a shot at a top-10 seed. Instead, the Lady Sundevils won 25-6, 25-12, 25-9. At that point, Long didn’t think St. Michael’s had much of a chance. “After that last showing against Sandia Prep, our chances were pretty nil,” Long said. “I thought we’d be the 13th or 14th team and on the bubble.” Instead, St. Michael’s will be matched up with No. 4 Silver and No. 5 West Las Vegas in Pool D. Thursday’s pool play will determine the bracket for all six classes (B-AAAAA). Pojoaque Valley earned the third seed and is grouped with No. 6 Ruidoso and
11th-seed Shiprock in Pool C. Ruidoso is a familiar foe for Pojoaque — the two battled in last year’s Class AAA state championship. Elkettes head coach Eric Zamora likes the matchup with the Lady Warriors, because he expects those two games to be intense, which will only help prepare the four-time state champion for bracket play. “It’s one of those matchups where it’s tough enough to where you stay tested, and stayed challenged,” Zamora said. “And you can turn it into something positive.” Santa Fe High is hoping to turn the positives from last week into more success in the AAAA bracket. The Demonettes did their part to secure a spot with a sweep of Española Valley in the 2AAAA Tournament championship. Santa Fe High will have eighth-seeded Albuquerque St. Pius X and No. 1 Piedra Vista in Pool A.
Demonettes head coach Sam Estrada echoed a sentiment of a lot of AAAA coaches regarding this year’s field. “It’s wide-open,” Estrada said. “I don’t think there is anybody that is so dominant, except for maybe PV and Artesia that somebody can’t step ion there and take it.” In Class AA, Santa Fe Preparatory took the third seed and will be in Pool C with No. 6 Hatch Valley and No. 11 Ramah. The Questa Lady Wildcats placed fifth in the seeding order in A, and is paired with No. 4 Magdalena and No. 12 Tse’ Yi’ Gai. McCurdy is in Pool A as the ninth seed and will get top-seed Fort Sumner and No. 8 Mountainair as opponents. As for the Class B bracket, Santa Fe Waldorf will be in Pool A as the No. 4 seed, and will face off with No. 1 Elida, No. 5 Mosquero and No. 8 Evangel Christian.
Rolls: No. 1 Wildcats dominate in all areas Continued from Page B-1 For NKU (0-2), it was a big drop off from Friday’s 77-76, season-opening loss at Purdue that wasn’t decided until the final seconds. In that game, the Norse shot 13 of 26 from long range and tied the Boilermakers 35-35 in rebounds including a 17-16 edge on the offensive boards. Much-shorter NKU had no chance of keeping pace against Kentucky’s muchpraised eight-man recruiting class featuring six high All-Americans who measure 6-foot-6 and up. And when shots didn’t fall against the Wildcats’ makeshift zone defense, it was pretty much over for the Norse. “We just had to knock down open shots and convert on those opportunities,” Johnson said. “We were moving the ball well and crashing the boards, but toward the middle of the half, Kentucky kind of took off.” Freshman forward Julius Randle had a lot to do with that. He had 22 points and 14 rebounds for his second double-double in as many games to lead the Wildcats. Guard Aaron Harrison added 16 points for Kentucky while twin brother Andrew
had 13. Alex Poythress contributed nine points while 7-footer Willie Cauley-Stein added seven points and 11 rebounds. Needing a good tuneup with Tuesday’s showdown looming against No. 2 Michigan State in Chicago, the Wildcats responded by dominating every area. Kentucky shot 30 of 55 from the field (54.5 percent), outrebounded NKU 51-23 and scored 36 points in the paint. The Wildcats were seeking a better start than in Friday night’s 89-57, seasonopening rout of UNC-Asheville, the first of three games in five days. Wildcats coach John Calipari couldn’t complain after Kentucky held NKU to 9-of-31 shooting in the first half on Sunday, though much of that had more to do with the Norse’s understandable reluctance to try and drive inside against the bigger Wildcats. That left NKU to try and make things up from beyond the arc, a strategy that yielded just 3-of-18 shooting (16.7 percent) and played right into Kentucky’s hands in numerous ways. “They didn’t make their 3s today,” Calipari said. “We hit them on a good night.” The Wildcats tallied just four fast-break points in the first half but had 16 secondchance points thanks to 12 offensive rebounds. They dominated the boards
29-12 through 20 minutes. Figure in 5-of-13 shooting from long range (38 percent), and it quickly added to the expected lopsided outcome. Leading 16-10 after Poythress’ 3-pointer, the Wildcats closed the half with a 32-12 run for a 48-22 lead. Just two nights after its close loss at Purdue, the Norse endured a rude chapter in their second season playing Division I basketball. And that was just the first half. “I just wanted to learn how tough we could play,” White said. “Even though we came out hard, we didn’t play the type of game we wanted to play.” NO. 21 NOTRE DAME 80, STETSON 49 In South Bend, Ind., Jerian Grant and Garrick Sherman scored 15 points each for Notre Dame. Pat Connaughton added 10 points for the Irish (2-0), while Sherman led the team with nine rebounds. Senior point guard Eric Atkins finished with eight points, leaving him five short of 1,000 for his career. Reserve Brian Pegg led the Hatters (0-2) with 13 points and Willie Green added eight points and nine rebounds. The Irish took a double-digit lead less than 5 minutes in as they improved to 48-0 at home in November under coach Mike Brey.
WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — Stanford at UConn 7 p.m. on ESPN2 — Tennessee at North Carolina
CROSS-COUNTRY RESULTS
State Cross-Country Championships Individual results of Northern New Mexico runners not in the Top 10 of the Class A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Cross Country Championships, held on Saturday at Rio Rancho High School. Course distance was 3.06 miles. Boys Class AAAA Individual results Santa Fe High — Chris Vigil, 25th, 17 minutes, 29.80 seconds; Mateo Martinez, 53rd, 18:29.25; Torin Sammeth, 71st, 18:50.10; Miguel Pantano, 20:36.05; Amoni Rogers-Mueller, 108th, 20:44.25; Wyatt Egelhoff, 112th, 21:58.65. Capital — Timothy Vigil, 91st, 19:21.50; Anthony Garcia, 123rd, 20:44.05. Los Alamos — Gus Saeger, 13th, 16:52.20; Cameron Staples, 15th, 16:57.25; Forrest White, 16:57.90; Conner Bailey, 19th, 17:10.15; John Rees, 17:10.45. Española — Diomi Talaswaima, 23rd, 17:23.45; Norman Sanchez, 38th, 18:04.40; Antonio Trujillo, 40th, 18:08.55; Zach Montoya, 72nd, 18:53.15; Carlos Estrada, 75th, 19:04.55; Caleb Valdez, 92nd, 19:42.85; Aaron Martinez, 96th, 19:49.55. Class AAA Individual results St. Michael’s —Troy Pacheco, 11th, 17:14.75; Javier Malcolm, 12th, 17:18.55; Denver Luttrell, 21st, 17:54.70; Austin Luttrell, 22nd, 17:55.10; Sean Noonan, 25th, 17:57.20; Kristopher Cordova, 37th, 18:27.80; Joshua Depaula, 53rd, 18:57.45. Santa Fe Indian School —Myron Tenorio, 13th, 17:33.50; Francis Calabaza, 15th, 17:38.05; Thomas Lucero, 24th, 17:56.45; Robert Jojola, 43rd, 18:35.15; Daniel Aguino, 52nd, 18:55.10; Ricardo Melton, 57th, 19:30.35; Merrick Calabaza, 67th, 20:08.55. Pojoaque Valley — Matthew Herrera, 20th, 17:54.45; Dominic Roybal, 32nd, 18:23.35; Avery Torres, 51st, 18:50.65; Christopher Fierro, 54th, 19:01.10; Joseph Fresques, 61st, 19:57.15. Taos — Cade Cannedy, 18th, 17:50.30; Tristen Padilla, 23rd, 17:55.60; J.C. Santistevan, 44th, 18:38.05; Theo Hummel, 45th, 18:38.55. West Las Vegas — Kevin Villanueva, 31st, 18:19.75; Conrad Atencio, 36th, 18:27.35; Miguel Coca, 55th, 19:23.45; Enrico Tenorio, 62nd, 19:57.95; Devon Maes, 68th, 20:10.75; John Romero, 22:23.85. Las Vegas Robertson — Leandro Garduno, 31st, 18:08.30; Ian Parks, 35th, 18:20.50. Class AA Santa Fe Prep — Kyle Evaldson, 25th, 17:55.25; Mike Ewers, 28th, 17:58.00; Martin Soto, 39th, 18:32.00; Christoph Schild, 18:32.90; Sage Shahi, 55th, 19:00.70; Tenzin Dorjee, 59th, 19:10.00. Academy for Technology and the Classics — Cyrus Kirkman, 88th, 20:06.40. Pecos — Julian Garcia, 12th, 17:26.35; Josh DeHerrera, 26th, 17:56.45; Jason Henderson, 29th, 18:02.55; Michael Montano, 35th, 18:20.45; Isaac CdeBaca, 36th, 18:25.55; Josh Lopez, 43rd, 18:40.65. Peñasco — Patrick Denne, 56th, 19:05.95; Max Lopez, 73rd, 20:03.30; Anthony Sanchez, 77th, 20:20.85; Donevon Sanchez, 78th, 20:27.00; Isaiah Rodarte, 79th, 20:35.45; Reyes Leyba, 83rd, 20:45.85. Mora —Casmiro Fresquez, 34th, 18:10.15. Class A Desert Academy — Jeremy Hartse, 20th, 19:54.60; Ben Voter, 20:12.30; Alex Kellum, 27th, 20:24.50; Jonas Rasmussen, 29th, 20:29.70; Taso Warsa, 33rd, 20:51.00; Sahsha Hunter, 50th, 23:26.20; Daniel Onstott, 58th, 28:28.20. Coronado —Diego Jacquez, 22nd, 19:59.20; Ben Velasquez, 23rd, 20:07.75; Marcus Barela, 31st, 20:46.70; A.J. Martinez, 48th, 22:57.30; Morgan Jacquez, 49th, 23:16.30; John Chacon, 57th, 25:33.05; Pat Chacon, 59th, 28:54.25.
Girls Class AAAA Santa Fe High — Noel Prandoni, 15th, 19:56.50; Greta Miller, 37th, 21:19.70; Victoria Quintana, 39th, 21:20.95; Camille Sammeth, 40th, 21:23.25; Emma Thompson, 48th, 22:05.25; Sierra Sweeney, 59th, 22:44.70; Kyra Hewett, 61st, 22:59.85. Capital — Mayra Florez, 115th, 25:14.55. Los Alamos — Sophia Galvez, 14th, 19:53.50; Amanda Mercer, 16th, 19:57.05; Mikayla Pulliam, 19th, 20:16.30; Katy Stockton, 20th, 20:17.15. Española Valley — Samantha Sanchez, 45th, 21:54.55; Miranda Varoz, 56th, 22:37.15; Ashlynn Trujillo, 63rd, 23:02.40; Shantell Boylan, 64th, 23:02.65; Leah Deaguero, 65th, 23:03.30; Analisa Campos, 88th, 24:33.05; Faith Trujillo, 97th, 25:15.05. Class AAA St. Michael’s — Jordyn Romero, 13th, 20:44.05; Alondra Mendez, 15th, 20:48.65; Mackenzie Serrao, 19th, 20:57.45; Kaitlin Dobesh, 20th, 20:59.40; Marisa Trujillo, 32nd, 21:32.55; Tristan Gonzales, 48th, 22:39.85; Hannah Gates, 49th, 22:47.75. Santa Fe Indian School — Jordin Aguilar, 21st, 21:01.75; Sunshine Eaton, 38th, 21:47.40; Karli Najera, 39th, 21:49.85; Brianna Garcia, 40th, 22:00.40; Courtenae Magdalena, 53rd, 23:03.35; Kaitlin Sandoval, 57th, 23:43.15; Shante Toledo, 58th, 23:51.35. Pojoaque Valley — Jaylen Quintana, 30th, 21:29.15; Dallas Archibald, 31st, 21:32.05; Hannah Martinez, 52nd, 22:57.95 Adah Gellis, 59th, 23:51.40; Leah Archuleta, 60th, 23:57.50. Taos — Elizabeth Reyes, 17th, 20:52.15; Isabella Padilla, 23rd, 21:08.85; Elicia Sanchez, 35th, 21:41.95. Las Vegas Robertson — Karlene Montano, 44th, 22:18.05; Rebekah Hutchinson, 45th, 22:24.15; Esperanza Maritnez, 46th, 22:25.80; Morgan Defindorf, 56th, 23:33.20. West Las Vegas — Esperanza Garduno, 55th, 22:48.65; Divana Romero, 63rd, 23:35.50; Renee Saavedra, 66th, 23:45.40. Class AA Santa Fe Prep — Sarah Raboff, 18th, 21:16.80; Ariel Whitten, 38th, 22:24.10; Ava McCord-Robb, 43rd, 22:39.50; Zoe Unverferth, 63rd,23:40.80; Peyton Lawrenz, 73rd, 24:00.65; Marika Sayers, 83rd, 25:30.85; Kristin Knight, 87th, 25:58.40. Academy for Technology and the Classics — Alizabeth Williams, 13th, 21:01.05; Angelika Lucero, 21st, 21:34.75; Jordan Enright, 30th, 22:02.25; Julianna Tibbetts, 34th, 22:16.45; Grace Graham, 47th, 22:48.70; Lilia NogerOnstatt, 59th, 23:36.80; Carly Bonwell, 69th, 23:51.15. Pecos — Cassie CdeBaca, 14th, 20:49.25; Alex Bradford, 59th, 22:53.60; Cayla Vigil, 89th, 24:11.45. Peñasco — Charlyna Gonzales, 24th, 21:46.25; Estrella Gonzales, 64th, 23:41.00; Victoria Vasquez, 71st, 23:58.15; Nancy Tafoya, 75th, 24:11.90; Alicia Lujan, 83rd, 25:31.70; Shannon Medina, 99th, 29:36.65. Mora — Natalia Marrujo, 17th, 21:14.90; Santiana Marrujo, 28th, 21:58.60; Danika Hurtado, 37th, 22:21.85; Analisa Chavez, 62nd, 23:40.05; Luzia Manuel, 79th, 24:53.50; Shauntae Rivera, 88th, 26:05.50; Margarita Rivera, 92nd, 27:02.50. Class A Desert Academy — Sophie Lebron, 20th, 25:30.20; Lia Kane, 22nd, 26:00.45; Lileigh Thomas, 25th, 28:38.80; Nikki Laudicina, 28th, 34:53.10; Ceryn Schoell, 29th, 37:11.00.
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.
Thursday Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: Pool play/first round (except for Class B) Class AAAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Pool play (A — No. 9 Santa Fe High; C —No. 11 Los Alamos; D — No. 5 Española Valley): 8 a.m. First round, 3:30 p.m. Class AAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Pool play (B — No. 10 Las Vegas Robertson; C — No. 3 Pojoaque Valley; D — No. 5 West Las Vegas): 1 p.m. First round, 7 p.m. Class AA, Rio Rancho Cleveland/Rio Rancho Middle School (first round) Pool play (C — No. 3 Santa Fe Preparatory): 1 p.m. First round, 4 p.m./5:45 p.m./7:30 p.m. Class A, Rio Rancho High School Pool play (A — No. 9 McCurdy; D — No. 5 Questa): 8 a.m./10:30 a.m. First round, 4 p.m./5:45 p.m./7:30 p.m. Class B, Rio Rancho High School Pool play (A — No. 4 Santa Fe Waldorf): 1 p.m.
