Capital falls to Albuquerque Academy, loses shot at championship Sports, B-1
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Police continue probe into deadly shooting Blood sample from deceased driver headed to state lab for analysis By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican
New Mexico State Police said Friday that a blood sample from a woman who was fatally shot by an officer early Thursday in
Jeanette Anaya
Santa Fe following a high-speed chase will be submitted to a state laboratory for analysis. A police spokesman released no further details concerning the department’s ongoing investigation, including the identities
of the officer involved or that of a 34-year-old male passenger who was in her car at the time. Police have said the officer shot 39-year-old Jeanette
Please see PROBE, Page A-4
Winter sports savings Snow lovers find deals on gear and equipment at the annual Santa Fe Ski and Sports Swap. Page A-6
Not a case of poisoning?
Hiring surge
Forensic test results show no chemical agents in the bones of the late Chilean Nobel Prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda. Page A-2
U.S. employers added nearly twice as many jobs as expected in October, despite the shutdown. Page A-3
Record-setting sale
Kathleen Sebelius
East-side home goes for $4 million, tops Santa Fe’s mark for 2013
Health and Human Services secretary says the rule should put an end to discrimination through higher mental health care costs or limits on hospital stays or visits to the doctor.
New rule: Behavioral care must be equal Federal regulations specify mental and physical ailments should be treated with parity By Kevin Freking
The Associated Press
From left, Dale Heinemann and Brian Tercero of Keller Williams Realty have been working as a team for several years. The two believe in the use of video, the Internet and technology to drive business. Jane Phillips/The New Mexican
By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican
B
rian Tercero grew up in a home built by his father on family property in the historic Village of Agua Fría, a long way from Santa Fe’s pricey east-side neighborhoods. But Tercero, a Capital High School graduate and agent at Keller Williams Realty, was one of the Realtors involved in the highest-priced residential property sale so far in 2013 — a $4 million, 5,200-square-foot home located at 1260 Upper Canyon Road. Tercero represented the buyers, who lived outside the United
States and shopped for properties with him over the Internet. The listing agent for the home was Paige Maxwell of Sotheby’s International Real Estate, who said the sale was also her biggest ever and a sign that the luxury market in Santa Fe is healthy. “We’ve had an abundance of inventory in that market, but starting in October, the luxury market has really seen an increase in sales and showings,” she said. Tercero agreed, saying the allcash sale was watched by other agents and builders as an indication that homes on the historic
Please see SALE, Page A-4
WASHINGTON — It’s final: Health insurance companies must cover mental illness and substance abuse just as they cover physical diseases. The Obama administration issued new regulations Friday that spell out how a 5-year-old mental health parity law will be administered. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said the rule should put an end to discrimination faced by some mental health patients through higher out-of-pocket costs or stricter limits on hospital stays or visits to the doctor. The law, signed by President George W. Bush, was designed to prevent that. But mental health advocates said health insurers at times sidestepped lawmakers’ intentions by delaying requests for care and putting in place other bureaucratic hurdles.
Please see CARE, Page A-4
A 5,200-square-foot home at 1260 Upper Canyon Road sold for $4 million in the city’s highest-priced residential property sale this year. Luis Sánchez Saturno/The New Mexican
Coss pushes for cleanup of LANL waste site By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican
Teens benefit from obesity surgery
Today Plenty of sunshine. High 63, low 32.
Study shows procedures help those with severe weight-related health issues. LIfe & science, A-9
Page A-12
President Barack Obama is limited in what he can do to help people losing their insurance policies. Page A-5
Index
www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Holiday Pie Mania
Obituaries
Few options to fix cancellations
Pasapick
Jeanette “Jen” Lisa Anaya, 39, Nov. 7 Ray “Eskimo” Johnson , 44, Santa Fe, Oct. 23 Louis Isidore Romero Sr.
Auction of pies supplied by local chefs and bakers; 1-5 p.m. Builders Source Appliance Gallery, 1608 Pacheco St., $5 in advance, $7 at the door, proceeds benefit The Food Depot, holidaypiemania.org.
Mayor David Coss wants the Santa Fe City Council and other area governing bodies to pass resolutions urging Los Alamos National Laboratory to clean up its nuclear waste dump rather than leaving the waste buried in the ground. Coss said Los Alamos’ Technical Area 54, Area G, just west of White Rock, was used to bury transuranic waste during the Manhattan Project, which developed the first atomic bomb, and during the early years of the Cold War. Above-ground waste from Area G is being hauled to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad. But, Coss said, one proposal calls for leaving the buried waste in place and capping it to make it impervious to water.
Please see WASTE, Page A-4
Page A-10
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Two sections, 24 pages TV Book, 32 pages 164th year, No. 313 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
NATION&WORLD
MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000
In brief MANILA, Philippines— One of the strongest storms on record slammed into the central Philippines, killing at least 100 people, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes and knocking out power and communications in several provinces. But the nation appeared to avoid a major disaster because the rapidly moving typhoon blew away before wreaking more damage, officials said. Typhoon Haiyan left the Philippines early Saturday on a path toward Southeast Asia, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tweeted. Forecasters said the storm was expected to pick up renewed strength over the South China Sea on its way toward Vietnam. Nearly 750,000 people in the Philippines were forced to flee their homes.
Family of Chilean Nobel Laureate Pablo Neruda not content with results
By Luis Andres Henao The Associated Press
Russia’s Arafat report inconclusive
Man guilty in wife’s hospital bed murder AKRON, Ohio — An Ohio man who said he fatally shot his hospitalized wife out of love because of her debilitated condition that left her unable to speak, was convicted by a jury on Friday and could face life in prison. Police say John Wise, 68, calmly walked into Barbara Wise’s hospital room on Aug. 4, 2012, and shot her at her bedside. She died the next day. Barbara Wise, 65, was in the intensive care unit at Akron General Medical Center after suffering triple cerebral aneurysms. Wise testified that he couldn’t stand to see his wife of 45 years in pain in the hospital. “She looked at me like she was in pain and a tear rolled down her cheek,” Wise told the jury this week. The Associated Press
At left, Willis Tower, formerly known as the Sears Tower, in Chicago, and One World Trade Center in New York. A committee of architects recognized as the arbiters on world building heights is meeting to decide whether a design change affecting 1 World Trade Center’s 408-foot needle disqualifies it. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS
Who gets bragging rights? New York, Chicago vie for tallest building title
By Jason Keyser The Associated Press
CHICAGO ising from the ashes of 9/11, the new World Trade Center tower has punched above the New York skyline to reach its powerfully symbolic height of 1,776 feet and become the tallest building in the country. Or has it? A committee of architects recognized as the arbiters on world building heights was meeting Friday to decide whether a design change affecting the skyscraper’s 408-foot needle disqualifies it from being counted. Disqualification would deny the tower the title as the nation’s tallest. But there is more than bragging rights at stake; 1 World Trade Center stands as a monument to those killed in the terrorist attacks, and the ruling could dim the echo of America’s founding year in the structure’s height. Without the needle, the building measures 1,368 feet, a number that also holds symbolic weight as the height of the original World Trade Center. What’s more, the decision is being made by an organization based in Chicago, whose cultural and architectural history is embodied by the Willis — formerly Sears
R
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— Tower that would be knocked into second place by a vote in favor of the New York structure. “Most of the time these decisions are not so controversial,” said Daniel Safarik, an architect and spokesman for the nonprofit Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. The 30 members of its Height Committee are meeting to render a judgment behind closed doors in Chicago, where the world’s first skyscraper appeared in 1884. The committee, comprising industry professionals from all over the world, will announce its decision next week. The question over 1 World Trade Center, which remains under construction and is expected to open next year, arose because of a change to the design of its towertopping needle. Under the council’s current criteria, spires that are an integral part of a building’s aesthetic design count; broadcast antennas that can be added and removed do not. The designers of 1 World Trade Center had intended to enclose the mast’s communications gear in decorative cladding made of fiberglass and steel. But the developer removed that exterior shell from the design, saying it would be impossible to properly maintain or repair. Without it, the question is whether the mast is now primarily just a broadcast antenna. According to the architecture firm behind the building, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP, the needle
will have a communications platform for radio and television equipment, but it will also be topped with an LED beacon that will fire out a horizontal blaze of light visible from up to 50 miles away on a clear night — a feature that has been described as a crowning beacon of hope. If the matter weren’t so steeped in emotion it might have set off some of the good natured ribbing emblematic of the history of oneupmanship between New York and Chicago. But 1 World Trade Center is a monument to American resilience admired well beyond Manhattan. Still, the Willis has a central place in Chicago’s history, speaking to the city’s own tradition of recovering from adversity ever since the 1871 Great Fire and its history of creating architectural marvels, said Peter Alter, an archivist at the Chicago History Museum. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, headquartered in Chicago, also designed the Willis. Then known as the Sears Tower, it was completed in 1973 and remained the tallest building in the world until 1996 when the council ruled that the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, had knocked it from the top spot. And the Willis can still claim to get visitors up higher: The highest occupied floor in the 1,450-foot (not including antenna height), 110-story Willis Tower is still higher up than that of the 104-story 1 World Trade Center.
SANTIAGO, Chile — The fourdecade mystery of whether Chilean Nobel Prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda was poisoned was seemingly cleared up Friday, when forensic test results showed no chemical agents in his bones. But his family and driver were not satisfied and said they’ll request more proof. Neruda died under suspicious circumstances in the chaos that followed Chile’s 1973 military coup. The official version is that the poet died of cancer. But Neruda’s former driver has said for years that dictatorship agents injected poison into the poet’s stomach while he was bedridden at the Santa Maria clinic in Santiago. Neruda’s body was exhumed in April to determine the cause of his death. “No relevant chemical substances have been found that could be linked to Mr. Neruda’s death,” Patricio Bustos, the head of Chile’s medical legal service, said. The highly anticipated results by the team of Chilean and international experts didn’t satisfy Neruda’s family members and friends who said the poet’s case remains unsolved. Neruda won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1971 after a prolific career. Neruda also was a leftist politician and diplomat, and a close friend of socialist President Salvador Allende, who committed suicide rather than surrender to troops during the Sept. 11, 1973, bloody coup led by Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Neruda, who was 69 at the time of the coup, planned to go into exile. But a day before he planned to leave, he was taken by ambulance to the Santa Maria clinic. Officially, Neruda died there on Sept. 23 of natural causes. But suspicions that the dictatorship had a hand in the death lingered long after Chile returned to a democracy in 1990.
Works by Chile’s Nobel Prize winning poet Pablo Neruda are displayed in Santiago, Chile. The mystery of whether Neruda was poisoned was seemingly cleared up on Friday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Philippines avoids disaster after storm
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Four investigations, hundreds of testimonies and stacks of medical reports on Yasser Arafat’s unexplained death in 2004 have failed to produce hard evidence of what killed him — and findings presented Friday only created more confusion. Palestinian officials said a report they received from Russia on the role of radioactive polonium in Arafat’s death was inconclusive. They spoke just a day after Swiss scientists said the Palestinian leader was probably poisoned by the rare and extremely lethal substance. Despite those discrepancies, the Swiss and Russian reports agreed that Arafat’s death “was not caused by old age or disease, but as a result of a toxic substance,” said Dr. Abdullah Bashir, a medical expert in the three-member Palestinian team that has been investigating Arafat’s death. The reports revived Palestinian allegations that Israel was behind the attack, despite its denial.
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Saturday, Nov. 9 ADAM FRANCIS RABY AT EVANGELOS: The author reads from his debut memoir A Circus of One about his battle with alcohol addiction, 2-3:30 p.m., 200 W. San Francisco St. ART AUCTION: From 5 to 8 p.m. at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center, the 19th Annual Art Auction for Acequia Madre Elementary School will be held. The $15 admission fee includes free child care. There will be an auction, live entertainment, food, drinks and fun. For more information or to donate items, call 467-4000. 201 W. Marcy St. ARTIST TALK AT RED DOT GALLERY: Jim Vogel, Nikki Bustos, Diego López, Gene Ortega and Toby Morfin discuss their Day of the Dead works, 1-2:30 p.m., 826 Canyon Road. HANDMADE HEART: Sale of handmade jewelry, linen wares, ceramics and clothing; sweets, art and tarot readings; proceeds benefit the Santa Fe Community Yoga Center, noon-5 p.m. 826 Camino de Monte Rey, Suite B-1. HOLIDAY PIE MANIA: Auction of pies supplied by local chefs and bakers, proceeds benefit The Food Depot at Builders
Lotteries
Corrections
Roadrunner
Due to an editing error, The New Mexican incorrectly described the age of a male passenger in the car driven by Jeannette Anaya before she was fatally shot early Thursday by a state police officer following a high-speed chase in Santa Fe. Online reports and a story published on Page A-1 in the Friday, Nov. 8, edition incorrectly described the passenger as a minor. Police say the man, whose name has been withheld, is 34 years old.
2–7–12–29–37 Top prize: $79,000
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Source Appliance Gallery, 1-5 p.m. 1608 Pacheco St. KIDS CRAFTS AT BEE HIVE KIDS BOOKS: Children ages 3 and up can make leaf-print note cards, 11 a.m.-noon. 328 Montezuma Ave. SALLY OOMS AT OP. CIT. BOOKSTORE: The author reads from Finding Home: How Americans Prevail, 3 p.m., 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101, Sanbusco Center. WILLIAM STINE AT GARCIA STREET BOOKS: The author discusses his book France on Fragile Wings, an illustrated biography of his father, Harold Stine, 2 p.m. 376 Garcia St.
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gested they were all well cared for and fed. However, that contradicts reports published during the artist’s lifetime that Macaione hoarded pets, keeping houses full of stressed, malnourished and neglected animals. In 1984, animal control officers rounded up more than 50 dogs and cats from Macaione’s home, of which 28 disease-ridden animals subsequently were euthanized at the local animal shelter.
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A story that ran on Pages 38-39 in Pasatiempo’s Nov. 8 issue about late artist Tommy Macaione contained an account of his large collection of pets that sug-
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.
NIGHTLIFE
Performance Space, 7:30 p.m. 1808-H Second St.
Saturday, Nov. 9 YO: THE SPIRIT OF ASIA: A musical journey into the heart of Japan and the soul of India with Yutaka Oyama, Akihisa Kominato and Ty Burhoe at Gig
For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.
NATION & WORLD
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-3
U.S. weathers shutdown with new job growth October payrolls almost double what analysts predicted
that the Federal Reserve would be more prone to start reducing its large bond-buying stimulus program next month. The Labor Department’s report Friday also made subBy Don Lee stantial upward revisions to McClatchy Tribune job growth for the prior two months, to 163,000 in SeptemWASHINGTON — All of a ber and 238,000 in August. sudden, the American economy Taken together, the data over is looking very resilient — the last three months indicate much more so than experts had that the American job-creation thought. machine is not sputtering, as Despite forecasts that job some had feared, but is continugrowth would be sapped by the ing to run at a fairly steady, if budget impasse and government moderate, speed. shutdown, employers in the The unemployment rate, U.S. stepped up their hiring last however, edged up to 7.3 permonth by adding 204,000 new cent last month from 7.2 percent jobs across a wide spectrum of in September amid an unusually industries. large drop in the total number The increase in payrolls was of people working or actively looking for jobs — what econoalmost double what many analysts were predicting and imme- mists call the labor force. diately triggered speculation That data injected a measure
Dow hits new high on hiring surge NEW YORK — An unexpectedly strong jobs report gave stocks a lift on Friday, pushing the Dow Jones industrial average back to an all-time high. The gains were led by banks, such as Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase, which stand to benefit from a pickup in lending as the economy strengthens. Consumer-focused stocks such as Priceline.com and Disney also rose after reporting higher profits. Losers included housing stocks and Twitter, which dropped 7 percent the day after its initial public offering. Friday’s jobs report left investors grappling with how to interpret this week’s good economic news and what it means for the Federal Reserve’s stimulus program. That program has helped power this year’s stock rally. The Associated Press
of skepticism to an otherwise optimistic report, though analysts noted that survey calculations of the unemployed and the labor force were complicated
by the partial government shutdown, which temporarily furloughed hundreds of thousands of employees. The payroll numbers are
Chief Catherine Ashton lasted until 11:30 p.m., aides said, but failed to break the deadlock. “The negotiations have John Kerry reached [a] critical, very sensitive situation, and it needs decisions at higher levels,” said Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s deputy foreign minister and chief negotiator. An apparent diplomatic breakthrough in 2009 collapsed after leaders in Tehran weighed in negatively. The latest plan was expected to lay out a series of reciprocal steps intended to pave the way for further negotiations. The ultimate goal is a comprehensive deal that ensures Iran will give up its nuclear ambitions in exchange for lifting sanctions that have strangled its economy. Hoping to make an official announcement, Kerry was joined Friday by his counterparts from Britain, France and Germany.
McClatchy Tribune
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State John F. Kerry and other top Western diplomats flew to Geneva on Friday in the hope of completing an accord to freeze Iran’s nuclear program, but the high-stakes diplomatic push ran into obstacles that dimmed prospects for a quick resolution after a decade-long stalemate. Instead of the expected signing ceremony Saturday, disappointed diplomats said they expect the talks to spill at least into next week. Diplomats declined to say why the deal has stalled, but the two sides are known to disagree about Iran’s construction of a plutonium reactor, a possible route to a nuclear bomb. The international community wants Iran to agree not to activate the reactor while the interim deal is in place. But it also may be pressing for more restrictions. A meeting Friday between Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and European Union Foreign Policy
The foreign ministers of Russia and China were expected to arrive Saturday. The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, plus Germany, have united as a diplomatic bloc in the negotiations with Iran. Hawkish critics in Congress, in Israel and elsewhere already have begun taking aim at the proposed multistaged plan, warning that even a modest “first step” agreement under consideration would relieve too much pressure on Iran if it did not require a halt to all uranium enrichment during the expected six months of final negotiations. “Any deal that does not require a full and complete halting of the Iranian nuclear program is worse than no deal at all,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said in a statement Friday, echoing comments from several other key lawmakers and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said he would convene a hearing Wednesday.
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a pretty strong month” for job gains, said Sophia Koropeckyj, a labor economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pa. After Friday’s report, Koropeckyj forecast job growth rising to 250,000 a month by the middle of next year. “It’s slowly inching up,” she said. Chris Nelson, chief executive of Kemin Industries, a Des Moines maker of nutrition ingredients for the food industry, said the dysfunction in Washington may not touch his company’s employment right away but could down the road. Kemin has added 80 employees this year and has 30 openings in the U.S., he said. “The last charade played out in Washington has, quite frankly, shaken my confidence in any relative credibility and stability of the government,” he said.
SALE • WAREHOUSE •
Iran, Western diplomats extend talks to clinch elusive nuclear deal By Paul Richter
based on a much larger, separate sample of employers, not households, and thus are considered more reliable and less volatile from month to month. Labor Department officials said they saw no discernible effect on new jobs stemming from the shutdown. The report counted federal workers on furlough as employed because they were receiving back pay. Analysts thought job growth in October would have been stronger had there not been the 16-day closure of many federal facilities and operations. Anecdotal reports suggested that some private employers may have put their expansion plans on ice as they awaited greater clarity on the political and economic outlooks. “If some people did delay their hiring, November could be
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A-4
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
Probe: Family waiting on dash-cam recording Continued from Page A-1 Anaya after she backed her Honda Accord into his patrol car following a maneuver that apparently caused her to crash into a wall on Camino Carlos Rey. Police said Anaya reached speeds of 87 mph in the residential neighborhood after the officer spotted her driving erratically on St. Francis Drive at Alta Vista Street at about 1:15 a.m. Thursday. Friends and family have questioned whether the shooting was justified. “She didn’t deserve for this to happen to her,” said Serena Chavez, a neighbor of the family and longtime friend of Anaya. “If she’s getting pulled over and she knows she’s getting pulled over, she’s going to stop,” insisted Michaela Anaya, a niece of Jeanette Anaya, in an on-camera interview with told KOB-TV Channel 4 on Thursday. “That’s what doesn’t make sense to me.” On Friday, members of Jeanette Anaya’s family declined to comment on the case, directing all questions to the family’s lawyer, Tom Clark. Clark said the family was still trying to put together what happened during Jeanette Anaya’s last hours before she was shot. He added that the public perception is that Jeanette Anaya “got herself killed” but that the best way to clear up what led up to the shooting will be dashcam video from the officer’s car, which hasn’t yet been released. “I think what you’re getting from the state police is a sanitized version of a really horrible thing they did,” Clark said. “The one thing that could clear this up — who’s at fault [and] who did what — is for the state police … to release the video to the press. Then we don’t have to guess about what Ms. Anaya did.” David Martinez, who told KRQETV Channel 13 he was a nephew of Jeanette Anaya, said in an oncamera interview: “It’s unbelievable. I can’t believe it. There are still a lot of unanswered questions that I want to get to the bottom of.” Sister Jackie Anaya told a television reporter on Thursday that Jeannette Anaya “was a young, beautiful, vibrant, happy girl.” Julia Castro, a co-owner of Cafe Castro, a Cerrillos Road restaurant, said Jeanette Anaya was regular customer at her eatery and remembers her as a “nice woman.” She said she recognized her picture from news reports. The male passenger in the car the night of the shooting, who police say was a friend of Jeanette Anaya, was taken to the hospital to be examined for injuries that were not life-threatening. Police have said he isn’t charged with any crime. The New Mexico State Police did not immediately provide information regarding the agency’s current policies on use of deadlyforce or regarding high-speedchases. A department spokesman advised a reporter to file a publicrecords request under the state Inspection of Public Records Act, a process which allows the agency at least two weeks to respond. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ujohnnyg.
Santa Fe Realtor Brian Tercero of Keller Williams Realty talks with client Pam Sisneros on Wednesday about a house she is planning to buy. Tercero said his recent $4 million sale shows that a local can deliver high-end buyers and succeed in real estate in his hometown. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Sale: Internet, technology played big part in process Continued from Page A-1 east side are still appealing. “There are a lot of prominent high-end builders watching this deal. It will impact the market significantly,” Tercero said. But with more than 8,000 Twitter followers and a knack for Internet marketing, Tercero said the sale means much more to him: that a Santa Fe local can deliver high-end buyers and succeed in real estate without leaving his hometown. “We just didn’t want to leave Santa Fe,” said the fifth-generation resident who married his high school sweetheart. “There are ways to stay here if you want to, and real estate has done that for me.” After graduating from Capital High, Tercero went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in information technology at The University of New Mexico. He worked as the Web developer for Prudential Real Estate for nine years, until it closed in in 2011. During that time, he saw the business change — and witnessed how the reach of the Internet and search analytics transformed the way homes were marketed. So in 2010, he took classes and got a real estate license from the state of New Mexico, even though he had never sold anything in his life.
“I never had a sales job. I never sold a home in my life,” he said. Tercero did, however, grow up with an entrepreneurial spirit he got in part from his grandfather, Amarante Romero, a lifelong Agua Fría resident who died Aug. 31. Romero was dubbed the unofficial mayor of the village and operated a small gas station and grocery store that became the center of chatter and politics in the community. The store was attached to the family home, and Tercero, as well as other family members, helped around the business. So it didn’t seem like a leap when Tercero decided to join Keller Williams Realty in Santa Fe and partner with Dale Heinemann, a veteran agent who specializes in ranch properties and shares Tercero’s philosophy about the use of video, the Internet and technology. Tercero signed an agreement not to disclose the names of the buyers on the $4 million sale. But he said they found him through his website in January. Tercero kept in contact through email for several months — sending them information about properties and using his iPhone to shoot video of homes. The buyers had lived in Santa Fe part time and were looking to relocate here full time, so
they were familiar with the city and even had a builder, Nick Ritter, with whom Tercero consulted about property choices. He first took a video of the Upper Canyon Road property in May and sent it to the buyers via email. The couple liked the home and location, but they thought it was too pricey. A $1 million price cut in early September got their attention. They came to see the home for the first time at an open house a few weeks later and things moved quickly after that. Tercero did the final walk-through before the Oct. 29 closing by himself because the buyers had already left the United States. Since New Mexico is a nondisclosure state for real estate transactions and sale prices are not public record, there is no definitive source on what homes sell for, except those included in the MLS database by the Santa Fe Association of Realtors. And not all sales are included, especially those on the high end, where both buyers and sellers might want privacy. But longtime Realtors believe the most expensive residential property (excluding ranches) ever sold in Santa Fe was the 20-acre Sol y Sombra property that once was owned by Georgia O’Keeffe and sold to Micro-
soft co-founder Paul Allen in 2000. The asking price was $12.2 million. The other large sale came in 2011, when Sotheby’s agent Neil Lyon represented both buyer and seller for a 40-acre Tesuque estate with a guest house, conservation easement and equestrian facilities. That $10.5 million home had been owned by builder Jay Ross. The Upper Canyon Road home that closed last month has four bedrooms and six bathrooms on 1.18 acres with a 1,500-square-foot guest house. Alan Ball, a Keller Williams broker who writes a blog about Santa Fe realestate, said 72 homes have sold above $2 million in the past 5 years, and only 15 above $3 million. “It’s not rare in the Hamptons [Long Island, N.Y.] or San Francisco or with a penthouse in New York, but it’s rare in Santa Fe — we just don’t have a lot of multimillion-dollar sales. And you can’t count on them selling quickly or for full price in our market. But they’re wonderful, they make everyone feel good.” Added Tercero, “It’s not every day you sell a $4 million house. I’ve come a long way.” Contact Bruce Krasnow at 986-3034 or bkrasnow@sfnewmexican.com.
Waste: Site is 18 miles from Plaza, 5 from well field Continued from Page A-1 Some argue this would be less expensive and not as dangerous as digging it up and shipping it to WIPP, but Coss said the counterargument is “then it’s dangerous to leave over a highly fractured fault zone that goes directly to our aquifer.” According to the proposed resolution, Area G is 18 miles from the Santa Fe Plaza and only five miles from the Buckman Well Field near the Rio Grande, part of Santa Fe’s community water system. Coss, who leaves office in March after two terms as mayor, said this
week he plans to introduce the resolution next week. He said the idea came up at the monthly meetings of the Regional Coalition of the Los Alamos National Laboratories Communities. The coalition, which he heads, includes members of the governing bodies of the cities and counties of Santa Fe and Taos, the city of Española, Rio Arriba County, Los Alamos County and Ohkay Owingeh, formerly known as San Juan Pueblo. “What we keep hearing in public comments is, “Don’t just cap and cover it like they did at Rocky Flats. Remove it,’ ” Coss said.
The Rocky Flats Plant, 12 miles northwest of Denver, was a federal nuclear-weapons production facility from 1952 to 1992. After a cleanup by the Rockwell Co., now Rockwell Automation, the 6,500-acre tract was opened as a public recreation area and wildlife refuge, despite allegations the site contains buried radioactive waste that is dangerous. Resolutions are symbolic gestures by governing bodies that do not carry the force of law. But Coss said that when coalition members meet with federal officials and “say, ‘We’re speaking for our communities,’ we’ve got some actual backing politically.”
Coss said the coalition also is urging Congress not to continue cutting the lab’s budget and is exploring how surrounding communities can get more out of the lab in terms of technology transfer, jobs and education. “I’ve got to say, they’re doing a pretty good job with their management of stormwater and with removing this [transuranic] waste, above-ground waste and taking it to WIPP,” Coss said. “There’s always concerns when the fires rage about, but most of that will be removed by the end of the year.” Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.
Care: Parity rule part of administration’s effort to curb gun violence Continued from Page A-1 They described the new Obama administration rule as necessary to ensure patients get benefits they are entitled to receive. The administration had pledged to issue a final mental health parity rule as part of an effort to reduce gun violence. Officials said they have now completed or made significant progress on 23 executive actions that were part of a plan announced in response to the school massacre in Newtown, Conn., last December. The 2008 mental health parity law affects large group plans. It does not require they offer mental health coverage, but if they do, that coverage must be equal to what is provided for patients with physical illnesses. Meanwhile, the Affordable Care Act extends the parity protections for those partic-
ipating in individual and small group health insurance plans. “For way too long, the health care system has openly discriminated against Americans with behavioral health problems,” Sebelius said in a telephone conference call with reporters. “We are finally closing these gaps in coverage.” Sebelius said that access to mental health coverage had already been improving since passage of the 2008 mental health parity law. She noted that larger employer health insurance plans have eliminated higher costsharing for inpatient mental health care and said most plans have done the same for outpatient care. HHS officials said mental health services generally amount to only about 5 percent of a large group insurance plan’s spending, so there should
be limited impact on premiums. They said the small group and individual plans being made available through health insurance exchanges already reflect the parity requirements. Health insurers said the final rule doesn’t really change the landscape they’ve been operating in since interim rules were released in 2010. Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of American’s Health Insurance Plans, said health plans have long supported the legislation and have worked to implement its requirements in an affordable and effective way for patients. The group said it doesn’t have cost estimates for compliance with the regulation. The National Alliance on Mental Illness called the parity regulations the crowning achievement of a 20-year campaign, but also said that the
regulations don’t cover managed care plans through Medicaid or the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, excluding about 15 percent of Americans covered by health insurance. “Some of our most vulnerable people are still being left behind,” said Michael Fitzpatrick, the group’s executive director. Gil Kerlikowske, director of the National Drug Control Policy Office at the White House, said the rule builds on the need to treat drug problems as a public health issue and not just as a criminal justice issue. He said about 23 million Americans have a substance abuse disorder, but only about 1 in 10 gets the treatment they need. “Access to drug treatment shouldn’t be a privilege to a few who can afford it. It should be provided to everyone who needs it,” Kerlikowske said.
Lawmakers instrumental in passing the health parity law had grown impatient with how long it was taking to fully implement it. “While I am clearly frustrated that this wasn’t done sooner, I understand that they had a lot of other things on their plate,” said former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., adding that it would be ungrateful not to take into account progress made on other fronts through the health care overhaul. Kennedy went public about his own struggle with addiction after crashing his car into a barricade near the Capitol in 2006; he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after winning election to Congress in 1994. “Ending insurance discrimination against pre-existing conditions is the single biggest mental health bill we could get,” Kennedy said.
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Martha Rigsby, left, speaks with attorney Vickey WrightSmith as they leave the courthouse Wednesday in Washington, D.C. In the past year, Rigsby has accounted for 226 calls to 911. MARK GAIL/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
the mental capacity to handle her medical affairs. These are “uncharted waters,” Miramontes said. It might be a unique attempt in the District of Columbia, but other cities have reported success with similar proceedings. Niels Tangherlini, a paramedic captain for the San Francisco Fire Department, led a successful pilot program from 2004 through 2009 to stop 911 serial callers. During the height of the program, Tangherlini said, officials successfully filed conservator petitions, which are legally similar to guardianships, for about 12 serial 911 users a year. Public documents and legal proceedings detail Rigsby’s 911 habits and assessments of her mental state and medical problems. They also reveal continued concerns from D.C. officials about the impact of one woman’s troubles on publichealth and safety resources. Although Rigsby has had various medical insurance plans throughout the years, she has an outstanding balance of $61,366.33 owed to the D.C. Fire and EMS for ambulance transports, according to Andrew Beaton, the department’s management program analyst. Over the past five years, each ambulance trip has averaged $478. Rigsby opposes the city’s attempt at guardianship. Over two weeks, she has quietly watched the proceedings in Judge Erik Christian’s courtroom in the D.C. Superior Court’s probate division. She has whispered instructions to her court-appointed attorney, Vickey Wright-Smith, at times. Wright-Smith has argued that Rigsby is able to care for herself and has no malicious intent for calling 911.
If the District of Columbia’s petition is successful, the medical guardian could take responsibilities for such things as hiring a home health aide, filling prescriptions and proposing a different living environment. But it would still be possible for Rigsby to dial 911 because the guardian would not be a live-in caregiver. After a court session this week, Rigsby seemed taken aback by a question about her calls to 911. “Well, I don’t do it on purpose,” she responded. According to testimony during the court hearings, Rigsby’s calls follow the same general pattern. She feels faint and collapses. About 40 percent of the time, she dials 911 on her own. Other times, she’s out in the city when passersby see her fall and call for help, the testimony indicated. About 55 percent of the time, she refuses to be transported in an ambulance and signs a waiver allowing emergency responders to leave. Court proceedings won’t resume until January, when Rigsby will have had a neuropsychological assessment, according to attorneys in the case. Several mental health experts have already been called to testify. According to court records, Abayomi Jaji, a psychiatrist with the city’s Department of Behavioral Health, said that Rigsby lacks the mental capacity to take care of herself as evidenced by “almost every other day calls to 911.”
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lation protections offered by the statute. Its grandfather clause applies only to policies that were WASHINGTON — Presiin effect when the law passed in dent Barack Obama says he’ll 2010. do everything he can to help More than five weeks after people coping with health open-enrollment season started insurance cancellations, but for uninsured Americans, legally and practically his Obama’s signature domestic options appear limited. policy achievement is still That means the latest politi- struggling. Persistent website cal problem engulfing Obama’s problems appear to have kept health care overhaul may not most interested customers from be resolved quickly, cleanly or signing up. Repairs are underway, completely. and the administration said FriWhite House deputy day the website’s income verifispokesman Josh Earnest said cation component will be offline Friday that the president for maintenance until Tuesday has asked his team to look at morning. An enrollment report administrative fixes to help expected next week is likely to people whose plans are being reflect only paltry sign-ups. canceled as a result of new Website woes have been federal coverage rules. Obama, eclipsed by the uproar over canin an NBC interview Thursday, cellation notices sent to millions said “I am sorry” to people of people who have individual who are losing coverage and plans that don’t measure up to had relied on his assurances the benefits package and level of that if they liked their plan, financial protection required by they could keep it. the law. The focus appears to be on “It was clear from the begineasing the impact for a specific ning that there were going to be group: people whose policies some winners and losers,” said have been canceled and who Timothy Jost, a law professor at don’t qualify for tax credits to Washington and Lee University offset higher premiums. The in Virginia, who supports the administration has not settled health overhaul. “But the losers on a particular fix and it’s pos- are calling reporters, and the sible the final decision would winners can’t get on the website.” apply to a broader group. In the House, a RepublicanStill, a president can’t just sponsored bill that would give pick up the phone and order insurers another year to sell the Treasury to cut checks for individual policies that were in people suffering from insureffect Jan. 1, 2013, is expected to ance premium sticker shock. get a floor vote late next week. In Spending would have to be the Senate, Louisiana Democrat authorized by law. Mary Landrieu has introduced legislation that would require Another obstacle: Most insurers to keep offering current of the discontinued policies individual plans. Democrats, appear to have been issued who as a group have stood firmly after the law was enacted, behind the new law so far, may according to insurers and independent experts. Legally, start to splinter if the uproar conthat means they would have tinues. never been eligible for cancelThe legislation faces long odds By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
The Associated Press
The Washington Post
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Obama has few options to fix cancellations problem
Washington court mulls fate of serial 911 caller WASHINGTON — Martha Rigsby collapsed to the ground for the first time in 1977. The spells continued, and she began calling 911 for help. She hasn’t stopped. In the past year alone, she’s accounted for 226 calls to 911 and been whisked by an ambulance to a hospital 117 times. Among firefighters in the District of Columbia, she’s a dreaded legend. They can recite her date of birth and Social Security number from memory. Over 30 years, Rigsby has become the most frequent 911 user in Washington history, totaling thousands of emergency calls and trips to the hospital after falling down, court papers say. Dubbed “super users” or “frequent fliers,” repeat 911 callers have long been identified as burdens on the health system and a drain on public-safety resources. “There will come a time when one of these [frequent 911 callers] will call and they will cost someone else their life,” said Jim Dunford, the emergency medical director for San Diego and a known expert on frequent 911 callers. Some cities, including San Diego, track mileage and ambulance hour time for each frequent caller to calculate the long-term costs and effects of serial 911 callers, Dunford said. “All cities are going through a similar experience of how do we deal with this small subset of people,” he said. For years, there has been concern that if crews are tending to Rigsby, the next 911 caller with an emergency might get a paramedic from a farther distance, said David Miramontes, medical director of the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department. A group of D.C. officials met earlier this year to figure out how to solve their problem with Rigsby. Her situation has led to the first known attempt in the city to seek guardianship for a serial 911 caller. The Department of Behavioral Health filed a court petition in April, alleging that Rigsby, 58, has bipolar and borderline personality disorders and does not have
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to begin with, but it may not do the job even if it passes. The reason: States, not the federal government, regulate the individual insurance market. State insurance commissioners have already approved the plans that will be offered for next year. It may be too late to wind back to where things stood at the beginning of this year. The insurance industry doesn’t like the legislative route either. “We have some significant concerns with how that would work operationally,” said Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for the trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans. Behind the political and legal issues, a powerful economic logic is also at work. Shifting people who already have individual coverage into the new health insurance markets under Obama’s law would bring in customers already known to insurers, reducing overall financial risks for the insurance pool. That’s painful for those who end up paying higher premiums for upgraded policies. But it could save money for the taxpayers who are subsidizing the new coverage. Compared with the uninsured, people with coverage are less likely to have a pent-up need for medical services. At one point, they were all prescreened for health problems. A sizable share of the uninsured people expected to gain coverage under Obama’s law have health problems that have kept them from getting coverage. They’ll be the costly cases.
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19th Annual Art Auction S a t ur d ay • N o v e m be r 9 , 2 0 1 3 • 5 p m S a n t a F e c o n v e nt i o n C e nt e r Live & Silent Auction • Cash Bar • Food by The Beestro • DJ John Edwards This popular fundraiser is now a well-anticipated tradition which includes several of Santa Fe’s best-known artists
Your Chance to Bid on... A week in Costa Rica, A Two day Stay at Buffalo Thunder REsort, Fine Art, Spa Services, Jewelry, STudent ARt, and More... Businesses Donors: 315 Restaurant • Act 2 • Adobo Catering • American Rain Gutters • Andiamo! • Artful Tea • Auto Angel • B Beautiful Luxury Salon & Spa • Back Street Bistro • The Beestro • Bill Hester Fine Art • Bishop’s Lodge • Bitter Sweet Designs • Body Studio • Broken Spoke • Buffalo Thunder • Cafe Cafe • Canyon Road Contemporary • Canyon Vista • Center for Contemporary Arts • Chalk Farm Gallery • Chevrolet Cadillac of Santa Fe • Chic Hair Boutique • Chiseled Fitness • Claiborne Gallery • Claufouttis • Cody Burch D.O.M. • The Compound Restaurant • Core Chiropractic • Cornerstone Community Partnership • The Cutler • CVG Contemporary • Da Silva Architecture, Inc. • DeLeone Allegway • Desert Son • Discount Tire • Diva Salon • dkb Fitness • Downtown Subscription • Dressman’s Gifts • Economos Works of Art • El Toro Landscape • Enrique’s Boutique Salon • Ernesto Mayans Gallery • Estate of Peggy Humphries • Expert Tire • Fiasco Fine Wine • For A Fist Full of Dollars • Frontier Frames • Garcia Street Books • Georgia O’Keeffe Museum • Glow Spray Tan Boutique • The Golden Eye • Hair to There • Harry’s Road House • Historic Santa Fe Foundation • Holistic Health Coach • House of Ancestors Antiques • Iconik Coffee Roasters • IMPACT Personal Safety • Institute for Permanent Makeup • Jane Smith Home • Jean Cocteau Cinema • Jewels • Jurassic Pets • Just For Grins • Kakawa Chocolate • La Posada • Lakind Dental Group • The Lensic • Las Cosas Kitchen Shoppe • LewAllen Jewelry • LNH Studio • Lorreen Emporium • Loretto Chapel • Lululemon • Lyn Fox Pueblo Pottery • Marble Brewery Tap Room • Mark White Fine Art • Mark White Fine Art/Veilleux Studio • Maya • Mertail Fitness • Michael Smith Gallery • Mike’s Garage • MNMF Shops • Momentum Bilingual Preschool • Moon Rabbit Toys • Museum Hill Cafe • Museum of International Folk Art Education • Music Studio • Nathalie • Nedra Matteucci Gallery • New Mexico Academy of Healing Arts • Northside Veterinary Clinic • Nuart Gallery • Ohori’s Coffee • Ojo Caliente Mineral Springs Resort & Spa • Pacha Mama • The Pantry • Patrick McQuitty, DDS • Perfect Eyebrows • Pippin Contemporary • The Plaza Cafe • Pomegranate Studios • Pranzo • Rainbow Gate • Reflection Gallery • Reflective Images • Rio Chama • Sage Bakehouse • Salon del Mar • Samantha Silver Jewelry & Design • Sangre de Cristo Racquet Club • Santa Facials • Santa Fe Children’s Museum • Santa Fe Community Yoga Center • Santa Fe Fabrics • Santa Fe Opera • Santa Fe Quilting • Santa Fe Sage Inn • Santa Fe Scout Collection • Santa Fe Spa • Santa Fe Spirits • Savory Spice Shop • Selby Fleetwood Gallery • SENSE, Inc. • Shear Perfection • Silver Sun • Smith Veterinary Hospital • Somers Jewelry • Sparrow Antiques • Spirit of the Earth • The Standard Art & Antique Co • Studio of Joe Ramiro Garcia • Sweet Water Harvest Kitchen • Takis Landscape Maintenance, LLC • Talis Fortuna • The Teahouse • Therapy Solutions • Timeship Skate School • Tom Ross Gallery • Tomasita’s • Total Body Nutrition & Fitness • Toyopolis • Toyotech • Tree House, LLC • Tresa Vorenberg Goldsmiths • The Triangle Inn • Tumbledown • Turner Carroll Gallery • Uppercrust Pizza • Verve Gallery of Photography • Waxlander Gallery • White Lotus • Will Wilson Photography • Wolf Creek • Yoga Source • Zane Bennett Contemporary Art • Zaplin Lampert Gallery Individual Donors: Blair & Stewart Anderson • Ruth Avila • Alana Bader • Jodi & Dean Balsamo • Steve Barrett • Lisa Bartoletti • Robin Beachner • Rick Beaman • Maria Bernal • James & Sue Berry • Sarah Bienvenue • F. Bimontes • Sara Birmingham • Theresa Bohn • Holly Bradshaw Eakes • Geralyn Britko • Melanie Brittain • Joan Brooks Baker • Allen Brown • Cody Burch • Peter Burega • Joy Busch • Katherine Byrnes • Jon Caradies • Elizabeth Carovillano • Mike Chapman • Wendy Chase • Charles Churchward • Omer Claiborne • Christa Coggins • Amber Coghlan • James Cohen • Catherine Colby • Lisa Cooley • Gabriela Cover • Allen Davis • Elisa Day • Gary Denmark • Ana Diesner Whittemore • Charles Doerwald • James Economos • Pamela Emsden • Marc Esposito • Sean Fairbridge • Deborah Fishbein • Selby Fleetwood • Talis Fortuna • Lyn Fox • Ella Frank • Elsa Frost • Atsuko Fukue • Audrey & Israel Garcia • Jenna Garcia • Karen Gardner • Eva Ghazi • Birgitte Ginge • Natalie Goldberg • Aurelia Gomez • Jacqui Grabb • Jill Grove • Stacy Guinan • Lama Gyurmed • Monica Halford • Linda Hall • Marilyn Hargrove • Noel Harvey • Ashley Haynes • Anna Heiniger • Theo Helmstadler • Katyea Hendricks • Jay Heneghan • Jan Heneghan • Margaret Hennessey • Kate Herrell • Dr. Stan Heyman • Anne Hilley • Anne Hoi • Rebecca Holland • Shelly Horton-Tripp • Sarah Hryniewicz • Cheryl Ingram • Katina Jellison • Kerry Johnson • Bryan Johnson-French • Robin Jones • Kim Kelly • Ellen Kemper • Nathalie Kent • Eslee Kessler • Lucille Kissock • Carla Kountoupes • Myra Krien • Roger Kull • Richard Lampert • Armand Lara • Laiyee Lee • Nancy Leeson • Kris Legatski • Anne-Laure Legier • Joe Lehm • Laurie Lenfestey • Laura LewAllen • Gloria List • Tama Lombardo • Don Lucas • Tony & Gayatri Malmed • Leilani Maloney • Lyn Martel • Teresa & Vinny Martinez • Mark McDowell • Sara McIntyre • Patrick McQuitty • Jeanine McTasney • Robert Morris • Patricia Naylor • Sarah Nolen • Molly Norton • Jennifer O’Brian • Kathryn O’Keefe • Brian O’Malley • Jason S. 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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
LOCAL NEWS
Gearing up to ski
John Adams with Santa Fe Mountain Sports arranges snowboard boots for the annual Santa Fe Ski and Sports Swap at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center on Friday. The popular swap started Friday evening; Saturday hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday hours are 10 a.m.-2 p.m. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Skiers find their deals on equipment at annual swap He said the swap, which has been going on since at least the 1970s, has grown over the years. ows upon rows of ski “It’s always been a big source of boots, skis and other income for the team,” he said. winter sports gear filled Santa Fe resident Stephanie the Genoveva Chavez Varoz dropped off two pairs of Community Center gymnasium skis and a couple of ski suits at Friday evening, waiting for buyers the swap. She said she has bought seeking a good deal. things at the event in the past. The equipment was consigned “I’ve gotten some good deals,” to the Santa Fe Ski and Sports she said. Swap by local residents and venInside the gym Friday evening, dors for a sale that started Friday Sharon Mottola was taking equipnight and continues Saturday and ment and checking it in. Mottola Sunday. volunteers with the Adaptive Ski Twenty percent of the sales Team, which provides lessons from the swap benefit the Santa and specialized winter equipment Fe Ski Team, and the consignors to people of all ages who have a take home the rest. wide range of disabilities. The The team has 75 members group will have information at ranging in age from 7 years old to the swap about its program. 75. The money helps pay for the Mottola said she has shopped team’s coaches, travel expenses to at the swap over the years. “Any ski races and other fees, said Dan McCarthy, a longtime coach who time you have kids and they’re outgrowing equipment, this is a sat at the entrance of the gym great place to come and trade,” Friday night checking equipment. she said. “There are definitely deals to be The Ski and Sports Swap is had,” said McCarthy, who also open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturworks with Santa Fe Mountain day The entrance fee for adults is Sports. Skis with too-old bindings were $5 and free for kids under 48 inches tall. On Sunday, the set aside along a wall. They’ll be swap is free and is open from turned into furniture, McCarthy 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. said. By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
R
In brief Social event for military veterans set for Tuesday A retired major general is organizing a gettogether for military veterans, offering them a chance to meet one another. Frank Schober Jr. said the 7 p.m., Tuesday gathering at Duel Brewery, 1228 Parkway Drive off Rufina Street, is an opportunity for veterans to share a real VA experience — a Veterans Assembly. The party, which offers snacks, Fussball, darts and table games, isn’t a formal or official assembly, but it will give veterans an opportunity to meet other veterans. He’s targeting veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and their “senior brothers.” “Many of these people have served three or four tours in Iraq or Afghanistan,” he said. “We’ve had nothing like this before in our history. It really takes a toll and the idea is to just get them to hang out together and get to know each other.” The Santa Fe animal shelter, in connection with the event, plans to announce a special adoption discount for pets for veterans, called Pets for Vets. The adoption fees for all adult dogs and cats will be waived for veterans, said
Anna McMillian with Santa Fe Mountain Sports arranges skies for this weekend’s annual ski swap at Genoveva Chavez Community Center on Friday.
People who consigned equipment to the swap will return between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. on Sunday to collect a check or equipment that didn’t sell. If they don’t show up, the ski team keeps the unsold merchandise as a donation.
Dylan Moore, the shelter’s adoptions manager. The adoption fee for all puppies, kittens and Shelter Heroes — purebred or highly sought-after dogs — will be 50 percent off. The Pets for Vets adoption discount starts on Veterans Day, Monday, Nov. 11.
Scholarships available for returning students Students who are returning to college for a certificate or two-year program can apply for $1,000 scholarships from the Los Alamos Employees’ Scholarship Fund. The deadline for applications to is Dec. 2. Applications must be submitted online to the Los Alamos National Laboratory Foundation’s Regional College/Returning Student Scholarship Fund at www.lanlfoundation.org. The awards go to students returning to a formal education after an absence, such as business, the military or personal reasons. Candidates from Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, Los Alamos, San Miguel, Taos, Mora and Sandoval counties are eligible and must show that they have been accepted for certification or a two-year degree program at an accredited regional college. Since the program began in 2011, 48 students have been awarded the scholarship. Students who previously received the Regional College/Returning Scholar award may reapply.
more info For more information about the Santa Fe Ski Team, call 986-1230 or visit www. santafeskiteam.com.
Taos parking to double after town puts in new meters By Andrew Oxford The Taos News
TAOS — Town of Taos facilities director Steve Kennebeck pointed out a problem with each parking meter he passed while walking along a downtown street. Several meters were completely broken or were missing a mechanism to accept coins. One meter only accepted two hours of payment at a time while the one next to it accepted four hours. What Kennebeck calls an “inconsistent” and “unreliable” parking situation has prompted the town to buy more than 240 secondhand meters and double the cost of hourly parking downtown to $1 an hour. Officials call the overhaul a “bargain” and say it will generate money for downtown improvements. But some merchants worry the increases will anger visitors who already complain about parking costs. On Taos Plaza, notes attesting to the frustrations of motorists were taped over some meters. “I put coins in but it didn’t work,” one note stated. Perhaps it was for naught, though, as even town officials have acknowledged that the unreliability of parking meters downtown had made citations easy to challenge and defeat in municipal court. “The honor system,” Kennebeck said. “That’s what is frustrating people. They try to do the right thing.” Kennebeck said the new mechanisms will be installed Monday, and he said the upgrades are long overdue. Town officials have described the project’s $20,000 cost as a bargain, noting that the mechanisms were purchased secondhand from the city of Anchorage, Alaska. With the machinery, however, will come higher rates and new rules. The cost of parking will double to $1 per hour and rates will be enforced from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. The free hour between noon and 1 p.m. will be eliminated. Meters will be programmed to accept payment for up to two hours at a time. Town manager Oscar Rodríguez conceded that the changes come in the absence of any comprehensive plan for downtown parking. All metered parking spaces would be collecting revenue, he said, and citations would be issued with the confidence they could be defended in court. Ample free parking would still be available along some streets and in lots leased by the town. Reliable equipment and the streamlining of metered hours would ease confusion surrounding downtown parking, the town manager added. The revenue would be directed back into downtown, according to town officials, who have identified a slew of drainage and resurfacing concerns as well as opportunities to upgrade street fixtures like trash cans and benches. Ultimately, the town would also seek to hire a full-time staff person devoted to parking enforcement and downtown visitor interaction. “This could generally be a strong income stream,” the town manager said. In June, downtown parking was projected to generate $87,821 in fiscal 2013. The town collected $83,300 in parking fees during fiscal 2012 and $85,635 in 2011. The promise of better infrastructure downtown was not enough, however, to assuage the concerns at some local businesses that higher parking rates will drive away customers. “I think it sucks,” Leandro Rodríguez, proprietor of Las Acuarelas Studio and Gallery said. “I don’t see why they want to do it.” Rodríguez was skeptical that area business owners or residents would see any benefits from the extra revenue and said the higher rates would irk visitors. “The tourists are always complaining about paying for parking,” he said. A few doors down at the Taos Artists Collective, the ceramist and printmaker at the register offered a more nuanced opinion. “New meters are fine,” said John Hutson. “The main issue a lot of people have is the time limit. It causes customers to be concerned about feeding the meters,” he added, referring to the policy that drivers will only be able to pay for two hours of parking at a time. If the town is upgrading its meters, he said, there should be options for more methods of payment such as credit or debit cards. Merchants on the plaza are often asked for change by motorists trying to pay for parking, Hutson said.
Funding for the Los Alamos Employees’ Scholarship Fund comes from contributions by LANL employees and a match from Los Alamos National Security LLC. For complete guidelines, see www.lanl foundation.org.
Program to feature Santa Fe author McCord Richard McCord, author and founder of the Santa Fe Reporter, is scheduled to be interviewed on the Report from Santa Fe public-affairs program on KNME-TV on Sunday. McCord in June published his book No Halls of Ivy, the Gritty Story of the College of Santa Fe, a history of the school that opened in 1947 and closed in 2009. He also wrote The Chain Gang: One Newspaper versus the Gannett Empire, which documented the struggle of the weekly Santa Fe Reporter in the early 1980s against Gannett, the national media company which at the time owned The New Mexican. The show, hosted by Lorene Mills, airs 8 a.m. Sunday on KNME-TV Channel 5. The audio also will be aired at 9:30 a.m. Monday, on KANW-FM 89.1.
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
The New Mexican
Parking in Taos will double after the town installs new meters Monday. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
LOCAL & REGION
In brief
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
APS superintendent suspended for 3 days
ALBUQUERQUE — Albuquerque Public Schools Superintendent Winston Brooks has been suspended three days without pay over comments he posted online. ALBUQUERQUE — The nation’s highAPS Board president Marty Esquivel est court is being asked to overturn a New announced the suspension at a news conMexico ruling that an Albuquerque busiference Friday. ness owned by gay marriage opponents The school board met to discuss violated a state anti-discrimination law in whether or not to take action against refusing to photograph a same-sex couple’s Brooks for tweets about New Mexico Educommitment ceremony. cation Secretary Hanna Skandera. In two An appeal was filed Friday with the tweets, he compared Skandera to livestock. U.S. Supreme Court by a law firm repreBrooks apologized for his tweets on senting Elane Photography. The court is Wednesday, saying he “meant no offense.” expected to decide in late fall or over the His suspension will begin on Monday. winter whether to hear the case. Chief Operating Officer Brad Winter will The New Mexico Supreme Court ruled fill the role for three days. in August the business’s refusal in 2006 to photograph the ceremony involving two women violated the state’s Human Rights Act. Lawyers for the business say the ruling violates the business owners’ free speech ALAMOGORDO — The Alamogordo rights by compelling them to “express school district has decided to allow the messages that conflict with their religious fantasy novel Neverwhere to be used once beliefs.” again in high school English classes. The district superintendent’s office made the announcement Friday after a review of the book’s content. The book was removed from use about two weeks ago after a parent pointed out a ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico passage that described a sexual encounter Tourism Secretary Monique Jacobson and used a curse word. The book is about says tourism is at an all-time high in New an Englishman who is drawn into an alterMexico. nate reality of London’s abandoned subJacobson told the Tourism of Associaway system and sewer tunnels. tion of New Mexico on Thursday that School officials say the review found domestic visits, spending and hospitality the book to be educationally suitable, baljobs have all hit record levels. anced and age-appropriate for high school In 2012, Jacobson says there were 32 mil- students. lion domestic overnight and day visitors to English teacher Pam Thorp told the the state. That’s up 2.6 percent over 2011. Alamogordo Daily News last month that Day trips were up 4.8 percent to 17.5 miltaking the book out of the students’ hands lion. Average per person spend was up amounted to censorship. 12.9 percent for day visits and 4.9 percent for overnight. Direct tourism spend increased to a record $5.9 billion, up from $5.5 billion in 2011. Additionally she says, tourism employment passed pre-recession levels in June DALLAS — The Dallas museum chroniof this year. Leisure and hospitality jobs cling the life and death of President John increased 5.5 percent jobs over last sumF. Kennedy has added several items visible mer to 4,767, marking 12 consecutive quar- in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of Jack Ruby shooting Kennedy assassin Lee ters of job growth.