Friday Football — Class AAA/AAAA playoffs — TBA Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: quarterfinals/semifinals Class AAAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 8 a.m. Semifinals, 4:45 p.m. Class AAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 3 p.m. Semifinals, 8:15 p.m. Class AA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 1:15 p.m. Semifinals, 6:30 p.m. Class A, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 9:45 a.m. Semifinals, 4:45 p.m. Class B, Rio Rancho Cleveland (quarterfinals)/the Santa Ana Star Center (semifinals) Quarterfinals, 8 a.m./9:45 a.m./11:30 a.m./1:15 p.m. Semifinals, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday Boys basketball — Santa Fe Preparatory at Mesa Vista, 6:30 p.m. Football — Class AAA/AAAA playoffs — TBA Class A playoffs, semifinals — No. 3 Capitan at No. 2 Escalante, 1 p.m. Girls basketball — Santa Fe Preparatory at Mesa Vista, 5 p.m. Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: championships Class AAAA, 3 p.m. Class AAA, 11 a.m. Class AA, 5 p.m. Class A, 1 p.m. Class B, 9 a.m.
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B-4
NFL
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
NFL American Conference
East New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo South Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Cleveland Baltimore Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland
W 7 5 4 3 W 6 4 2 1 W 6 4 4 3 W 9 8 4 3
L 2 4 4 7 L 3 5 7 8 L 4 5 5 6 L 0 1 5 6
T Pct PF PA 0 .778 234 175 0 .556 169 231 0 .500 174 187 0 .300 199 259 T Pct PF PA 0 .667 222 193 0 .444 200 196 0 .222 170 248 0 .111 115 291 T Pct PF PA 0 .600 234 186 0 .444 172 197 0 .444 188 189 0 .333 179 218 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 215 111 0 .889 371 238 0 .444 212 202 0 .333 166 223
National Conference
East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 5 5 0 .500 274 258 Philadelphia 5 5 0 .500 252 244 N.Y. Giants 3 6 0 .333 165 243 Washington 3 6 0 .333 230 287 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 7 2 0 .778 265 163 Carolina 6 3 0 .667 214 115 Atlanta 2 7 0 .222 186 251 Tampa Bay 0 8 0 .000 124 190 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 3 0 .667 238 216 Chicago 5 4 0 .556 259 247 Green Bay 5 4 0 .556 245 212 Minnesota 2 7 0 .222 220 279 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 9 1 0 .900 265 159 San Francisco 6 3 0 .667 227 155 Arizona 5 4 0 .556 187 198 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 224 234 Thursday’s Game Minnesota 34, Washington 27 Sunday’s Games Detroit 21, Chicago 19 Philadelphia 27, Green Bay 13 Jacksonville 29, Tennessee 27 Baltimore 20, Cincinnati 17, OT St. Louis 38, Indianapolis 8 Seattle 33, Atlanta 10 N.Y. Giants 24, Oakland 20 Pittsburgh 23, Buffalo 10 Carolina 10, San Francisco 9 Denver 28, San Diego 20 Arizona 27, Houston 24 New Orleans 49, Dallas 17 Monday’s Game Miami at Tampa Bay, 6:40 p.m. Open: Cleveland, Kansas City, N.Y. Jets, New England Thursday, Nov. 14 Indianapolis at Tennessee, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 17 Baltimore at Chicago, 11 a.m. Oakland at Houston, 11 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Arizona at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. San Diego at Miami, 2:05 p.m. Minnesota at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. San Francisco at New Orleans, 2:25 p.m. Green Bay at N.Y. Giants, 2:25 p.m. Kansas City at Denver, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 18 New England at Carolina, 6:40 p.m. Open: Dallas, St. Louis
Eagles 27, Packers 13
Philadelphia 7 3 17 0—27 Green Bay 0 3 7 3—13 First Quarter Phi—Jackson 55 pass from Foles (Henery kick), 5:57. Second Quarter Phi—FG Henery 25, 1:16. GB—FG Crosby 26, :02. Third Quarter Phi—Cooper 45 pass from Foles (Henery kick), 11:21. Phi—FG Henery 41, 7:28. GB—Bostick 22 pass from Tolzien (Crosby kick), 3:22. Phi—Cooper 32 pass from Foles (Henery kick), :10. Fourth Quarter GB—FG Crosby 35, 12:19. A—78,011. Phi GB First downs 19 23 Total Net Yards 415 396 Rushes-yards 37-204 30-99 Passing 211 297 Punt Returns 0-0 1-2 Kickoff Returns 2-10 4-69 Interceptions Ret. 2-86 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 12-18-0 29-44-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-17 1-8 Punts 2-38.5 2-48.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 5-65 5-31 Time of Possession 25:36 34:24 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Philadelphia, McCoy 25-155, Foles 8-38, Brown 4-11. Green Bay, Lacy 24-73, Tolzien 1-19, Starks 4-5, Kuhn 1-2.
PASSING—Philadelphia, Foles 12-180-228. Green Bay, Tolzien 24-39-2-280, Wallace 5-5-0-25. RECEIVING—Philadelphia, Jackson 4-80, Cooper 3-102, Avant 2-25, Casey 1-8, Celek 1-7, McCoy 1-6. Green Bay, Boykin 8-112, Nelson 6-56, J.Jones 4-44, Bostick 3-42, Lacy 2-11, Kuhn 2-10, Starks 1-9, White 1-9, Quarless 1-8, R.Taylor 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Philadelphia, Henery 39 (WL). Green Bay, Crosby 53 (WR), 42 (WR).
Giants 24, Raiders 20
Oakland 10 7 3 0—20 N.Y. Giants 7 7 7 3—24 First Quarter Oak—Pryor 1 run (Janikowski kick), 14:07. NYG—Taylor 21 blocked punt return (J.Brown kick), 9:22. Oak—FG Janikowski 33, 3:21. Second Quarter NYG—Randle 5 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), 7:36. Oak—Porter 43 interception return (Janikowski kick), 1:18. Third Quarter Oak—FG Janikowski 24, 6:56. NYG—A.Brown 1 run (J.Brown kick), 2:15. Fourth Quarter NYG—FG J.Brown 23, 8:04. A—80,366. Oak NYG First downs 12 19 Total Net Yards 213 251 Rushes-yards 25-107 38-133 Passing 106 118 Punt Returns 1-(-1) 3-30 Kickoff Returns 2-77 1-19 Interceptions Ret. 1-43 1-65 Comp-Att-Int 11-26-1 12-22-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-16 3-22 Punts 6-42.3 4-30.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 3-2 Penalties-Yards 8-65 1-5 Time of Possession 27:58 32:02 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Oakland, Jennings 20-88, Pryor 5-19. N.Y. Giants, A.Brown 30115, Hillis 5-21, Manning 3-(minus 3). PASSING—Oakland, Pryor 11-26-1122. N.Y. Giants, Manning 12-22-1-140. RECEIVING—Oakland, D.Moore 3-45, Reece 3-30, Rivera 2-22, Jennings 2-19, Streater 1-6. N.Y. Giants, Nicks 4-49, Randle 3-50, Cruz 3-37, A.Brown 1-4, Hillis 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Lions 21, Bears 19
Detroit 7 0 7 7—21 Chicago 7 0 3 9—19 First Quarter Chi—Marshall 32 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 12:37. Det—Durham 5 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 5:57. Third Quarter Det—Johnson 4 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 12:58. Chi—FG Gould 25, 7:25. Fourth Quarter Chi—FG Gould 32, 9:17. Det—Johnson 14 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 2:22. Chi—Marshall 11 pass from McCown (run failed), :40. A—62,431. Det Chi First downs 21 19 Total Net Yards 364 338 Rushes-yards 26-145 20-38 Passing 219 300 Punt Returns 0-0 1-16 Kickoff Returns 3-71 4-114 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 1-35 Comp-Att-Int 18-35-1 27-49-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-12 Punts 4-44.5 5-42.6 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5-51 5-39 Time of Possession 28:25 31:35 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Detroit, Bush 14-105, Bell 10-41, Stafford 2-(minus 1). Chicago, Forte 17-33, Jeffery 2-5, Bush 1-0. PASSING—Detroit, Stafford 18-351-219. Chicago, Cutler 21-40-1-250, McCown 6-9-0-62. RECEIVING—Detroit, Johnson 6-83, Pettigrew 5-70, Bush 3-8, Ross 2-28, Fauria 1-25, Durham 1-5. Chicago, Jeffery 9-114, Marshall 7-139, M.Bennett 4-29, Forte 4-16, E.Bennett 2-10, Fiammetta 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Detroit, Akers 45 (WR).
Ravens 20, Bengals 17, OT
Cincinnati 0 0 3 14 0 —17 Baltimore 10 7 0 0 3 —20 First Quarter Bal—Clark 1 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 9:42. Bal—FG Tucker 36, 4:39. Second Quarter Bal—T.Smith 7 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 6:30. Third Quarter Cin—FG Nugent 32, 10:37. Fourth Quarter
Cin—Bernard 18 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 8:22. Cin—Green 51 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), :00. Overtime Bal—FG Tucker 46, 5:27. A—70,992. Cin Bal First downs 21 18 Total Net Yards 364 189 Rushes-yards 31-120 30-85 Passing 244 104 Punt Returns 6-62 3-17 Kickoff Returns 2-50 2-41 Interceptions Ret. 2-3 3-46 Comp-Att-Int 24-51-3 20-36-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-30 5-36 Punts 6-37.2 8-44.4 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 9-134 8-65 Time of Possession 37:58 37:02 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Cincinnati, Bernard 14-58, Green-Ellis 9-36, Dalton 6-22, M.Jones 1-7, Hawkins 1-(minus 3). Baltimore, Pierce 8-31, Rice 18-30, Taylor 1-18, Flacco 1-4, Leach 2-2. PASSING—Cincinnati, Dalton 24-51-3274. Baltimore, Flacco 20-36-2-140. RECEIVING—Cincinnati, Green 8-151, Bernard 8-37, Eifert 3-55, Sanu 3-26, Al.Smith 1-3, M.Jones 1-2. Baltimore, Rice 6-26, T.Smith 5-46, Dickson 3-28, J.Jones 2-17, Pierce 2-12, M.Brown 1-10, Clark 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Cincinnati, Nugent 42 (WL).
Steelers 23, Bills 10
Buffalo 3 0 0 7—10 Pittsburgh 0 10 7 6—23 First Quarter Buf—FG Carpenter 20, 6:16. Second Quarter Pit—FG Suisham 36, 8:47. Pit—Cotchery 5 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), 1:55. Third Quarter Pit—Bell 4 run (Suisham kick), 3:02. Fourth Quarter Pit—FG Suisham 37, 8:00. Pit—FG Suisham 23, 4:34. Buf—Gragg 2 pass from Manuel (Carpenter kick), :03. A—60,406. Buf Pit First downs 16 19 Total Net Yards 227 300 Rushes-yards 22-95 33-136 Passing 132 164 Punt Returns 4-15 2-74 Kickoff Returns 1-18 1-1 Interceptions Ret. 1-57 1-37 Comp-Att-Int 22-39-1 18-30-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-23 4-40 Punts 9-36.9 5-39.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 4-30 6-42 Time of Possession 24:44 35:16 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Buffalo, Jackson 12-55, Spiller 8-23, Manuel 2-17. Pittsburgh, Bell 22-57, Dwyer 6-38, Sanders 1-25, F.Jones 4-16. PASSING—Buffalo, Manuel 22-391-155. Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 18-30-1-204. RECEIVING—Buffalo, Gragg 4-25, Johnson 3-48, Chandler 3-21, Spiller 3-11, Jackson 3-7, Easley 2-13, Goodwin 2-9, Hogan 1-16, Graham 1-5. Pittsburgh, A.Brown 6-104, Sanders 4-13, Bell 3-39, Cotchery 2-31, Palmer 1-8, Miller 1-6, Dwyer 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Jaguars 29, Titans 27
Jacksonville 10 3 7 9—29 Tennessee 0 7 3 17—27 First Quarter Jax—Jones-Drew 6 run (Scobee kick), 13:29. Jax—FG Scobee 32, 6:31. Second Quarter Jax—FG Scobee 44, 10:47. Ten—Thompson 9 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bironas kick), :41. Third Quarter Jax—Todman 5 run (Scobee kick), 10:17. Ten—FG Bironas 39, 5:15. Fourth Quarter Ten—FG Bironas 37, 12:50. Jax—Team safety, 7:44. Ten—Fitzpatrick 4 run (Bironas kick), 4:15. Jax—Blackmon 21 fumble return (Scobee kick), 2:32. Ten—Walker 14 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bironas kick), :40. A—69,143. Jax Ten First downs 13 19 Total Net Yards 214 362 Rushes-yards 30-54 27-83 Passing 160 279 Punt Returns 2-6 2-15 Kickoff Returns 4-120 4-81 Interceptions Ret. 1-17 2-7 Comp-Att-Int 14-23-2 26-42-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-20 1-9 Punts 7-43.4 5-43.8 Fumbles-Lost 3-0 5-3 Penalties-Yards 4-19 6-45 Time of Possession 29:24 30:36
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Jones-Drew 21-41, Todman 3-11, Robinson 4-3, Sanders 1-0, Henne 1-(minus 1). Tennessee, C.Johnson 12-30, Greene 9-22, Locker 3-18, Fitzpatrick 3-13. PASSING—Jacksonville, Henne 14-232-180. Tennessee, Fitzpatrick 22-33-0264, Locker 4-9-1-24. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, JonesDrew 4-33, Lewis 3-39, Shorts III 2-42, Brown 2-40, Harbor 1-13, Burton 1-11, Todman 1-2. Tennessee, Wright 7-78, C.Johnson 5-43, Walker 4-62, Washington 3-29, Greene 3-10, Hunter 2-51, Thompson 1-9, Stevens 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Seahawks 33, Falcons 10
Seattle 3 20 3 7—33 Atlanta 0 3 7 0—10 First Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 39, 7:32. Second Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 43, 11:53. Atl—FG Bryant 53, 6:30. Sea—Kearse 43 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 5:33. Sea—FG Hauschka 44, 1:52. Sea—Tate 6 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), :01. Third Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 53, 7:49. Atl—D.Johnson 12 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 1:02. Fourth Quarter Sea—Lynch 1 run (Hauschka kick), 8:48. A—70,309. Sea Atl First downs 25 16 Total Net Yards 490 226 Rushes-yards 42-211 16-64 Passing 279 162 Punt Returns 3-55 0-0 Kickoff Returns 1-22 3-64 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 19-26-0 23-36-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 2-10 Punts 2-41.0 5-53.4 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 9-80 1-15 Time of Possession 35:30 24:30 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Lynch 24-145, Michael 8-33, Wilson 3-20, Turbin 7-13. Atlanta, Rodgers 3-31, Ryan 3-15, Jackson 9-11, Snelling 1-7. PASSING—Seattle, Wilson 19-26-0287. Atlanta, Ryan 23-36-0-172. RECEIVING—Seattle, Tate 6-106, Baldwin 5-76, Kearse 3-75, Lynch 3-16, Willson 1-19, Turbin 1-(minus 5). Atlanta, Douglas 7-49, Rodgers 5-28, Gonzalez 3-29, Snelling 3-25, Jackson 3-9, White 1-20, D.Johnson 1-12. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Rams 38, Colts 8
St. Louis 7 21 10 0—38 Indianapolis 0 0 8 0— 8 First Quarter StL—C.Long 45 fumble return (Zuerlein kick), 12:12. Second Quarter StL—Stacy 1 run (Zuerlein kick), 14:30. StL—Austin 98 punt return (Zuerlein kick), 10:28. StL—Austin 57 pass from Clemens (Zuerlein kick), 6:58. Third Quarter StL—Austin 81 pass from Clemens (Zuerlein kick), 13:55. StL—FG Zuerlein 32, 5:15. Ind—D.Brown 13 pass from Luck (Fleener pass from Luck), 1:35. A—66,004. StL Ind First downs 12 21 Total Net Yards 372 406 Rushes-yards 37-140 14-18 Passing 232 388 Punt Returns 4-145 3-25 Kickoff Returns 1-27 4-60 Interceptions Ret. 4-34 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 9-16-0 31-52-4 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-15 3-33 Punts 5-48.4 6-49.7 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards 8-46 2-20 Time of Possession 30:38 29:22 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—St. Louis, Cunningham 7-72, Stacy 26-62, Austin 1-4, Clemens 3-2. Indianapolis, Luck 4-17, Richardson 5-2, Havili 1-1, Herron 1-0, D.Brown 2-(minus 1), Hasselbeck 1-(minus 1). PASSING—St. Louis, Clemens 9-16-0247. Indianapolis, Luck 29-47-3-353, Hasselbeck 2-5-1-68. RECEIVING—St. Louis, Austin 2-138, Givens 2-54, Stacy 2-6, Cunningham 1-18, Cook 1-17, Harkey 1-14. Indianapolis, Hilton 7-130, D.Brown 5-64, Fleener 4-33, Whalen 3-36, Richardson 3-33, Heyward-Bey 3-30, Havili 3-25, Herron 1-57, Brazill 1-11, Reed 1-2. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Topple: Sean Lee suffers hamstring injury atoned for an early muffed punt that gave Making matters the Cowboys the ball on worse for Dallas was the Saints 22 after a diva hamstring injury to ing recovery by Dallas’ linebacker Sean Lee, Dwayne Harris. the Cowboys’ leading But with an energized tackler. nighttime crowd in the Sproles, whose conSuperdome roaring, the cussion one week earlier Cowboys had to call forced him to miss most timeout on third-andof the Saints’ 26-20 road short, then came back loss to the New York Jets, out an committed a false caught seven passes for start penalty. Dallas was 76 yards. then unable to convert Getting Colston for a first down and involved was another settled for Dan Bailey’s encouraging sign for the 37-yard field goal. Saints one week after the The Cowboys arrived veteran receiver sat out in New Orleans with the loss to the Jets. three wins in their preColston had seven vious four games, but catches for 107 yards. His faced a tough task in the touchdown catch was Superdome, where the the 60th of his career, all Saints have won coming from Brees. 12 straight night games On Colston’s touch(including two playoff down, Sproles made wins). a key block on blitzDallas was frustrated ing linebacker Barry offensively for much of Church, giving Brees the game. Star receiver enough time to throw Dez Bryant, covered over the middle. Colston mostly by Keenan Lewis, then slipped safety Jeff did not have his first and Heath’s tackle before div- only catch — a 44-yarder ing across the goal line. — until late in the third For Sproles, the key quarter. Jason Witten block was the first of was held to two catches several highlights that for 27 yards.