Business appeals court ruling in gay bias case
Alamogordo allows use of fantasy novel
Secretary says state tourism at all-time high
Apache war leader Nana defied the U.S. Cavalry and remained ‘unreconstructed’ until his death. U.S. WAR DEPARTMENT PHOTO/COURTESY MARC SIMMONS
Spanish colonists struggled to deal with Apache tribes
I
Sixth Floor Museum adds historic items
n colonial days, the Gran At the heart of the policy was Apachería, or Apache a plan to divide and conquer. As Homeland, stretched from alliances were made with other the Gulf of Mexico westward to tribes, one of the terms imposed the head of the Gulf of Califorwas that they must join with nia. Through this vast territory the Spaniards in a common war ranged sub-tribes like the Lipan, with the Apaches. And when Kiowa-Apache, Mescalero, individual Apache bans sued for Gila, Chiricahua and Western peace, it was to be granted only Apache. All were hostile to the on condition that they take up Spaniards. arms against fellow tribal memIndeed, as the advancing bers still hostile. Spanish frontier reached the Another plank in the new Apaches’ range, it was abruptly policy resulted in suspension of halted. White settlement within the old law against selling liquor Angela Ortiz Flores LISW Apachería proved precarious, to Apaches. Now, Individual/Family therapist or in many cases their taste for spirits 2074 Galisteo St., Ste. B-5, impossible. was to be encouraged Santa Fe, NM 87505 The fierce raids as a way of promotby these Indians ing native goodwill exacted a huge toll Angela Ortiz LISW BarryFlores Kentopp toward Spaniards and in lives and property 2074 Galisteo St., Ste. B-5, www.visalusofnm.bodybyvi.com luring them into a from colonists who Santa Fe,470-3811 NM 87505 (505) state of dependence. settled on the fringes A new law to allow of Apache country, or sale of firearms to who traveled through Marc Brian McPartlon Roofing Apaches had the it with the pack Simmons 39 Bisbee Ct, #7 Santa Fe, NM, 87508 same aim. If forced ttoreplace your trains. (505) 982-6256 www.mcpartlonroofing.com/ Trail Dust rely upon the SpanLike most nomad iards for ammunition hunting and warrior and gun repairs, it appeared FURNITURE societies, the Apaches did not they’d be more apt to keep the think in terms of tribal owner1735 Central Ave, Los Alamos, NM 87544 ship of land. Nor when fighting peace. Hope existed too that the www.cbfox.com • (505) 662-2864 other Indians or Europeans was Indians would gradually lose skill with their deadly bows and their motive, strictly speaking, arrows. “to defend their homeland.” And finally, there was a plan Apache bands constantly 100 S Federal Pl, Santa Fe, NM 87501 shifted their range, looking to create “peace settlements” centurynetbank.com • (505) 995-1200 for new hunting grounds and for the Apaches whenever they bumping weaker peoples out of could be persuaded to give Cos Bar their way. Sometimes they got up their warring ways. This bumped themselves. 128 W. Water St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 foreshadowed the reservation That happened to the Lipan system later adopted by Ameriwww.cosbar.com • (505) 984-2676 Apaches in the 18th century. cans. They roamed the buffalo plains One of these settlements David Richard Gallery of west Texas and eastern New was placed at Sabinal on the Mexico until the Comanches 544 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 Rio Grande between Belen and stormed in from the west with www.DavidRichardGallery.com • (505) 983-9555 Socorro. In 1792 the Spanish the aim of taking that rich coun- governor at Santa Fe had neightry away from them. boring settlers there clear land What followed was a bloody Eden Medi Spa for planting and dig irrigation inter-tribal war of exterminaditches. 405 Kiva Court, Santa Fe, NM 87505 tion. Lipan society was shatThen Mescalero and Warm edenmedispa.com • (505) 988-3772 tered and the few survivors fled Springs Apaches were located into northern Mexico, leaving Authentic on the site and for several years Spanish Cuisine their Comanche enemies in received subsidies, in hopes possession of the buffalo herds. 213 Washington Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 they could be transformed The Lipan today are extinct. www.elmeson-santafe.com • (505) 983-6756 into peaceful farmers. But the Both the Spanish governSabinal experiment eventument and army were baffled as ally broke up and the Indians Georgia O’Keeffe Museum to how they should deal with raiding Apaches, at least during returned to the wild. For them, 217 Johnson St, Santa Fe, NM 87501 the pull of the old way of life the first two centuries of the www.okeeffemuseum.org • (505) 946-1000 was simply too strong. colonial era. Huge sums were Spain’s 1786 police here and spent in futile military camthere did have some marginal paigns against the tribe, while The Golden Eye success, providing a bit of welthe despair of the terrorized 115 Don Gaspar Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 come relief from Apache pressettlers grew. www.goldeneyesantafe.com • (505) 984-0040 sure, but the basic problem had An American army officer still not been resolved at Mexiin the New Mexico TerriIndian Arts and Culture can independence in 1821. tory would later describe the 710 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, NM 87505 Apache hostilities actually Apache warrior as “the greatest increased under the Republic of guerrilla fighter the world has indianartsandculture.org • (505)-476-1250 Mexico. And raids by remnant ever seen.” That helps explain why the Spaniards were unable bands in the Sierra Madres conInternational Folk Art to solve the “Apache problem” tinued as late as the 1930s. Museum on the battlefield. 706 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, NM 87505 That led Gen. Jacobo Ugarte, Now in semi-retirement, author internationalfolkart.org • (505) 476-1200 Marc Simmons wrote a weekly supreme military commander history column for more than of Mexico’s northern frontier, KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY SANTA FE 35 years. The New Mexican is to adopt a new Indian policy 130 Lincoln Ave., Ste. K, Santa Fe, NM 87501 publishing reprints from among in 1786. It comprised a series www.kwsantafenm.com/ • (505) 983-5151 the more than 1,800 columns he of novel strategies designed to bring about Apache pacification. produced during his career.
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Harvey Oswald. The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza announced Friday the additions as the nation marks the 50th anniversary of Kennedy’s Nov. 22, 1963, assassination. New items include the tan suit worn by police Detective Jim Leavelle and the handcuffs that linked him to Oswald during the attempted jail transfer. Also added were Ruby’s gray fedora and the Nikon camera Dallas Times Herald photographer Bob Jackson used to make the photo. The museum’s permanent exhibit is on the sixth floor of the former Texas School Book Depository, where investigators say Oswald set up his sniper’s nest.
NBC wins space race, will televise flight NEW YORK — NBC has won the television space race. The network announced Friday it has signed a deal with Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic to televise the company’s first commercial space flight. Branson and his two adult children, Holly and Sam, will be the first private passengers to travel into space next year through his company. The launch will be part of a three-hour special Today show. NBC’s Peacock Productions unit also will offer programming leading up to the flight across the company’s other outlets, including CNBC, MSNBC, SyFy and The Weather Channel. Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo will leave from the company’s terminal in New Mexico.
Former Belen police detective indicted ALBUQUERQUE — A former Belen police detective could face 10 years in prison if convicted of a federal civil rights charge alleging he assaulted a handcuffed suspect. The U.S. Attorney’s Office says John Lytle was indicted by a federal grand jury in Albuquerque in connection with the March 15, 2012 incident. Defense attorney John D’Amato did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. The case was investigated by the FBI. The Associated Press
LINK TO THESE BUSINESSES Lannan Foundation
313 Read Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.lannan.org • (505) 986-8160
NM History Museum
113 Lincoln Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 nmhistorymuseum.org • (505) 476-5200
NM Art Museum
107 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe, NM 87501 nmartmuseum.org • (505)-476-5072
Positive Energy
801 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505 positiveenergysolar.com • (505) 428-0069
Quail Run
3101 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.quailrunsantafe.org • (505) 986-2200
Rio Grande School
715 Camino Cabra, Santa Fe, NM 87505 riograndeschool.org • (505) 983-1621
Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association
1409 Luisa Street, Suite A, Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.sfahba.com • (505) 982-1774
Santa Fe Culinary Academy
112 W San Francisco St #300, Santa Fe, NM 87501 santafeculinaryacademy.com • (505) 983-7445
2414 Cerrillos Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.santaferestore.org • (505) 473-1114
Southwest Care Center
649 Harkle Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505 southwestcare.org • (505) 989-8200
SW Ear, Nose and Throat
1620 Hospital Dr., Santa Fe, NM 87505 swentnm.com • (505) 629-0612
Teca Tu A Paws-Worthy Emporium
500 Montezuma Avenue – in Sanbusco Market Center, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.tecatu.com • (505) 982-9374
Theater Grottesco
theatergrottesco.org • (505) 474-8400
435 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.zanebennettgallery.com • (505) 982-8111
James Chrobocinski
Broker/Owner 433 Paseo de Peralta, Suite 2, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.ziarealtygroup.com • (505) 662-8899
Faith & Worship
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
These houses of worship invite you to join them
ANGLICAN St. Thomas The Apostle Anglican Church
“Use the Cosmic 2x4 to Hit a Home Run - Part 1: The 2x4” by special guest Rev. Judy Morley. Information on workshops, classes, concerts, rentals, past lectures videos available at www.santafecsl.org - www.facebook.com/ SantaFeCSL - 505-983-5022.
An Anglican Holy Communion service is celebrated every Sunday morning at 11 a.m. by St. everyday Center For Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church. Services are held in the chapel located on the 3rd floor Spiritual Living at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center, is a spiritual community committed to 455 St. Michaels Drive, Santa Fe. Members of all empowering people to live joy-filled lives. Our faiths and traditions are welcome to attend. For Sunday service celebrations speak to living our information, contact Rev. Lanum, 505-603-0369. lives to the fullest with rockin’ upbeat music to open our hearts. Come join our community as we grow together into our best lives. Visit us at First Baptist Church of www.everydaycsl.org for more information. We are located at 2544 Camino Edward Ortiz Suite B Santa Fe First Baptist Church of Santa Fe, 1605 Old Pecos (across from the UPS Distribution Center). Trail. Come join us this Sunday! 9:15 a.m. – Bible Study for all ages; 10:30 a.m. – Worship Service (interpreted for deaf). Wednesday – 6:15 p.m. – The Light at Mission viejo Bible Study/Prayer Meeting led by Pastor Lee H erring; Adult Choir Rehearsal; 6:30 p.m. – “Ignite” Sunday Service 10:30; Men’s Prayer Ministry: for Youth. Childcare available for all services. For Monday- Thursday Morning Prayer 6 a.m.; Women’s Ministry: Monthly on 4th Saturday, more information, please call the church office at 983-9141, 8:30 – 4:00, Monday - Friday, or visit 9- 11 a.m.; Missions: Palomas, Mexico, monthly, second weekend; Youth: Amped- 6 p.m. Fridays; our website www.fbcsantafe.com. Consumed- Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; Singles (30+) meet monthly, 1st & 3rd Tuesday at 6 p.m.; MidRodeo Road Baptist Church Current Sermon Series: “How to be a Christian in week Spanish Service, Wednesday at 6 p.m.; a Non-Christian World” Sunday mornings at 10:45 Homeless Ministry, monthly 3rd Saturday; Mida.m. 3405 Vereda Baja (one block south of Rodeo Week Prayer: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. Information: Road on Richards) Visit us on the web at 505-982-2080. www.thelightatmissionviejo.org www.rrbcsantafe.com. Call 505-473-9467 or Like us on Facebook.
BAPTIST
CHRISTIAN
BUDDHIST Prajna Zendo
CHRISTIAN SCIeNCe First Church of Christ Scientist, Santa Fe
Our church is designed to support the practice of Meditation, Koan study, private interviews with Christian healing. Services consist of readings two qualified Zen teachers. Retreats, classes, book study, dharma talks and more. Prajna Zendo from the King James Bible and Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker is committed to its members and all beginners Eddy. Sunday service/Sunday School/Child care and practitioners who walk through its doors. Based on the lineage of Hakuyu Taizen Maezumi at 10:00a.m. Everlasting Punishment and Adam and Fallen Man are upcoming Bible Lessons Roshi. Upcoming seven-day Rohatsu: December for November 3 and 10. Wednesday meetings at 1 - 8. Sunday service, zazen and dharma talk 12:10p.m. and 7:30p.m. Readings are on a timely starting 9:00am. Tuesday evening zazen at 7pm. Tuesday through Sunday morning zazen at 6am. topic followed by sharing healings attesting to Call 505-660-3045 for more information. 5 Camino the practical presence of God in our life. The Potrillo, Lamy, 15 minutes from Santa Fe just off noon meeting is informal. Bring your lunch and friends. Please join us! 323 East Cordova Road. of Hwy 285 next door to Eldorado. www.christiansciencesantafe.org www.prajnazendo.org
Thubten Norbu Ling Buddhist Center
Thubten Norbu Ling provides education and practice in Tibetan Buddhism following the tradition of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and in accord with the lineage teachings of Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche. Classes are offered to all levels of western students seeking a path to personal clarity and well-being, and are generally held on Sunday morning and on Wednesday and Thursday evenings. Practices and meditations are offered on Tuesday evenings, and on weekend mornings. Our resident teachers are Geshe Thubten Sherab and Don Handrick. 1807 Second Street, #35. For more information visit our website www.tnlsf.org or call 505-660-7056
CATHOLIC The Church of Antioch at Santa Fe
Join us as we delve into the Gifts of the Feminine (human and divine) Mother Carol Calvert and Mother Jenni Walker preside with special music by Carol Williamson, and organist, Carole Farina. We have open communion and welcome all to attend our weekly meditation Sunday morning 8:45 to 9:00 and Mass from 9 to 10 at the Loretto Chapel 207 Old Santa Fe Trail. Doors open at 8:30. Pastor Daniel Dangaran 505-983-9003, Associate Pastor Carol Calvert Archbishop Richard Gundrey, Emertius, and Resident Priests Mother Jenni Walker and Father Doug Walker invite you to come experience this loving community!
Step-by-Step Bible Group You are invited to a complete course on bible study called “Understanding the Scriptures”. St. Anne’s bible study Step By Step Bible Group belongs to you as a member of the body of Jesus Christ and members of The Church. All are welcome. Come join us. May God bless you all. (Thursdays in Santa Fe) from 6:00 p.m 8:00 p.m. at St. Anne’s Church School Building – 511 Alicia St. More information, Call Sixto Martinez: 470-0913 or Paul Martinez: 470-4971 or find us online www.stepbystepbg.net
CeNTeRS FOR SPIRITUAL LIvING Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living
Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living
We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, creativity and service. Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s. All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when Live Video Streaming starts at www.santafecsl.org. Music: Celia. Message:
DISCIPLeS OF CHRIST
JeWISH Located at 2230 Old Pecos Trail, our Synagogue follows progressive Reform Judaism led by Rabbi Martin Levy and Cantor Michael Linder. Continuing this Saturday morning at 9:15am, Rabbi Levy leads our Shabbat Torah discussion on Genesis. On Wednesday, November 13 at 7:30pm, Rabbi teaches the origins of Lurianic Kabbalah. We continue our regular Shabbat evening services on Friday nights, 7:30pm. On Friday, November 29 at 6:30 pm is our Chanukkah Party - Pot Luck Meal ($5) donations, and bring your Menorah for Communal Lighting, call for reservations! For additional information, call us at 505-820-2991 or visit our website at http://www.beittikvasantafe.org/.
Are you looking to connect with an inclusive, spiritual (not religious) CommUnity? Come join us tomorrow Sunday for our 10:30am service, which features music, meditation, fellowship, fun and illuminating topics. Rev. Brendalyn’s message “If I Be Lifted Up” will support you in resting in the ISness beyond words and thoughts”. Preregister now for “Expand Your Spiritual Universe” workshop with Matthew Watson. December 7, 10am-5:30pm, $50 includes book, lunch and refreshments. Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way North side of 599 Bypass @ Camino de los Montoyas. (2.4 miles from 84/285, 8.4 miles from Airport Rd.) ALL are honored and welcome.
Temple Beth Shalom
ORTHODOX
Congregation Beit Tikva
is a handicap accessible, welcoming Reform Jewish Congregation with a great religious school and preschool (www.preschool.sftbs. org). Friday services begin at 6:30pm. Saturday mornings, enjoy bagels, lox, and Torah study, at 9:15. Stay for morning services at 10:30. Monday Morning Minyan and study with Aaron Wolf is from 8:00-9:00am in the Upper Sanctuary. The Chanukah/Thanksgivukkah Bazaar is tomorrow, November 10, 10-2. Dr. Martin Rosenberg is our Craig Fawcett Memorial Scholar-in-Residence November 15-16. He’ll speak at services on Friday, November 15 and will present ‘Explorations in Visual Midrash’ at 7pm on November 16. 205 E. Barcelona Road, 982-1376, www.sftbs.org.
LUTHeRAN
Christ Lutheran Church (PCA) PReSBYTeRIAN
Worship services every sunday 8am & 10am, bible study 8:50am with pastor kate schlechter “baptised, we live”, what is lutheran christianity. Coffee and refreshments after services. Mondaybook club, tuesday-beaders, prayer shawl knitters & crocheters, thursday-feed the hungry, fridaymen’s lunch bunch with guest speakers tba, women’s luncheon, saturday-social, sunday-choir practice. We are a reconciling in Christ church, composed of all races, classes, genders and sexual orientations in community to honor God and be of service. 505-983-9461 1701 Arroyo Chamiso www.clcsantafe.com
Our Presbyterian church is at Don Gaspar and Cordova Road. Our focus is on the historical truths of Jesus Christ, His Love and Redemptive Grace... and our contemporary response. Sunday services are 9:00 and 10:45 am (childcare provided). Children and Youth Ministry activities also available. Call us at (505)982-8817 or visit our website at christchurchsantafe.org for more information.
Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS)
First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA)
9:30AM Divine Service - 11:00AM Luncheion. The members and pastor, Rev. Doug Escue, celebrate its 75th year of organization. On Nov. First Christian Church 10, 1938—the birthday of Martin Luther—50 individuals signed the charter to become of Santa Fe Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church. The First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Santa Fe, 645 Webber Street, worships at 10:30 on day’s festivities include guest preacher and former son of the congregation, the Rev. Ben Roberts. Sunday mornings. We are an open and affirming The Divine Service also includes special music congregation with communion open to all who by the adults choir, children’s choir, musicians, wish to partake. Viento de Gracia (Disciples of and the San Pablo Mariachi from El Paso, TX. Christ) meets in the same building with services Several new members will also be received. An in Spanish on Sundays 5 p.m. and Thursdays Anniversary meal will follow the service. Join at 7 p.m. All are welcome. Located two blocks us. ILC is located just west to the New Mexico south of the state capital building. We support Children’s Museum which is at the corner of Old global hunger relief through Week of Compassion, Pecos Trail and East Barcelona Road. 983-7568 Christian Ministry through the Disciples of www.ilc-sfnm.org Christ, and local hunger relief through Food for Santa Fe. We can be found on the web at www. santafedisciples.org
MeTHODIST
ePISCOPAL Holy Family episcopal Church
10A Bisbee Court, www.holyfamilysantafe.org A family oriented church with a special mission to ASD Spectrum Children. Sundays: 10:30 Eucharist with Choir Practice starting at 9:45, Tuesdays: 10am Prayer Shawl Ministry (come to learn or come to create) Thursdays: 12:15pm Noonday Prayer or Eucharist. A sensory break room is available during all services. Please contact us at (505) 424-0095 or email us at holyfamilysantafe@gmail.com.
Holy Trinity Orthodox Church
We invite you to come and experience the mystery and beauty of the Eastern Orthodox Christian Church! Our Services include Great Vespers Saturday at 5:30pm, Matins on Sunday at 8:15am, and the main Sunday service, the Divine Liturgy, at 9:30am. Weekly Classes: Our Thoughts Determine our Lives, on Wednesdays at 11am. If You Want to Become A Christian, First Become a Poet! The Poetry of the Creed, Saturday, November 9th, at 4pm. All are welcome. Fr. John Bethancourt, pastor 231 E Cordova Road 9835826 Email: FrJohnB@aol.com. www.holytrinitysantafe.org.
St. John’s United Methodist
Sunday, November 10 - Worship services at 8:30 and 11am; Fellowship Time (conversation, tea, and coffee) at 9:30am; and Sunday Classes for all ages at 9:45am. November Sermon Series: Pastor Greg Kennedy speaks on “A Marriage (NOT) Made in Heaven.” Many thanks to all who helped in the Pumpkin Patch - the proceeds go to fund Youth Mission programs. The Chapel is now open daily during church hours, with a Monday Prayer Service from 6 - 6:30pm and a Wednesday Prayer Service with Holy Communion from 5:45-6:15pm with Pastor Greg Kennedy. On the web at www.sfstjohnsumc.org, on Facebook, and by phone 982-5397.
Christ Church Santa Fe (PCA)
Worship services in the sanctuary at 8:30 and 11:00am with guest preacher the Rev. Larry Haslam. Classes and fellowship for all ages between services. Rev. Jim Brown takes us on a month-long journey to the church in Corinth through Paul’s first letter. Mary Lou Williams offers the course “Finding Elegance in the Written Word.” Morning Prayer Wednesdays at 7:00 a.m. TGIF Concerts every Friday at 5:30 p.m. Located downtown at 208 Grant Ave. More information www.fpcsantafe.org or 982-8544.
Westminster Presbyterian (PCUSA)
A Multi-cultural Faith Community, St. Francis Dr. at West Manhattan, 11 AM on Sunday, November 10th, STEWARDSHIP SUNDAY Members from the Congregation will share their personal faith stories 2 Corinthians 9:6-15 & Mark 10:17-21, Music by the Westminster Choir and Pat Slentz on the Organ. ALL ARE WELCOME!
UNITARIAN UNIveRSALIST UU Congregation of Santa Fe
107 W. Barcelona (corner with Galisteo) Nov 10: The Third Principle, Gail Marinner, *Winter Schedule Sept-May: Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. with nursery care available at both services and faith development classes for children Church of the Holy Faith and youth held concurrently with the second We welcome all people into an ever-deepening service; classes are cooperative ventures taught relationship with Jesus Christ our Lord. Sundays: in a compassionate, welcoming environment 7:30 Spoken Eucharist; 8:30 and 11 Choral eckankar *Everyone welcome *UU Women’s Federation Eucharist. Adult Forum 9:50- 10:35. Tuesdays For people of all beliefs, a community HU chant at 6 p.m., Taizé Eucharist with prayers for will be held at 10:00 a.m. today, November 9, at the Program and Luncheon: Third Saturday Sept.exhibition space in La Tienda at Eldorado. The healing; Wednesdays and Thursdays, Eucharist May *More info: 505-982-9674 and http://www. twenty-minute meditation includes singing HU, at 12:10 p.m. Evening Prayer weekdays, 4:30 uusantafe.org/ *We nurture hearts and minds, p.m. Children’s Chapel for 3 ½ - 11 years Sunday a universal word that opens the heart, followed practice beloved community and work for justice.* by a silent contemplation period. There will be at 8:30 and Tuesday afternoons at 4:00-5:15 seasonally. HF Youth Group meets for pizza and an open discussion at 10:45 a.m. on the general topic: “Have You Had a Spiritual Experience?” For study on first and third Sundays at 12:30. Mid information, see www.eckankar.org or call 800Singles Lunch and activities Second Sunday of 876-6704, or see www.miraclesinyourlife.org for each Month. Call 982 4447. A nursery is available an uplifting meditation technique. The United Church of Sundays from 8:30-12:30, and Tuesday for Taizé. Downtown at 311 E. Palace Avenue, (505)982Santa Fe The Celebration 4447. www.holyfaithchurchsf.org “The Last Blessing.” 8:30 Communion and a Sunday Service Different! Now in our 22nd 11:00 Worship with Rev. Talitha Arnold and Rev. St. Bede’s episcopal Church year as the “Bring Your Own God” church. Our Brandon Johnson, Pianist Jacquelyn Helin, and is a Christ-centered servant community rooted in opening statement: “You are invited to join us The Zia Singers (Director Karen Marrolli). 11:00 Holy Scripture, tradition and reason as practiced in the collective energy of Oneness and AllEmbracing Love. Here you have the freedom Children’s Ministry and Young Adventurers. 9:45: by the Episcopal Church, located at 1601 S. to look within to discover your own Truth and Adult Forum on “Mabel: Food for the Soul,” Youth St. Francis Drive. Holy Eucharist on Sunday connection with Spirit. Our intention is to November 10, 2013, at 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. (7:00 Confirmation, Children’s Music/Games. Childcare p.m. in Spanish) Bilingual activities for children embrace and welcome you exactly as you are.” all morning. Tues. 11:30 Swinging Seniors; Thurs: 10:30am, NEA-NM bldg., 2007 Botulph Rd., enter at 6:45 p.m. After the 8:00 and 10:30 services 1:00 United Artists. “Love God. Love Neighbor. Carol Neelley will provide information concerning around back. The speaker for Sunday, November 10 is Alicia Nation, “A Path to Peace: Saving Wild Love Creation!” That’s our mission at The United new requirements for cooking and serving Church of Santa Fe, an open and affirming Horses - Saving Ourselves.” Special music by at the Interfaith Homeless Shelter. For more Charles Tichenor. www.thecelebration.org; United Church of Christ. All welcome! 988-3295/ information visit www.stbedesantafe.org or call unitedchurchofsantafe.org 1804 Arroyo Chamiso 982-1133. The Episcopal Church welcomes you. 699-0023. Unity (at St. Michael’s Drive). La Iglesia Episcopal les da la bienvenida.
NON-DeNOMINATIONAL
UNITeD CHURCH OF CHRIST
For information about listing your organizations, service information & special events, call Keyana at 995-3818 or email kdeaguero@sfnewmexican.com
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
LIFE&SCIENCE
Health Science Environment
A-9
Microgrids are “ about to become big, big game changers.”
David Breecker,
president of the Santa Fe Innovation Park
Innovation park preps for microgrid surge
S
Chelsea Hale of Cincinnati holds a photo of herself made three years ago at the age of 17 before she had obesity surgery. Hale had weighed 314 pounds and is now about 170 pounds. AL BEHRMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Big benefits for teens Study shows obesity surgery helps youths with health issues usually reserved for adults By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press
U
.S. teens seeking weight-loss surgery have a startling number of health problems that used to be seen only in adults, according to a major government-funded study. Half the teens had at least four major illnesses linked with their excess weight. Three out of four had cholesterol problems; almost half had high blood pressure or joint pain; and many had diseased livers or kidneys. These kids weighed three times more than what is considered healthy. They weren’t just teens “who want to fit into that cheerleading outfit better,” said Dr. Thomas Inge, the study’s lead researcher and a surgeon at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The study offers reassuring evidence that obesity surgery is generally safe for teens, echoing previous short-term research. While it is a drastic, last-ditch option, major complications including accidental injury to internal organs occurred in just 8 percent of teens. Less serious complications including bleeding and dehydration affected 15 percent of kids during the first month after surgery. The study involved 242 teens who had surgery at five U.S. centers from 2007 through 2011. Results for the first month after surgery were released online this week in the journal JAMA Pediatrics. The National Institutes of Health paid for the study. In a recent scientific statement, the American Heart Association said obesity surgery may be the most effective treatment for what it called “severe obesity” in teens, a condition it said affects about 5 percent of U.S. children
and is increasing nationwide. The group’s threshold for severe obesity is a body mass index of at least 35; the average BMI in the study was 51. Because lifestyle changes and medication rarely work for such obese teens, the statement says obesity surgery should be considered for those with related health problems who are psychologically mature enough to handle it. The new results bolster evidence from smaller studies in teens and also suggest teens may do better, at least initially, than adults. Earlier 30-day research in adults found a few deaths after obesity surgery, although the risk was no greater than for other major operations. There were no deaths in the teen study. A three-year follow-up report on more than 2,000 patients in the adult study was also published online this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It showed adults generally had fewer obesityrelated illnesses than in the teen study, and most weight loss occurred within the first year after surgery. Gastric bypass surgery, the most common operation in the U.S., resulted in more weight loss and more improvement in related illnesses than stomach banding, as other studies have shown. Three-year death rates were low, and similar for both procedures, but band patients had many more repeat surgeries. In the teen study, whether obesity surgery resulted in lasting weight loss and better health remains to be seen; the researchers are still following the participants and calculating data. But anecdotal reports from the teens suggest they’re doing pretty well. Chelsea Hale of Cincinnati has shrunk from 314 to 170 pounds — almost half her previous size — since having surgery three years ago at age 17 at Cincinnati Children’s. Before surgery, Hale had a hormonal problem, heart blockage and sleep apnea — all linked with obesity and all have since subsided.
“I feel good, I can pretty much physically do anything,” said Hale, now in nursing school. Like 28 percent of the teens studied, she had gastric sleeve surgery, which involves removing part of the stomach and creating a smaller tube or sleeve-shaped stomach. She has to be careful about eating only small portions of foods, to avoid getting sick, but said otherwise she has no food restrictions. Some teens in the study say they can no longer tolerate certain foods, including sugar, meat or dairy products. Most teens had gastric bypass or stomach stapling, which creates a small pouch in the stomach and attaches it to the intestines. A handful had gastric band operations, in which surgeons position an adjustable band around the top of the stomach and inflate it to shrink the stomach. This operation has not been approved for U.S. teens. Inge, a pioneer in obesity surgery in teens, says he does about 30 to 40 operations each year at Cincinnati Children’s, and the numbers have increased slightly in recent years. Kids must be severely obese to qualify. But many are so large that even when surgery results in substantial weight loss and better health, they can’t shrink their BMI to below the obese range, Inge said. That underscores the need to find ways to prevent severe obesity, he said. University of Colorado heart specialist Dr. Robert Eckel, an American Heart Association spokesman, said the study shows obesity surgery should be considered a reasonable approach for kids, but that the study results may represent a best-case scenario, since surgeons involved were all highly experienced. Parents seeking obesity surgery for their teens should have them evaluated in centers that do lots of these operations, he said.
on the web u Obesity surgery: http://1.usa.gov/bFLmPR u JAMA Pediatrics: http://www.jama pediatrics.com
Tracking eyes, scientists find signs of autism in babies By Karen Kaplan Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Children with autism spectrum disorders usually aren’t diagnosed until they are at least 2 years old, but a new study finds that signs of the condition are apparent as early as two months after birth. Researchers focused on babies’ ability to make eye contact with caregivers, since lack of eye contact is one of the hallmarks of autism. Among typical children, interest in the eyes increased steadily with age. But for children with autism, interest in the eyes waned starting between 2 and 6 months of age. By the time they reached their second birthdays, levels of eye fixation among children with autism were only half as high as levels seen in typically developing children, according to a report published Wednesday by the journal Nature. Although researchers expected to see a difference between the two groups of kids, they were surprised that the infants who were later diagnosed with autism started out developing just like their peers. That suggests that “some social adaptive behaviors may initially be intact” in babies’ brains, which would “offer
a remarkable opportunity for treatment,” the researchers wrote. Warren Jones and Ami Klin of the Marcus Autism Center at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta recruited 110 infants for their study. Among them, 59 had a full sibling with an autism spectrum disorder and thus were considered at high risk of developing the condition themselves. An additional 51 infants who had no first-, second- or thirddegree relatives with autism were considered low-risk, and they served as controls. The infants were shown “scenes of naturalistic caregiver interaction” while the researchers used eye-tracking technology to monitor where the babies focused their gazes. They measured the proportion of time spent paying attention to the woman’s eyes, mouth, body (including neck, shoulders and hair) and nearby inanimate objects. The subjects were tested 10 times over the course of the study, when they were 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18 and 20 months old. By the time the toddlers were 3 years old, 13 were formally diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder — 10 boys and two girls from the high-risk group and one boy from the control group. For the sake of simplicity,
they focused their analysis on boys: 11 with autism and 25 without. The data showed that distinct differences in eye interest became apparent when the babies were between 2 and 6 months old. During those early months, the boys in the control group spent more time focused on the caregiver’s eyes than the mouth, body or object regions. But for the boys with autism, interest in the caregiver’s eyes steadily declined after the 2-month test. The researchers also found that steeper declines in eye interest tended to be linked to more severe cases of social disability. Other differences emerged as well. Although boys in both groups showed increasing interest in the caregiver’s mouth up through the age of 18 months, the typically developing boys lost interest in the body and object regions much more quickly than the boys with autism. “These results, although still limited in sample size, document the derailment of skills that would otherwise guide typical socialization,” Jones and Klin wrote. If the results are confirmed and doctors are able to identify children with autism as early as 2 months of age, therapists could intervene earlier — and perhaps get better results.
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
anta Fe Innovation Park has advanced its plan to position itself as a global center of excellence in microgrid innovation and design. The full plan includes system testing and certification and workplace training at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design’s Sustainable Technology Center. Offering a unique combination of education and a microgrid business aimed at industrial, emerging and developing economies, this is a start-up project that expects to fill a local and national need and also aspires to go global in a burgeoning market “Microgrids are about to become big, big game changers,” said David Breecker, president of the Santa Fe Innovation Park, in a recent interview. He is probably right. Microgrid technology and expertise will be needed to facilitate the expanded use of renewable energy sources, which generally require a separate set of technical and management tools, and we’re going to need a lot of it, to offset carbon emissions from fossil fuels. Microgrids are small-scale, customizable improvements in an electrical network that can be made for the sake of efficiency and climate considerations. They are among several community sustainability issues that Santa Roger Fe and a lot of other places have on Snodgrass their plates. The innovation park began as an Science Matters economic development effort for the city about five years ago, wrestling with the basic problem of how to do technological development in a small city without a research university. More recently, Breecker was hired as a consultant to work on the Santa Fe County economic development plan, which is currently making its way through the administrative process. Earlier this year, state Sen. Peter Wirth, a Santa Fe Democrat, introduced a bill to appropriate a million dollars for designing and developing the microgrid center and training program at Santa Fe Community College. The bill found support in two committees, but according to Breecker’s best information, was postponed because of uncertainties surrounding the sequester, the automatic budget cuts that were required by Congress but still up in the air at that time. The bill is expected to be submitted again this year. But in the meantime, Breecker’s organization has adopted a virtual model for the park. “The city is the park,” Breecker said. “You can treat the entire city as an innovation zone with all the intellectual, cultural and creative capital of a city many times its size.” He added, “It really is a collaborative, cross-discipline, problem-solving laboratory.” Also in the works: The park is hosting a community capital fund project sponsored by the Santa Fe Community Foundation; a community health project, studying health as a complex system; and a social media project, called Portray.It, which successfully raised an initial round of money by crowdsourcing — soliciting contributions on the Internet. Santa Fe Innovation Park relies on bootstrapping techniques for getting start-up funds, including extensive alliances and partnerships. The microgrid project illustrates the model, starting with partnerships with Los Alamos and Sandia national labs and the National Renewable Energy Lab in Golden, Colo., all of which have contributed basic research and led notable projects in the field. Most recently, Sandia National Laboratories partnered with New Jersey state agencies to develop a microgrid for the transit system, meant to keep the system running in a future disaster. Because of the differences between large regulated energy distributors and smaller independent utilities, the microgrid project works with Duke Power, a large energy generator and distributor with regulated operations in several states in the Southeast and Midwest and which, Breecker notes, is committed to integrating the microgrid into its customers’ service portfolios. Not all regulated energy distributors are necessarily in favor of accommodating unconventional energy sources or empowering off-grid options. The innovation park is also working with the independent municipal utility, the Los Alamos County Department of Public Utilities, which has one of the most sophisticated microgrid projects in the country, in partnership with LANL and with a major Japanese consortium. Earlier this year, Santa Fe Innovation Park named Terry Mohn as a key principal and managing partner of the Global Microgrid Center, which will do the testing and certification in Santa Fe. He is founder of General MicroGrids Inc. Mohn’s General MicroGrids is also a member of the United Nations Foundation’s microgrid group, operating under a mandate to close the gap for the 1 in 5 people in the world who currently have no access to electricity.
Study: Speaking 2 languages can help keep dementia at bay People who spoke two languages developed dementia 4½ years later than those who spoke just one — even in people who were illiterate, said scientists who reviewed the records of hundreds of dementia patients. The study is the largest to date to document the delay of dementia in bilingual people and the first to suggest that education level alone can’t explain the difference, the researchers said. The researchers found that a person didn’t get additional advantage by speaking three or more languages. Los Angeles Times
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
A-10
LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
Family blames hospital in mom, baby TB deaths By Michelle Rindels
Ruben White talks about the death of his wife and two children at a news conference in Las Vegas, Nev., on Thursday.
The Associated Press
The 2013 U.S. Capitol Christmas tree is loaded on a truck in Washington state. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/SKYBITZ
Capitol Christmas tree heads through Utah on way to D.C. By Cathy McKitrick
The (Ogden) Standard-Examiner
OGDEN, Utah — Veterans Day, meet Christmas! These two holidays will briefly converge Monday as an 88-foot Engelmann spruce makes a scheduled stop in Ogden on its journey to Washington, D.C. A special ceremony will be held Monday afternoon at The Junction to honor military veterans and allow residents to catch a glimpse of the Capitol Christmas Tree that will grace the west lawn of the U.S. Capitol this holiday season. “We are absolutely thrilled to be part of an event that is on the national stage and is so symbolic for our country,” said Ogden Mayor Mike Caldwell. With Ogden’s transcontinental railroad roots and close ties to Hill Air Force Base, the venerable visit makes sense, Caldwell figured. “For a century, everything stopped in Ogden,” Caldwell said. “It’s great to see this tree do the same thing.
The supersized fir, chosen in mid-2012 by the Capitol architect, was cut from the 1.1-million acre Colville National Forest in northeast Washington State on Nov. 1. By the time the six-story-tall evergreen reaches the west lawn of the U.S. Capitol, it will have traveled over 4,000 miles and played to crowds in two dozen cities, three of them in Utah. After leaving Ogden, the near-perfect pine known as “The People’s Tree” will stop in Spanish Fork on Tuesday, then St. George on Wednesday before exiting southward out of the state. It travels on a double flatbed truck and trailer that extends more than 100 feet in length, outfitted with a special 65-gallon water reservoir that gets replenished daily. People can view the tree through the trailer’s acrylic glass windows. In addition to remarks Monday by Mayor Caldwell, Ogden’s celebration will feature Col. Kathryn L. Kolbe, commander of the 75th Air
Base Wing, the VFW Post 1695 Honor Guard and the Hill Air Force Base Melodic Medics. A motorcycle brigade of veterans and police officers will escort the tree into The Junction, said Christy McBride, special event coordinator for Ogden. “What a great fit that they’ll be here on Veterans Day,” McBride said. “Veterans gave us the freedom to have such a tree.” People are invited to donate signed greeting cards that will be shipped to all Utah-based service members who cannot make it home for the holidays. “We’re shooting for 1,000 cards,” McBride said. While Santa Claus will not arrive until Ogden’s Holiday Electric Light parade in late November, McBride said that Woodsy Owl and Smokey Bear will be on hand to commemorate Monday’s occasion. The tree travels through Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Maryland before arriving in D.C. on Nov. 25.
Veterans Day closings 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-
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 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
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone stole four credit cards from an SUV between the hours of 8 and 10 p.m. Thursday while the car was parked near a soccer field at Salvador Perez Park, 601 Alta Vista St. u A female suspect took an undisclosed amount of money from Holiday Inn Express, 3450 Cerrillos Road, at about 9 p.m. Thursday. u Someone stole a laptop computer, a 12-inch TV, an iPad and jewelery from a house in the 2000 block of Otowi Road between 1 and 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. u Derek Romero, 25, of Santa Fe was arrested on charges of aggravated assault, false imprisonment and interference with communications on Thursday night after a woman reported to police that he assaulted her. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Samantha Loper, 21,
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Family members of a young mother who contracted tuberculosis blame a Las Vegas hospital for failing to diagnose her before she and at least one of her twin babies died of the illness this summer. Lawyers for the family of 25-year-old Vanessa White announced Thursday that they plan to sue Summerlin Hospital Medical Center in her death, as well as the deaths of her two premature baby girls, Emma and Abigail. “There were multiple diagnostic failures,” attorney Robert Cottle said at a press conference at his law office. “Three lives would’ve been saved had tuberculosis been thought of in May or June.” The hospital issued a statement expressing sympathy for the family, but saying it took appropriate steps in the case. “Medical experts who have already reviewed this matter have confirmed there was no reason to suspect that the patient had TB and an appropriate screening was performed,” the statement said. Testing of family, friends and hospital employees conducted after White’s death in July found 26 people tested positive for the infection. Two of those had the contagious form, while the rest had inactive TB.
JOHN LOCHER LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Health officials later expanded the testing to include about 140 babies and their family members who spent time in Summerlin Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit over the summer. The results of that round of tests, initiated in October, have not been released. White had been ill to various degrees before and after she gave birth prematurely in May. According to Cottle, doctors conducted multiple tests, but didn’t pursue the possibility of TB after a nurse screened for symptoms and ruled out the condition. “No one connected the dots in this case, and as you can see, the dots were very obvious,” Cottle said. It wasn’t until White died in California in July, and an autopsy was performed, that health workers found she had TB. Doctors tested one of her
Funeral services and memorials RAY "ESKIMO" JOHNSON Ray, "Eskimo", Johnson, 44, a resident of Santa Fe, went home to his heavenly father on October 23, 2013. He is survived by his wife, Loretta, sons Eli, Darnell and daughter Christina. Ray worked at Wild Birds Unlimited as an Inventory Manger for many years. He enjoyed spending all of his time with his family. Ray enjoyed watching Football, NASCAR and Baseball during his free time. He also enjoyed playing golf every day. He will be greatly missed by all who knew and loved him. There will be a memorial service for Ray on Wednesday, November 13th, at Berardinelli’s Funeral Home, 1399 Luisa Street, Santa Fe, (505) 984-8600. Visitation will be from 6-7 with a service starting at 7:00 p.m. A Memorial Fund in Ray’s name has been established at First National Bank for those who wish to assist the family at this very difficult time. Checks should be made out to "Memorial Fund, Ray Eskimo Johnson" and mailed to: First National Bank, 516 Cordova, Santa Fe, NM 87505.
DWI arrests u Anthony Perea, 28, of Santa Fe was arrested at 3:11 a.m. Friday on a DWI charge after police pulled him over for a traffic violation on Cerrillos Road and Las Soleras Boulevard. He also was booked on open container, tail lamp and traffic lane violations. u Jaime Chavez-Solis, 31, of Santa Fe was arrested on DWI charge after a Thursday traffic stop on N.M. 599 after a sheriff’s deputy reported seeing a car traveling at a high speed. A report said a breathalyzer test showed a blood-alcohol level of 0.16, double the legal limit.
tion for mobile speed-enforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Old Pecos Trail between Cordova and Old Santa Fe Trail; SUV No. 2 Cordova Road between Old Pecos Trail and Galisteo; SUV No. 3 at Don Gaspar between Cordova and Paseo De Peralta.
Help lines
Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: Speed SUVs 911 u The Santa Fe Police Depart- Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255) ment listed the following loca-
RIVERA FAMILY MORTUARIES SANTA FE ~ ESPAÑOLA ~ TAOS RIVERA FAMILY FUNERAL HOME ~ SANTA FE (505) 989-7032 Virginia Leyba, 59, Santa Fe October 31, 2013 Paul O. Manzanares, 46, Santa Fe November 1, 2013 Hal Fielding, 85, Santa Fe November 5, 2013 Dannette Shaw, 53, Santa Fe November 6, 2013 RIVERA FAMILY FUNERAL HOME ~ TAOS (575) 758-3841 Melissa Farrell, 40, Eagle Nest October 26, 2013
Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com
LOUIS ISIDORE ROMERO SR. 22 Encantado Road, was booked on a charge of battery on a household member Thursday. A report says that the victim was struck in the face after a verbal argument with the suspect.
twins and began treating the girl, but she succumbed to the illness in August. The other baby died in May but was never tested for the disease. Officials with the Southern Nevada Health District said it appears White contracted the disease from an unpasteurized dairy product. Lawyers plan to seek damages and changes in hospital policy. The twins were the first children for White, who did clerical work at a dental office, and her husband, who described himself as a government worker. The couple had been married for three years at the time of her death. “I would never wish this on anyone else,” said Ruben White, who choked up during the Thursday news conference as he talked about his wife and daughters. “You get the sense that sometimes life is not fair.”
Preceded in death by mother and father Ramon & Anita Romero, brother Tony Romero. And sister Bell Romero. Survived by wife Rose; children Rodney & Louie Jr. Romero, and Kim & Danny Gonzales; grandchildren Ashlie & Disney Romero, Angel & Daniel Gonzales; and one great-grandson; brothers Sam, Arthur, & Press Romero, Manuel Quintana; sisters Lucy, Margie, & Charlotte Romero, Erlinda Quintana; and many other family and friends. The services: Rosary on Monday at St. John’s Church in Santa Fe at 6 PM; Mass on Tuesday at St. John’s in Santa Fe at 9 AM; Reception to follow at FOP at 12 PM noon.
Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com
James B. Duffy, 68, Red River November 3, 2013 Margaret Duran, 64, Arroyo Seco November 4, 2013 RIVERA FAMILY FUNERAL HOME ~ ESPANOLA (505) 753-2288 Leonardita "Betty" Casias, 86, Chamita November 2, 2013 Michael A. Robins, 76, Eldorado November 4, 2013
JEANETTE "JEN" LISA ANAYA
Born July 14, 1974, passed away unexpectedly on November 7, 2013. Services Pending.
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
A health care minefield, then what?
T
he president went to politically hostile Texas this week and spoke strongly in support of his Affordable Care Act. He needed to do something. October was a terrible month for Barack Obama. The Republicans had shut down the government in a Bill Stewart desperate attempt Understanding to repeal Your World or defund “Obamacare,” as the president’s signature piece of legislation is popularly known. The attempt failed, as anyone with an ounce of political common sense predicted, and the Republicans got little or nothing for their efforts. That should have given the White House some comfort. But in the popular mind, everyone was to blame, including Obama. Opinion polls show the president’s popularity has shrunk to about 42 percent, although that of the Republicans has dropped to somewhere in the 20s. But what has given the White House fits since the beginning of October has been the disastrous rollout of Obamacare. And that cannot be blamed on the Republicans. The Affordable Care Act website collapsed from the moment it opened Oct. 1. It has been unable to cope with popular demand for health care insurance, despite months of preparation. Because the administration spent well over $100 million on computer programs designed to help millions of Americans purchase health care insurance, shouldn’t the demand have been anticipated? Well, apparently not, and that should raise legitimate concerns about other aspects of the program. What else should we expect
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
ANOTHER VIEW
NSA should end metadata program Los Angeles Times
F to fail? It may be true that the website and the health care act itself are two different things. But they also are closely connected, and the public at large might not make the distinction. This is not just an embarrassment for the Obama administration, but a national embarrassment. And that hurts. President Obama has said dozens of times over the past few years that under the Affordable Care Act, Americans could keep their present health care plans and their doctors if they liked them — a statement that is not precisely true. His words are being portrayed as lies. If you had a good health care plan before Obamacare came into effect, it seems, you can keep it. But if you signed up for a health care plan after the Affordable Care Act came into effect, and your plan is found to be substandard by the terms of the act, then you lose that plan and must find a new one through the new exchange. In my opinion, Obama was wise to take the advice of just re-elected New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, who said in an interview this week that Obama should
simply own up to the fact that he misstated the situation, stop trying “to lawyer” the issue and then restate the actual facts. According to Christie, who speaks with new authority, the country will almost certainly forgive him. The country also saw two important state elections this week whose outcomes might well have been affected by the government shutdown and the deeply flawed rollout of the Affordable Care Act. The first was in New Jersey, a heavily Democratic state that nevertheless re-elected Christie as governor in a landslide. His victory automatically makes him a top contender for the Republican nomination for president. It was his superb handling of superstorm Sandy — which ravished the Jersey coast last year — that made him a hero. He also was seen walking armin-arm with President Obama in the storm’s aftermath, a move that irked many Republicans but won over many Democrats. He is conservative, straight forward and likable, a hard-to-beat combination. The other contest was in Virginia, a state in transition from solidly Republican to a mixed
bag of Republicans, Democrats and independents. Democrat Terry McAuliffe won a closerthan-expected election against Virginia Attorney General Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, an outspoken social conservative whose strong anti-abortion views may have offended many women. There also was speculation that the Republican-backed plan to shut down the government offended many people in the northern reaches of Virginia, which is really suburban Washington, D.C., and home to tens of thousands of government workers. The closer-thanexpected race might have been affected by the rollout of the health care program. The White House is hoping November will turn out to be far better than October, which wouldn’t take much. The Virginia election win no doubt brought smiles to the Oval Office. But the administration has promised that all will be well with the health care website by the end of November. We shall see. Bill Stewart served in the U.S. Foreign Service and as a correspondent for Time magazine.
MY VIEW: TR KNOBLAUCH
City should stop thwarting will of voters
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uring the city charter revision vote of 2008, the citizens of Santa Fe voted by 66 percent (more than any candidate in any disputed race) to empower ranked choice voting. Right now, voices on the City Council are pushing to set aside ranked choice voting and switch to the much more expensive traditional delayed runoff. Such a runoff isn’t mentioned in the language in the city charter. Additionally, a runoff would cost tens of thousands of dollars that don’t need to be spent. Instead, with ranked choice voting, citizens select their two favorite candidates. Should someone not receive a majority in the race, the second choice would be counted. Next year, no mayoral or District 2 candidate will receive 50 percent of the vote; that could be true in District 3, also. Complicating the city election is this: There isn’t any language in the public financing law to cover a runoff. Candidates would have to raise campaign money and go through the rigmarole of a campaign again. If we did extend public financing to a runoff, would the candidates have to requalify? Would the amounts be the same? The law lacks language to cover these circumstances. If candidates fund runoff campaigns themselves, it would defeat the purpose of public financing. We would sacrifice one plank of a fair vote policy as we do away with another.
If we used public financing at the current level for a runoff, it would break the bank for our public financing kitty. The city’s cost could be as much as $150,000 to $180,000 on top of the expense of holding another election. Ranked choice voting would be cheaper. On a national level, fewer than 10 percent of those who vote in a regular city election bother to vote in a delayed runoff. So, if we figure a 40 percent turnout for regular elections, we can figure a 4 percent turnout for a runoff. The mayoral election could be decided by plus or minus 2 percent of registered voters. Ranked choice voting allows the entire contest to be decided in a single election and be (small “d”) democratic. The ranked choice voting process would require only one machine, which could be rented or purchased for the occasion for around $25,000. If ranked choice voting is triggered, ballots would be fed into that one machine at the City Clerk’s Office. The process would take hours versus waiting six weeks for results. The excuse has been that the New Mexico secretary of state needs to approve these machines and software. Another excuse has been that the county needs to supply the machine. As a home rule city, we can get around these perceived restrictions. The ability to conduct ranked choice voting was cleared by the Legislature and reviewed by the New
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
Mexico attorney general prior to passage. Former city attorney Frank Katz certified it as constitutionally appropriate before it was placed on the charter revision referendum ballot in 2008. Ranked choice voting-compliant machines and software are used in San Francisco, Minneapolis and Cambridge, Mass., and Berkeley, Oakland and San Leandro, Calif. All of these cities have larger populations than Santa Fe. Some of these cities used hand counting (remember that?) and spreadsheet tallies until they acquired adequate machines. Ranked choice voting is used to elect governments globally; arguments against it because of complexity just don’t hold water. It’s as easy as 1-2-3. Ranked choice voting empowers minority and working voters and candidates. It keeps the letter, spirit and intent of the city charter. Every City Council candidate who was present at the Central Labor Council candidate forum earlier this month committed to pushing for the purchase of a ranked choice voting-enabled machine if elected. Is there a reason we can’t do this instead of side-stepping the express wishes of the Santa Fe electorate? Please come to the council meeting Wednesday to speak about this distortion of the clear result of the city of Santa Fe charter revision referendum of 2008. TR Knoblauch is secretary of the Green Party of New Mexico.
ive months after Americans learned that information about their telephone calls was being indiscriminately scooped up by the National Security Agency, Congress seems poised to place limits on the bulk collection of telephone “metadata” — information about the source, destination and duration of telephone calls but not their contents. That’s a positive development. But there is a world of difference between the legislation approved by the Senate Intelligence Committee, which would make only minor improvements in the program, and a superior proposal by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Rep. James Sensenbrenner Jr., R-Wis., that would bring the collection of phone records into compliance with the letter and the spirit of the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches and seizures. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the head of the Intelligence Committee, rightly says the committee’s bill “increases privacy protections and public transparency” in the phone records program. But the protections are minimal, and in return for the minor changes, Congress would give its explicit approval for the wholesale acquisition of metadata by the government. By contrast, the LeahySensenbrenner bill would allow the government to acquire phone data only as part of an investigation tied to a specific suspected terrorist or foreign agent or an individual in contact with him. Bulk collection would end. Obama administration officials insist the metadata program is vital because it assembles a “haystack” that makes it possible for a computer search to extract the “needle” of evidence leading to the perpetrators of a terrorist plot. The government persuaded the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that such a dragnet was legal under a section of the Patriot Act authorizing the acquisition of records reasonably believed to be “relevant to an authorized investigation” of espionage or terrorism. (The FISA court also noted that the Supreme Court has afforded no privacy protection to information, such as phone records, that individuals turn over to “third parties” such as phone companies — an interpretation of the Fourth Amendment that has been rendered obsolete by advances in electronic information-gathering.) It’s easy, amid the legal and technical complexities, to lose sight of the question at the heart of this debate: whether the government should be able, without a showing of probable cause of a connection to terrorism, to obtain and store information that can often provide as wide a window on the private lives of Americans as the actual contents of phone calls. Feinstein and other defenders of the program emphasize that the database is searched or “queried” only when there is “reasonable, articulable” suspicion of a connection to terrorism. The Intelligence Committee bill would further discourage abuse by mandating an annual public accounting of the number of queries and limiting the number of people at the NSA who may authorize them. But the mere possession of such information by the government is unsettling, and there is no guarantee that some employees with access to private information won’t betray their trust. On the other side of the ledger, claims that the metadata program led to the disruption of a significant number of terrorist attacks seem to have been greatly exaggerated. The metadata program intrudes on the privacy of virtually every American. It needs to be ended, not mended.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Nov. 9, 1913: At the meeting called by the Santa Fe Merchants Association last evening, the call for opinions brought out the consensus that taxes are already high enough and that a raise of 20 percent was excessive. H.B. Cartwright suggested the assessor be enjoined from putting the raises on his roll. Nov. 9, 1988: New York — If you feasted on oat bran, fed Fido with gourmet chow, pulled on a pair of pre-shredded jeans or leafed through a comic book this year, you were one of the Americans who made those some of the hottest products of 1988, according to Adweek magazine. The hottest products largely were “conspicuously unnecessary,” the advertising and marketing trade magazine stated in this week’s issue, and ran the gamut from the ephemeral novelty to technological nuisance.
DOONESBURy
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
Lance Armstrong in the film The Armstrong Lie. Armstrong will get a kickback from the film’s proceeds. COURTESY SONY PICTURES CLASSICS
Rough road to ‘Armstrong Lie’ By Jessica Herndon The Associated Press
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Newsmakers Chris Brown countersues man over studio fight
Chris Brown
LOS ANGELES — Chris Brown has countersued a man who has accused the R&B star’s entourage of attacking him outside a recording studio earlier this year. The singer filed an assault and battery lawsuit Wednesday against Sha’keir Duarte, who claimed in an earlier suit that he was injured when a fight erupted between Brown and Frank Ocean’s entourages in January outside a West Hollywood studio. No criminal charges were filed over the fight.
Kanye West pleads not guilty in battery case
Kayne West
LOS ANGELES — Kanye West has pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor battery and attempted grand theft in a case filed over a scuffle with a celebrity photographer earlier this year. Attorney Blair Berk entered the plea on the rapper’s behalf Thursday in a Los Angeles court. West was charged with two misdemeanors in September over a July altercation with paparazzo Daniel Ramos. West’s case is due back in court Jan. 23. The Associated Press
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top picks
time of year. Dolly Parton portrays herself in the story of a girl from Appalachia (Desiree Ross) who defies her mother to pursue her dream of being a country singer, starting with a contest presided over by Parton — where she’s reunited with her musician father (R&B star Brian McKnight). Megyn Price (Rules of Engagement) also stars. 6 p.m. on SPIKE Cops In case you missed the news, the long-running reality series, which Fox canceled in the spring, has found a new home on cable. In this new episode, officers are on the case when a fleeing motorist hits a fire hydrant, and a suspect in a domestic violence case makes accusations against his partner. A cache of contraband also surfaces in “Guns, Hash and Fire Hydrants.” 8 p.m. on NBC Miss Universe It may not be a universal competition, what with no entries from other planets, but until we find extraterrestrials who look good in swimsuits and evening gowns, it’ll have to do. Held in Las Vegas in 2012, the pageant airs this year from Moscow. Representing us this year as Miss USA is Erin Brady from Connecticut, who’s hoping to succeed reigning queen and fellow New Englander Olivia Culpo of Rhode Island.