Continued from Page B-1
Panthers 10, 49ers 9
Carolina 0 7 0 3—10 San Francisco 3 6 0 0— 9 First Quarter SF—FG Dawson 52, 10:45. Second Quarter SF—FG Dawson 43, 13:34. SF—FG Dawson 25, 6:16. Car—D.Williams 27 run (Gano kick), 1:52. Fourth Quarter Car—FG Gano 53, 10:05. A—69,732. Car SF First downs 15 10 Total Net Yards 250 151 Rushes-yards 30-111 24-105 Passing 139 46 Punt Returns 5-65 3-35 Kickoff Returns 2-42 1-18 Interceptions Ret. 1-2 1-41 Comp-Att-Int 16-32-1 11-22-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-30 6-45 Punts 7-45.7 7-48.7 Fumbles-Lost 3-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards 3-25 4-25 Time of Possession 32:03 27:57 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Carolina, D.Williams 8-46, Stewart 13-41, Newton 7-17, Tolbert 2-7. San Francisco, Gore 16-82, Kaepernick 4-16, Hunter 3-8, James 1-(minus 1). PASSING—Carolina, Newton 16-321-169. San Francisco, Kaepernick 11-22-1-91. RECEIVING—Carolina, Smith 6-63, LaFell 4-48, Ginn Jr. 2-19, Tolbert 2-16, Olsen 1-14, Hixon 1-9. San Francisco, Manningham 3-30, Boldin 3-23, Gore 2-21, Miller 1-10, K.Williams 1-5, V.Davis 1-2. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Carolina, Gano 48 (WL).
Broncos 28, Chargers 20
Denver 7 14 7 0—28 San Diego 0 6 7 7—20 First Quarter Den—J.Thomas 74 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 9:18. Second Quarter SD—FG Novak 26, 14:58. SD—FG Novak 40, 9:05. Den—D.Thomas 11 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 6:38. Den—D.Thomas 7 pass from Manning (Prater kick), :13. Third Quarter Den—D.Thomas 34 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 11:34. SD—Woodhead 7 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 8:38. Fourth Quarter SD—Mathews 1 run (Novak kick), 10:42. A—68,847. Den SD First downs 22 20 Total Net Yards 397 329 Rushes-yards 22-84 35-131 Passing 313 198 Punt Returns 2-6 0-0 Kickoff Returns 4-103 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-36-0 19-29-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-17 4-20 Punts 5-46.6 5-47.6 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-28 6-40 Time of Possession 21:57 38:03 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Denver, Moreno 15-65, Ball 5-20, Manning 2-(minus 1). San Diego, Mathews 14-59, R.Brown 9-36, Woodhead 6-27, Rivers 5-7, Weddle 1-2. PASSING—Denver, Manning 25-36-0330. San Diego, Rivers 19-29-0-218. RECEIVING—Denver, Moreno 8-49, D.Thomas 7-108, J.Thomas 3-96, Decker 3-52, Welker 3-21, Green 1-4. San Diego, Gates 4-62, Allen 4-41, Woodhead 4-17, V.Brown 3-35, Royal 2-36, Green 1-25, Mathews 1-2. MISSED FIELD GOALS—San Diego, Novak 37 (WL).
Cardinals 27, Texans 24
Houston 7 10 0 7—24 Arizona 7 7 6 7—27 First Quarter Ari—Shaughnessy 6 fumble return (Feely kick), 14:46. Hou—A.Johnson 7 pass from Keenum (Bullock kick), 5:55. Second Quarter Ari—Housler 12 pass from Palmer (Feely kick), 13:57. Hou—Griffin 2 pass from Keenum (Bullock kick), 9:37. Hou—FG Bullock 48, 6:31. Third Quarter Ari—FG Feely 35, 6:06. Ari—FG Feely 21, :02. Fourth Quarter Ari—Roberts 19 pass from Palmer (Feely kick), 6:42. Hou—A.Johnson 5 pass from Keenum (Bullock kick), 4:34. A—60,845.
Saints 49, Cowboys 17
Dallas 3 7 7 0—17 New Orleans 7 21 7 14—49 First Quarter Dal—FG Bailey 37, 8:14. NO—Colston 22 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 3:23. Second Quarter Dal—Murray 7 run (Bailey kick), 14:05. NO—Thomas 1 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 5:09. NO—Sproles 3 run (Hartley kick), 1:32. NO—Sproles 28 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), :05. Third Quarter NO—Ingram 4 run (Hartley kick), 2:12. Dal—Williams 21 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), :41. Fourth Quarter NO—Stills 52 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 12:43. NO—Thomas 1 run (Hartley kick), 5:44. A—73,018. Dal NO First downs 9 40 Total Net Yards 193 625 Rushes-yards 16-89 38-242 Passing 104 383 Punt Returns 0-0 4-18 6-132 0-0 Kickoff Returns Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 10-24-0 34-41-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-24 1-9 Punts 8-50.4 1-33.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 11-82 6-44 Time of Possession 20:28 39:32 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Dallas, Murray 16-89. New Orleans, Ingram 14-145, Thomas 1787, Sproles 5-12, McCown 2-(minus 2). PASSING—Dallas, Romo 10-24-0-128. New Orleans, Brees 34-41-0-392. RECEIVING—Dallas, Hanna 3-11, Witten 2-27, Bryant 1-44, Williams 1-21, Beasley 1-18, Murray 1-6, Harris 1-1. New Orleans, Colston 7-107, Sproles 7-76, Thomas 7-24, Graham 5-59, Stills 3-75, Ingram 2-15, Meachem 1-17, Moore 1-14, Watson 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS—New Orleans, Hartley 37 (WR).
Injury Report
The updated National Football League injury report, as provided by the league: MIAMI DOLPHINS at TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS DOLPHINS: OUT: T Jonathan Martin (illness). DNP: LB Jelani Jenkins (foot), LB Koa Misi (knee). LIMITED: CB Dimitri Patterson (groin), TE Dion Sims (toe), K Caleb Sturgis (right groin). FULL: CB Nolan Carroll (concussion), S Chris Clemons (hamstring), LB Dannell Ellerbe (calf), G Nate Garner (knee). BUCCANEERS: DNP: RB Doug Martin (shoulder), G Carl Nicks (foot), WR Chris Owusu (foot). LIMITED: CB Danny Gorrer (groin). FULL: LB Mason Foster (elbow), S Dashon Goldson (knee), G Davin Joseph (knee), RB Erik Lorig (toe), DT Akeem Spence (wrist), S Keith Tandy (ankle), LB Dekoda Watson (shoulder).
ALL-TIME SINGLE-SEASON LEADERS Passing Yards
Player (Age at time) Drew Brees (32) Tom Brady (34) Drew Brees (33) Dan Marino+ (23) Drew Brees (29) Matthew Stafford (23)
Yards Season 5,476 2011 5,235 2011 5,177 2012 5,084 1984 5,069 2008 5,038 2011
Rolling: Manning completes 25 passes Continued from Page B-1
Saints running back Mark Ingram celebrates his touchdown during the second half against the Cowboys on Sunday. BILL HABER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hou Ari First downs 17 19 Total Net Yards 235 332 Rushes-yards 21-76 29-97 Passing 159 235 Punt Returns 2-12 6-74 Kickoff Returns 5-118 2-38 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-43-0 20-32-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-42 1-6 Punts 7-58.9 5-43.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-2 Penalties-Yards 7-53 5-29 Time of Possession 28:52 31:08 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Houston, Tate 15-56, Keenum 2-13, D.Johnson 4-7. Arizona, Ellington 11-55, Mendenhall 13-42, Taylor 2-6, Palmer 2-(minus 2), Peterson 1-(minus 4). PASSING—Houston, Keenum 22-43-0201. Arizona, Palmer 20-32-1-241. RECEIVING—Houston, Hopkins 6-69, A.Johnson 5-37, Posey 3-34, Tate 3-8, G.Graham 2-18, G.Jones 1-19, D.Johnson 1-14, Griffin 1-2. Arizona, Roberts 5-72, Housler 4-57, Fitzgerald 3-23, Floyd 2-31, Ellington 2-18, Ballard 1-15, Dray 1-9, Mendenhall 1-9, Brown 1-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Houston, Bullock 40 (BK).
and third quarters, staking the Broncos to a 28-6 lead. Julius Thomas had a 74-yard catch-and-run on Denver’s first drive, turning a short pass into the second-longest play by a tight end in team history. The Broncos’ scoring drives lasted 57 seconds; 2 minutes, 27 seconds; 1:25 and 3:26. Manning has thrown for 3,249 yards and 33 touchdowns in nine games. He completed 25 of 36 passes against the Chargers. The Chargers (4-5) closed the gap late in the second half but couldn’t catch up. Manning’s big afternoon was marred only when rookie linebacker Tourek Williams hit Manning from behind and knocked the ball loose, with Donald Butler recovering at the Denver 11 midway through the third quarter. Two plays later, Philip Rivers found Danny Woodhead for a 7-yard scoring pass. The Chargers pulled to 28-20 on Ryan Mathews’ 1-yard touchdown run on third down with 10:42 to play. A week earlier, the Chargers had the ball first-and-goal from
the Washington 1 before Woodhead was stuffed and Rivers threw two incompletions before settling for a field goal to force overtime. The Redskins won 30-24. San Diego settled for field goals of 26 and 40 yards by Nick Novak in the second quarter. Novak was wide left on a 37-yard attempt with 1:38 left before halftime. That gave Manning enough time to move the Broncos 73 yards in nine plays, all passes, capped by his 7-yard scoring throw to Demaryius Thomas for a 21-6 lead before halftime. Manning threw only one incompletion that drive. The Broncos got the opening kickoff of the second half and went 78 yards in eight plays, with Thomas’ 34-yard TD catch giving the Broncos a 28-6 lead. The Chargers finished the game without left tackle King Dunlap, who sustained his third concussion this season, and center Nick Hardwick, who had a stinger. Rookie right tackle D.J. Fluker moved to left tackle. Rivers completed 19 of 29 passes for 218 yards.
SPORTS
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
In brief
NFL ROUNDUP
ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Chris Kirk survived a wild back nine Sunday to win the McGladrey Classic, thanks to one big mistake by Briny Baird that kept him winless in 365 starts on the PGA Tour. Kirk closed with a 4-under 66 for his second career win, though he received plenty of help from Baird. They were tied for the lead playing the 18th hole at Sea Island when Baird drove into a fairway bunker, the ball blow his feet. He topped a 4-iron that went about 90 yards and into a hazard. Kirk only had to make par for a one-shot win over Baird (67) and Tim Clark (62). The victory sends Kirk to the Masters for the first time. He had been living at Sea Island for the last six years until moving back to Atlanta. It was a crushing loss for Baird, who now has six runner-up finishes since the 41-year-old first joined the PGA Tour in 1999.
The Associated Press
Baltimore tops Bengals in OT
Kirk takes home McGladrey title
Harvick claims AdvoCare 500 AVONDALE, Ariz. — As Kevin Harvick streaked to victory when Carl Edwards ran out of fuel on the last lap Sunday, Jimmie Johnson streaked toward a sixth NASCAR championship. Johnson finished third at Phoenix International Raceway to widen his lead in the Sprint Cup standings to a sizable 28 points over Matt Kenseth, who finished 23rd, with only one race left. The season finale, and the last of the 10 races in NASCAR’s Chase for the Cup playoff, is next Sunday at HomesteadMiami Speedway in Florida. Johnson kept his No. 48 Chevrolet among the leaders for most of the AdvoCare 500 despite two close calls that nearly sent him spinning out of control. But Kenseth’s No. 20 Toyota was ill-handling from the start. Combined with a botched pit stop later in the race, Kenseth kept losing more ground to Johnson, who entered the race with a seven-point lead.
Djokovic joins Nadal in ATP final LONDON — Defending champion Novak Djokovic set up an enticing final against Rafael Nadal with a 6-3, 6-3 victory Sunday over Stanislas Wawrinka at the ATP World Tour Finals. Nadal ended Roger Federer’s hopes of finishing a disappointing season on a high note, defeating the six-time champion 7-5, 6-3 in the other semifinal. Unbeaten in his round-robin matches this week, the secondseeded Djokovic extended his winning streak to 21 matches since losing in the U.S. Open final to Nadal. The two will play for the title Monday. The world’s two highestranked players are unbeaten in London this week and have faced each other five times this season, with Nadal winning three times. After losing a set in each of his three previous matches, Djokovic raised his game Sunday by making only 14 unforced errors and breaking Wawrinka four times. “The performance was definitely by far the best I’ve had in the tournament,” said Djokovic, who is bidding for a third title at the elite event and has been the dominant player of the indoor season.