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10:30 a.m. on NBC English Premier League Soccer Two teams off to slow starts to the season get down to business today in Norwich, England, where Anthony Pilkington, pictured, and the Norwich City Canaries do battle with Carlton Cole and the West Ham United Hammers. This is the first meeting between these clubs this year. 6 p.m. LIFE Movie: A Country Christmas Story This is one of those Christmas movies that could have worked just as well if it were set at a different
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EVERLY HILLS, Calif. — When Alex Gibney set out to make a movie about cyclist Lance Armstrong’s 2009 Tour de France comeback, the documentarian admits he bought into the hype: The man who’d cheated death was coming back to reign supreme — and clean. “All of us fans wanted to believe,” said Gibney, who directed this summer’s wellreceived documentary We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks. “You want to root for people. That is what sports are all about.” In fact, it was such a positive project, Armstrong himself had a “financial participation” in the film, Gibney said. Then in 2011, things changed. The “feel-good movie,” as Gibney called the original version, was nearly finished when Armstrong’s ex-teammates, Tyler Hamilton and Floyd Landis, began going public about Armstrong’s doping. That same year, Armstrong faced a U.S. government investigation into doping allegations. Then in 2012, a federal Anti-Doping Agency report alleged Armstrong and his U.S. Postal Service-sponsored team used performanceenhancing drugs. It had become all too clear — Gibney needed to change the fabric of his film. What had been titled The Road Back became The Armstrong Lie, which opened Friday. “It was a lie that was hiding in plain sight,” said Gibney. “But you don’t want to doubt.” Suspicions about Armstrong’s drug use actually began to surface in 2005, after former Armstrong teammate Frankie Andreu and his wife, Betsy, testified in a lawsuit about a drug confession they heard Armstrong make while hospitalized in 1996 during his bout with cancer. (Armstrong later did his best to ostracize Frankie Andreu from the cycling world.) “Most of the facts had been revealed a long time ago,” said Gibney in a recent interview at a Beverly Hills hotel. “The question was if they had been revealed, then how did Lance maintain that they weren’t true? That is what the film is about.” Sitting with Oprah Winfrey in January of this year, Armstrong admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs to win the Tour de France seven times, titles that have since been revoked. Gibney was there as the interview was shot and insisted that Armstrong come clean in front of his camera, too. “A long interview was hard to get in the wake of Oprah because that interview hadn’t done for him what he wanted it to do,” said Gibney. “He wanted his fans back. It didn’t work out that way. But I was moving forward with other people like Betsy [Andreu, who appears in the film]. I think that was the reason he ultimately agreed to sit down: He wanted to feel a sense of control over his story and he knew that without his voice, things might go worse.”
“You have to call a fraud a fraud,” said Betsy Andreu said. “Lance tried to use cancer to shield himself, but in my opinion, that is how he got the cancer — using all of those drugs. Growth hormones fuel cancer” — a theory increasingly supported by medical research. Has Armstrong tainted the cycling world forever? “That’s the hard part,” said Gibney. “We want [athletes] to be superhuman, but we are surprised when they dope. That, to some extent, is where it falls back on us.” Though Armstrong has no plans to see the film — he sent his representatives instead — the disgraced cyclist will receive a small portion of the film’s profits. “When the original deal was made with Sony, Lance had a financial participation,” Gibney explained, thus entitling Armstrong to a backend deal with the new film. The film’s producers said the original deal with Armstrong was partly to secure his cooperation in making The Road Back but that he was not an investor in the film. Last interviewed by cycling site Velo News, Armstrong said in an October article he will “pay a heavy price” for what he’s done. But moving forward, he said, “Folks should expect the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” Through his spokesman, Armstrong declined to comment for this story. Will Armstrong ever confirm what the Andreus said they heard in the hospital room in 1996? When did Armstrong actually start doping? “He wouldn’t tell me,” said Gibney. “We assumed Lance started using after cancer and then started winning the Tour de France, but we know he started using drugs back in 1993,” said Gibney. “But if the drugs were so good, why couldn’t he win the tour back then?” And what about the speculation that Armstrong was in cahoots with the sanctioning body Union Cycliste Internationale, and the talk about doctored race times? Gibney said the questions still linger for him. “There is an element that Lance is hinting at but hasn’t come clean on, which is how the mechanism of the sport worked to keep his secret for so long,” said Gibney. “He worked hand in glove with the UCI and sponsors. Everybody was getting paid” — a point also suggested in the film but yet to be proven. We may never know the answers to these questions but Gibney says he never stopped pushing for answers while making his film, which has received high marks from most critics. “Lots of people were doping in cycling,” he said, “but the lie is what was really problematic with Lance’s story. He’d made cancer survivors complicit in his lie and the media bought in. As Betsy says in the film: ‘The doping was bad, but the abuse of power was worse.’”
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Soccer B-4 NBA B-5 NHL B-5 Markets in review B-5 Classifieds B-7 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
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Fleet-footed: Taos has high hopes for state cross-country championship. Page B-3
GIRLS SOCCER
Sandia Prep beats St. Michael’s in rough match By Chris Jackson
ALBUQUERQUE — The St. Michael’s girls soccer team expected a rough, physical game in a Class A-AAA state semifinal on Friday afternoon. That was the style the second-seeded Lady Horsemen ended up playing, but they could not find the back of the net in a 1-0 loss to No. 3 Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory. The Lady Sundevils and
St. Michael’s Isabel Chavez, center, is double teamed by Sandia Prep’s MacKenzie Blackburn, left, and Katherine Robinson, right, during Friday’s game of the Girls Soccer State Tournament semifinals at the APS Soccer Complex in Albuquerque.
Hope Christian St. Michaels 0 will meet in an AllDistrict 4A-AAA final today at 9:30 a.m. “Unfortunately they beat us on the 50-50s and the headers and I think that’s how they won the game,” St. Michael’s coach Robyn Serge said. “It was just a dirty match all around. Fouls from both sides. “When it comes down to state playoffs, you’re going to Sandia Prep
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see games like that. It’s going to come down to the last minute and the last ball.” It was a ball much earlier in the game that the Horsemen (17-5) ultimately rued. The Lady Sundevils’ Audrey Allen found fellow senior Riley Cronin
Please see RoUGH, Page B-4
It was just a dirty match all around. Fouls from “ both sides.”
LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO THE NEW MEXICAN
Robyn Serge, St. Michael’s coach
BOYS SOCCER ALBUQUERQUE ACADEMY 2, CAPITAL 1
UNM
Lobos run past Air Force
Heartbreaker
Capital falls to ’Burque Academy, loses shot at championship
Both teams combined for 924 total yards By Glen Rosales
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — Kasey Carrier ran for 179 yards, and Cole Gautsche added 140 yards and two touchdowns and threw a scorUNM 45 ing pass to help New Mexico beat Air Force 37 Air Force 45-37 on Friday night. New Mexico (3-6, 1-4 Mountain West) snapped a four-game losing streak, piling up 451 yards on the ground. Anthony LaCoste ran for 177 yards for Air Force (2-8, 0-6), and Nate Romine threw three touchdown passes and ran for a score The teams combined for 924 total yards, but one of the biggest plays came on defense when New Mexico
Please see LoBos, Page B-3
Lobos retire Urlacher’s No. 44 jersey By Glen Rosales
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico retired former Chicago Bears star Brian Urlacher’s No. 44 jersey at halftime of the Lobos’ 45-37 victory over Air Force on Friday night. The crowd of almost 22,000 people stood and cheered when the red banner lifted Brian and “44 Brian Urlacher Urlacher” showed up on the ring of honor at University Stadium. The Lobos also retired his locker, enclosing it in glass with his uniform inside. “It’s a big deal,” said Urlacher, from the small town of Lovington. “There’s a lot of people from my hometown that came up here to watch this and be a part of it. So I’m very excited and honored to have this chance to do this.” Urlacher was a standout defensive back from 1996-99 at New Mexico, where he was a first-team All-America selection and a Jim Thorpe Award finalist. He played linebacker for the Bears, retiring after last season. “I came a long ways from Lovington,” Urlacher said. “I got to college at 195 pounds and I got to be 245 when I was done. I started growing, getting bigger, faster and when I was a junior I started getting on the radar for the scouts.”
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Capital’s Jose Encina, right, tries to control the ball while under pressure from Albuquerque Academy’s Luis Ortega during the first half of Friday’s match of the Boys Soccer State Tournament semifinals at the APS Soccer Complex in Albuquerque. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Now the Chargers will play Roswell at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Albuquerque Public Schools Soccer Complex for the Class AAAA championship. ALBUQUERQUE Amid all of the Jaguar mourners who missed t was the typical scene after Capital’s 2-1 loss to their shot at a championship, senior Jason Alarcon Albuquerque Academy on Friday morning. was trying to console his distraught teammates. There were some Jaguars (14-7) lying on the “They all brought their heads down, so I was tellground with their jerseys covering their crying ing them to put them up,” Alarcon said. eyes while others were still in shock that their seaThe Jaguars were in a completely different state son had come to an end at the hands of the of mind just five minutes prior to this moment. No. 1 Chargers (22-1), a team that they beat in the While down 2-0 to the Chargers, Alarcon sent in quarterfinals last year. a corner kick that fellow senior Diego Pichardo
By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
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headed into the goal to cut their deficit to 2-1 in the 75th minute of the match. “I told Jason to cross it into the first post,” Pichardo said. “Some guy started following me as I started running, so I told him to give it to me in the P-K area. Luckily I was there and no one was around me, and the ball went in.”
Please see caPitaL, Page B-4
PREP FOOTBALL
Demons trounce Jaguars in district showdown By Will Webber The New Mexican
If Friday was, indeed, the last district matchup between the city’s two biggest high schools, at least it carried some weight movDemons 46 ing forward. Jaguars 22 With the District 2AAAA football title still undecided, Santa Fe High pulled away from its archrival, Capital, for a 46-22 win on Friday night at Ivan Head Stadium. In so doing, the Demons (4-6 overall, 3-1
2AAAA) punched their ticket to the Class AAAA state playoffs for the second straight season. If and when another playoff appearance is in the works remains to be seen, since Santa Fe High is tentatively scheduled to join the new Class AAAAAA along with the rest of the state’s biggest schools next year. Capital will join AAAAA. For now, the Demons will take what they can get — and that’s two straight district championships for the first time since the program won three in a row between 1977 and 1979. They will
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
learn who and when they will play when the playoff pairings are revealed Saturday night. More than likely they will land the No. 12 seed in the 12-team field and have to travel to the No. 5 seed for next week’s opening round. Head coach Ray Holladay said he expects to face either Los Lunas or Piedra Vista a week from now. “Either way, I think we’re looking at facing a team that likes to run the ball — and that’s good for us,” he said. He also expects his team to be as ready as it has all season. It heads into
the playoffs with all its top players healthy and back in game shape. That includes one of the mainstays, senior Mario Holladay. He finished with a career-high four rushing touchdowns in his final game in Ivan Head Stadium. “I just wanted to leave with a good impression,” he said. “Even though I hate turf, I love this field.” Capital (1-9, 1-3) could have ruined the playoff party by pulling the upset. The Jagaurs stayed close for most of
Please see demons, Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
BASKETBALL basketball
Nba eastern Conference
atlantic Philadelphia New York Brooklyn Toronto Boston southeast Miami Charlotte Orlando Atlanta Washington Central Indiana Milwaukee Detroit Chicago Cleveland
W 4 2 2 2 2 W 4 3 3 2 2 W 6 2 2 2 2
l Pct 2 .667 3 .400 3 .400 4 .333 4 .333 l Pct 2 .667 3 .500 3 .500 3 .400 3 .400 l Pct 0 1.000 2 .500 3 .400 3 .400 4 .333
Western Conference
Gb — 11/2 11/2 2 2 Gb — 1 1 11/2 11/2 Gb — 3 31/2 31/2 4
southwest W l Pct Gb San Antonio 5 1 .833 — Houston 4 2 .667 1 New Orleans 3 3 .500 2 Dallas 3 3 .500 2 Memphis 2 3 .400 21/2 Northwest W l Pct Gb Oklahoma City 4 1 .800 — Minnesota 4 2 .667 1/2 Portland 3 2 .600 1 Denver 1 4 .200 3 Utah 0 6 .000 41/2 Pacific W l Pct Gb Golden State 4 2 .667 — Phoenix 4 2 .667 — L.A. Clippers 3 3 .500 1 L.A. Lakers 3 4 .429 11/2 Sacramento 1 4 .200 21/2 Friday’s Games Boston 91, Orlando 89 Philadelphia 94, Cleveland 79 Indiana 91, Toronto 84 Washington 112, Brooklyn 108, OT New York 101, Charlotte 91 Oklahoma City 119, Detroit 110 Chicago 97, Utah 73 Minnesota 116, Dallas 108 New Orleans 96, L.A. Lakers 85 San Antonio 76, Golden State 74 Phoenix 114, Denver 103 Portland 104, Sacramento 91 thursday’s Games Miami 102, L.A. Clippers 97 Denver 109, Atlanta 107 L.A. Lakers 99, Houston 98 saturday’s Games Utah at Toronto, 5 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m. Boston at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Houston, 6 p.m. Golden State at Memphis, 6 p.m. Dallas at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. Portland at Sacramento, 8 p.m. sunday’s Games San Antonio at New York, 10 a.m. Washington at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.
Nba boxsCores Friday knicks 101, bobcats 91
NeW York (101) Shumpert 2-3 0-0 5, Anthony 12-22 3-5 28, Bargnani 11-25 0-0 25, Prigioni 3-6 0-0 9, Felton 6-17 1-1 15, World Peace 4-9 0-1 9, Udrih 0-1 0-0 0, Stoudemire 2-2 1-2 5, Hardaway Jr. 2-4 0-0 5, Martin 0-0 0-0 0, Aldrich 0-0 0-0 0, Murry 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 42-90 5-9 101. CHarlotte (91) Kidd-Gilchrist 6-11 2-4 14, McRoberts 2-5 0-0 5, Biyombo 0-1 3-4 3, Walker 8-22 8-8 25, Henderson 7-18 4-5 18, Taylor 2-8 0-0 5, Zeller 1-3 1-2 3, Sessions 4-4 7-7 15, Tolliver 1-4 0-0 3, Adrien 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-76 25-30 91. New York 28 23 34 16 —101 Charlotte 22 25 22 22 —91 3-Point Goals—New York 12-26 (Prigioni 3-4, Bargnani 3-9, Felton 2-6, Shumpert 1-1, World Peace 1-2, Hardaway Jr. 1-2, Anthony 1-2), Charlotte 4-16 (Tolliver 1-3, McRoberts 1-3, Taylor 1-4, Walker 1-5, Kidd-Gilchrist 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— New York 47 (Bargnani, Anthony 8), Charlotte 55 (Biyombo 11). Assists— New York 25 (Anthony 6), Charlotte 13 (Walker 5). Total Fouls—New York 22, Charlotte 15. Technicals—New York delay of game 2, Henderson, Charlotte defensive three second. A—16,465.
Celtics 91, Magic 89
bostoN (91) Green 5-14 0-1 10, Bass 6-14 4-4 16, Faverani 1-4 0-0 3, Crawford 5-13 3-3 13, Bradley 5-13 3-4 14, Wallace 1-3 0-0 2, Olynyk 4-13 0-0 8, Sullinger 2-8 7-8 11, Lee 5-9 3-4 13, Pressey 0-4 1-2 1, Humphries 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-95 21-26 91. orlaNDo (89) Harkless 1-4 2-3 4, Maxiell 4-6 1-5 9, Vucevic 6-12 2-4 14, Nelson 4-15 2-2 12, Afflalo 8-15 5-6 23, Oladipo 3-12 3-4 9, Moore 3-7 1-1 7, O’Quinn 2-6 1-2 5, Nicholson 2-6 2-2 6. Totals 33-83 19-29 89. boston 17 29 25 20—91 orlando 24 25 19 21—89 3-Point Goals—Boston 2-14 (Bradley 1-2, Faverani 1-2, Sullinger 0-1, Olynyk 0-1, Pressey 0-1, Crawford 0-2, Wallace 0-2, Green 0-3), Orlando 4-20 (Afflalo 2-5, Nelson 2-9, Nicholson 0-1, Harkless 0-1, Moore 0-1, Oladipo 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Boston 58 (Bradley 8), Orlando 68 (Vucevic 13). Assists—Boston 19 (Crawford 5), Orlando 19 (Nelson 7). Total Fouls— Boston 24, Orlando 24. Technicals— Orlando defensive three second 2. A—17,555.
Wizards 112, Nets 108, ot
brooklYN (108) Pierce 1-5 2-3 4, Garnett 2-11 0-1 4, Lopez 10-14 3-5 23, Williams 5-14 2-3 14, Johnson 7-15 0-0 16, Blatche 4-5 2-4 10, Livingston 5-7 2-2 12, Kirilenko 0-2 6-8 6, Terry 4-9 1-1 11, Evans 0-0 2-2 2, Anderson 3-6 0-0 6. Totals 41-88 20-29 108. WasHINGtoN (112) Ariza 2-8 0-0 5, Nene 8-12 4-7 20, Gortat 6-11 3-5 15, Wall 4-14 8-8 17, Beal 11-20 4-4 29, Harrington 5-11 1-2 15, Webster 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin 3-5 0-0 6, Maynor 2-6 0-0 5, Temple 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-88 20-26 112. brooklyn 33 25 15 26 9—108 Washington 27 26 20 26 13—112 3-Point Goals—Brooklyn 6-24 (Johnson 2-5, Terry 2-6, Williams 2-6, Garnett 0-1, Anderson 0-3, Pierce 0-3), Washington 10-24 (Harrington 4-6, Beal 3-6, Maynor 1-2, Wall 1-4, Ariza 1-5, Webster 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Brooklyn 66 (Blatche 13), Washington 43 (Gortat 12). Assists— Brooklyn 23 (Johnson 4), Washington 28 (Wall 14). Total Fouls—Brooklyn 27, Washington 19. Technicals—Gortat. A—17,215.
thunder 119, Pistons 110
oklaHoMa CItY (119) Durant 9-15 17-19 37, Ibaka 5-9 1-2 11, Perkins 0-2 0-0 0, Westbrook 5-19 9-10 20, Sefolosha 3-9 2-2 9, Jackson 2-7 2-2 6, Adams 7-10 3-4 17, Collison 3-3 3-3 9, Lamb 3-6 2-2 10, Fisher 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 37-82 39-44 119.
DetroIt (110) Smith 10-20 2-3 25, Monroe 8-13 4-5 20, Drummond 2-3 0-0 4, Jennings 7-17 4-6 22, Billups 1-6 0-0 3, Singler 2-9 0-0 5, Bynum 2-7 4-4 8, Datome 2-5 2-2 6, Stuckey 5-7 5-7 17, Jerebko 0-2 0-0 0, Caldwell-Pope 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 39-91 21-27 110. oklahoma City 20 35 29 35—119 Detroit 22 29 25 34—110 3-Point Goals—Oklahoma City 6-17 (Durant 2-3, Lamb 2-3, Westbrook 1-3, Sefolosha 1-6, Ibaka 0-1, Fisher 0-1), Detroit 11-31 (Jennings 4-10, Smith 3-7, Stuckey 2-2, Singler 1-4, Billups 1-5, Jerebko 0-1, Datome 0-2). Fouled Out—Singler, Smith. Rebounds— Oklahoma City 58 (Adams 10), Detroit 50 (Monroe 15). Assists—Oklahoma City 22 (Durant 7), Detroit 22 (Jennings 11). Total Fouls—Oklahoma City 22, Detroit 27. Technicals—Oklahoma City delay of game, Oklahoma City defensive three second, Billups, Smith, Detroit delay of game, Detroit defensive three second. A—15,624.
76ers 94, Cavaliers 79
CleVelaND (79) Clark 2-9 0-0 4, T.Thompson 5-15 3-4 13, Varejao 1-7 0-0 2, Irving 4-17 1-2 10, Waiters 7-19 1-2 18, Bynum 2-3 0-0 4, Jack 3-10 4-4 13, Gee 1-2 0-0 2, Bennett 0-0 0-0 0, Miles 5-7 1-2 13, Zeller 0-0 0-0 0, Karasev 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 30-90 10-14 79. PHIlaDelPHIa (94) Turner 10-18 2-2 22, Young 8-12 0-1 16, Hawes 3-6 2-2 10, Carter-Williams 4-13 1-2 11, Anderson 5-7 0-0 11, Wroten 7-14 2-2 18, Allen 3-10 0-0 6, Morris 0-3 0-0 0, Davies 0-1 0-0 0, H.Thompson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-84 7-9 94. Cleveland 28 14 19 18—79 Philadelphia 14 30 33 17—94 3-Point Goals—Cleveland 9-26 (Jack 3-4, Waiters 3-6, Miles 2-4, Irving 1-6, Varejao 0-1, Gee 0-1, Clark 0-4), Philadelphia 7-21 (Hawes 2-3, CarterWilliams 2-5, Wroten 2-8, Anderson 1-3, Young 0-1, Morris 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Cleveland 53 (T.Thompson 16), Philadelphia 57 (Turner 10). Assists—Cleveland 22 (Irving 9), Philadelphia 25 (CarterWilliams 6). Total Fouls—Cleveland 12, Philadelphia 18. A—15,219.
Pacers 91, raptors 84
toroNto (84) Gay 12-26 4-4 30, A.Johnson 5-8 2-2 12, Valanciunas 2-6 0-0 4, Lowry 4-10 2-2 12, DeRozan 2-15 2-2 6, Hansbrough 1-4 2-2 4, Fields 2-2 1-3 5, Augustin 0-2 0-0 0, Ross 2-4 0-0 5, Gray 0-1 0-0 0, Stone 1-1 0-0 3, Buycks 1-1 1-1 3, Novak 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 32-81 14-16 84. INDIaNa (91) George 7-21 7-9 23, West 4-7 1-2 9, Hibbert 9-14 2-2 20, G.Hill 4-8 3-3 14, Stephenson 2-5 0-0 4, S.Hill 0-1 0-0 0, Watson 3-8 0-0 6, Scola 4-6 0-0 8, O.Johnson 3-7 0-0 7, Mahinmi 0-1 0-0 0, Butler 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-78 13-16 91. toronto 32 14 13 25—84 Indiana 22 22 28 19—91 3-Point Goals—Toronto 6-18 (Gay 2-5, Lowry 2-6, Ross 1-1, Stone 1-1, Novak 0-1, Augustin 0-1, DeRozan 0-1, A.Johnson 0-2), Indiana 6-21 (G.Hill 3-4, George 2-8, O.Johnson 1-3, S.Hill 0-1, Stephenson 0-2, Watson 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Toronto 48 (A.Johnson 10), Indiana 48 (George 8). Assists—Toronto 16 (Lowry 8), Indiana 20 (George 6). Total Fouls—Toronto 22, Indiana 19. Technicals—Toronto defensive three second. A—13,316.
Pelicans 96, lakers 85
l.a. lakers (85) Young 5-11 2-2 13, Gasol 3-12 3-4 9, Kaman 7-13 2-2 16, Blake 4-11 3-4 13, Meeks 4-10 1-2 11, Farmar 3-9 4-4 10, Hill 2-4 0-6 4, Henry 2-5 2-2 6, Johnson 1-5 0-0 3. Totals 31-80 17-26 85. NeW orleaNs (96) Aminu 1-4 0-0 2, Davis 12-18 8-11 32, Smith 7-12 0-0 14, Holiday 5-15 3-4 13, Gordon 5-11 5-6 16, Evans 3-12 1-1 7, Stiemsma 1-2 0-0 2, Morrow 4-7 0-0 10, Roberts 0-5 0-0 0, Thomas 0-1 0-0 0, Withey 0-0 0-0 0, Onuaku 0-0 0-0 0, Rivers 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-87 17-22 96. l.a. lakers 27 21 18 19—85 New orleans 28 27 14 27—96 3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 6-19 (Blake 2-5, Meeks 2-5, Young 1-3, Johnson 1-3, Farmar 0-3), New Orleans 3-9 (Morrow 2-3, Gordon 1-2, Evans 0-1, Holiday 0-1, Roberts 0-2). Fouled Out—Young, Roberts. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 57 (Hill 13), New Orleans 55 (Davis 12). Assists—L.A. Lakers 19 (Blake 8), New Orleans 25 (Holiday 13). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 18, New Orleans 22. A—18,209.
bulls 97, Jazz 73
UtaH (73) Jefferson 3-12 1-2 8, Favors 3-10 4-6 10, Kanter 4-11 0-0 8, Tinsley 1-3 0-0 2, Hayward 5-15 4-5 15, Lucas III 3-9 0-0 9, Gobert 1-2 2-6 4, Burks 3-13 3-4 10, Williams 1-5 0-0 3, Harris 1-3 2-2 4, Clark 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 25-85 16-25 73. CHICaGo (97) Deng 7-9 5-5 19, Boozer 7-11 4-6 18, Noah 6-9 2-4 14, Rose 3-8 5-5 12, Butler 2-5 0-0 5, Gibson 5-13 2-4 12, Dunleavy 4-7 0-0 9, Hinrich 1-2 0-0 2, Mohammed 3-6 0-1 6, Snell 0-1 0-0 0, Murphy 0-1 0-0 0, Teague 0-0 0-0 0, James 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-72 18-25 97. Utah 18 22 16 17—73 Chicago 30 21 27 19—97 3-Point Goals—Utah 7-20 (Lucas III 3-4, Hayward 1-2, Williams 1-3, Burks 1-3, Jefferson 1-4, Favors 0-1, Clark 0-1, Tinsley 0-2), Chicago 3-8 (Dunleavy 1-1, Rose 1-2, Butler 1-4, Hinrich 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Utah 54 (Gobert 12), Chicago 56 (Deng 11). Assists—Utah 18 (Hayward 5), Chicago 26 (Deng 9). Total Fouls— Utah 21, Chicago 24. Technicals—Utah defensive three second, Chicago defensive three second. A—21,946.
timberwolves 116, Mavericks 108
Dallas (108) Marion 5-13 0-0 10, Nowitzki 5-11 3-3 14, Dalembert 2-3 0-0 4, Calderon 7-11 1-1 21, Ellis 9-24 4-4 23, Blair 4-6 0-2 8, Crowder 5-10 0-2 10, Ellington 2-2 0-0 6, Mekel 3-8 1-2 7, James 2-2 1-1 5. Totals 44-90 10-15 108. MINNesota (116) Brewer 7-14 2-3 17, Love 12-21 5-5 32, Pekovic 4-9 7-8 15, Rubio 2-8 2-2 6, Martin 10-19 9-10 32, Shved 0-1 1-2 1, Barea 2-8 0-0 5, Cunningham 3-6 0-0 6, Hummel 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 41-89 26-30 116. Dallas 24 32 25 27—108 Minnesota 28 27 30 31—116 3-Point Goals—Dallas 10-22 (Calderon 6-8, Ellington 2-2, Ellis 1-4, Nowitzki 1-4, Marion 0-1, Mekel 0-1, Crowder 0-2), Minnesota 8-20 (Martin 3-5, Love 3-6, Barea 1-3, Brewer 1-3, Shved 0-1, Hummel 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Dallas 49 (Blair 9), Minnesota 54 (Love 15). Assists—Dallas 21 (Calderon 7), Minnesota 26 (Love 8). Total Fouls—Dallas 21, Minnesota 15. Technicals—Ellis, Nowitzki, Dallas defensive three second, Love, Minnesota defensive three second. A—13,677
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD spurs 76, Warriors 74
GolDeN state (74) Barnes 2-6 0-0 5, Lee 5-13 3-4 13, Bogut 3-7 0-0 6, Thompson 5-16 0-0 11, Iguodala 4-7 1-2 9, Douglas 8-14 0-0 21, Dr.Green 2-2 0-0 5, O’Neal 0-4 2-2 2, Speights 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 29-71 8-10 74. saN aNtoNIo (76) Leonard 6-8 0-1 13, Duncan 3-11 2-2 8, Splitter 2-5 0-0 4, Parker 7-14 4-10 18, Da.Green 1-6 0-0 3, Ginobili 3-11 0-0 6, Diaw 4-8 0-1 8, Mills 2-4 0-0 6, Baynes 2-7 1-2 5, Ayres 0-1 2-2 2, Belinelli 1-4 0-0 3. Totals 31-79 9-18 76. Golden state 20 13 22 19—74 san antonio 27 13 24 12—76 3-Point Goals—Golden State 8-20 (Douglas 5-9, Dr.Green 1-1, Barnes 1-3, Thompson 1-5, Iguodala 0-2), San Antonio 5-19 (Mills 2-2, Leonard 1-2, Belinelli 1-3, Da.Green 1-5, Parker 0-1, Diaw 0-1, Ginobili 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Golden State 53 (Bogut 13), San Antonio 48 (Splitter 8). Assists— Golden State 16 (Bogut 5), San Antonio 19 (Duncan 5). Total Fouls—Golden State 20, San Antonio 18. Technicals— O’Neal, Baynes. A—18,581.
suns 114, Nuggets 103
DeNVer (103) Hamilton 8-12 0-0 19, Faried 1-4 1-1 3, McGee 1-4 0-0 2, Lawson 10-21 7-8 29, Foye 3-10 4-6 11, Hickson 1-2 2-4 4, Mozgov 0-2 0-0 0, Randolph 4-9 5-5 14, Arthur 3-6 0-0 6, Fournier 2-2 0-0 5, Robinson 2-3 0-0 4, A.Miller 1-5 4-4 6. Totals 36-80 23-28 103. PHoeNIx (114) Tucker 2-7 4-5 9, Frye 2-10 2-2 7, Plumlee 7-13 4-8 18, Bledsoe 6-11 4-4 17, Green 5-12 1-2 12, Mark.Morris 10-13 7-8 28, Goodwin 1-2 0-0 2, Marc. Morris 3-8 2-2 11, Smith 3-3 1-1 8, Christmas 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 40-83 25-32 114. Denver 29 18 40 16—103 Phoenix 35 29 20 30—114 3-Point Goals—Denver 8-22 (Hamilton 3-7, Lawson 2-6, Fournier 1-1, Randolph 1-3, Foye 1-5), Phoenix 9-20 (Marc.Morris 3-6, Bledsoe 1-1, Smith 1-1, Mark. Morris 1-1, Tucker 1-2, Green 1-3, Frye 1-4, Christmas 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Denver 43 (Hamilton 9), Phoenix 56 (Plumlee 11). Assists— Denver 17 (A.Miller, Foye, Lawson 4), Phoenix 21 (Bledsoe 9). Total Fouls— Denver 26, Phoenix 22. A—15,145.
trail blazers 104, kings 91
saCraMeNto (91) Salmons 1-6 0-0 2, Patterson 4-8 0-0 10, Cousins 13-25 9-10 35, Vasquez 5-10 1-2 12, Thornton 2-11 0-0 5, McLemore 0-0 0-0 0, Thomas 5-15 3-3 13, Thompson 2-2 0-0 4, Outlaw 4-7 0-0 10, Hayes 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 36-86 13-15 91. PortlaND (104) Batum 5-10 1-2 14, Aldridge 10-20 0-0 20, Lopez 4-8 3-4 11, Lillard 5-13 8-8 22, Matthews 7-11 2-2 18, Williams 1-6 0-0 2, Wright 1-3 0-0 3, Freeland 2-4 0-0 4, Robinson 4-5 2-2 10. Totals 39-80 16-18 104. sacramento 22 27 17 25—91 Portland 29 25 23 27—104 3-Point Goals—Sacramento 6-22 (Outlaw 2-2, Patterson 2-4, Vasquez 1-4, Thornton 1-6, Salmons 0-1, Cousins 0-2, Thomas 0-3), Portland 10-23 (Lillard 4-9, Batum 3-6, Matthews 2-3, Wright 1-3, Williams 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Sacramento 41 (Cousins 9), Portland 54 (Lillard 8). Assists—Sacramento 20 (Thomas 7), Portland 28 (Batum 8). Total Fouls—Sacramento 24, Portland 18. A—17,627.
NCaa basketball top 25
Friday’s Games No. 1 Kentucky 89, UNC Asheville 57 No. 2 Michigan State 98, McNeese State 56 No. 4 Duke 111, Davidson 77 No. 5 Kansas 80, Louisiana-Monroe 63 No. 6 Arizona 73, Cal Poly 62 No. 7 Michigan 69, UMass-Lowell 42 No. 8 Oklahoma State 117, MVSU 62 No. 8 Syracuse 82, Cornell 60 No. 10 Florida 77, North Florida 69 No. 12 North Carolina 84, Oakland 61 No. 14 VCU 96, Illinois State 58 No. 17 Marquette 63, Southern U. 56 No. 18 UConn 78, Maryland 77 No. 19 Oregon 82, Georgetown 75 No. 20 Wisconsin 86, St. John’s 75 No. 21 Notre Dame 74, Miami (Ohio) 62 No. 24 Virginia 61, James Madison 41 No. 25 Baylor 72, Colorado 60 saturday’s Games No. 3 Louisville vs. College of Charleston, 11 a.m. No. 11 Ohio State vs. Morgan State, 10 a.m. No. 15 Gonzaga vs. Bryant, 5 p.m. No. 16 Wichita St. vs. Emporia St., noon No. 22 UCLA vs. Drexel, 10 p.m. No. 23 New Mexico vs. Alabama A&M, 8:05 p.m. sunday’s Games No. 1 Kentucky vs. Northern Kentucky, 2 p.m. No. 21 Notre Dame vs. Stetson, 11 a.m.
TENNIS teNNIs
atP WorlD toUr barClaYs atP WorlD toUr Finals
Friday at o2 arena london Purse: $6 million (tour Final) surface: Hard-Indoor round robin x-advanced to semifinals singles Group a Stanislas Wawrinka (7), Switzerland, def. David Ferrer (3), Spain, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-1. Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Tomas Berdych (5), Czech Republic, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. standings x-Nadal 3-0 (6-1); x-Wawrinka, 2-1 (4-4); Berdych, 1-2 (4-4); Ferrer, 0-3 (1-6). Group B standings Djokovic, 2-0 (4-2); Federer, 1-1 (3-2); del Potro, 1-1 (3-3); Gasquet, 0-2 (1-4). Doubles Group a standings Dodig-Melo, 2-0 (4-2); FyrstenbergMatkowski, 1-1 (3-2); Bryan-Bryan, 1-1 (3-3); Qureshi-Rojer, 0-2 (1-4). Group b Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (3), Spain, def. Leander Paes, India, and Radek Stepanek (7), Czech Republic, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 10-8. Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (2), Brazil, def. David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco (6), Spain, 6-3, 7-5. standings x-Peya-Soares, 2-1 (5-3); x-MarreroVerdasco, 2-1 (4-2); Granollers-Lopez, 1-2 (3-5); Paes-Stepanek, 1-2 (3-5).
eUroPeaN toUr turkish airlines open
HOCKEY HoCkeY
FOOTBALL Football
atlantic GP Tampa Bay 15 Toronto 16 Detroit 17 Boston 15 Montreal 17 Ottawa 16 Florida 16 Buffalo 19 Metro GP Pittsburgh 16 Washington 16 N.Y. Rangers 16 Carolina 16 N.Y. Islanders 16 New Jersey 16 Columbus 15 Philadelphia 15
east New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo south Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Cleveland Baltimore Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland
W 7 5 4 3 W 6 4 2 0 W 6 4 3 2 W 9 7 4 3
l 2 4 4 6 l 2 4 6 8 l 3 5 5 6 l 0 1 4 5
t Pct PF Pa 0 .778 234 175 0 .556 169 231 0 .500 174 187 0 .333 189 236 t Pct PF Pa 0 .750 214 155 0 .500 173 167 0 .250 146 221 0 .000 86 264 t Pct PF Pa 0 .667 217 166 0 .444 172 197 0 .375 168 172 0 .250 156 208 t Pct PF Pa 0 1.000 215 111 0 .875 343 218 0 .500 192 174 0 .375 146 199
east Dallas Philadelphia Washington N.Y. Giants south New Orleans Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay North Detroit Chicago Green Bay Minnesota West Seattle San Francisco Arizona St. Louis
W 5 4 3 2 W 6 5 2 0 W 5 5 5 2 W 8 6 4 3
l 4 5 6 6 l 2 3 6 8 l 3 3 3 7 l 1 2 4 6
t 0 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0
NHl eastern Conference
W l ol Pts GFGa 11 4 0 22 51 37 11 5 0 22 50 37 9 5 3 21 43 45 9 5 1 19 42 29 8 8 1 17 44 38 6 6 4 16 50 49 3 9 4 10 32 57 3 15 1 7 33 61 W l ol Pts GFGa 11 5 0 22 49 38 9 7 0 18 53 44 8 8 0 16 35 43 6 7 3 15 30 45 6 7 3 15 47 51 4 7 5 13 30 44 5 10 0 10 36 44 4 10 1 9 22 42
Western Conference
Central GP W l ol Pts GFGa Colorado 15 13 2 0 26 50 27 Chicago 16 10 2 4 24 56 43 St. Louis 14 10 2 2 22 50 33 Minnesota 17 9 4 4 22 45 38 Nashville 16 8 6 2 18 37 49 Dallas 16 8 6 2 18 44 47 Winnipeg 18 7 9 2 16 45 51 Pacific GP W l ol Pts GFGa Anaheim 18 14 3 1 29 63 44 San Jose 16 10 2 4 24 59 36 Phoenix 17 11 4 2 24 56 53 Vancouver 18 11 5 2 24 52 46 Los Angeles 16 10 6 0 20 45 40 Calgary 17 6 9 2 14 47 61 Edmonton 17 4 11 2 10 42 66 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Friday’s Games Toronto 2, New Jersey 1, SO Winnipeg 5, Nashville 0 Colorado 4, Calgary 2 Anaheim 6, Buffalo 2 thursday’s Games Washington 3, Minnesota 2, SO Boston 4, Florida 1 Ottawa 4, Montreal 1 New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 0 Carolina 1, N.Y. Islanders 0 N.Y. Rangers 4, Columbus 2 Dallas 4, Detroit 3, OT Tampa Bay 4, Edmonton 2 St. Louis 3, Calgary 2 Los Angeles 2, Buffalo 0 Vancouver 4, San Jose 2 saturday’s Games Edmonton at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Florida at Ottawa, noon Toronto at Boston, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Carolina, 5 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Columbus, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 6 p.m. Washington at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 8 p.m. sunday’s Games N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 4 p.m. Nashville at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Florida at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m. Edmonton at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. San Jose at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. Washington at Colorado, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Anaheim, 6 p.m.
NHl sUMMarIes Friday Maple leafs 2, Devils 1, so
New Jersey 0 0 1 0—1 toronto 0 0 1 0—2 toronto won shootout 1-0 First Period—None. second Period—None. third Period—1, Toronto, Kessel 10 (Franson), 8:12 (pp). 2, New Jersey, Ryder 5 (Gelinas, Greene), 15:15 (pp). overtime—None. shootout—New Jersey 0 (Ryder NG, T.Zajac NG, Henrique NG), Toronto 1 (Raymond NG, Kessel NG, van Riemsdyk G). shots on Goal—New Jersey 7-15-112—35. Toronto 8-8-10-2—28. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 1 of 3; Toronto 1 of 6. Goalies—New Jersey, Schneider 1-4-3 (28 shots-27 saves). Toronto, J.Bernier 7-4-0 (35-34). referees—Wes McCauley, Ian Walsh. linesmen—S. Driscoll, M. Cormier. a—19,377. t—2:38.
Jets 5, Predators 0
Nashville 0 0 0—0 Winnipeg 4 0 1—5 First Period—1, Winnipeg, Little 9 (Ladd, Wheeler), 3:04. 2, Winnipeg, Jokinen 3 (Kane, Ellerby), 6:47. 3, Winnipeg, Byfuglien 1 (Clitsome, Thorburn), 8:23. 4, Winnipeg, Setoguchi 4 (Jokinen), 16:45. second Period—None. third Period—5, Winnipeg, Little 10 (Ladd, Wheeler), 9:53. shots on Goal—Nashville 9-15-17—41. Winnipeg 13-10-9—32. Power-play opportunities—Nashville 0 of 4; Winnipeg 0 of 3. Goalies—Nashville, Hutton 4-2-1 (8 shots-5 saves), Mazanec (8:23 first, 24-22). Winnipeg, Pavelec 5-7-2 (41-41). referees—F. Charron, P. Devorski. linesmen—S. Barton, K. Murchison. a—15,004. t—2:30.
avalanche 4, Flames 2
Calgary 0 2 0—2 Colorado 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Colorado, O’Reilly 6 (Parenteau, Hejda), 5:31. second Period—2, Colorado, Stastny 6 (Johnson, Benoit), 1:09 (pp). 3, Calgary, Cammalleri 6 (Backlund, Hudler), 6:07. 4, Colorado, Mitchell 2 (MacKinnon, Sarich), 7:16. 5, Calgary, Cammalleri 7 (Hudler, Backlund), 9:46. third Period—6, Colorado, Duchene 11 (O’Reilly), 19:57 (en). shots on Goal—Calgary 8-14-10—32. Colorado 8-11-8—27. Power-play opportunities—Calgary 0 of 2; Colorado 1 of 3. Goalies—Calgary, Ramo 2-4-1 (26 shots-23 saves). Colorado, Giguere 5-0-0 (32-30). referees—Frederick L’Ecuyer, Don Van Massenhoven. linesmen—Steve Miller, Lonnie Cameron. a—17,620. t—2:24.
Ducks 6, sabres 2
buffalo 1 1 0—2 anaheim 4 2 0—6 First Period—1, Anaheim, Getzlaf 8 (Fowler, Penner), 2:11 (pp). 2, Anaheim, Fowler 2 (Penner, Getzlaf), 9:53 (pp). 3, Buffalo, Grigorenko 1 (McCormick, Stafford), 13:26. 4, Anaheim, Getzlaf 9, 16:29. 5, Anaheim, Getzlaf 10 (Perry, Penner), 19:40. second Period—6, Anaheim, Penner 3 (Perry), 4:53. 7, Buffalo, Grigorenko 2 (Tropp, McCormick), 13:09. 8, Anaheim, Cogliano 4 (Rakell, Winnik), 18:53. third Period—None. shots on Goal—Buffalo 7-11-9—27. Anaheim 22-12-12—46. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 0 of 2; Anaheim 2 of 2. Goalies—Buffalo, Miller 2-11-0 (34 shots-28 saves), Enroth (0:00 third, 1212). Anaheim, Andersen 5-0-0 (27-25). referees—Rob Martell, Brad Watson. linesmen—B. Lazarowich, B. Murphy. a—15,577. t—2:21.
NFl american Conference
National Conference
Week 10
Pct .556 .444 .333 .250 Pct .750 .625 .250 .000 Pct .625 .625 .625 .222 Pct .889 .750 .500 .333
PF Pa 257 209 225 231 230 287 141 223 PF Pa 216 146 204 106 176 218 124 190 PF Pa 217 197 240 226 232 185 220 279 PF Pa 232 149 218 145 160 174 186 226
sunday’s Games Detroit at Chicago, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Green Bay, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Baltimore, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 11 a.m. Oakland at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Carolina at San Francisco, 2:05 p.m. Denver at San Diego, 2:25 p.m. Houston at Arizona, 2:25 p.m. Dallas at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m. Monday’s Game Miami at Tampa Bay, 6:40 p.m. thursday’s Game Minnesota 34, Washington 27 open: Cleveland, Kansas City, N.Y. Jets, New England
NCaa the aP top 25
Friday’s Game No. 20 Louisville 31, UConn 10 thursday’s Games No. 6 Stanford 26, No. 2 Oregon 20 No. 5 Baylor 41, No. 12 Oklahoma 12 saturday’s Games No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 10 LSU, 6 p.m. No. 3 Florida State at Wake Forest, 10 a.m. No. 7 Auburn at Tennessee, 10 a.m. No. 9 Missouri at Kentucky, 10 a.m. No. 11 Texas A&M vs. Mississippi State, 1:30 p.m. No. 14 Miami vs. Virginia Tech, 5 p.m. No. 15 Oklahoma State vs. Kansas, 2 p.m. No. 16 UCLA at Arizona, 8 p.m. No. 17 Fresno State at Wyoming, 8:15 p.m. No. 19 UCF vs. Houston, 5 p.m. No. 21 Wisconsin vs. BYU, 1:30 p.m. No. 23 Arizona State at Utah, 2 p.m. No. 24 Notre Dame at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. No. 25 Texas Tech vs. Kansas State, 10 a.m.
GolF GOLF
PGa toUr the McGladrey Classic
Friday at sea Island resort (seaside Course) st. simons Island, Ga. Purse: $5.5 million Yardage: 7,005; Par: 70 (35-35) Partial second round 18 players failed to finish the round Chris Kirk 66-66—132 Kevin Chappell 65-68—133 Briny Baird 63-70—133 Webb Simpson 65-68—133 John Senden 66-67—133 Jason Kokrak 69-65—134 Scott Brown 66-68—134 Ted Potter, Jr. 67-67—134 Tim Clark 67-67—134 Brian Harman 67-68—135 Matt Every 67-68—135 Brian Gay 63-72—135 Jonathan Byrd 66-69—135 Matt Kuchar 68-68—136 Will Claxton 65-71—136 Kevin Stadler 68-68—136 Boo Weekley 67-69—136 D.H. Lee 67-70—137 Scott Langley 66-71—137 Ben Curtis 68-69—137 Martin Flores 70-68—138 George McNeill 62-76—138 Harris English 68-70—138 Heath Slocum 67-71—138 Zach Johnson 70-68—138 Stuart Appleby 68-70—138 Trevor Immelman 67-72—139 Aaron Baddeley 68-71—139 Andres Romero 70-69—139 Pat Perez 68-71—139 Paul Goydos 68-71—139 Cameron Tringale 70-69—139 Kyle Stanley 68-71—139 Rory Sabbatini 66-73—139 Charley Hoffman 66-73—139 Robert Garrigus 65-74—139 Spencer Levin 69-70—139 Darren Clarke 69-70—139 Charles Howell III 69-70—139 Y.E. Yang 68-71—139 Retief Goosen 68-71—139 J.J. Henry 67-72—139 Troy Matteson 71-69—140 Russell Henley 69-71—140 Carl Pettersson 66-74—140 Scott Piercy 67-73—140 Camilo Villegas 66-74—140 David Hearn 74-66—140 James Hahn 69-72—141 David Toms 68-73—141 Justin Leonard 71-70—141 John Rollins 65-76—141 Blake Adams 73-68—141 Danny Lee 70-71—141 leaderboard Player score through Chris Kirk -8 F John Senden -7 17 Kevin Chappell -7 F Webb Simpson -7 F Briny Baird -7 F Jason Kokrak -6 F -6 F Tim Clark Ted Potter, Jr. -6 F Scott Brown -6 F Brian Harman -5 F Matt Every -5 F Jonathan Byrd -5 17 Seung-yul Noh -5 14 Brian Gay -5 F
Friday at Montgomerie Maxx royal belek, turkey Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,100; Par: 72 (35-37) second round Justin Walters, SAf 66-66—132 Ian Poulter, Eng 66-66—132 Victor Dubuisson, Fra 67-65—132 Henrik Stenson, Swe 64-68—132 Tiger Woods, USA 70-63—133 Richard Sterne, SAf 69-65—134 Jamie Donaldson, Wal 68-67—135 Alejandro Canizares, Esp 67-68—135 Ross Fisher, Eng 68-68—136 David Lynn, Eng 68-68—136 Paul Waring, Eng 68-68—136 Robert-Jan Derksen, Ned 67-69—136 Thomas Bjorn, Den 64-72—136 Lee Westwood, Eng 70-66—136 Julien Quesne, Fra 67-69—136 Justin Rose, Eng 70-66—136 also Francesco Molinari, Ita 69-68—137 Martin Kaymer, Ger 69-68—137 Padraig Harrington, Irl 68-70—138 Charl Schwartzel, SAf 68-70—138 Peter Uihlein, USA 67-72—139 Matteo Manassero, Ita 70-70—140 Paul Lawrie, Sco 74-70—144 Colin Montgomerie, Sco 72-72—144 Miguel Angel Jimenez, Esp73-71—144 Louis Oosthuizen, SAf 72-74—146
lPGa toUr lPGa Mizuno Classic
Friday at kintetsu kashikojima Golf Course shima, Japan Purse: $1.2 million Yardage: 6,506; Par: 72 (36-36) First round Shiho Oyama 32-36—68 Chella Choi 35-34—69 Hee-Won Han 34-35—69 Eun-Bi Jang 36-33—69 Na-Ri Lee 35-34—69 Brittany Lincicome 35-34—69 Pernilla Lindberg 34-35—69 Kaori Nakamura 33-36—69 Junko Omote 35-34—69 Jiyai Shin 34-35—69 Austin Ernst 35-35—70 Asako Fujimoto 36-34—70 Mamiko Higa 34-36—70 Yuki Ichinose 35-35—70 Danielle Kang 33-37—70 Brittany Lang 33-37—70 Esther Lee 34-36—70 Teresa Lu 37-33—70 Jennifer Rosales 34-36—70 Yuko Fukuda 35-36—71 Julieta Granada 35-36—71 Erina Hara 35-36—71 Vicky Hurst 36-35—71 Ah-Reum Hwang 35-36—71 Kumiko Kaneda 35-36—71 Christina Kim 35-36—71 Rui Kitada 35-36—71 Rebecca Lee-Bentham 34-37—71 Stacy Lewis 35-36—71 Catriona Matthew 36-35—71 Mika Miyazato 35-36—71 Da-Ye Na 36-35—71
aUstralIaN PGa toUr australian PGa Championship
Friday at royal Pines resort Gold Coast, australia Purse: $1.25 million Yardage: 7,378; Par: 71 second round Adam Scott, Aus David McKenzie, Aus Rickie Fowler, USA Gareth Paddison, NZl Nathan Green, Aus Steven Jeffress, Aus Josh Geary, NZl Jason Scrivener, Aus Ashley Hall, Aus Matthew Guyatt, Aus Matthew Griffin, Aus Jack Wilson, Aus Rory Hie, Indonesia Richard Green, Aus Sven Puymbroeck, NZl Michael Wright, Aus Adam Bland, Aus Lincoln Tighe, Aus
65-67—132 65-69—134 63-72—135 68-67—135 66-69—135 68-68—136 68-68—136 70-67—137 68-69—137 69-69—138 69-69—138 68-71—139 69-70—139 69-70—139 67-72—139 69-70—139 69-70—139 71-68—139
AUTO RACING aUto raCING
NasCar sPrINt CUP advoCare 500 lineup
after Friday qualifying; race sunday at Phoenix International raceway avondale, ariz. lap length: 1 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 139.222 mph. 2. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 139.023. 3. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 138.942. 4. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 138.851. 5. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chev., 138.627. 6. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 138.595. 7. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 138.52. 8. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 138.446. 9. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chev., 138.297. 10. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 138.069. 11. (88) D. Earnhardt Jr., Chev., 138.053. 12. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 137.968. 13. (27) Paul Menard, Chev., 137.736. 14. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 137.704. 15. (31) Jeff Burton, Chev., 137.652. 16. (14) Mark Martin, Chev., 137.41. 17. (39) Ryan Newman, Chev., 137.237. 18. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 137.195. 19. (42) J.P. Montoya, Chev., 137.153. 20. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 136.971. 21. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 136.945. 22. (55) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 136.69. 23. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 136.679. 24. (95) Reed Sorenson, Ford, 136.096. 25. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chev., 136.008. 26. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 135.962. 27. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 135.947. 28. (35) Josh Wise, Ford, 135.793. 29. (30) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 135.716. 30. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 135.578. 31. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 135.399. 32. (10) Danica Patrick, Chev., 135.379. 33. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 135.323. 34. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 135.277. 35. (36) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 135.11. 36. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chev., 134.862. 37. (83) David Reutimann, Toyota, Owner Points. 38. (32) Timmy Hill, Ford, Owner Pts. 39. (98) M. McDowell, Ford, Owner Pts. 40. (40) L. Cassill, Chev., Owner Pts. 41. (33) Tony Raines, Chev., Owner Pts. 42. (7) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, Owner Points.
SOCCER soCCer
NortH aMerICa Mls Playoffs CoNFereNCe CHaMPIoNsHIP eastern Conference
leg 1 — saturday’s Game Sporting KC at Houston, 12:30 p.m. leg 2 — saturday, Nov. 23 Houston at Sporting KC, 5:30 p.m.
Western Conference
leg 1 — sunday’s Game Portland at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. leg 2 — sunday, Nov. 24 Real Salt Lake at Portland, 7 p.m.
SPORTS CROSS-COUNTRY
Taos has high hopes for state meet By James Barron
The New Mexican
Lucia Costanza needs a happy ending. The Taos sophomore is saying goodbye at the end of the semester in the winter to what has been her home since she was born. Costanza and her family are moving to Albuquerque, where she will become a La Cueva Bear. But in her heart she is a Taos Lady Tiger. She said her farewells to her soccer teammates on Friday afternoon, after Taos lost 1-0 to Albuquerque Hope Christian in the Class A-AAA semifinals in Albuquerque. But while most of her team headed back home, she made a 20-minute drive north to Rio Rancho, where Costanza will trade a soccer uniform for running shorts and a shirt. While she missed out on a trophy in soccer, Costanza will be counted on to lead a Lady Tigers brigade to a podium finish in the Class AAA State Cross-Country Championships at Rio Rancho High School on Saturday. The only downside is that she can’t celebrate in the success of the sport she truly loves. “Soccer is my passion,” Costanza said. But cross-country is her muse, as she has become a key part to what is a statecontending program. She was a part of Taos’ first district title team on Nov. 2, as Taos beat Pojoaque Valley for that honor in the 2AAA meet. In the AAA meet, Taos is in the running for a state title, which would be the program’s first in 23 years. That has been a running
Taos’ Haley Rach, left, took third in the Class AAA state meet in November 2012. LUIS SáNCHEz SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
theme for Taos over the past two seasons. The girls track team won its first state title in May, while the boys took third. The basketball team won the 2AAA title and the football team is on the cusp of winning its first district title since it was in AAA back in the 1990s. “The atmosphere at the school, I think, is phenomenal,” Taos girls soccer coach Michael Hensley said. “I feel like the energy is positive. A few years ago, there were some problems internally and that has disappeared.” Still, overall success almost came at a detriment to the cross-country team. Costanza, Isabella Padilla and Cora Cannedy all play soccer as well as run cross-country, complementing the duo of Haley Rach and Hannah Gunther. Had Taos upset Hope, those three would have been on the pitch instead of the course since the A-AAA match is scheduled at 9:30 a.m. and the AAA meet is a half-four later.
But the relationship has been prosperous for both soccer and cross-country, other than scheduling. “My assistant works hard with the cross-country coach,” Hensley said. “And I have been good friends with coach [Bruce] Gomez for a long time. It’s been neat because we’ve put together a program to where we don’t overtax their runners and do what’s in their best interest and run both activities.” The Taos boys, meanwhile, could make it two trophies for the school. The Tigers also won the district meet, and have been the top team in AAA for most of the season, thanks to the trio of Mateo Vigil, Roy Madrid and Donevan Gravelle. They are the lead pack for Taos and routinely finish in the top quarter of every meet. The strength of those three alone make them a difficult challenge for the rest of the state. The main pursuer has been St. Michael’s, and the Horse-
men will try to bridge the gap once more. The last time the teams met was at the Rio Rancho Jamboree in October, Taos was 83 points better than St. Michael’s. The Horsemen took the final week of the regular season off before winning the 4AAA title. St. Michael’s head coach Lenny Gurule feels his team is rested for the final meet of the season, but can it pull off the surprise? “We’ve got to run well up front and we got to beat their other scoring guys with our depth,” Gurule said. “But that’s why we compete. I know Taos knows what they got to do.” In Class AAAA, the race for the state title in boys and girls begins with Albuquerque Academy and Los Alamos. Can anyone play the spoiler role? Santa Fe High head coach Peter Graham thinks Albuquerque St. Pius X is that team. “The [Kelli] Reagan girl and [Julie] Giannini are tough,” Graham said. “They ran 1-2 at Los Alamos [in the final regular-season meet] and ran well at Rio Rancho. If they get it together, they could spoil everyone’s party.” As for Santa Fe High, Graham thinks a top five finish is possible and getting third could happen if the Demonettes run to their potential. In AA, Santa Fe Prep’s Jimmy Buchanan will be among the boys favorites and Prep will be among a group of five vying for a podium. The Academy for Technology and the Classics girls have a shot as well. Taylor Bacon took second at last year’s inaugural A meet, and will be a favorite to win this year.