Findley, RSL beat Timbers 4-2 SANDY, Utah — Robbie Findley scored a go-ahead goal in the first half and had an assist in the second half, leading Real Salt Lake to a 4-2 victory over the Portland Timbers in the first leg of the Western Conference finals on Sunday night. Chris Schuler, Devon Sandoval and Javier Morales also scored for Salt Lake, which will take a two-goal advantage into the second leg of the series on Nov. 24th. Salt Lake scored three goals in a 15- minute stretch starting with Schuler’s tally in the 35th that tied it 1-1. New Mexican wires services
B-5
BALTIMORE — Justin Tucker kicked a 46-yard field goal with 5:27 left in overtime, and the Ravens won after blowing Ravens 20 a 17-point halftime Bengals 17 lead and giving up a touchdown on the final play of regulation. The tense victory ended a three-game skid for the Ravens (4-5) and thrust them into a second-place tie in the division, just one game behind Cincinnati (6-4) in the loss column. It was the defending Super Bowl champions’ first victory since Oct. 6. The Bengals have lost two straight in overtime. Panthers quarterback Cam Newton passes as 49ers linebacker Corey Lemonier pursues during the first quarter on Sunday in San Francisco. BEN MARGOT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Injuries take toll on San Francisco Tight end Davis and safety Reid to undergo concussion evaluations as Panthers keep reign as NFC champs By Janie Mccauley
The Associated Press
S
AN FRANCISCO — First, tight end Vernon Davis went down with a concussion. Then it was standout rookie safety Eric Reid. Perhaps more concerning for San Francsico than a lackluster 10-9 defeat to the Panthers on Sunday is the loss of a key player from each side of the ball along with a handful of other injuries as the reigning NFC champions head into the season’s stretch run. With two tough road games up next, too. Drayton Florence intercepted a pass by Colin Kaepernick in the final minute to seal it as the Panthers snapped the 49ers’ fivePanthers 10 game winning streak. Coach Jim Har49ers 9 baugh didn’t yet know much about how Davis and Reid were doing. “Just saw them in the locker room, and they seemed as good as could be expected,” he said. Still, both players will be put through a concussion protocol involving several different steps and an evaluation once they become symptom-free. The Niners (6-3) hit the road next week for New Orleans, then go to Washington. “We’ll do what we do: Bounce back, regroup, refit and reorganize, and come back this week,” Harbaugh said. Davis didn’t return after sustaining a concussion in the second quarter, then Reid went down on a helmetto-helmet hit on Mike Tolbert in the third. Earlier, Reid recovered a fumble to give him five takeaways in an already-stellar rookie season that also includes three interceptions. Graham Gano kicked a 53-yard field goal with 10:05 remaining that held up as the Panthers (6-3) twice shut down Kaepernick on last-ditch drives with swarming defense. DeAngelo Williams broke two tackles for a 27-yard touchdown run late in the first half that pulled Carolina within 9-7. Gano missed wide left on a 48-yard field goal in the third period, but came through later. San Francisco got the ball back with 5:25 left at its 1, then again with 1:02 to go. Phil Dawson kicked a season-best 52-yard field goal among his three for the 49ers, who failed to recover a pair of Carolina fumbles in the closing moments. Jonathan Stewart fumbled, and Mike Tolbert pounced on
the ball. Cam Newton recovered his own bobble. This was hardly the highly touted showdown between 2011 No. 1 overall pick Newton and Kaepernick, the sixth quarterback drafted that year, in the second round. They roomed together during the scouting combine. Kaepernick went 11 for 22 for 91 yards with an interception and was sacked six times for a 42.0 passer rating. Newton was only slightly better, going 16 of 32 for 169 yards, an interception and four sacks for a 52.7 rating. “It’s unacceptable. We have a number of weapons on offense. We just have to do a better job of making it happen,” wide receiver Anquan Boldin said. “Offensively, we didn’t get it done. It’s all on us.” For two teams that have been putting up points at a prolific pace for the past month, the defenses dictated this one. Frank Gore had 16 carries for 82 yards, accounting for most of San Francisco’s 151 total yards. Dawson put San Francisco ahead on a 52-yard field goal on the team’s opening drive, then kicked secondquarter field goals of 43 and 25 yards. But Kaepernick could never get his team in the end zone. “For the most part, I don’t really think they did anything that necessarily confused us,” 49ers center Jonathan Goodwin said. “They only gave up nine points. It’s hard not to give them credit. We expected it to be a physical game. Did we expect to only score nine points? Nah.” 49ers pass-rushing specialist and 2012 All-Pro linebacker Aldon Smith played about a dozen snaps after missing five games to undergo treatment for substance abuse. “Oh, it’s special to see a dominant player like that back,” cornerback Tarell Brown said. Wide receiver Mario Manningham started and had three catches in his season debut, nearly 11 months after a serious left knee injury that required surgery. When San Francisco’s Andy Lee had his punt blocked at the end of the first quarter, Florence tried to get out of the way, but went to grab the ball at the last second and it got away from him. Reid wrestled the ball from Josh Thomas for his second fumble recovery of the season and fifth takeaway. Carolina got going after managing only minus-7 yards passing and 12 total yards in the first quarter. The Panthers finished with 250 total yards. “This one really did come down to the way the defense played,” Panthers coach Ron Rivera said. “Any time you put yourself in a position where you can force the other team to kick field goals, you get a chance to win.”
NFL INJURY REPORT
Three quarterbacks sidelined The Associated Press
Three starting quarterbacks had to come out of their games Sunday afternoon. Already without franchise quarterback Aaron Rodgers because of a left collarbone injury, the Packers lost backup Seneca Wallace to a groin injury at Lambeau Field. In Nashville, Tennessee’s Jake Locker was lost to an injured right foot that had him on crutches and in a walking boot in the second half. And in Chicago, Jay Cutler threw for 250 yards and a touchdown in his first action since he injured his groin last month. He looked progressively worse as the game wore on and departed before the Bears’ final drive with what the team said was an ankle injury. Three teams, three lost quarterbacks, three losses — all at home. Just like last week, Packers coach Mike McCarthy had to adjust on the fly after losing his starting quarterback on the first series. Third-stringer Scott Tolzien, who played college ball at Wisconsin and was just signed off the practice squad this week, filled in
well enough with 280 yards and a touchdown with two interceptions. But quarterback play was hardly a concern as Philadelphia’s Nick Foles exposed the suspect Green Bay secondary in a 27-13 win. In Tennessee, the Titans rallied late against Jacksonville. They scored twice in the final 4:15, the last on a 14-yard TD pass by Ryan Fitzpatrick to Delanie Walker with 40 seconds left. But Johnathan Cyprien recovered the onside kick to seal the 29-27 victory. Now, the Titans likely will be without Locker on Thursday night. He hurt his right foot in the second quarter at the end of an option keeper and left the stadium on crutches wearing a walking boot. Locker said he will have more tests Monday to determine the extent of the damage but said he’s hoping it’s not a season-ending injury. “I can’t imagine in four days he’d able to play, as sore as he was,” Tennessee coach Mike Munchak said of Locker. In Chicago, Cutler was replaced by Josh McCown, who drove the Bears right downfield, throwing an 11-yard touchdown pass to Brandon
Marshall with 40 seconds left. After a roughing penalty on Willie Young gave the Bears another chance at the tying 2-point conversion, Nick Fairley threw Matt Forte down in the backfield to preserve the 21-19 win for Detroit. “I just felt really restricted in the pocket in what I was able to do and it wasn’t getting out as quick, and some of the throws didn’t have as much on them as I wanted,” Cutler said. “And I knew Josh was ready to go, and I just didn’t want to get to a point where I was hurting us more than I was helping us.” Cutler said he isn’t sure if he will be able to play next Sunday against Baltimore. In San Diego, Peyton Manning hurt his right ankle when he was hit by Corey Liuget as the Broncos ran out the clock in the closing minutes of a 28-20 win over the Chargers. Manning stayed in the game. Also, Dallas’ Sean Lee left the game Sunday night against the New Orleans Saints because of a hamstring injury. In San Francisco, 49ers tight end Vernon Davis and rookie safety Eric Reid each sustained concussions against Carolina.
CARDINALS 27, TEXANS 24 In Glendale, Ariz., Carson Palmer threw two touchdown passes, and the Cardinals sent the Texans to their franchise-record seventh consecutive loss. The Texans (2-7) were without coach Gary Kubiak, who collapsed on the sidelines against Indianapolis last Sunday night with what was diagnosed as a ministroke. Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips is filling in as interim coach. Arizona (5-4) scored on the game’s first play when John Abraham knocked the ball out of Case Keenum’s arm and Matt Shaughnessy returned it 6 yards for a touchdown. Keenum threw three touchdown passes, two on remarkable catches by Andre Johnson. LIONS 21, BEARS 19 In Chicago, Calvin Johnson had two second-half touchdown receptions, Reggie Bush rushed for 105 yards, and the Lions took over first place in the NFC North. Johnson broke Herman Moore’s franchise record with his 63rd career touchdown reception with 2:22 to go, giving the Lions a 21-13 lead with a 14-yard grab. He also had a tiebreaking 4-yard TD reception on the first drive in the third quarter. Bush had 89 yards on the ground in the second half as Detroit (6-3) swept the season series against Chicago (5-4). SEAHAWKS 33, FALCONS 10 In Atlanta, Russell Wilson threw a pair of touchdowns passes, and Marshawn Lynch ran for 145 yards in a one-sided follow-up to last season’s NFC divisional playoffs. After struggling for victories the last two weeks, the first-place Seahawks (9-1) blew out a team that not so long ago was talking Super Bowl, but now is just two defeats away from its first losing season since 2007. The Falcons (2-7) trailed 23-3 at the half after the Seahawks scored a touchdown with 1 second remaining — a complete reversal of their postseason game last January. RAMS 38, COLTS 8 In Indianapolis, Tavon Austin returned one punt 98 yards for a touchdown, caught TD passes of 57 and 81 yards and almost single-handedly ended the Rams’ three-game losing streak. The touchdown catches were the only receptions Austin had on his biggest day of the season, and St. Louis (4-6) won for the first time since Kellen Clemens replaced the injured Sam Bradford. It was the Colts’ worst loss since a 55-point thrashing at New Orleans in 2011. Indy (6-3) fell for the second time at home this season and only the third time in coach Chuck Pagano’s career. Robert Mathis had two sacks for the Colts, giving him a 13 1-2. EAGLES 27, PACKERS 13 In Green Bay, Wis., a week after tying the NFL record by passing for seven TDs, Nick Foles connected for three long touchdowns against the injury-ravaged Packers. Foles connected with DeSean Jackson for a 55-yard score in the first half. Touchdown passes to Riley Cooper from 45 and 32 yards highlighted a 17-point second half for the up-tempo Eagles. The Eagles, the NFL’s road warriors, improved to 5-5, with all their victories coming away from Philly. Philadelphia handed Green Bay its first back-to-back home losses since 2008, Rodgers’ first season as the starter. It was the worst home loss for the Packers since falling 38-10 to the New York Jets on Dec. 3, 2006. GIANTS 24, RAIDERS 20 In East Rutherford, N.J., Terrell Thomas returned an interception 65 yards to set up a go-ahead 1-yard touchdown run by fellow comebacker Andre Brown, and the Giants won their third straight game. The error-prone Giants (3-6) handed the Raiders (3-6) their first 17 points on first-half turnovers. But they got 115 yards rushing by Brown in his first game this season — he’s had two broken left legs the last two years — and another big defensive game to keep their season alive. Despite throwing another pick-6, Eli Manning threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Rueben Randle, and Cooper Taylor scored on a 21-yard return with a blocked punt. Josh Brown added a field goal. STEELERS 23, BILLS 10 In Pittsburgh, the Steelers shut down rookie quarterback E.J. Manuel in his return. A week after giving up 610 yards and 55 points in a loss to New England, Pittsburgh held the Bills (3-7) to 227 total yards, more than one-third coming on a meaningless drive in the final minutes. Manuel completed 22 of 39 passes for 155 yards with a touchdown and an interception. The Steelers limited Buffalo to 95 yards rushing, nearly 50 below its average, and sacked Manuel three times.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad call
986-3000 or Toll Free (800) 873-3362 or email us at: classad@sfnewmexican.com »real estate«
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
OUT OF TOWN
St. Michael Hospital Corridor
Multi-use 28,000 sq.ft. building, on 1.67 acres. Priced to sell under two million dollars. Owner will finance. Old Santa Fe Realty 505983-9265.
PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000 OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395 PLEASE SEE PHOTOS ON PECOSRIVERCLIFFHOUSE.COM
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SANTA FE CONDO
1804 San Felipe Circle, Beautiful midcentury multi generational Stamm Home, significant additions, upgrades, and remodeling. Must See to Believe. Main, Guest, 3,352 squ.ft., 4 bedroom, 3 bath, cul-de-sac lot on Acequia, 2 plus car garage, private well, incredible irrigated landscaping. $565,000. Sylvia, 505-577-6300.
RANCHO VIEJO near SFCC. 2 room, 2.5 bath 1642 sq.ft. grades, storage, 2 car garage, AC/Heat, gas fireplace. Views, parks. $1400 pets negotiable. 670-3581
bedUpW/D, near 505-
RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000
MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com
ESPANOLA VALLEY Property, 10 acres and old farmhouse. Water rights for irrigation, borders Highway 76 and Santa Cruz River. $375,000, owner will finance. 702-499-9821.
GUESTHOUSES
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, Laundry facility on site, fire place, balcony, patio, near Walmart. $625 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, laundry hookups, fireplace, single story complex. $699 month. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RANCHO SIRINGO ROAD , fenced yard, fireplace, laundry facility on-site. $725 month. One Month Free Rent, No Application Fees.
Large one bedroom including loft two bath $1350 One bedroom one bath $900 Modern kitchens and appliances, New carpet and paint. 505-603-0052.
Sunny and inviting one bedroom furnished Tesuque guesthouse. Portal, vigas, saltillo tile, washer & dryer, no pets, no smoking, $1095 including utilities. 982-5292.
PECOS STUDIO, 3/4 bath wood burning stove. large front yard $400 monthly plus propane. Also, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, garage, storage $750. 505-795-2245
HOUSES FURNISHED
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath in quiet fourplex, near Trader Joe’s. Includes washer, dryer, NO pets, NO Smoking. $850 monthly. 626-466-6737.
SUNSET VIEWS: charming 1 bedroom, 700 sq.ft. $655, deposit plus utilities. Laundry access. Cats ok. East Frontage Road. 505-699-3005.
2 BEDROOM 1 bath, utilities paid. Off Airport Rd. $850 monthly. $700 deposit. Available November 1st. 505474-2887.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
2 Bedroom Apartmant off Agua Fria Behind Home Depot. Available Now! Call 505-603-4622 for details.
2 bedroom, non-smoker, no pets $600, $1200 deposit required. Appointment only. 505-471-2929
ESPANOLA
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
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
CALL 986-3000
NORTHSIDE TOWNHOME, minutes from Plaza. New carpet, paint, updated. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1000SF. Washer, Dryer hook-up. Courtyard. $1300, monthly + gas, electric + DD. 505259-4433.
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
$800 HILLSIDE STREET. 1 BEDROOM. Great neighborhood. Walk to Plaza. Utilities included. Private patio. Clean. Off-street parking, Nonsmoking. No pets. Quiet Tenant Preferred! 505-685-4704 RIO RANCHO ENCHANTED HILLS, SPECTACULAR VIEW, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, minutes from I-25, RailRunner. See online ad photos, description $265,000. 505-771-2396
»rentals«
LOTS & ACREAGE
813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY: 2 available, Live-in Studio & 1 Bedroom, both have Full kitchen and bath, plenty of closet space with gas and water paid. Studio: $680 and 1 Bedroom: $750. DOWNTOWN, 104 FAITHWAY: Live-in studio, Full bath and kitchen, tile throughout, fireplace. $760 with all utilities paid. 1425 PASEO DE PERALTA , 1 bedroom, full kitchen and bath, small living room, tile throughout, free laundry, $735 with all utilities paid.
STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648
2 BEDROOM, 1 1/2 Bath, 2 Car Garage. Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher, Kiva Fireplace, Private Courtyard, Skylights. Sunset, Mountain Views. Walk to Plaza. Small Pets. $1,500 monthly. 505-660-4585. DOS SANTOS, one bedroom, one bath, upper level, upgraded, reserve parking. $800 Western Equities, 505-982-4201 NICE 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 1.5 bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoking. No pets. $825 plus utilities. Unfurnished. Calle De Oriente Norte. Year lease. 505-983-4734
REDUCED PRICES! 3 bedroom, 2 bath plus 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment. $380,000. 5600 sq. ft. warehouse, $280,000. 5 bedroom 4600 sq.ft. 1105 Old Taos Highway, $480,000. 3.3 acres Fin del Sendero, $145,000. 505-470-5877 UNIQUE THREE bedroom, three bath, Park Plazas home offers privacy and Jemez Mountain v i e w s . Large family room - guest suite. Beautiful remodeled kitchen. 438-0701 by appointment.
VIA CAB 2587 CALLE DELFINO Total remodel, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car, 2 Kiva, 7 skylights, tile, AC. Huge lot $290,000. 505-920-0146
Abiquiu
Peaceful, sublime acreage. Panoramic views. Pedernal, O’Keeffe country. Spiritual Retreat. Near Abiquiu lake, 62 acres. Just $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001
BUILDING SITE 2.5 Acres, all utilities plus well, at the end of St. francis Dr. and Rabbit Rd. on Camino Cantando. Views, views, views! Beautiful land, vigas, latillas and lumber included. $280,000, 505-603-4429.
APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750 2 BEDROOM, $800 Utilities paid, fireplace, charming, clean, 5 minute walk to Railyard, No Pets, 505-471-0839
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED ONE BEDROOM EFFICIEN CY apartment for rent, available immediately. $675.00 per month, including utilities. $300.00 cleaning deposit. No Pets, No Smoking. Contact phone number: 505-204-4777 (please leave voice message).
PARK PLAZAS! 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath, 1,350 sq.ft. Private end unit, attached two car garage. $1,150 monthly plus utilities. No pets or smoking. Available 11/15. 505-471-3725.
CHECK OUT THE AMAZING AUTUMN MOVE-IN SPECIALS we’re offering this month on our sunny, spacious Studios & Large 2 Bedroom Apartments! You won’t believe the savings! The new management & 24 hour professional maintenance teams at Las Palomas ApartmentsHopewell Street are ready to show you how easy life can be when you love where you live. Call 888-4828216 for a tour today. Se habla español.
RARELY AVAILABLE North Hill compound 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2000 square feet. Minutes to Plaza. Mountain & city light views. 2 Kiva Fireplaces, fabulous patio, A/C, washer & dryer, freezer, brick style floors, garage. $1,950 monthly, includes water. 1 level private end unit. 214-491-8732
HISTORIC REMODELED ADOBE , 1 bedroom 1 bath with yard. In the downtown area minutes to the Plaza. $850 monthly.
Chamisa Management Corporation, 505-988-5299
POJOAQUE CASITA. Fully furnished 1 bedroom, 2 bath. Baseboard heat, lots of trees, open space. $700 monthly plus $350 deposit. Some utilites. No smoking, no pets. Call, 505-455-3902.
$1425 MONTHLY. BEAUTIFUL Rancho Viejo 3 bedroom, 2 bath hom e with gas rock fireplace, granite counter-tops, evaporative cooler, enclosed spacious walled yard. NonSmoker. 505-450-4721. www.ranchoviejo.shutterfly.com/pict ures/16
CHARMING 1 BEDROOM Compound. Private Patio. Lots of light. Carport, Laundry facilities. No pets. Non-smoking. $600 monthly, $600 deposit. (505)474-2827
CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, new heater, super clean. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References required. No Credit Check. 505-4705188
AWESOME VIEWS, 8 miles from Plaza. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Short term rental for winter season. Wifi, directtv, sauna, utilities included. VERBO# 406531. $1,500 monthly. 505-690-0473
$1125 MONTHLY. BRIGHT, A T TRACTIVE, REMODELED HOME, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057.
CAMINO CAPITAN, one bedroom, one bath in quiet fourplex, fireplace, off street parking. $650 Western Equities 505-982-420.
(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.
Sunset views, 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-699-6161.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405
PUEBLO STYLE, CUSTOM BUILT 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Drop dead Sangre views, minutes from the hospital. LOGIC REAL ESTATE 505-820-7000
AFFORDABLE LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA
T O W N H O U S E , 1200 square feet. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Garage, patio, storage, large kitchen. Beautifully furnished. Convenient location. $1100 monthly. 866-363-4657
GUESTHOUSES EASTSIDE WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936
2 BEDROOM, 1-1/2 BATH Country living on Highway 14, Northfork. Approximately 900 square feet. Horse friendly. $850 monthly. Deposit required. Pets negotiable. 505-920-9748
2 BEDROOM 1 bath adobe home. Freshly remodled. Columbia Street. $1,050 monthly plus utilities. Available now! 505-983-9722. 2 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATHS TOWNHOME, RANCHO VIEJO. 1150 sq.ft. 2 car garage. Across from park. $1250 monthly plus utilities. 505-471-7050 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH, 2 car garage, washer, dryer. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golf course. Near Cochiti Lake. $900. 505-359-4778, 505-980-2400. 2BR, 1BA, Adobe House in scenic Chimayo. Minutes from El Santuario. Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator, $700 monthly + Utilities, No smoking. References required. 505-662-3927.
service«directory CALL 986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! ANIMALS
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
505 Go K9 Sit Pet Sitting in your home.
References available, insured, Call Michelle, 505-465-9748, michelle@petsits.com or visit 505GoK9Sit.com
CABINETRY LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073
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!
CHILDCARE
CLEANING
CLEANING
CONSTRUCTION
FLORES & MENDOZA’S PROFESSIONAL MAINTENENCE. Home and Office cleaning. 15 years experience, references available, Licensed, bonded, insured. (505)7959062.
REMODELING. Our Specialty is Showers. Expert workmanship. License #58525 since 1982. Life-time Workmanship Warranty. 505-466-8383
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
FIREWOOD
A.C.E. PLASTERING INC. Stucco, Interior, Exterior. Will fix it the way you want. Quality service, fair price, estimate. Alejandro, 505-795-1102
GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE
Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed and Insured. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072
Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117
HANDYMAN
Clean Houses in and out. Windows, carpets. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m, For More Information Please Call Miranda 505-467-8623
DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and office with TLC. Excellent references. Nancy, 505-986-1338.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPING
PLASTERING
ROOFING
COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510
A+ Cleaning
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.
HANDYMAN
YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 years experience, Residential & offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655
CONCRETE Cesar’s Concrete.
Concrete work, Color, Stamp, and Acid Wash. Masonry work. Licensed, bonded, insured. License# 378917. Call Cesar at 505-629-8418.
AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PROPANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877
MOVERS PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.
PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119.
ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call, Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760. ROOFING PRO Panel, shingles, torch down. Also restucco parapets, repair plaster and sheet rock damage.All phases of construction. 505-310-7552.
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, near Rodeo Yucca. New Energy efficient windows, air conditioning, garage, enclosed yard. Non-smoking, small pet ok, $1150 plus utilities. 505-930-8124
COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948.
3 bedroom, 1 bath. Single car garage, quiet street, wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1100 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196.
EASTSIDE ADOBE. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, fireplace, hardwood floors, washer, dryer. Off-street parking $1600 monthly, some utilities included. 303-908-5250 ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603
3 BEDROOM 2 bath adobe. 1,900 sq.ft. 3 car carport, enclosed yard, pets ok. $1,300 monthly. Includes utilities. $1,300 deposit. Available 12/1/13. 505-470-5877. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190
LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271 LEASE & OWN. ZERO DOWN! PAY EXACTLY WHAT OWNER PAYS: $1200 includes mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance (HOA). ZIA VISTA’S LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CONDO. Save thousands. Incredible "Sangre" views. 505-204-2210
4 BEDROOM, 1 3/4 baths, washer, dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered patio, storage, central location. $1800 plus utilities, deposit, 1-yr lease, no pets, no smoking. 505-9820266.
PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $895 plus utilities DESIRABLE NAVA ADE COMMUNITY 3 bedroom, plus library, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, enclosed backyard, 2 wood burning fireplaces, $1695 plus utilities LOCATED AT THE LOFTS ON CERRILLOS This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities CHARMING AND CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 bedroom, 1 bath, wood & tile floors, enclosed backyard, additional storage on property $1100 plus utilities EXQUISITE SANTA FE COMPOUND PROPERTY situated on 5 acres, boasts majestic mountain views, 6200 sqft of living space, 8 bedrooms, 7 baths, 2 car garage. $3500 plus utilities. Call for personal showing ARROYO HONDO (SF) award winning contemporary gated 4 acres. Bright, spacious 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, plus guest quarters - studio. $5000 monthly + utilities. 505-9860046 CHARMING NEIGHBORHOOD. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Wood stove, laminate & tile. 1700 square feet. $1400. www.enchantedcity.com 505-204-3309
MALE, looking for roommate. Share 3 bedroom 2 bath home. Beautiful garden, deck. Off St. Michael’s, $582. 505-988-5836. NAVA ADE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Garage, all appliances. Fireplace, storage unit, Access to clubhouse (workout, pool). Low maintenance. 1500 sq.ft. $1,350. 505-660-1264 PRIVATE SMALL HO U SE on 5 acres lots of trees off Old Las Vegas Highway. $875 month, includes water. C o n t a c t wellness@hypnosissantafe.com
REDUCED PRICE FOR RENT OR SALE:
4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage; approximately 3200 sq.ft. enclosed yard, private cul-de-sac, mountain views. Beautiful house in Rancho Viejo. $2,000 + deposit + utilities. Call Quinn, 505-690-7861. REFURBISHED. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH $1000 monthly plus utilities. Nonsmoking, no pets. Behind DeVargas Mall, 10 minute walk to Plaza or Railyard. 505-690-3116, 505-438-8983.
TESUQUE, 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath on horse property, wood stove, no dogs, horses possible. $800 monthly plus electric. 505-983-8042
LIVE IN STUDIOS
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE 1200 & 600 SQUARE FEET
800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906
986-3000
STORAGE SPACE
LOT FOR RENT
TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE
"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"
505-989-9133
VACANCY
1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH
Single & Double Wide Spaces
GET NOTICED!
BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
CALL 986-3000
$600. 2 small bedrooms. Very clean, quiet, safe. Off Agua Fria. Has gas heating. Pay only electric. No pets. 505-473-0278
$975 + UTILITIES, OFFICE S U IT E , GALISTEO CENTER. Two bright, private offices plus reception area, kitchenette, bathroom. Hospital proximity. Available November 15th. 518-672-7370
NEW SHARED OFFICE
$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS
Private desk, and now offering separate private offices sharing all facilities. Conference room, kitchen, parking, lounge, meeting space, internet, copier, scanner, printer. Month-To-Month. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280. Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $450 monthly. 505-690-5092
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 ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.
4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00 WAREHOUSES
Opportunity Knocks!
1,500 sq.ft. industrial unit with nice office, half bath, overhead door, high ceilings, sky lights, parking, absolutly no automotive. $900 monthly plus utilities. No better deal in town! Call 505-438-8166.
WORK STUDIOS Arroyo Hondo Studio 4 acre compound. 1,000 ft, with loft. Overhead door, views, quiet, W/D. $600, monthly, plus utilties. 505-670-7958. FURNISHED, CHARMING Studio Apartment. No Pets. Use of nice patio. Walking distance to Plaza. $650 monthly. All utilities paid. 505-9836184.
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Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
CALL 986-3000
»announcements«
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
ROOMMATE WANTED
FOUND
1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.
FOUND, YOUNG FEMALE DOG. Cerrillos and Maez Ave area. Call to describe. 720-620-7497.
WOMEN’S WHITE Gold or Silver Ring with 3 stones. Found in La Casa Sena Parking Lot on October 30, 2013. 505660-7913.
STORAGE SPACE
PUBLIC NOTICES
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330
I AM looking for my sister Rita (Martinez) this is Trudy, email racerwife@hotmail.com, her birthday is in April & grew up in Santa Fe.
Fri. | Nov. 15th | 12pm-6pm Sat. | Nov. 16th |10am-2pm SEASONAL FULL/PART POSITIONS INDOOR/OUTDOOR EOE
www.twitter.com/sfnmsports
ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCED BILINGUAL tax preparer wanted. Must have prior experience and be willing to work Saturdays. Directax 505-473-4700.
FULL-TIME BOOKKEEPER
THE Santa Fe Animal Shelter seeks a full-time bookkeeper. The ideal applicant must have at least an Associates Degree in accounting, be personable, have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be proficient in Quickbooks and Excel. Multitasking ability, strong focus skills and the ability to meet deadlines is required. Salary dependent on experience.
Fax resumes to: 505-820-6901 or email rhernandez@sfhumesociety. org. No phone calls please.
ADMINISTRATIVE NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RECEPTIONIST/CONSTITUENT SERVICES ASSISTANT PROVIDE HIGH level professional support to internal/external constituents; assist with meetings and conferences. Required: 5 yrs of administrative experience, (2 yrs association or membership experience preferred), excellent customer service, proficiency in all Microsoft Office programs, excellent written and verbal communication, some travel/extended hours. Excellent benefits package; salary commensurate with experience. Email resume and three professional references to info@nmcounties.org by 11/15/13.
The Santa Claran Casino Hotel is hiring Food & Beverage managers and line cooks. Pay DOE. Applicants my apply on-line at www.santaclaran.com
MANAGEMENT AUDUBON SEEKS an Executive Director to lead its program in NM. To apply, please visit the Career Center at audubon.org. BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is Hiring Assistant Managers at two Santa Fe Locations! Pay DOE, 35-40 hours per week. Contact Lupe at L F e r n a n d e z Marquez@lotaburger.com to apply.
MEDICAL DENTAL
DENTAL ASSISTANT
needed for busy dental office in tiny mountain town of Angelfire, NM. Must be positive, multi-tasker. Love of snow is a plus. E m a i l resume with cover letter to Daniela: affdentistry@yahoo.com. HELP NEEDED WITH INSURANCE EXAMS in Santa Fe & surrounding areas. Contract position. Must be proficient in drawing blood and reliable. Call (505)296-9644 Veronica.
P C M is hiring PCAs, Caregivers (FT & PT Hours), LPNs, RNs, for in-home care in the Santa FE, NM area. PCA, Caregiver $11 hourly, LPN $25 hourly, RN $32 hourly. Call 866-902-7187 Ext. 350 or apply at: procasemanagement.com EOE
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS?
DRIVERS
At the Ski Area in the La Casa Cafeteria
flock to the ball.
HOSPITALITY
Smith’s is now accepting applications for an EXPERIENCED BAKER. Retail experience preferred. Apply in person at 224 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur or apply online at www.smithsfoodanddrug.com, select store location 426.
HIRING RECEPTIONIST, FULL-TIME ENTRY LEVEL. 10.51 HR, WITH FULL BENEFITS. FAX RESUME: 505-982-0788 OR CALL VICTORIA 505-982-8581
HIRING FAIR
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»jobs«
PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available
AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122
2000 SQUARE foot space with high ceilings & 2 overhead doors. Office, bath. Great for auto repair. $1600 monthly. 505-660-9523
MANUFACTURED HOMES
OFFICES
LIVE AMONG Pines near Plaza. 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Wood floors, kiva fireplace, front, back yards, washer, dryer. NO smoking, 2 car garage. $1,700 monthly. 505670-6554
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
to place your ad, call
B-7
Check out the coupons in this weeks
Lincare, leading national respiratory company seeks caring service representative. Service patients in their home for oxygen and equipment needs. Warm personalities. Age 21 plus who can lift up to 120 pounds should apply. CDL with DOT a plus or obtainable. Growth opportunities are excellent, drug free workplace. EOE. Apply at 712 West San Mateo, Santa Fe, NM 87505.
TV book
The Santa Fe New Mexican is seeking an
A1 editor with excellent news judgment to help anchor its presentation desk at night. Our editors do it all: Write accurate, punchy headlines; spot holes in stories while editing for AP style; design clean, eye-catching pages and graphics; and keep our website up-to-date and looking sharp. We’re seeking candidates with at least two years of experience in editing and design. Email your cover letter, resumé and five best design clips to Presentation Editor Brian Barker at bbarker@sfnewmexican.com.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL DENTAL
COMPUTERS
TRADES
SANTA FE CARE CENTER ADMISSIONS COORDINATOR
WE are now taking applications for an Admissions Coordinator. Full-time Hourly Position. Primary Duties Include: Conducts tours/ inquires for prospective admissions. Completes required admission paperwork. Develops marketing plan with Marketing Liaison to increase referrals to SFCC. LTC exp. a plus. Outstanding interpersonal skills a must. LPN/SW License a plus but sales experience required. If interested please submit a resume to the Attn. of the Administrator or to come by our facility and fill out an application.
UNIT MANAGER
2 Full-time Unit Managers. The position requires that you must be a REGISTERED NURSE. The duties will be to help the DON, Oversight & Systems Management. This is a salary position.