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 9:30 a.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for AdvoCare 500, in Avondale, Ariz. 10:30 p.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for ServiceMaster 200, in Avondale, Ariz. 12:30 p.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, “Happy Hour Series,” final practice for AdvoCare 500, in Avondale, Ariz. 2 p.m. on ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, ServiceMaster 200, in Avondale, Ariz. 12:30 a.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, qualifying for Auto Club Finals, in Pomona, Calif. (delayed tape) BOXING 7:30 p.m. on HBO — Vanes Martirosyan (33-0-1) vs. Demetrius Andrade (19-0-0), for vacant WBO junior middleweight title; junior featherweights, Nonito Donaire (31-2-0) vs. Vic Darchinyan (39-5-1); champion Roman Martinez (27-1-2) vs. Mikey Garcia (320-0), for WBO junior lightweight title, in Corpus Christi, Texas COLLEGE FOOTBALL 10 a.m. on ABC — National coverage, Kansas St. at Texas Tech ESPN — Auburn at Tennessee ESPN2 — Penn St. at Minnesota FSN — TCU at Iowa St. 1 p.m. on FOX — Southern Cal at California 1:30 p.m. on ABC — Nebraska at Michigan or BYU at Wisconsin CBS — National coverage, Mississippi St. at Texas A&M ESPN — Nebraska at Michigan or BYU at Wisconsin NBCSN — James Madison at New Hampshire 1:45 p.m. on FSN — Tulsa at East Carolina 2 p.m. on FS1 — Kansas at Oklahoma St. NBCSN — Cornell at Dartmouth 5 p.m. on ESPN — Virginia Tech at Miami ESPN2 — Houston at UCF FOX — Texas at West Virginia 6 p.m. on CBS — National coverage, LSU at Alabama 6:07 p.m. on ABC — Notre Dame at Pittsburgh 8 p.m. on ESPN — UCLA at Arizona 8:15 p.m. on ESPN2 — Fresno St. at Wyoming GOLF 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, The McGladrey Classic, third round, in St. Simons Island, Ga. 1:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Turkish Airlines Open, final round, in Antalya, Turkey SOCCER
Lobos: Air Force tightened lead in 2nd half Continued from Page B-1 linebacker Brett Bowers sacked Romine for a 13-yard loss on a fourth-and-23 attempt midway through the fourth quarter with the Falcons trailing 42-34. The Lobos then took 4:10 off the clock in driving for a field goal. New Mexico had leads of 14-0 and 21-7, but Air Force pulled even at 21 on Romine’s 21-yard scoring pass to Jale Robinette early in the third quarter. Jhurell Presley went over from 3 yards out for the first of two second-half touchdowns, but the extra point was blocked. Moments later Air Force took its only lead at 28-27 on Romine’s 7-yard pass to Garret Griffin. Presley immediately responded with a 61-yard run that put New Mexico back ahead to stay. Presley finished with 87 yards on four carries. Gautsche completed only one pass in three attempts, a 28-yard scoring strike to Jeric Magnant in the first quarter.
7:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, West Bromwich at Chelsea 10:30 p.m. on NBC — Premier League, West Ham at Norwich 12:30 p.m. on NBC — MLS, playoffs, conference championships, leg 1, teams TBD
Today on radio Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL 1:30 p.m. on KVSF 1400 AM — Albuquerque Hope Christian at St. Michael’s
HIGH SCHOOL SCORES
Prep football
Air Force’s Nate Romine gets sacked by New Mexico’s David Guthrie during Friday’s game in Albuquerque. ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Albuquerque Academy 49, Socorro 13 Artesia 53, Del Norte 22 Aztec 32, Kirtland Central 20 Belen 47, Grants 22 Centennial High School 28, Deming 14 Cibola 38, Volcano Vista 28 Clayton 50, Texico 0 Clovis 66, Carlsbad 39 Dexter 54, NMMI 28 Farmington 21, Piedra Vista 6 Goddard 35, Roswell 0 Hatch Valley 57, Cobre 21 Laguna-Acoma 66, Ramah 0 Lordsburg 47, Mesilla Valley Christian 7 Los Lunas 49, Valencia 21 Mayfield 28, Las Cruces 20 Miyamura 39, Gallup 30 Moriarty 19, St. Pius 0 Navajo Prep 77, Dulce 0
Ruidoso 42, Lovington 0 Sandia 35, La Cueva 7 Santa Fe 46, Capital 22 Santa Rosa 52, Tucumcari 0 Silver 47, Hot Springs 7 Taos 40, Raton 19 Zuni 50, Crownpoint 44
Class 1A quarterfinal Capitan 22, Fort Sumner 8 Jal 49, Magdalena 8
Eight Man quarterfinal Melrose 40, Carrizozo 12 Tatum 32, Logan 8
Six man Hondo 74, Dora 25
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE
Demons: Demons fullback had solid night Continued from Page B-1 the first half, taking advantage of two Demons fumbles to mount a pair of scoring drives. They led 10-8 after a 32-yard field goal by Carlos Gallegos early in the second quarter, giving them two scoring drives in a game for just the third time this season — one of them being a game against Socorro that they later forfeited. Eventually, Santa Fe High remedied the turnover situation and started to pull away. Alongside Holladay was bruising fullback Rayes Montano.
He had a solid night of runs up the middle and finished with two rushing touchdowns. Holladay also had a 41-yard reception in the second half as the game turned into a rout. The Demons’ 21-10 lead at halftime mushroomed to 40-16 after three quarters and to 46-16 after a Montano 3-yard touchdown run up the middle with six minutes remaining in the game. Holladay had touchdown runs of 50, 2, 15 and 19 yards before the fourth quarter while Montano had 110 yards on the ground through that same span.
As usual, Santa Fe High’s weakness was its pass defense. Capital quarterback Augie Larranaga — playing behind an overmatched offensive line that was beaten repeatedly by the Demons’ three-man rush — had a passing touchdown and completed five throws in the first half for 79 yards. The problem is both he and sophomore running back Kevin Brown had almost no time to operate. Time and again the Demons swarmed the backfield. Even when they didn’t, plays like a 30-yard Larranaga touchdown
run in the fourth quarter were wiped off the books by a Capital penalty. “Sooner or later we’re going to learn not to kick the ball to [Brown],” Ray Holladay said. “We’ve got two more years of dealing with that guy. We need to figure out a way to keep him out of it.” Larranaga was sacked six times and picked off on three throws, twice by Holladay. He did have a 64-yard touchdown run midway through the fourth quarter to cut into what was a 30-point deficit.
VOLLEYBALL
Santa Fe Prep wins district championship
The New Mexican
The ride isn’t over yet for the Santa Fe Preparatory volleyball team. But Friday night offered the Blue Griffins a chance to gaze upon what they’ve done so far. Prep capped its first double district championship — regular season and tournament — with a 23-25, 25-16, 25-19, 25-21 win over Mora to win the District 2AA Tournament championship. It is the ninth win in a row for Prep,
which went 8-0 in the 2AA regular season and beat Mora for the third time this year. “It was a nice ride, and hopefully it continues still,” said Kiran Bhakta, Prep head coach. The ride was bumpy in Game 1, as the Rangerettes came out strong, but Prep showed its trademark serving and hitting to take control of the match. Desiray Anderson led the way for the Blue Griffins (19-3) with 19 kills, three aces and a block, while middle hitter Joy Maran added 11 kills, four aces and five blocks.
Myla Borden added five kills, while Gressia Burrola and Bae Lee Harman each had three. Senior Alex Archuleta added 10 digs on defense and an ace, and Elena Wirth added an ace and four digs. Prep will wait until Sunday for its seed. The latest MaxPreps.com rankings had the Blue Griffins sixth, but Bhakta said he and the players are not concerned with their placement. “It’s out of our hands,” Bhakta said. “We did our playing on the court. Now, it’s in the committee’s hands.”
This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, call 986-3045.
Today Cross-country — Class A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Championships at Rio Rancho High School: Boys Class AA, 12:05 p.m. Class AAA, 12:35 p.m. Class AAAA, 1:05 p.m. Class A, 2:05 p.m. Girls Class AA, 9:30 a.m. Class AAA, 10 a.m. Class AAAA, 10:30 a.m. Class A, 11:30 a.m. Football — Albuquerque Hope Christian at St. Michael’s, 1:30 p.m. West Las Vegas at Las Vegas Robertson, noon Volleyball District 2AAAA Tournament: Santa Fe High at Española Valley, 7 p.m. District 2AAA Tournament: Friday’s winner at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. District 4A Tournament: Coronado at McCurdy, 6:30 p.m. District 5B Tournament: Victory Christian/Evangel Christian winner at Santa Fe Waldorf (Christian Life), 5 p.m.
ANNOUNCEMENTS u The Pojoaque Valley High School girls basketball team is hosting an arts and crafts fair from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at Pojoaque Valley Middle School. Vendors call Pebols at 929-4038.
Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
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SOCCER
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
BOYS SOCCER
GIRLS SOCCER
Last-minute goal nets Roswell win
Hope Christian exploits holes, takes down Taos
By Will Webber The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — By all accounts, it was headed to overtime. After Roswell 1 nearly 80 minLos Alamos 0 utes of game action, the only logical assumption about Friday’s Class AAAA Boys Soccer State Tournament semifinal match between Los Alamos and Roswell at the Albuquerque Public Schools Soccer Complex was that it was going to require bonus time to determine a winner. And then along came the guy with the wild hairdo. Well, one of them anyway. Finding a crease in the Los Alamos defense just inside the box, Roswell senior captain Fernando Sanchez carried his forward momentum straight toward the Hilltoppers’ net and skipped home the game’s only goal in the 79th minute to hand the second-seeded Coyotes (21-1) a dramatic 1-0 victory that plants them in Saturday’s state championship match against Albuquerque Academy. Roswell has never won a state title. Los Alamos was seeking its first since the Hilltoppers of 2010 beat Belen in the finals. Despite being outplayed for much of the match, Los Alamos (12-11) more than held its own in a contest that featured very few quality shots on goal. “They were starting to get momentum with 10 minutes left,” Sanchez said. “It kept winding down and we were getting frustrated because we had opportunities but we just couldn’t make them. They were playing physical, and those thoughts of overtime came through my mind at some point.”
Tarantula scuttling across field briefly interrupts play By James Barron The New Mexican
Los Alamos’ Thomas Routiaux, left, tries to get the ball back from Roswell’s Sergio Carvajal during Friday’s game of the Boys Soccer State Tournament semifinals at the APS Soccer Complex in Albuquerque. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Los Alamos goalkeeper Christopher Parker was solid between the posts all day, making a handful of Roswell attacks die quietly with his mistake-free play. On the winning goal, however, it was more a product of Sanchez working in complete harmony with Coyotes teammate Chris Mesquita to make the gamewinner a reality. Mesquita had the ball near the perimeter of the Los Alamos box before sliding it ahead to Sanchez. From there, he worked his way past Hilltoppers senior Skylar Veenis before depositing his shot past a lunging Parker into the corner of the net inside the right post. Just moments later, the match was over and Los Alamos’ unlikely run through the AAAA tournament was history. Seeded sixth, the Hilltoppers beat Las Cruces Centennial in the opening round before
upsetting No. 3 Farmington in Thursday’s quarterfinals. The No. 2 seed behind Academy, Roswell has won 12 matches in a row. “It was a memorable season,” Los Alamos head coach Evan Gartz said. “That’s exactly what I told the seniors, that they made this possible. We’ve got some good young players coming back, but we wanted to thank the players going out.” While the Hilltoppers’ season came to an end, it survived one more day for Sanchez and the Coyotes. When it’s all said and done, he said it helps when trying to explain the style of hair on top of his head. It’s a look that a number of his teammates have taken in different directions; some with streaks of red, others with shaved designs, others with highlights. Sanchez elected to let the
top and back grow long and then bleach it with streaks of puffy blond locks. He accentuated the look with shaved sides at crew-cut level. From a distance it gives him a halfMohawk, half-mullet appearance. “It’s just something a bunch of us decided to do for state,” he said. “I’ve kind of had this same look all year. The only difference is the coloring.” Whatever his motivation, there’s no denying the impact he had when all else seemed to fail. Gartz said his defense had been ordered to keep an eye on Sanchez all game. “We knew he was the playmaker,” Gartz said. “It did kind of feel like we were going to overtime, but [Sanchez] made the big play when maybe we’d kind of let our guard down just a little bit because it was right there at the end. He’s a good player and he came through when he had to.”
Capital: Jags couldn’t score in 2nd half Continued from Page B-1 As expected, the Jaguars were trying everything they could to tie the match with little time remaining. They almost did so when Brayan Perez took a hard shot in the final minute at Albuquerque Academy goalkeeper Theodore Hooker, who scooped up the shot as well as the Jaguars’ chances of playing for a state championship. “We had a couple of extra chances there at the end, but we couldn’t get a goal,” Capital head coach Eugene Doyle said. “Their goalie played a great match.” The Jaguars could not get a goal in the first half either, but luckily for them, neither could the Chargers, but that changed 10 minutes into the second half. As Albuquerque Academy’s Bryan Jaramillo was possessing the ball in Capital’s box, he was fouled by Rey Tapia to set up a penalty kick. While Doyle was on the other side of the field, he still
Albuquerque Academy’s goal keeper, Theodore Hooker, dives as Capital’s Jason Alarcon tries to take a shot during Friday’s game. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
saw that the foul may have been a generous call. “I didn’t see a foul at all on that play,” he said. “I don’t know why they got awarded a penalty kick. I’m kind of scratching my head as to why they got that call, but you gotta play the game.” Jaramillo converted the penalty kick, and the Chargers were in control with a 1-0 lead. Tapia admits that he
gave Jaramillo a nudge, but he thinks Jaramillo went down a little too easy. “I kind of pushed him, but it wasn’t enough for him to dive,” Tapia said. “He dove and the referee called it a penalty.” Although that goal came with most of the half still left to play, it meant that the Jaguars had to find a way to counter the score, and that
was when things started to go Albuquerque Academy’s way. “I thought we were playing very well,” Doyle said. “I thought we were in control of the match. They were able to get that penalty kick and changed the momentum and we had to change our strategy.” The momentum kept going the Chargers’ way as Chase Snyder scored on a header in the 69th minute for a 2-0 lead, and that depleted the Jaguars hope even more. “After they scored the second goal, we kind of went down,” Alarcon said. “We got the goal on the corner kick, but it wasn’t enough.” The Jaguars were certainly down at the end of the match, but Alarcon doesn’t think they needed to be. To him, Albuquerque Academy was simply better. “They had a lot of opportunities and they took advantage of those opportunities,” he said. “The better team won. There’s no reason to put our heads down when we played a good match.”
Dragons lose to Sundevils in state debut By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — There are a lot of things that Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory has that the Monte del Sol Dragons do not. Sandia Prep 3 For starters, the Sundevils have won Monte del Sol 0 the past three Class A-AAA state boys soccer championships. Monte del Sol has never played in a state semifinal until they lost to the Sundevils 3-0 on Friday. Sandia Prep (19-3) has its own soccer field. Monte del Sol (13-6) has to practice and play its home matches at the Municipal Recreation Complex, a public facility. Sandia Prep also has the numbers. They compete in AAA in all other sports. Monte del Sol is in AA for all the rest. Regardless of what one program has and the other doesn’t, they still had to best each other in a soccer match to determine who will play Albuquerque Bosque School in the A-AAA championship Saturday at 1:30 p.m. The Dragons were fresh off a 2-0 win over District 2A-AAA rival Santa Fe Preparatory, but they knew the Blue Griffins
were not of the same caliber as the No. 1 Sundevils. “We knew it was going to be a high hill to climb, there was no doubt about that,” Monte del Sol head coach Mazatl Galindo said. Monte del Sol was knotted up with Sandia Prep until the 28th minute when the Sundevils’ Donald Roberts put one in the back of the net to give the Sundevils a 1-0 lead that would be their’s for the rest of the day. Zack Tenorio added two more goals for the Sundevils in the second half as the they cruised to a shot at their fourth consecutive title. The Dragons, on the other had, were shut out for the first time in four matches, which came primarily from an effort to keep Sandia Prep out of the net. “We played a defensive match,” Monte del Sol senior Luis Lozoya said. “We didn’t really try to do much offensively. We just tried to defend and take a couple shots and keep the ball as much as we could.” The increased defensive effort meant that Lozoya, who lead 2A-AAA this year with 26 goals, did not have many opportunities to put Monte del Sol on the
board. “Yeah, I had a couple shots, but we didn’t really get that many balls up front to get the opportunities that we usually get as a team,” he said. Although it seems like the strategy was ineffective for allowing three goals, Galindo believes that with a lot of things considered, the score wasn’t all that bad. “It’s a deceiving score because I don’t think it reflects how well we played against a well-established program,” he said. Even though Monte del Sol is not playing for a championship, it still accomplished something the school has never done before, which doesn’t just include making it to the semifinals. “We came out here and showed that we mean business and we can play with any team in the state,” Lozoya said. “Not once did we put our heads down, because we know we can play soccer.” Not a bad accomplishment for a team that knows what little it has. “The reality is that we’re a small program with a small school and no budget and no field,” Galindo said. “I’m grateful that we actually made it this far.”
ALBUQUERQUE — Answer: A tarantula and the Albuquerque Hope Christian girls soccer team. Question: What were two things the H. Christian 1 Taos Lady Tigers had Taos 0 to battle on Friday afternoon? In the end, the two unlikely items had more in common for Taos than it would appear. Both are relatively docile in nature — until provoked. Taos did all it could to provoke frustration out of the Lady Huskies in a Class A-AAA semifinal on Friday morning, but Hope managed just enough offense to eke out a 1-0 win at the APS Soccer Complex. That sets a rematch of last year’s state championship with defending champion and District 4A-AAA foe Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory, which beat St. Michael’s 1-0. As for the tarantula, that proved to be an easier task for the Lady Tigers (14-4) to overcome. Taos sophomore midfielder Lucia Costanza saw the furry critter scurrying across her path about halfway through the first half and immediately told her head coach, Michael Hensley. “It was huge! It was this big!” Costanza exclaimed as she held her hands several inches apart. “It was scary. I didn’t think it was real. I’d never seen one before. That was right where I was playing, so I didn’t want to step on it.” It took a few moments to get the head referee’s attention, but he stopped play and turned into a handler for a moment. He used two paper cups to scoop up it up, but it jumped out on the first attempt. He scooped the spider up again and then kept the spider prisoner by putting the second cup into the first to prevent a second escape. Then, Hensley deposited the creature outside the fence, and a few onlookers took pictures. Even Hope Christian’s filmer took his camera out onto the field to capture an image of it. Once that was done, however, the bigger task remained for the Lady Tigers. They placed six
Hope in “ many ways
was the better team. I am just glad that we were able to play really respectable, play hard. I felt like they left their all on the field.” Michael Hensley Taos head coach
players in and around the penalty box, clogging the field and bogging Hope (19-3) down even as it dominated possession. “They wouldn’t give us the space,” said Ron Espinoza, Lady Huskies head coach. “As soon as we got possession, they were on us. I couldn’t tell what their shape was.” One subtle change made all the difference for the Lady Huskies. Instead of trying to pass through the middle of the field, they started the offense from the wings. Taos couldn’t maintain its defensive shape and it left holes for Hope to explore. Yet it took a 40-yard direct kick for the Lady Huskies to break through. Kristen Traaeger sent a through ball that sailed into the front edges of the penalty box, grazed the head of teammate Alivia Lewis and bounced to the left of Taos goalkeeper Katie Emery before settling into the net. Taos was forced to abandon its defensive strategy late in the match, moving up Costanza and Angelica Pacheco. In the final minute, the Lady Tigers got a corner kick, and senior striker Zoe Hensley, with 53 goals to her name, couldn’t make it 54 as her kick deflected off of teammate Dawn Penso. However, the side judge called Penso for offsides. “Hope in many ways was the better team,” Hensley said. “I am just glad that we were able to play really respectable, play hard. I felt like they left their all on the field.”
Rough: Frustrating loss for St. Michael’s Continued from Page B-1 alone inside the 18-yard box, just to the left of the goal. Cronin then served up her specialty — a short-side hook shot that curled in between St. Michael’s goalkeeper Alyssa Evans and the left post. “Actually, she’s hit those all years long,” Lady Sundevils coach David Disko said. “She was the third-leading scorer as a fifth-year [player] in 3A.” The scoring play was set up by a free kick just seconds earlier. “She hit a nice shot, we’ll give that to her for sure,” Serge said. “But we made the mistake of fouling out there and giving it to them. We told them at the beginning we don’t want to give them those set pieces. And what did we do? We gave them one.” From there, neither Sandia Prep (14-7) nor St. Michael’s could get much of a grip on possession. “This field is tough for them,” Disko said. “It’s small, it’s greasy, it’s hard for the kids to keep possession. For us, we play on a nice grass field all the time. It’s difficult. So that has something to do with it. “But having said that, St. Michael’s played very hard. They were very aggressive. So you get those kinds of games. We got an excellent goal and we had opportunities for others. In my opinion, we deserved to win
the game for sure.” If adjusting to the smaller, artificial turf fields was not hard enough, then the fouls began to mount in the second half. It all culminated in Lady Horsemen freshman Niqui Enloe being whistled for two yellow cards, resulting in her ejection with about 12 minutes left in the game. Reduced to just 10 players, St. Michael’s could not put together a sustained attack on goal. “It hurt us that we got a red card and played down for the last 12 minutes,” Serge said. “[But] you’ve got to give it to them. They deserved it.” The last, best chance for the Lady Horsemen came late in the match when there was a foul by the Sundevils just outside the 18-yard box. St. Michael’s junior Isabel Chavez took the free kick, but it failed to bend to the left like she wanted and ended up sailing harmlessly to the right of the goal and out of bounds. In the end, the Lady Horsemen were left frustrated by what transpired and what could have been. “I think we had to hold back both sets of coaching staffs for a minute there,” Serge said. “That was a mess. It’s girls soccer. They’re women, treat them like women and teach them more than what it is, teach them more than just a game.”
SPORTS
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
TOP 25 FOOTBALL
TOP 25 BASKETBALL
Alabama-LSU: Not even Saban downplays magnitude of game
UL-Monroe fades late in loss to No. 5 Kansas
By John Zenor
The Associated Press
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Even Nick Saban isn’t protesting too loudly that AlabamaLSU is just another game. The stakes are too high, the recent meetings too competitive and the rivalry just too compelling. “It’s probably hard for everybody to think Nick Saban that this is just another game,” Saban said. For the top-ranked Crimson Tide’s laser-focused coach, that amounts to a monumental concession to what Saturday night’s meeting with the Tigers at Bryant-Denny Stadium means for both teams and fan bases. For Alabama (8-0, 5-0 Southeastern Conference), it represents one of the biggest remaining hurdles toward a crack at a third consecutive national title. LSU (7-2, 3-2) hopes to spoil that bid and still turn the season into something special despite losing to both Georgia and Mississippi by a field goal. Plus it’s Alabama. “It’s definitely huge. I can’t even understate that,” Tigers running back Jeremy Hill said. “It’s a big game. I’m not even going to sit here and lie to you guys. You just can’t let it overwhelm you.” Hill said that’s one thing Alabama does well in big games. “They don’t let the moment get to them,” he said. The Tide is 15-4 against opponents ranked in the Top 10 over the past six seasons. Then again, nobody has beaten Saban and the Tide as many times as LSU’s three victories since 2007, and the Tigers have won five of the past six meetings in Tuscaloosa. “Just to play a game of this magnitude with this type of team, this is kind of our
Alabama quarterback AJ McCarron celebrates his touchdown run with wide receiver Christion Jones as LSU cornerback Jalen Mills watches in the first half of their game Nov. 3, 2012, in Baton Rouge, La. BILL HABER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
national championship right here,” Tigers linebacker Lamin Barrow said. “And I feel like those guys feel the same way, so it’s a kind of different attitude when we play these guys. You hate to lose to a team like Alabama.” Here are some things to watch in this SEC West showdown: Covering Beckham & Landry: Alabama’s secondary has typically been Saban’s pride and joy, but injuries and youth have turned the cornerback spot opposite Deion Belue into a revolving door of starters. Potential starter Bradley Sylve’s status is uncertain with an ankle injury. As if covering LSU receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Jarvis Landry, who have a combined 1,891 receiving yards and 16 touchdowns, isn’t hard enough. Texas A&M’s Mike Evans torched the Tide for 279 yards early in the season. Saban calls both LSU receivers as good as any “you’re ever going to play against.” Points galore? The last time LSU visited Bryant-
Denny, the teams combined for 15 points and zero touchdowns even with overtime thrown in. The last three meetings produced a collective 74 points. The oddsmakers’ over-under for this one is 55 points. The Tide is ranked second in the SEC in scoring offense and LSU fourth, and both have plentiful weapons for quarterbacks AJ McCarron and Zach Mettenberger. “Both teams are probably a little bit more geared up to score points and have scored points this year a little more consistently than maybe in that particular year,” Saban said of 2011. Mettenberger vs McCarron: They’re two of the SEC’s most efficient, dangerous passers. Alabama’s McCarron has the big-game reputation but LSU’s Mettenberger is poised to become the first LSU quarterback to pass for 2,500 yards in back-to-back seasons. They had quite a duel last season, when both had some cold spells and stretches where they caught fire. McCarron has been steadily
leading Alabama to big leads and hasn’t gone the distance much this season, keeping his numbers down some. He has thrown for 16 touchdowns against three interceptions. Mettenberger has thrown five interceptions in the past two games but only seven all season. Underdog LSU: The Tigers are 12-point underdogs in a rivalry where the margin for the last three regular season meetings has been almost a dead heat: LSU 50, Alabama 48. LSU coach Les Miles says his team doesn’t take on an underdog mentality. Tigers defensive tackle Anthony Johnson is feeling a bit put out by all the attention tilting toward the Tide. “It’s personal with me because I — I’m not saying I dislike them, I have an edge against them,” Johnson said. “It’s always been Alabama and LSU, Alabama and LSU, but this year people are just saying … Alabama is going to get past that team. Honestly I don’t like that.”
NBA
George leads Pacers to win over Raptors The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Paul George scored 17 of his 23 points in the third quarter and the Indiana Pacers beat the Toronto Raptors Pacers 91 91-84 Friday night to improve to 6-0 and Raptors 84 match the best start in franchise history. Roy Hibbert added a season-high 20 points and seven rebounds as the Pacers remained the NBA’s lone undefeated team. Rudy Gay scored a season-high 30 points on 12-of-26 shooting for the Raptors, who lost their third straight to fall to 2-4. Amir Johnson added 12 points and 10 rebounds. The Raptors shot 39.5 percent from the field, becoming the sixth consecutive opponent Indiana has held to 40 percent shooting or worse. KNICKS 101, BOBCATS 91 In Charlotte, N.C., Carmelo Anthony had 28 points and eight rebounds, Andrea Bargnani added 25 points, and New York spoiled Patrick Ewing’s NBA head coaching debut with a victory over Charlotte. Ewing, who spent 15 seasons with the Knicks as a star center, filled in as Charlotte’s coach after Steve Clifford had a procedure earlier in the day to have two stents placed in his heart. Clifford checked himself into the hospital late Thursday night with chest pain. The Knicks shot 75 percent from the field in the third quarter — including six of seven 3-point attempts — to blow open a tight game and snap a three-game losing skid. CELTICS 91, MAGIC 89 In Orlando, Fla., Brandon Bass had 16 points, including a pair of free-throws in the closing seconds to help Boston hang on to beat Orlando for its second straight win. Trailing by three, the Magic had a chance to tie the game in the final minute, but Arron Afflalo’s jumper came from just a step inside the 3-point line. THUNDER 119, PISTONS 110 In Auburn Hills, Mich., Kevin Durant had 37 points, eight rebounds and seven
Marcin Gortat had 18 points and 12 rebounds for the Wizards, who nearly held Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce scoreless for the first time since they were rookies in the 1990s. TIMBERWOLVES 116, MAVERICKS 108 In Minneapolis, Kevin Love had 32 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists to lead the Minnesota Timberwolves to a victory over the Dallas Mavericks. Kevin Martin added 32 points and five rebounds and Corey Brewer scored 17 points to help the Timberwolves snap a two-game skid.