ATTN: CNA’S
We have a CNA positions available. The hours are as follows: 6a.m. 6:30p.m., and 6p.m. to 6:30a.m. 3 days a week!
Please contact Raye Highland, RN/DON, at 505982-2574, or come fill out a application at: Santa Fe Care Center 635 Harkle Rd Santa Fe, NM
An award-winning weekly newspaper based in the Rocky Mountains ski town of Angel Fire, N.M., the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle has an immediate opening for a staff writer/page designer who will work 30 hours per week. The person in this position will write stories and take photos for the newspaper and its special sections and help with page layout once a week. The ideal candidate will have a degree or experience in journalism, a strong grasp of AP style and a fervor for both hard and soft news. Experience in page layout is preferred. The pay for this position is $12.82 per hour without medical benefits. Send your résumé, three clips and samples of page design to Managing Editor Jesse Chaney at news@sangrechronicle.com or PO Drawer 209, Angel Fire, NM 87710. Deadline is 5 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2013. EOE.
986-3000
PREMIER RESALE
Email resume to:eviechec@sfhumanesocie ty.org. No phone calls please.
ASSISTANT MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
HVAC, Pool Certified, electrical, plumbing, painting experience required. Competitive pay & benefits. Drug test required. santaferesume@gmail.com HIRING ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMAN OR APPRENTICE. 2 years experience, Valid Driver’s license, Background check required. Pay DOE. Contact Allied Electric, 505-438-8899.
AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $70. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.
FURNITURE 1950’S MAHAGONY drop-leaf table. Rectangular, 28"x36", extends to 60"x36". 4 ladder-back chairs. Very good condition. $490, OBO. 505-9882761
DOMESTIC
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
986-3000
CLASSIC CARS
1982 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505471-3911
»animals«
2005 FORD Thunderbird 50th Anniversary Edition! Convertible with only 52k miles! $15,500. Mint condition. 505-363-2592
APPLIANCES DRYER. $100. 505-662FRIDGE. $100. 505-662-
1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339
CARVED PINE bench, 34" high, 17" deep, 42" wide. Double - full cotton futon with trifold wooden frame. Call 505-983-8606.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
for activists rally Immigrants,
"FREEMONT" STARTED under saddle. 3 year gelding Mustang. Very gentle. Would make good kid horse. USFF Adoption, $475. John, 505-419-9754.
PETS SUPPLIES
WHIRLPOOL WASHER. $100. 505-6626396.
4X4s
Locally owned
and independent
to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,
rights at Capitol
Tuesday,
February
8, 2011
Local news,
www.santafenew
A-8
SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN
50¢
mexican.com
for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary E.J. Martinez
The New
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.
CALL 986-3010
Toy Box Too Full?
CAR STORAGE FACILITY
DOG HOUSE, Precision-Wood, Medium Size, Good Condition $60. 505982-2791.
BUILDING MATERIALS PLYWOOD. G1S. 4’x8’ sheets. Different thicknesses. 505-983-8448 STEEL BUILDING Allocated Bargains 40x60 on up. We do deals. www.gosteelbuildings.com Source# 18X 505-349-0493
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
CLOTHING BLACK LEATHER COAT. SIZE MED-LG. GOOD CONDITION . $30. 505-474-9020.
1921 MASON and Hamlin, Model A, 5.8" Concert Baby Grand, wonderful condition. $24,500. Please call for an appointment. 505-984-9849
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT NEVER BEEN USED 48" sandwich prep table, with under counter refrigeration. 3 year compressor warranty. $1,600 OBO. 505-852-0017 RANCHILLO SINGLE- G R O U P EXPRESSO MACHINE. 110 volt. Plus expresso grinder. $1200 for both. LARANZATO SINGLEGROUP EXPRESSO MACHINE, $1000. 505-8988999
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS
EARLY THANKSGIVING DEADLINES
PAPER
»cars & trucks«
BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING.
CLASSIFIEDS
TRADES
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
HORSES
WHIRLPOOL 6396.
Have an eye for detail? Love sorting the good from the bad? Want to help animals? The Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s premier resale store, Look What The Cat Dragged In 2 on West Cordova Road, seeks a part-time Sales Associate. Must have excellent customer service skills, previous cashier experience. Some heavy lifting required.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
»merchandise«
WHIRLPOOL 6396.
SALES MARKETING
986-3000
LIFESTYLE RF545 Recumbent Bike. With health monitor. Perfect condition. Easy riding! $100. 505-474-9020
STAFF WRITER, PAGE DESIGNER
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
to place your ad, call
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 ITALIAN WATER DOGS. 4 MONTH OLD PUPPIES, CRATE TRAINED. 25-35 lbs, non-shedding. Free training and daycare. $2,000. Excellent family or active retiree pet. Call Robin, 505-6606666. WHITE AKC Labrador Retriever Puppies! Excellent Bloodlines! Visit www.hufflabs.com or call 719-5880934.
DOMESTIC
1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $16,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862
1991 CAMARO RS, Runs Good, Ttop, $2,000. 575-483-5987 TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2002 with 108k miles, clean title. $2900. Please call or text me anytime at 762-359-0324.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
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DEADLINE
RETAIL DISPLAY
Tuesday, Nov. 26 & Wednesday, Nov. 27 Friday, November 22, 3:00p.m Thursday, November 28 Monday, November 25, 1:00p.m. Pasatiempo, November 29 Monday, November 25, Noon Friday, November 29 Tuesday, November 26, Noon Saturday, November 30 Tuesday, November 26, 2:00p.m. Sunday, December 1 Wednesday, November 27, Noon Monday, December 2 Wednesday, November 27, 4:00p.m. TV Book, Sat., December 7 Friday, November 29, 4:00p.m. Faith Directory, Saturday, Nov. 30 Tuesday, November 26, Noon Bulletin Board, Sunday, Dec 1 Wednesday, November 27, 11:00a.m. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Tuesday, Nov. 26 & Wednesday, Nov. 27 Friday, November 22, 3:00p.m Thursday, November 28 Monday, November 25, 1:00p.m. Friday, November 29 Tuesday, November 26, Noon Saturday, November 30 Tuesday, November 26, 2:00 p.m. Sunday, December 1 Wednesday, November 27, Noon Monday, December 2 Wednesday, November 27, 4:00p.m. CLASSIFIED LINERS Thursday, November 28 Wednesday, November 27, Noon Friday, November 29 Wednesday, November 27, 2:00p.m. OBITUARIES Thursday, November 28 Wednesday, November 27, Noon Friday, November 29 Wednesday, November 27, 2:00p.m. Death Notices – After the above deadlines, phone the New Mexican through Wednesday, Nov. 27, at 505-986-3035. LEGALS Tuesday, December 3 Wednesday, November 27, 9:30a.m. THRIFTY NICKEL Thursday, November 28 Monday, November 25, Noon
The offices of The New Mexican will be closed on Thursday, Nov. 28 and will re-open on Friday, Nov. 29 at 8am. While normal distribution will occur on the 28th, Circulation Customer Service will be closed and the call center will reopen at 6 a.m. on the 28th.
Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds 4X4s
IMPORTS
to place your ad, call IMPORTS
986-3000 IMPORTS
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! SUVs
IMPORTS
REDUCED!
95 MITSUBISHI Montero, mechanically sound, second owner, service receipts. $3,200. 505-231-4481.
2007 Land Rover Range Rover Supercharged SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.
2009 TOYOTA
2001 JAGUAR-XK8 CONVERTIBLE Local Owner, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 77,768 Original Miles, service RecordS, Custom Wheels, Books, X-Keys, Navigation, Soooo Beautiful! $12,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE
MATRIX WAGON4 AWD Another One Owner, Local, 74,000 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Pristine. $13,250 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.
2013 VW GTI with only 4,000 miles. Carbon Steel, 4-door, 6-speed manual with Laguna wheels. Factory warranty. Perfect. $23,000. 505-4669248.
CLASSIFIEDS
2011 VOLKSWAGEN-TDI JETTA WAGON MANUAL Another One Owner, Carfax, Garaged Non-Smoker 54,506 Miles, Service Records, 42 Highway 30 City, Loaded, Pristine $20,750. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
Where treasures are found daily
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
PICKUP TRUCKS
2006 LEXUS GS 300 AWD. Just in time for winter, AWD sports sedan, recent trade, absolutely pristine, Lexus for less $17,891. Call 505216-3800. 2001 TOYOTA Tundra 4x4 Limited Access Cab. Single owner. New tires. Well maintained with records. Clean interior. All the extras plus shell and bed liner. 187,000 miles. $10,400. 505699-3731
2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium. 25,321 miles, AM/FM stereo with CD player, Bluetooth hands-free. $23,771. Call 505-216-3800.
2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.
2008 TOYOTA SEQUOIA-4X4 PLATINUM Another One Owner, Local, Carfax, Service Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Navigation, Rear Entertainment, Third Row Seat, Leather, Loaded. Pristine $28,300. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
IMPORTS
2002 LEXUS LS 430 LUXURY SEDAN Local Owner, Carfax, Every Service Record, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-keys, New Tires, Loaded, Afford-ably Luxurious, $13,750, Must See! WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book. Was $29,995. REDUCED TO $28,995. 505954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2010 NISSAN Titan Crew Cab PRO4X. 4x4, local trade-in, clean CarFax, immaculate, new tires $22,321. Call 505-216-3800.
1992 LEXUS SC 400 . 101k miles, garaged, fine condition. $6,000. 1-405323-2569
2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C HYBRID FWD Another One Owner, Carfax, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, 14,710 Miles, City 53, Highway 46, Navigation, Factory Warranty. $19,850. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! 2007 MERCEDES C280 4matic. Only 65k miles!, All wheel drive, loaded, recent trade, clean CarFax, must see $15,471. Call 505-2163800.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
ATVs
2007 Red Club Car XRT 4x4 UTV with dump bed. $5,000. 505-470-5595.
2010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i Premium. Only 24k miles! AWD, heated seats, moonroof, 1 owner clean CarFax $16,951. Call 505-216-3800.
2008 TOYOTA Sienna LE. Just 59k miles, another 1-owner Lexus trade-in! clean CarFax, immaculate condition $15,941. Call 505-2163800.
2011 HONDA CIVIC COUPE One owner, no accidents, 28k miles, automatic, factory warranty. Silver with grey interior, nonsmoker. Below Blue Book $13,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
»recreational«
1987 Galion Road Grader. $10,000. 505470-5595.
BICYCLES
SUVs
2004 TOYOTA HIGHLANDERSUV 4X4 Another One Owner, Local, 85, 126 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, Third Row Seat, New Tires, Pristine. $13,950 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
SALE! ECO MOTIVE ELECTRIC BIKES.
(5) Storm 300’s, New. Pedal bike with electric assist. $1000. 505-690-9058 2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.
CAMPERS & RVs 1977 Prowler 16ft Trailer, Sleeps 6, Excellent Condition. Oldie but Goodie! Great for hunters or families $3,000 OBO. 505-660-4963.
2008 Land Rover LR2 HSE SUV. Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, tires are in excellent condition. 52,704 miles. Very clean interior. No accidents! Well maintained. $18,995. Call 505-474-0888. 1999 MERCEDES-BENZ E320 Excellent condition . 93k miles, no accidents, everything works, Barolo red metallic with tan leather. Was $6,995. REDUCED TO $5,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged SUV. 86,695 miles, Rear Seat Entertainment, Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, Roof Rail System, and much more. $29,995. Call 505-474-0888.
2010 T o y o t a 4Runner Trail V6 SUV . 43,338 miles, Remote Engine Start, One owner, No accidents! $29,995. 505-474-0888.
2005 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. $4400. BEST COLOR COMBO, BLACK MAGIC OVER BLACK. FACTORY RECARO SEATS, ALL WEATHER FLOOR MATS, BLACK MAGIC EXTERIOR, BLACK & GRAY CLOTH INTERIOR. CALL, 224999-0674
2010 TOYOTA Prius III. Just 21,000 miles! Package 3 with navigation, 1 owner clean CarFax. $19,761. Call 505-216-3800.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2005 VOLVO XC90. SUV, V-8, Black. AWD. Low mileage, 34,490. Loaded: GPS, sunroof, leather seats, 7passenger. Like new. $16,000. 505881-2711
2010 MINI Cooper Clubman S. Just 19k miles, turbocharged, super well-equipped, Navigation, leather, panoramic roof, 1 owner clean CarFax $22,731. Call 505-216-3800.
2009 TOYOTA Prius III. ANOTHER super low mileage Prius, 22k miles, package 3, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one $15,931. Call 505-2163800.
2009 TOYOTA Corolla LE. Only 53k miles! Another 1 owner clean CarFax trade-in! Super nice, fully serviced $12,961. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000
LEGALS STATE OF NEW MEXICO FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE
2006 VOLVO-C70 CONVERTIBLE FWD Another One Owner, Local, 36,974 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax,Garage,Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Convertible Fully Automated, Press Button Convertible Or Hardtop. Soooooo Beautiful, Pristine. $18,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .
sfnm«classifieds
to place legals, call
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com
LEGALS STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY
LEGALS STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF IN THE MATTER OF IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF NORTHE ESTATE OF JOE W. THE ESTATE OF STE- MAN GILBERT, DEWOOD, DECEASED PHEN E. CASE, CEASED. No. 2013-0122 NO .D - 0101- P B -2 013- Case No. 2013-0153 NOTICE TO 00172 CREDITORS Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY NOTICE TO GIVEN that the underCREDITORS NOTICE TO signed has been apCREDITORS pointed personal repNOTICE IS HEREBY resentative of this esGIVEN that Rachel C. NOTICE IS HEREBY tate. All persons havWood has been ap- GIVEN that Nancy ing claims against pointed Personal Case has been ap- this estate are reRepresentative of the pointed personal rep- quired to present Estate of Joe. W. resentative of this es- their claims within Wood, Deceased. All tate. All persons hav- two(2) months after persons having ing claims against the date of the first claims against this this estate are re- publication of this noestate are required to quired to present tice, or the claims will present their claims their claims within be forever barred. within two months two (2) months after Claims must be preafter the date of the the date of the first sented either to the first publication of publication of this no- undersigned personal this notice or the tice, or the claims will representative at the claims will be forever be forever barred . address listed below barred. Claims must Claims must be pre- or filed with the Probe presented either sented either to the bate Court of Santa to the undersigned personal representa- Fe, County, New MexiPersonal Representa- tive, Nancy Case, at co, located at the foltive, c/o Hinkle, the following ad- lowing address: 102 Hensley, Shanor & dress: c/o The Engel Grant Ave. Santa Fe, martin, LLP, attn: Law Firm, PO Box NM 87501 Nancy S. Cusack, Post 2521, Santa Fe, NM Dated: September 26, Office Box 2068, Santa 87504-2521, or filed 2013 fe, NM 87504, or filed with the Probate Jody Kent with the District Court of Santa Fe Signature of Personal Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, Representative County, New Mexico, located at 102 Grant 26 Camino de Mision 225 Montezuma Ave- Avenue, Santa Fe, NM Chimayo, NM 87522, nue, Santa Fe, NM 87501. 505-699-0010 87501. DATED: This 5th day Legal#95905 Rachel C. Wood of November, 2013. Published in the SanRobert A. Engel ta Fe New Mexican Legal #95935 Attorney for the Es- on: November 11, 18, Published in The San- tate of Stephen E. 2013 ta Fe New Mexican on Case PO Box 2521 November 11 and 18, Santa Fe NM 87504 2013. 505-424-1404 Legal #95924 You can view your Published in The Sanlegal ad online ta Fe New Mexican on To place a Legal ad November 11, 18 2013 at
Call 986-3000
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B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November 11, 2013
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS
LEGALS
Notice of Public Sale Pursuant to NEW MEXICO STATUTES 48-II-I TO 48-II-9: Notice is hereby given that on the 2 1 s t day of November, 2 0 1 3 open bids will be accepted, and the entirety of the following storage units will be sold to satisfy storage liens claimed by A-1 Self Storage in Santa Fe. A-1 Self Storage reserves the right to refuse any and all bids or cancel sale without notice. All accepted bids must be paid immediately with cash. All goods must be removed from the facility within 48 hours. Owners of the units may pay lien amounts by 5pm November 20th, 2013 to avoid sale. Sale will be held beginning at 9:00 AM at A-1 Self Storage 3902 Rodeo Road. Units to be sold at 3902 Rodeo Road, Unit # B003, David Cordova, P.O. Box 5896, Santa Fe, NM 8750 2, Futon, Couch, Pillow/Blanket, Clothing, Kitchen Utensils, Wood Dresser, Doll House/Toys, Vacuum, Microwave, Mattress, Canned Food, Dishes, Pots, Pans, Amplifier, Bookshelf, Ironing Board; Units to be sold at 1311 Clark Road, Unit # 1078, Jedidiah Huson, 4677 W. Alameda Street, Santa Fe, NM, 87501 , 7+Boxes, 10 Trash Bags, 1 Space Heater; Unit #1159, Barbra Olivas, 243 Maynard Street, Santa Fe, NM, 87501; 3 Tables, 10+ Plastic Bins, 2 Patio Chairs, 1 TV Stand, 1 Kids Bike, 1 High Chair, 5+ Boxes, 2 Frames, 1 Stroller; Units to be sold at 2000 Pinon Street, Unit # 426, Christina Eustace, P.O. Box 140, Chochiti Pueblo, NM 8 7 0 7 2 , Dolly, Metal Rack, Book Shelf, Boxes, Chairs, Vacuum, Kitchen Items, Microwave; Unit 720, Jesse Sandoval, 2531 Camino Espuela, Santa Fe, NM 87505, 4 Mattresses, Fan, Multiple Boxes, Multiple Plastic Bins, Multiple Wrapped Items; Units to be sold at 1591 San Mateo Lane, Unit # 4076, Thomas & Bertha A. Baca, 2924 Calle Princessa, Santa Fe, NM 87507 , Portable Heater, Fan, Misc. Boxes, Lamp, Table; Unit # 3047, Edmund (Ned) Bittinger, 1323 Escalante Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Table, chairs, Dolly, TV, Fan, Couch, Suitcases, Bike, Coat Rack; Unit 4007, Jeff Blum, 1111 Schmock Drive, Green Bay, WI 54303, Bike, Futon Mattress, Boxes, Back Pack, Containers; Unit # 3088, Chris Cordova, 241 ½ Irvine Street #6, Santa Fe, NM 87501, 2 Grills, Aquarium, Yard Tools, Kerosene Heater, Christmas Tree Stand, Ladder, Jack Stands; Unit 1530, Trinon Couch, 60 E. San Francisco Street, Ste. 213, Santa Fe, NM 87501; Computer, Keyboard, Box spring, Lights, Boxes, Exercise Ball; Unit # 1713, Ivy Daniels, 1398 Bishops Lodge Road, Santa Fe, NM 87506, Empty Boxes, Chair, Printer, 9+ Boxes, Storage Bin, Wooden Boxes, Tripod; Unit 2055, Toni LynumYoung, 5999 Airport Road #G, Santa Fe, NM 87507; Couch, Love Seat, Boxes, Tent; Unit # 1610, Gilbert Mendiola, 2093 Calle Lorca, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Large TV, Stereo Receiver, DVD, Misc. Storage Boxes; U n i t # 2008, Randy Murray, P.O. Box 31580, Santa Fe, NM 87594 , Wicker chairs, Brass Bed, Head Board, Bookshelf, Furniture, Bench, Shelves, Misc. Collectables, Spare Tire, Folding Table; Unit # 2128, Theresa Sanchez, P.O. Box 744, Tesuque, NM 87574, Boxes, Christmas Decorations, 3rd Row Van Seat, Wall- Paper, Lamps, chairs, Ladder; Unit 4035, Ezequiel Santos, 6151 Airport Road #1988, Santa Fe, NM 8 7 5 0 7 , Power Tools, Cart, Buckets, Table, TV, Gas Can; U n i t #1564, William & Tina Smith, County Road 49 # 12, Chimayo, NM 87522, Mattress, Box Spring, Clothing, Crock Pot, Bed Frame; Unit # 2140, Patrick & Marie Tarin, 8007 Pilgrim Drive, Amarillo TX, 79119-4904, 2 File Cabinets, 2 Ladders, Chairs, Mattress, Od Furniture, Coffee Pot, Bookshelf, Lawn Chairs, Rug, Boxes; Units to be sold at
1224 Rodeo Road, Unit # 64, Anthony & Tommie Wirz, P.O. Box 24005, Santa Fe, NM 87502, 16 Boxes, 1 Grey Small Case;
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Legal #95946 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 4 and 11, 2013. STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT EVA WOODS, Plaintiff, No. D-101-CV-2013-02439 vs. ESTATE OF MATTIE T. COX, ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF MATTIE T. COX, ESTATE OF ORVILLE MILTON COX, ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF ORVILLE MILTON COX, MARTHA BOYLE AND UNKNOWN HEIRS OF MARTHA BOYLE, E I L E E N STEIGERWALT AND ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF EILEEN STEIGERWALT, EUGENE M. COX ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF EUGENE M. COX, ESTATE OF CLINTON A. GRANT, ESTATE OF MARY E. GRANT, ARTHUR GRANT, AND ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF INTEREST IN THE SUBJECT PROPERTY, Defendants. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS AND CLAIMANTS TO THE FOLLOWIN DECEASED PERSONS: MATTIE T. COX, ORVILLE MILTONCOX, EUGENE COX, CLINTON A. GRANT, AND MARY E. GRANT; ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF MARTHA BOYLE AND EILEEN STEIGERWALT; AND ALL OTHER UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS WHO MAY CLAIM A LIEN, INTEREST OR TITLE ADVERSETO THE PLAINTIFF. GREETINGS: 1. Plaintiff Eva Woods rightfully owns the following described property in Santa Fe County, New Mexico: Lying and being situated within Exc. 348, P.C. 429; Exc. 349, P.C. 430 and Comp. 165 P.C. 431, within the Santa Clara Pueblo Grant, in Sec. 2, T20N, R8E, N.M.P.M. in the City of Espanola, County of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, more particularly described as follows: Lot 1 and Lot 2 as shown on survey entitled "Survey of Lands for Mr. and Mrs. Clinton A . Grant" as prepared by A. Dean Miller, PE & LS 2589 and recorded in Book 462, page 153 in February of 1980. Lot 3, Lot 4 and Lot 5 as shown on survey entitled "Survey of Lands for Mr. and Mrs. Clinton A. Grant" as prepared by A. Dean Miller PE & LS 2589 and recorded in Book 462, page 153 in February of 1980. Easements for underground utilities and road easement for ingress and egress comprising a width of 20 ft. as platted. (the Subject Property). 2. You are directed to serve a pleading or Motion in response to the Complaint on file in this cause within thirty (30) days after publication of this Notice and file the same, all as provided by law. 3. You are notified that, unless you so serve and file a responsive pleading or Motion, the Plaintiffs will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint and a Default Judgment may be entered. 4. You may obtain a copy of the Complaint by contacting the attorney for the Plaintiffs: Lor alee Hunt, Esq. Hu nt Law, PC 116 E. Country Club Ros well, NM 88201 1976
(575)623-
5. The general object of this cause is
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to place legals, call
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LEGALS
j to quiet title to the above-described property in the Plaintiffs, the true and correct owners thereof.
p p y subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. Legal #95919 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 4, 11, 18, 25 2013
6. Once this cause has been prosecuted to its end, the ownership of the Subject Property will be established as set out in the Complaint on file herein and any and all Defendants will be barred and forever estopped from having or making any claim to these interests. DATED this 17th day of October, 2013. Stephen T. Pacheco, CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY By: Court Clerk Legal #95796 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 11, 18, 25 2013 THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. 04011
D-101-CV-2009-
NATIONSTAR GAGE LLC,
MORT-
Plaintiff, vs. GIUSEPPE QUINN and DANIELLE REDDICK, Husband and wife; ABC Corporations I-X, XYZ Partnerships I-X, John Does I-X, Jane Does IX, THE UNKNOWNHEIRS AND DEVISEES OF ANY OF THE ABOVE, IF DECEASED, Defendants,
NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE P L E A S E TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the "Property") situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, commonly known as 41 Vereda Corta, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87507, and more particularly described as follows: LOT THREE-C (3C) AS SHOWN ON PLAT ENTITLED, "LAND DIVISION FOR RUDY FERNANDEZ WITHIN SHC 426, TRACT 2 IN SECTION 31, T 17N, R9E, NMPM…" FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, SANTA FE COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, ON MARCH 11, 1991, IN PLAT BOOK 220, PAGE 36, AS DOCUMENT NO. 731171.
NOTICE is hereby given that on May 7, 2013, Application No. RG-93821 into RG70151 for Permit to Change an Existing Water Right was filed with the OFFICE OF THE STATE ENGINEER by Rebecca and Larry Montano, 1429 Bishops Lodge Road, Santa Fe, NM 87506. The applicant seeks an additional point of diversion to existing adjudicated well RG93821, located at a point where X = 1,737,900.277 and Y = 1,727,124.993 NMSP (NAD 83 - feet), on 3.19 acres described as tract 1 and tract 2 within Section 31, T18N, R10E, NMPM and owned by Rebecca and Larry Montano, for the diversion of 3.0 acrefeet of water per annum (afa) used for domestic and livestock purposes at 1429 Bishops Lodge Road, in Tesuque, Santa Fe County, NM. Existing adjudicated well RG-93821 is not capable of reliably supplying the needs of the property and is inaccessible for repair. Well RG-93821 will be retained for emergency use.
Existing permitted well RG-70151 will serve as the additional point of diversion for the 3.0 afa water right associated with RG-93821, and is located at a point where X = 1,737,831.414 and Y = 1,726,837.710 NMSP (NAD 83 - feet). Well RG-70151 is currently permitted for the diversion of 3.0 afa for domestic purposes at the above described 3.19 acres of land owned by the appliThe sale is cants. to begin at 11:30 a.m. on December 18, 2013, Any person, firm or on the front steps of corporation or other the First Judicial Dis- entity having standtrict Courthouse, City ing to file objections of Santa Fe, County of or protests shall do Santa Fe, State of so in writing (legible, New Mexico, at which signed, and include time I will sell to the the writer’s complete highest and best bid- name and mailing adder for cash in lawful dress). The objection currency of the Unit- to the approval of the ed States of America, application must be the Property to pay based on: (1) Impairexpenses of sale, and ment; if impairment to satisfy the Judg- you must specifically ment granted identify your water and/or (2) Nationstar Mortgage rights; P u b l i c LLC. N a t i o n s t a r welfare/conservation Mortgage LLC was of water; if public awarded a Judgment welfare or conserva(IN REM) on August tion of water within 20, 2013, in the princi- the state of New Mexpal sum of ico, you must show $373,681.63, plus out- you will be substanstanding interest on tially affected. The the balance through written protest must August 21, 2013, in be filed, in triplicate, the amount of with Office of the $146,388.47 plus late State Engineer, Water charges of $2,314.04, Rights Division, Room 102, P.O. Box 25102, p l u s recoverable/escrow Santa Fe, NM 87504, balance in the within ten (10) days amount of $2,096.78, after the date of last plus corporate ad- publication of this Facsimiles vances in the amount Notice. of $2,595.87, plus at- (fax) will be accepted torneys fees in the as a valid protest as sum of $2,990.00 and long as the hard copy costs through August is sent within 2421, 2013 in the sum of hours of the facsim$2,353.40, with inter- ile. Mailing postmark est on the Judgment will be used to valiincluding late charg- date the 24-hour peries, property preser- od. Protest can be vation fees, escrow faxed to the Office of advances, attorney’s the State Engineer, fees and costs of this 505/827-6682. If no suit at the rate of valid protest or ob7.75% per annum jection is filed, the from date of the en- State Engineer will try of the Judgment evaluate the application in accordance until paid. NOTICE IS with Sections 72-2-16, FURTHER GIVEN that 72-5-6, and 72-12-3. the real property and improvements con- Legal#96059 cerned with herein Published in the Sanwill be sold subject to ta Fe New MExican any and all patent on: November 11, 18, reservations, ease- 25, 2013 ments, all recorded and unrecorded liens NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING OF THE not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and NEW MEXICO MINING COMMISSION unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. The New Mexico MinNationstar Mortgage ing Commission will LLC and its attorneys hold a public hearing disclaim all responsi- at 9:00 A.M. Thursday bility for, and the pur- and Friday, November chaser at the sale 21 and 22, 2013 in takes the property Morgan Hall, State
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986-3000
LEGALS
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g g Land Office, 310 Old Santa Fe County, PurSanta Fe Trail, Santa chasing Division, 142 Fe, NM. W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa The Mining Commis- Fe, NM 87501, or by sion will conduct a telephone at (505) public hearing on is- 992-6759, or by email sues remanded to the a t Commission by the plindsta@santafecou First Judicial District ntynm.gov or on our Court (Judge Ortiz) in website at the matter titled Mul- http://www.santafec ticultural Alliance for ountynm.gov/service a Safe Environment s / c u r r e n t and Amigos Bravos v. solicitations New Mexico Mining Commission et al., Santa Fe County Cause No. D-101-CV- Purchasing Division 2012-02318. In accordance with the Court’s Legal#96054 remand, the matters Published in the Santo be heard by the ta Fe New Mexican Commission on No- on: November 11, vember 21 and 22 are 2013 limited to (1) the sufficiency of Rio Grande Resources’ financial assurance, (2) CITY OF SANTA FE NMED’s DeterminaNOTICE OF PUBLIC tion, (3) Rio Grande HEARING Resources’ ability to comply with all applicable environmental Notice is hereby givlaws and standards, en that the Governing and (4) Rio Grande Body of the City of Resources’ economic Santa Fe will hold a public hearing at viability analysis. their regular City The hearing on re- Council Meeting on mand will be con- Wednesday, Decemducted in accordance ber 11, 2013 at 7:00 with the public par- p.m., in the City Counticipation provisions cil Chambers at City found in Part 9 of the Hall, 200 Lincoln AveNew Mexico Mining nue. Act (19.10.9NMAC). You may obtain a The purpose of the copy of Part 9 at: public hearing will be http://www.nmcpr.st to consider the folate.nm.us/nmac/part lowing: s/title19/19.010.0009. 1) Bill No. 2013-39: htm An Ordinance CreatA copy of the draft ing a New Section 19agenda for the 2 SFCC 1987 to Estabmeeting/hearing will lish a Fraud, Waste be available 72 hours and Abuse Hotline for before the hearing City Employees to Reand may be obtained port Alleged Fraud, by contacting Jane Waste and Abuse Beby Tabor or John Pfeil at ing Committed 476-3400. If you need Employees and Offia reader, amplifier, cers of the City. A Resolution qualified sign lan- a) Staff, guage interpreter or Authorizing any other form of During the 2014/2015 auxiliary aid or serv- Budget Process, to ice to attend or par- Establish a Budget for ticipate in the hear- the Design, Impleing, please contact mentation and Adof a Ms. Tabor or Mr. Pfeil ministration Waste and at 476-3400 at least 48 Fraud, hours prior to the Abuse Hotline for City hearing. Public docu- Employees to Report ments can be provid- Alleged Fraud, Waste Abuse Being ed in various accessi- and ble forms. Please Committed by Emcontact Ms. Tabor or ployees and/or OffiMr. Pfeil if a summary cers of the City. or other type of accessible form is need- Copies of this proposed ordinance and ed. resolution are availaLegal #95925 Published in The San- ble in their entirety ta Fe New Mexican on on the City’s web site http://www.santafen November 11 2013 m.gov (click on Legislative Services) or upon request and payment of a reasonSANTA FE COUNTY INVITATION FOR BIDS able charge, in the IFB# 2014-0146-PW/PL City Clerk’s Office, City Hall, 200 Lincoln TREE TRIMMING & Avenue, from 8:00 TREE REMOVAL SERV- a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through FriICES day. The Santa Fe County is requesting bids for All interested citizens the purpose of are invited to attend procuring for tree this public hearing. trimming, tree remov- ________________ al and mowing serv- Yolanda Y. Vigil, City ices. Bids may be Clerk held for ninety (90) days subject to all ac- Legal#95957 tion by the County. Published in the SanSanta Fe County re- ta Fe New Mexican serves the right to re- November 11, 2013 ject any and all bids in part or in whole. A completed bid package shall be submitted in a sealed con- COUNTY COURT JEFCOUNTY, tainer indicating the FERSON COURT IFB title and number COLORADO along with the bidd- ADDRESS 100 JEFFERer’s name and ad- SON COUNTY PARKGOLDEN, CO dress clearly marked WAY on the outside of the 80401 container. IN THE MATTER OF All bids must be re- THE PETITION OF: ceived by Friday, December 6, 2013 at PARENT/PETITIONER: 11:00 AM (MST) at the CHANTELL M. CHAVEZ Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 FOR W. Palace Avenue CHILD: (Bokum Building, Sec- MINOR MICHELLE ond Floor), Santa Fe, AALIYAH CHAVEZ-GONZALES N.M. 87501. Santa Fe County will be conducting a PreBid Conference on Monday November 18, at 11:00 AM (MST) at the Projects, Facilities & Open Space Division located at 901 W. Alameda, Santa Fe, N.M. 87501. Attendance at the conference is not mandatory but is strongly encouraged. By submitting a bid for the requested item each bidder is certifying that its bid complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Invitation for Bid. ANY BID PACKAGE RECEIVED BY THE PURCHASING DIVISION AFTER THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED ABOVE WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED AND WILL BE REJECTED BY SANTA FE COUNTY.
TO CHANGE THE CHILD’S NAME TO: AALIYAH MICHELLE LEYBA C A S E NUMBER:13c1129 DIVISION H COURTROOM 1C NOTICE TO NONCUSTODIAL PARENT BY PUBLICATION NOTICE TO: Aaron Gonzales, noncustodial parent. Notice is given that a hearing is scheduled as follows: Date: 2013
December
toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com
6,
Time: 2:00 p.m. Location: 100 Jefferson County Parkway Golden, CO 80401
for the purpose of requesting a change of name for Michelle EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Aaliyah EMPLOYMENT: All Chavez-Gonzales qualified bidders will receive consideration At this hearing the of contract(s) with- Court may enter an out regard to race, order changing the color, religion, sex, name of the minor national origin, an- child. cestry, age, physical To support or voice and mental handicap, objection to the proserious mental condi- posed name change, tion, disability, you must appear at spousal affiliation, the hearing. sexual orientation or Clerk of Court: Skloek gender identity. Deputy Clerk: J. HarInvitation for Bid lan packages will be available by contact- Legal#95884 ing Pamela Lindstam, Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: October 14, 21, 28 & November 4, 11, Continued... 2013
LEGAL NOTICE REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS RFP NO: 89-001-14 The Board of Education, Zuni Public School District, is requesting competitive sealed qualificationsbased proposals for Design Professional services for the construction of the new combined elementary school -Dowa Yalanne ES & A:Shiwi ES.
y pp ance in this cause within thirty (30) days of the date of the last publication of this Notice, judgment by default may be entered against you. Senovio Rios, PO BOX 4473, Santa Fe, NM 87502 505-795-8490
Witness this Honorable T.Glenn Ellington, District Judge of the First Judicial District Court of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe/Rio Arriba/Los The Request for Pro- Alamos County, this posals (RFP) may be 11th day of Septemrequested from the ber, 2013. District by contacting Martin Romine by STEPHEN T. PACHECO CLERK OF THE DISe m a i l : martin.romine@zpsd. TRICT COURT org . Additional B Y : M A U R E E N DEPUTY documents relating NARANJO, to the RFP may be CLERK found on the ZPSD Legal#95958 w e b s i t e www.zpsd.org ( link Published in the Sanlocated on lower left ta Fe New Mexican side of the on: September 11, 18, 25, 2013 homepage). A non-mandatory P r e - P r o p o s a l Conference/tour will be held on Tuesday, November 12, 2013 at 2:00 PM at The Twin Buttes HS Cafeteria.
IN THE PROBATE COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
NO. 2013-0147 Proposals will be received no later than IN THE MATTER OF 2:00 PM on Thursday, THE ESTATE December 12, 2013 OF ABEL DAVIS, Deceased. Sealed proposals must hand delivered to: NOTICE TO CREDITORS Zuni Public School District Attn: Martin Romine NOTICE IS HEREBY P.O. Drawer A, 12 Twin GIVEN that the underButtes Drive signed has been apZuni, NM pointed personal repPhone No: (505) 782- resentative of this es5511 X 6301 tate. All persons having claims against The Zuni Public this estate are reSchool District’s quired to present Board of Education their claims within reserves the right to two months after the reject any and all pro- date of the first publiposals and/or cancel cation of this Notice this RFP in its entire- or the claims will be ty. forever barred. Claims must be preLegal#95873 sented either to the Published in the San- personal representata Fe New Mexican tive at Post Office November 7, 8, 11, Box 4160, Santa Fe, 2013 New Mexico 875024160, or filed with the Santa Fe County ProCITY OF SANTA FE bate Court. ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NOS. 2013DATED: October 28, 34, 2013-35 AND 2013 RESOLUTION NO. 2013-97 /s/ Notice is hereby giv- Audrey Nan Hays en that the Governing Personal RepresentaBody of the City of tive of the Santa Fe held a public Estate of Abel Davis, hearing at their regu- Deceased lar meeting on Wednesday, October 30, CUDDY & MCCARTHY, 2013 and approved LLP James S. Rubin the following: P.O. Box 4160 1) O r d i n a n c e Santa Fe, New Mexico No. 2013-34: An Or- 87502-4160 dinance Relating to (505) 988-4476 the City of Santa Fe Attorneys for PersonInternal Audit Depart- al Representative ment; Amending Section 2-22 SFCC 1987 to Legal#95864 Strengthen Internal Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican Audit Independence. November 4, 11, 2013 2) Ordinance No. 2013-35: An Ordinance Relating to Notice is hereby givChapter VI SFCC 1987, en that the meeting Boards, Committees of the Board of Direcand Commissions; tors of the New MexiCreating a New Arti- co Water Trust Board cle 6-5 SFCC 1987 to will convene at 9:00 Establish the City of a.m. on Thursday, DeSanta Fe Audit Com- cember 5, 2013. The meeting will be held mittee. in Conference Room 309 at the State Capi3) R e so lu tio n 2013-97: A Resolution tol, 407 Old Santa Fe Amending Resolution Trail, Santa Fe, NM. 2010-83 to Repeal the The agenda will be Establishment of the available at the New City Audit Committee. Mexico Finance Authority’s office at 207 Copies of these ordi- Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico and nances and resoluwebsite at tion are available in the and their entirety on the www.nmfa.net City’s web site the Office of the State website http://www.santafen Engineer m.gov (click on (www.ose.state.nm.u G o v e r n m e n t / C i t y s). The Board may go Clerk/Ordinances) or into closed session to upon request and discuss matters in with payment of a reason- accordance able charge, in the NMSA 1978, Section City Clerk’s Office, 10-15-1 (H) (2). AnyCity Hall, 200 Lincoln one who has quesAvenue, from 8:00 tions regarding the or needs a.m. to 5:00 p.m., meeting Monday through Fri- special accommodations should contact day. Yolanda Valenzuela Yolanda Y. Vigil, at (505) 992-9632. City Clerk Legal #95923 Published in The San- If you are an individuta Fe New Mexican on al with a disability who is in need of a November 11 2013 reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or FIRST JUDICIAL DIS- any other form of TRICT COURT STATE auxiliary aid or servOF NEW MEXICO ice to attend or parCOUNTY OF SANTA ticipate in the hearFE, ing or meeting, Senovio Rios please contact Petitioner/Plaintiff, Yolanda Valenzuela at the NMFA at 992vs. 9632 as soon as possible. Public docuLuz Estrada, ments, including the Respondent/Defenda agenda and minutes, nt can be provided in various accessible Case No.: D101-DM- formats. Please con2013-00544 tact the NMFA at 9929632 if a summary or NOTICE OF other type of accessiPENDENCY OF SUIT ble format is needed. State of New Mexico to Luz Estrada. Greet- Legal# 95959 ings: You are hereby Published in the Sannotified that Senovio ta Fe New Mexican Rios, the above- November 11, 2013 n a m e d Petitioner/Plaintiff, has filed a civil action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, The general object thereof being: To dissolve the marriage between the Petitioner and yourself, Unless you enter your appear-
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To Place a Legal ad 986-3000
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING Notice is hereby given that the meeting of the Board of Directors of the New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA) will convene at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, November 20, 2013. The meeting will be held at the State Capitol, Room 311, 407 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. The agenda will be available at the NMFA office at 207 Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico and the web site (www.nmfa.net ) at least 72 hours prior to the meeting. Anyone who has questions regarding the meeting or needs special accommodations should contact Connie MarquezValencia at (505) 9841454. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, or if a summary or other type of accessible format is needed, please contact the NMFA at 505-984-1454 at least one week prior to the meeting or as soon as possible. Legal #96067 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 11, 2013.
To place a Legal ad Call 986-3000
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF ANGEL GRIEGO , A CHILD. Case No. 2013-02847 NOTICE OF OF NAME
D-101-CVCHANGE
TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 408-01 through Sec. 408-3 NMSA 1978, et. seq. the Petitioner Ying Meng will apply to the Honorable Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 1:00 p.m. on the 6th day of December, 2013, for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of a child from A n g e l G r i e g o to A n g e l Meng . Date: 2013
November
4,
STEPHEN T. PACHECO CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT BY: Deputy Submitted by: Ying Meng Petitioner, Pro Se Legal #95941 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 11 and 18, 2013. STATE OF NEW MEXICO FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ANNA MAY MILLS, DECEASED NOTICE TO CREDITORS D-0101-PB-201300165 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Marcella Finley has been appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of Anna May Mills, Deceased. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this notice of this notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative, c/o Hinkle, Hensley, Shanor & Martin, LLP, attn: Nancy S. Cusack, Post Office Box 2068, Santa Fe, NM 87504, or filed with the District Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Legal#95866 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican November 4, 11, 2013
Monday, November 11, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Horoscope
Crossword
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Nov. 11, 2013: This year you often demonstrate an unusually creative yet disciplined side of your personality. When you use it well, you could find that very little is unattainable. Pisces often makes you feel like a kid again. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You might want to keep a secret or allow a matter to stay hush-hush. You need to be intuitive, especially with others. Tonight: Watch your hot temper. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Zero in on what appears to be a hot issue. Use your unique talent to detach and see the big picture. Tonight: A disagreement encourages a creative solution. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You might be trying to work through a problem. You are able to handle a lot, but tension keeps rising. Tonight: A must appearance. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Detach and you’ll gain a unique perspective, especially when dealing with a particularly contentious or controlling person. Tonight: Look beyond the obvious. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Work with others directly. You communicate effectively, and many people around you gain insight quickly. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s request. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Defer to others. Know when you are in a no-win situation. It is important to recognize what is happening before you encounter a problem. Tonight: Make time for a friend.
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: LITERARY HEADLINES Identify the title from the “headline.” The author’s name is given. (e.g., William Golding: “Marooned Kids Kill on Coral Island.” Answer: Lord of the Flies) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. William Shakespeare: “Teenage Lovers Commit Double Suicide.” Answer________ 2. Robert Louis Stevenson: “London Doctor Suffers Multiple Personality Disorder.” Answer________ 3. Charles Dickens: “Woman Knits While Watching Public Executions.” Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Nathaniel Hawthorne: “Doctor’s Wife Has Daughter With Local Minister.” Answer________
5. Charlotte Bronte: “Crazy Woman Sets House on Fire, Then Leaps to Death.” Answer________ 6. John Steinbeck: “Mercy Killing of Best Friend by Itinerant Farmworker.” Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Sophocles: “King Kills His Father and Marries His Mother.” Answer________ 8. Tennessee Williams: “Crippled Woman Fixated on Glass Animals.” Answer________ 9. F. Scott Fitzgerald: “Garage Owner Shoots Businessman in Swimming Pool.” Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Romeo and Juliet. 2. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. 3. A Tale of Two Cities. 4. The Scarlet Letter. 5. Jane Eyre. 6. Of Mice and Men. 7. Oedipus Rex. 8. The Glass Menagerie. 9. The Great Gatsby.
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) HHH Your easygoing attitude allows others the space to be free and come forward. Tonight: Discuss a potential problem without becoming frustrated.
‘Freedom’ shared to honor veterans Dear Readers: In honor of Veterans Day, here is one of our favorite pieces, written by John Alton Robinson of Monroe, La.
Freedom From the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier To the silver-haired crowns of our fathers From the shores of Tripoli To the Pacific’s pearl-green waters I wish to give a tribute A four-starred salute today For those who fought so bravely For our freedom and American way. We take our rights for granted But they were earned in bluered blood And courage beyond the call of duty In France’s cold wet mud. Beginning with the Revolution Through the Saudi Arabian sands Men have fought and suffered And died on foreign lands. So salute this Veterans Day And many more to come. Through blood and guts and glory Our freedom has been won. Dear Annie: Please permit me to use your column to address my grown children. Dear Kids: Father’s Day and my birthday have come and gone, and I didn’t hear a word from any of you. Christmas is coming, and I expect more
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Your compassion comes out when dealing with a family member. Tap into your intuition in order to succeed today. Tonight: Your home is your castle. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be moving forward with a project that is often discussed. A talk will help this goal become a reality. Tonight: At a favorite spot. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You will indulge yourself, whether it is sharing a favorite breakfast or taking a few hours for yourself. You’ll maintain your responsibilities, even if the pace is more easy than usual. Tonight: Your treat. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might need to handle a situation differently from how you anticipated. You could be upset with someone far away. Tonight: Allow someone to let off steam without becoming embroiled. Jacqueline Bigar
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 HAS A CRUSHER Hint: Mate trumps a queen. Solution: 1. … Rg5! If 2. c7, … R(g)h5! 3. c8=Qch Kg7! (with … Rh1 mate! to follow) [Nisipeanu-Potkin ’13].
Today in history Today is Monday, Nov. 11, the 315th day of 2013. There are 50 days left in the year. This is Veterans Day in the U.S., Remembrance Day in Canada. Today’s highlight in history: On Nov. 11, 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end with the signing of an armistice between the Allies and Germany.
Hocus Focus
I worked hard to give you the best of everything, from designer clothes to Ivy League educations. I was involved in all of your activities when you were growing up, and I was at the head of your dinner table every evening. All you ever got from me was kindness and concern. And I fully respected your mother, regardless of what you may think. It’s hard to be old and alone, which is why my lady friend has assumed such a prominent role in my life. You may not like her, despite her many kindnesses to you, but she is here for me, and you are not. When I have been sick or injured, she alone has cared for me. The only times I hear from you are when you want something, usually money, which brings me to another topic: my will. While you may regard my lady friend as a “gold-digger,” whatever gold there is belongs to me. It is not your money. I am free to do whatever I want with it. I would love to hear from you, which is why I am constantly reaching out. My heart will always be open to you. — Love, Dad Dear Dad: We can feel your anger through your words. Kkids can hang onto a lot of resentment for a very long time. You want them to be warm and respectful, but they may have reasons for keeping an emotional distance. Reaching out may require apologies and forgiveness. Please try again. Be vulnerable enough to let them know you want to be closer, and ask how best to achieve it.
Sheinwold’s bridge
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Many opportunities come forward that could involve adjusting your schedule. Tonight: Approach a loved one with sensitivity.
Cryptoquip
of the same. You are not orphans. You didn’t rear yourselves. You didn’t come out of an abusive home.
Jumble
B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, November WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
11, 2013
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
PEANUTS
LA CUCARACHA
TUNDRA
LUANN
RETAIL
ZITS
STONE SOUP
BALDO
GET FUZZY KNIGHT LIFE
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
ROSE IS ROSE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PARDON MY PLANET
BABY BLUES
NON SEQUITUR