The Pacers’ Luis Scola, left, and the Raptors’ Aaron Gray reach for the ball during Friday’s game in Indianapolis. DARRON CUMMINGS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
assists to propel Oklahoma City over Detroit. Rookie Steven Adams played a key role for Oklahoma City, dominating inside when Detroit’s post players were in foul trouble. Adams finished with 17 points and 10 rebounds, while Russell Westbrook scored 20 points despite missing 14 of his 19 field-goal attempts. 76ERS 94, CAVALIERS 79 In Philadelphia, Evan Turner scored 22 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, Tony Wroten added 18 points and Philadelphia cruised past Cleveland to overshadow the return of Andrew Bynum. Thaddeus Young added 16 points, while James Anderson and Michael CarterWilliams had 11 each for the Sixers, who snapped a two-game losing streak and improved to 4-2. Spencer Hawes scored 10 points. WIZARDS 112, NETS 108 (OT) In Washington, Nene scored 12 of his 20 points in the final 4½ minutes of the fourth quarter, including a putback with 1.2 seconds to play that sent the game to overtime, and Trevor Ariza hit the goahead 3-pointer in the extra period to lift Washington over Brooklyn. Bradley Beal scored 29 points, John Wall had 17 points and 14 assists, and
PELICANS 96, LAKERS 85 In New Orleans, Anthony Davis scored a career-high 32 points, grabbed 12 rebounds and tied a career best with six blocks, leading the New Orleans Pelicans over the Los Angeles Lakers. Jrue Holiday had 13 points and 13 assists and Eric Gordon scored 16 for the Pelicans, who led most of the way in their second straight win. BULLS 97, JAZZ 73 In Chicago, Luol Deng scored 19 points, Carlos Boozer added 18, and the Chicago Bulls snapped a two-game skid with a win over the Utah Jazz. Deng added 11 rebounds and Joakim Noah had 14 points and Derrick Rose 12 for the Bulls (2-3). SPURS 76, WARRIORS 74 In San Antonio, Tony Parker scored 18 points, including the last seven for San Antonio, and the Spurs held on for a victory over the Golden State Warriors. Parker, however, missed two free throws with 16.4 seconds remaining that gave Golden State a final chance. Andre Iguodala drove to the basket and tried a layup that rolled off the rim. SUNS 114, NUGGETS 103 In Phoenix, Twin brothers Markieff and Marcus Morris made the big shots that helped the Suns rally from an 11-point deficit late in the third quarter to beat Denver. Markieff Morris scored 14 of his careerhigh 28 points in the fourth period. Marcus Morris sank a jumper with 5:13 left that gave the Suns a 100-95 lead after a back-and-forth first part of the quarter.
The Associated Press
LAWRENCE, Kan. — Andrew Wiggins scored 16 points in his highly anticipated debut for Kansas. Andrew Kansas 80 White III and Perry La.-Monroe 63 Ellis added 12 points each for the youthful Jayhawks, who are replacing all five starters from last season and plays No. 4 Duke on Tuesday night. Marvin Williams had 19 points and six rebounds for the Warhawks, who won just four games last season. They trailed 47-41 early in the second half before the quicker, more physical Jayhawks finally went on a 15-5 run to seize control. NO. 1 KENTUCKy 89, UNC-ASHEVILLE 57 In Lexington, Ky., Julius Randle scored 15 of his 23 points in the second half to lead five Kentucky players in double figures and help the top-ranked Wildcats and their highly touted freshman class beat UNC-Asheville. NO. 2 MICHIGAN ST. 98, MCNEESE ST. 56 In East Lansing, Mich., Gary Harris scored 15 of his 20 points in the first half and finished with a career-high 10 rebounds for the Spartans, whose next game is against No. 1 Kentucky. NO. 4 DUKE 111, DAVIDSON 77 In Durham, N.C., Jabari Parker scored 22 points in his debut for Duke. NO. 6 ARIZONA 73, CAL POLy 62 In Tucson, Ariz., Aaron Gordon scored 13 points, grabbed 10 rebounds and blocked four shots in his collegiate debut for Arizona. NO. 7 MICHIGAN 69, MASS.-LOWELL 42 In Ann Arbor, Mich., Glenn Robinson III scored 15 points and Michigan pulled away in the second half to beat Division I newcomer UMass-Lowell. NO. 8 OKLAHOMA ST. 117, MVSU 62 In Stillwater, Okla., Le’Bryan Nash had 21 points and 10 rebounds to lead five scorers in double figures for Oklahoma State. NO. 8 SyRACUSE 82, CORNELL 60 In Syracuse, N.Y., Trevor Cooney had seven 3-pointers and 27 points, both career highs, for Syracuse. NO. 10 FLORIDA 77, NORTH FLORIDA 69 In Gainesville, Fla., Casey Prather scored a career-high 28 points and Michael Frazier II added 19 for Florida. NO. 12 NORTH CAROLINA 84, OAKLAND 61 In Chapel Hill, N.C., J.P. Tokoto scored a career-high 13 points in his first start for North Carolina, which was missing two key players. NO. 14 VCU 96, ILLINOIS ST. 58 In Richmond, Va., Juvonte Reddic had 13 points and eight rebounds and VCU used a 33-7 first-half run to take command. The Rams, ranked to start the
season for the first time in program history, led 9-4 when Reddic started the suspense-ending blitz with a dunk off a feed from Rob Brandenburg. The burst included 3-pointers from five Rams, including three in a span of just 47 seconds by Melvin Johnson. NO. 17 MARQUETTE 63, SOUTHERN 56 In Milwaukee, Davante Gardner scored 25 points to help Marquette beat Southern in the season opener for both teams. The senior forward, Marquette’s leading returning scorer and the top sixth man in the Big East last season, was 5 of 7 from the field and made 15 of 20 free throws. He was a point off his career high set last season against Syracuse. NO. 18 UCONN 78, MARyLAND 77 In New York, Shabazz Napier scored 18 points, Niels Giffey had 13 and Connecticut survived Maryland’s second-half surge. NO. 19 OREGON 82, GEORGETOWN 75 In Pyeongtaek, South Korea, Joseph Young had 24 points and five rebounds for Oregon in a season opener played at a U.S. army base in South Korea. Young, who made all 12 of his free throw attempts, and Jason Calliste, who scored 16 points and made all 11 of his free throws, led Oregon to a win before hundreds of soldiers at Camp Humphreys, a U.S. Army base south of Seoul, the country’s capital. NO. 20 WISCONSIN 86, ST. JOHN’S 75 In Sioux Falls, S.D. Josh Gasser, who missed last season with a knee injury, scored 19 points and Wisconsin opened the season with a victory over St. John’s. NO. 21 NOTRE DAME 74, MIAMI (OHIO) 62 In South Bend, Ind., Jerian Grant scored a career-high 26 points to lead Notre Dame over Miami (Ohio). Notre Dame jumped out to a 21-6 lead midway through the first half, but Miami kept the game competitive by playing tight man-to-man defense and hustling for rebounds and loose balls. NO. 24 VIRGINIA 61, JAMES MADISON 41 In Charlottesville, Va., Anthony Gill scored 13 points in his Virginia debut and the Cavaliers held James Madison scoreless for nearly 7 minutes in the first half. Mike Tobey added 10 points and Malcolm Brogdon had nine for the Cavaliers. Virginia got only five points from first-team all-ACC guard Joe Harris, but a pair of sophomores led the way. NO. 25 BAyLOR 72, COLORADO 60 In Dallas, Kenny Chery scored 14 points and Cory Jefferson had 13 points and 11 rebounds for Baylor. The final game of a seasonopening tripleheader at the downtown Dallas home of the NBA’s Mavericks featured last year’s NIT champion in Baylor and a Colorado team coming off the school’s first consecutive trips to the NCAA tournament in 50 years.
NHL
Giguere has 30 saves as Avs top Flames The Associated Press
fired wide for the Devils.
DENVER — Jean-Sebastien Giguere stopped 30 shots, Ryan O’Reilly and Paul Stastny had goals to lead Avalanche 4 Colorado. John Flames 2 Mitchell and Matt Duchene also scored for the Avalanche. The Avalanche joined the 1995 Quebec Nordiques for the best 15-game start in franchise history. Colorado (13-2) needed 29 games to earn 26 points in last year’s lockout shortened season.
DUCKS 6, SABRES 2 In Anaheim, Calif., Ryan Getzlaf had three goals and an assist in the first period, linemate Dustin Penner also scored four points, and Anaheim remained the NHL’s only unbeaten home team. Getzlaf got his first career hat trick before the first intermission as the league-leading Ducks (14-3-1) trounced the league-worst Sabres (3-15-1) for their seventh win in eight games overall.
JETS 5, PREDATORS 0 In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Ondrej MAPLE LEAFS 2, DEVILS 1 Pavelec made 41 saves and Bryan Little scored twice as the In Toronto, James van Riemsdyk scored on a low wrist shot in Jets beat Nashville. the shootout to give the Maple Olli Jokinen, Eric Tangradi and Leafs a win over New Jersey. Devin Setoguchi also scored for Winnipeg. Andrew Ladd, playCory Schneider stopped ing in his 550th NHL game, and Toronto’s Mason Raymond and Blake Wheeler each had two Phil Kessel before van Riemsdyk’s goal. Adam Henrique then assists and Jokinen had one.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
NYSE
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Name
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Markets The weekininreview review Dow Jones industrials Close: 15,761.78 1-week change: 146.23 (0.9%)
15,800
23.57
-20.90 128.66 -152.90 167.80
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Here are the 944 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and 670 most active stocks worth more than $2 on the Nasdaq National Market. Stocks in bold are worth at least $5 and changed 10 percent or more in price during the past week. If you want your stocks to always be listed, call Bob Quick at 986-3011. Tables show name, price and net change, and the year-to-date percent change in price.
FRI
15,600 15,400
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
15,200 15,000 14,800
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
14,600
M
J
J
A
S
O
Last Chg %Chg
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
MARKET SUMMARY 52-Week High Low
DIARY
Volume
Name
Wk %Chg
YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg
Volume
Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg
Last
Stock footnotes: Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.
YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
NASDAQ National Market NATIONAL NASDAQ Name
Wk Chg
DIARY
New York Stock Exchange NEW Name
Last
N
Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … %YTD Chg: Percentage loss or gain for the year to date. No change indicated by … How to use: The numbers can be helpful in following stocks but as with all financial data are only one of many factors to judge a company by. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.
MARKET
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name
Div
PE
Last
Wk Chg
YTD %Chg
Wk YTD Chg %Chg
CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Last
Prev.
Last
Prev.
KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.
Last
Week ago
Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds
METALS
Prev. Last day Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.8055 0.8094 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.2290 3.2657 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1285.50 1307.25 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 21.345 21.690 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2117.00 2150.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 757.35 758.60 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1442.90 1456.80
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-7
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»rentals«
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.
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
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 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
(3) 2.5 Acre Lots, Senda Artemisia, Old Galisteo Road, Close to town. Easy building sites. Views, utilities, shared well. Owner financing. No Mobile homes. $119,700- $129,700 each. Greg. 505-690-8503, Equity Real Estate.
Abiquiu
Peaceful, sublime acreage. Panoramic views. Pedernal, O’Keeffe country. Spiritual Retreat. Near Abiquiu lake, 62 acres. Just $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001
BUILDING SITE 2.5 Acres, all utilities plus well, at the end of St. francis Dr. and Rabbit Rd. on Camino Cantando. Views, views, views! Beautiful land, vigas, latillas and lumber included. $280,000, 505-603-4429.
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).
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. CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, new heater, super clean. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References required. No Credit Check. 505-4705188 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
HOUSES FURNISHED
STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648
SUNSET VIEWS: charming 1 bedroom, 700 sq.ft. $655, deposit plus utilities. Laundry access. Cats ok. East Frontage Road. 505-699-3005.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 BEDROOM, 1 1/2 Bath, 2 Car Garage. Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher, Kiva Fireplace, Private Courtyard, Skylights. Sunset, Mountain Views. Walk to Plaza. Small Pets. $1,500 monthly. 505-660-4585. DOS SANTOS, one bedroom, one bath, upper level, upgraded, reserve parking. $800 Western Equities, 505-982-4201 NICE 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 1.5 bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoking. No pets. $825 plus utilities. Unfurnished. Calle De Oriente Norte. Year lease. 505-983-4734
AFFORDABLE LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA
Sunset views, 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-699-6161. AWESOME VIEWS, 8 miles from Plaza. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Short term rental for winter season. Wifi, directtv, sauna, utilities included. VERBO# 406531. $1,500 monthly. 505-690-0473
POJOAQUE CASITA. Fully furnished 1 bedroom, 2 bath. Baseboard heat, lots of trees, open space. $700 monthly plus $350 deposit. Some utilites. No smoking, no pets. Call, 505-455-3902.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED $1125 MONTHLY. BRIGHT, A T TRACTIVE, REMODELED HOME, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057.
$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
CAMINO CAPITAN, one bedroom, one bath in quiet fourplex, fireplace, off street parking. $650 Western Equities 505-982-420. CHARMING 1 BEDROOM Compound. Private Patio. Lots of light. Carport, Laundry facilities. No pets. Non-smoking. $600 monthly, $600 deposit. (505)474-2827
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
SOUTH CAPITOL NEIGHBORHOOD Charming 1 bedroom, spacious kitchen, beautiful vigas, hardwood floors, mudroom, portal, private parking. $695. Pet considered. 505898-4168
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
GUESTHOUSES
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. 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 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
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
GUESTHOUSES
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.
Sunny and inviting one bedroom furnished Tesuque guesthouse. Portal, vigas, saltillo tile, washer & dryer, no pets, no smoking, $1095 including utilities. 982-5292.
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.
Refernces available, insured, Call Michelle, 505-465-9748, michelle@petsits.com or visit 505GoK9Sit.com
CABINETRY LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073
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
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
CLEANING A+ Cleaning
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.
MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m, For More Information Please Call Miranda 505-467-8623 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
Clean Houses in and out. Windows, carpets. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and office with TLC. Excellent references. Nancy, 505-986-1338.
HANDYMAN
PLASTERING
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
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPING
ROOFING
COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510
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.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
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
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
3 bedroom, 1 bath. Single car garage, quiet street, wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1100 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196.
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:
3 BEDROOM 2 bath adobe. 1,900 sq.ft. 3 car carport, enclosed yard, pets ok. $1,300 monthly. Includes utilities. $1,300 deposit. Available 12/1/13. 505-470-5877. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190
4 BEDROOM, 1 3/4 baths, washer, dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered patio, storage, central location. $1800 plus utilities, deposit, 1-yr lease, no pets, no smoking. 505-9820266.
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
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com 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
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906
LOT FOR RENT
TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE
"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"
505-989-9133
VACANCY
1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH
Single & Double Wide Spaces
CHARMING NEIGHBORHOOD. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Wood stove, laminate & tile. $1300 first 6 months. www.enchantedcity.com 505-204-3309 COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. 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 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
MALE, looking for roommate. Share 3 bedroom 2 bath home. Beautiful garden, deck. Off St. Michael’s, $582. 505-988-5836.
BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 1 BEDR O O M GUESTHOUSE. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Close to town. Pets on approval. $ 1 , 3 5 0 month. 505-699-6161.
GET NOTICED!
BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
CALL 986-3000
WAREHOUSES 2000 SQUARE foot space with high ceilings & 2 overhead doors. Office, bath. Great for auto repair. $1600 monthly. 505-660-9523
Opportunity Knocks!
1,500 sq.ft. industrial unit with nice office, half bath, overhead door, high ceilings, sky lights, parking, absolutly no automotive. $900 monthly plus utilities. No better deal in town! Call 505-438-8166.
WORK STUDIOS Arroyo Hondo Studio 4 acre compound. 1,000 ft, with loft. Overhead door, views, quiet, W/D. $600, monthly, plus utilties. 505-670-7958.
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 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.
»jobs«
ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCED BILINGUAL tax preparer wanted. Must have prior experience and be willing to work Saturdays. Directax 505-473-4700.
ADMINISTRATIVE PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE
HIRING RECEPTIONIST, FULL-TIME ENTRY LEVEL. 10.51 HR, WITH FULL BENEFITS. FAX RESUME: 505-982-0788 OR CALL VICTORIA 505-982-8581
DRIVERS Lincare, leading national respiratory company seeks caring service representative. Service patients in their home for oxygen and equipment needs. Warm personalities. Age 21 plus who can lift up to 120 pounds should apply. CDL with DOT a plus or obtainable. Growth opportunities are excellent, drug free workplace. EOE. Apply at 712 West San Mateo, Santa Fe, NM 87505.
HOSPITALITY
FURNISHED, CHARMING Studio Apartment. No Pets. Use of nice patio. Walking distance to Plaza. $650 monthly. All utilities paid. 505-9836184.
»announcements«
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. The Santa Claran Casino Hotel is hiring Food & Beverage managers and line cooks. Pay DOE.
OFFICES $975 + UTILITIES, OFFICE S U IT E , GALISTEO CENTER. Two bright, private offices plus reception area, kitchenette, bathroom. Hospital proximity. Available November 15th. 518-672-7370
986-3000
Applicants my apply on-line at www.santaclaran.com
FOUND 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.
LOST **REWARD** LOST tan & white Pitbull in Santa Fe. Last seen by Kearny elementary. Please if found call 505-819-9922 or 505-231-9752.
PUBLIC NOTICES 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.
Have a product or service to offer?
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
CALL 986-3000
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. HISTORIC SANTA Fe Foundation seeks dynamic ED to lead conservation, education, fundraising, etc. Apply at www.historicsantafe.org/edsearch. No calls.
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
ROOMMATE WANTED 1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.
STORAGE SPACE
AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330
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
Classifieds
Get Results! Call 986-3000 to place your ad!
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO ADMISSIONS For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.stjohnscollege.edu. Click on — “About” “Santa Fe Campus” “Santa Fe Jobs.” This is a temporary position — 25 to 35 hours per week. Send resume, letter of intent, salary history and names, addresses and phone numbers of three professional references to jobs@sjcsf.edu. Resume packets will be accepted until interviews begin. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
MEDICAL DENTAL
MANAGEMENT NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RISK MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
$600. 2 small bedrooms. Very clean, quiet, safe. Off Agua Fria. Has gas heating. Pay only electric. No pets. 505-473-0278
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 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
VACATION
MANUFACTURED HOMES
Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $450 monthly. 505-690-5092
CHARMING 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom. Quiet neighborhood. $1100 monthly plus utilities and deposit. Available November 1st. Please call 505-4735396 or 505-660-4289.
to place your ad, call
Non-profit local governmental association seeking a risk management director to oversee three public entity self-insurance pools. Successful candidate should have experience in management, insurance administration, finance and claims, as well as familiarity with local government issues. Law degree, M.B.A., or advanced insurance certification a plus. Excellent benefits package and working environment. Email resume and references by November 22 to cstephenson@nmcounties.org
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS? Check out the coupons in this weeks
TV book NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RISK MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR
Non-profit local governmental association seeking a risk management director to oversee three public entity self-insurance pools. Successful candidate should have experience in management, insurance administration, finance and claims, as well as familiarity with local government issues. Law degree, M.B.A., or advanced insurance certification a plus. Excellent benefits package and working environment. Email resume and references by November 22 to cstephenson@nmcounties.org
MEDICAL DENTAL 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
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 PART TIME
PRODUCTION - WAREHOUSE HELP NEEDED. Approximately 24 hours per week. Apply at Aroma Coffee: 4 Bisbee Court, Santa Fe. 505-424-7777
TRADES ASSISTANT MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
HVAC, Pool Certified, electrical, plumbing, painting experience required. Competitive pay & benefits. Drug test required. santaferesume@gmail.com HIRING ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMAN OR APPRENTICE. 2 years experience, Valid Driver’s license, Background check required. Pay DOE. Contact Allied Electric, 505-438-8899.
STAFF WRITER, PAGE DESIGNER
An award-winning weekly newspaper based in the Rocky Mountains ski town of Angel Fire, N.M., the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle has an immediate opening for a staff writer/page designer who will work 30 hours per week. The person in this position will write stories and take photos for the newspaper and its special sections and help with page layout once a week. The ideal candidate will have a degree or experience in journalism, a strong grasp of AP style and a fervor for both hard and soft news. Experience in page layout is preferred. The pay for this position is $12.82 per hour without medical benefits. Send your résumé, three clips and samples of page design to Managing Editor Jesse Chaney at news@sangrechronicle.com or PO Drawer 209, Angel Fire, NM 87710. Deadline is 5 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2013. EOE.
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.
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »merchandise«
»animals«
to place your ad, call ESTATE SALES
986-3000
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
4X4s
4X4s
IMPORTS
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.
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
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.
Moving Through Presents, 761 Calle Picacho,
(take Cruz Blanca one block past St. John’s) Friday, November 8th: Noon to three p.m., Saturday, November 9th: Ten a.m. to Two p.m.
Antiques:
Cottage-Style settee, rustic demilune table, Spanish chest, fruitwood sideboard, country beidemeier bureau, marble-top French Directoire bureau, birds-eye maple dresser, Vacquero traveling desk, armoires, Sheraton-style settee, Victorian wing chair, English arm chairs, side tables.
APPLIANCES WHIRLPOOL 6396.
DRYER. $100. 505-662-
WHIRLPOOL 6396.
FRIDGE. $100. 505-662-
HORSES
Art:
Russian Impressionist, Italian and Chinese silk paintings, Aizpiri, Boncompain, botanicals, birds, Venetian scenes.
IMPORTS
Furniture:
Sofas, ceramic side tables, granite dining table, console table, chairs, coffee tables, king-size beds, mirrors, Indian screen, outdoor tables, chairs.
China Crystal and Pottery:
WHIRLPOOL WASHER. $100. 505-6626396.
WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad
CALL 986-3000
Baccarat, Waterford, Tiffany, Chinese export, Pueblo.
Lamps:
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS? Check out the coupons in this weeks
TV book
"FREEMONT" STARTED under saddle. 3 year gelding Mustang. Very gentle. Would make good kid horse. USFF Adoption, $475. John, 505-419-9754.
PETS SUPPLIES DOG HOUSE, Precision-Wood, Medium Size, Good Condition $60. 505982-2791.
Jugenstahl, Chinese, Japanese, Delft, Kinkaid, Simon Pearce.
Jewelry and Silver:
Blue Gem Lotus Blossom necklace, 1920’s, serving spoon and forks. Miehle vacuum, lots of kitchen. Persian and decorator rugs, bed and table linens.
2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.
DOWNSTREAM
Fine women’s clothes... three racks of luxury designer items in cashmere, leather and silk. 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.
»cars & trucks« 1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $16,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862
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
CLOTHING BLACK LEATHER COAT. SIZE MED-LG. GOOD CONDITION . $30. 505-474-9020.
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.
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
CLASSIC CARS
95 MITSUBISHI Montero, mechanically sound, second owner, service receipts. $3,200. 505-231-4481.
»garage sale«
COMPUTERS
2005 FORD Thunderbird 50th Anniversary Edition! Convertible with only 52k miles! $15,500. Mint condition. 505-363-2592 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
2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.
2007 Land Rover Range Rover Supercharged SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.
2005 VOLVO XC90. SUV, V-8, Black. AWD. Low mileage, 34,490. Loaded: GPS, sunroof, leather seats, 7passenger. Like new. $16,000. 505881-2711 1992 LEXUS SC 400 . 101k miles, garaged, fine condition. $6,000. 1-405323-2569
GARAGE SALE NORTH 1219 LUISA Street, Saturday 11/9 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Huge Sale! Beautiful items, 100% Benefitting the St. Elizabeth’s Shelter. 427 KATHRYN Place MOVING SALE Saturday 11/9 8 am. to Noon Many household and gardening items. Books, CDs, DVDs, weber grill, hoses, tools, supplies, leaf blower, rakes, shovels, dishes, utensils, planters, terra cotta pots and more.
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
1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339
Toy Box Too Full?
CAR STORAGE FACILITY
Get your headlines on the go!
MULTI-VENDOR ARTS & CRAFTS FLEA MARKET . Supplies, handmade books, journals, papers, gifts. Saturday 11/9, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Meem Room, Palace of Governors.
BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING.
MISCELLANEOUS MASSAGE TABLE. Adjustable, oak, with locking pins. 74"Lx33"W; 24"33" high; 44 lbs, carrying case. Excellent condition. $100. 505-473-1916.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
AWESOME!
3328 LA Avenida De San Marcos XMAS IN NOVEMBER. SATURDAY 9th, 8am-2pm. Jolly assortment of XMAS stuff; car stuff air filters, ramps; lighting fixtures, lamps, glass shades; saddles and tack; men’s shirts and new tshirts; housewares; blankets, comforters, pillows; building hardware- nails, etc. Various odds and ends.
Have a product or service to offer?
CHRISTMAS ITEMS, furniture, jewelry, China, Mexican Pottery, books, collectables, art, Americana. 2 Family Sale. 106 East Coronado Road. Saturday 8-12.
CALL 986-3000
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
SPORTS EQUIPMENT LIFESTYLE RF545 Recumbent Bike. With health monitor. Perfect condition. Easy riding! $100. 505-474-9020
1990 FORD F-150 Lariat extended cab. Low mileage, ready to make you money, 4x2. Great shape! Nice truck. $4,295. Ask for Lee 505-316-2230. 1991 CAMARO RS, Runs Good, Ttop, $2,000. 575-483-5987
6324 AVENIDA CHAMISA. Designer Garage Sale: Off of Paseo Del Sol between Jaguar and Airport: Decor, Furniture, Books. SATURDAY, 8:30. POSSIBLY SUNDAY (?).
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
DOMESTIC
GARAGE SALE SOUTH
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
1921 MASON and Hamlin, Model A, 5.8" Concert Baby Grand, wonderful condition. $24,500. Please call for an appointment. 505-984-9849
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039
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
1320 MORELIA. Furniture, coats, jewelry, horns, pewter, sewing machine, and more! Saturday 9 to 4 and Sunday 8 to 1. 617 1/2 Acequia Madre, Saturday, 9 - 12. Quality household items, furniture, rugs, paintings, antique art pottery, quality women’s clothing.
ESTATE SALES A TOUCH OF CLASS ESTATE SALES PRESENTS
2 Thyme Court, Santa Fe (NM599 Las Campanas Road), Thursday November 7th - Saturday (10 am - 3 pm). Home of sous vide chef, cookware, Jennaire refrigerator, Subzero freezer, Oriental rugs, LP collection, book collection, flat screen TV, projection TV, top line camera equipment, Apple computer.
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2002 with 108k miles, clean title. $2900. Please call or text me anytime at 762-359-0324.
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/
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November 9, 2013
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
»recreational«
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
SUVs
2006 LEXUS GS 300 AWD. Just in time for winter, AWD sports sedan, recent trade, absolutely pristine, Lexus for less $17,891. Call 505216-3800.
2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium. 25,321 miles, AM/FM stereo with CD player, Bluetooth hands-free. $23,771. Call 505-216-3800.
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.
2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.
BICYCLES
CAMPERS & RVs
2013 TRACER Executive 34ft Travel Trailer $22,500. Top-of-the-line, only used once! Two slide-outs, sleeps 10, includes all upgrades. 505-363-2592
Need some extra cash in your pocket?
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!
2010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i Premium. Only 24k miles! AWD, heated seats, moonroof, 1 owner clean CarFax $16,951. Call 505-216-3800.
SALE! ECO MOTIVE ELECTRIC BIKES.
2008 TOYOTA Sienna LE. Just 59k miles, another 1-owner Lexus trade-in! clean CarFax, immaculate condition $15,941. Call 505-2163800.
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
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
(5) Storm 300’s, New. Pedal bike with electric assist. $1000. 505-690-9058
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
Sell Your Stuff!
CAMPERS & RVs 2012 42FT FIBERGLASS FIFTH-WHEEL. 4 slides, 2 Bedroom, 2 airs, washer, dryer, dishwasher, awning, 4 Seasons. LIKE NEW, USED ONCE. $38,900 505-385-3944.
1977 Prowler 16ft Trailer, Sleeps 6, Excellent Condition. Oldie but Goodie! Great for hunters or families $3,000 OBO. 505-660-4963.
Call Classifieds For Details Today!
986-3000
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
2007 MERCEDES C280 4matic. Only 65k miles!, All wheel drive, loaded, recent trade, clean CarFax, must see $15,471. Call 505-2163800.
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
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.
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! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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.
2010 TOYOTA Prius III. Just 21,000 miles! Package 3 with navigation, 1 owner clean CarFax. $19,761. Call 505-216-3800.
for activists rally Immigrants,
Locally owned
and independent
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rights at Capitol
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February
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Local news,
A-8
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SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010
The New
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.
PICKUP TRUCKS
www.twitter.com/sfnmsports 2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .
2009 TOYOTA Corolla LE. Only 53k miles! Another 1 owner clean CarFax trade-in! Super nice, fully serviced $12,961. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book. Was $29,995. REDUCED TO $28,995. 505954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
flock to the ball. 2001 JAGUAR-XK8 CONVERTIBLE Local Owner, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 77,768 Original Miles, Every service Record, Custom Wheels, Books, X-Keys, Navigation, Soooo Beautiful! $14,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2009 TOYOTA MATRIX WAGON4 AWD Another One Owner, Local, 74,000 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Pristine. $13,250 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945 2010 NISSAN Titan Crew Cab PRO4X. 4x4, local trade-in, clean CarFax, immaculate, new tires $22,321. Call 505-216-3800.
www.twitter.com/sfnmsports
Saturday, November 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Horoscope
Crossword
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013: This year you sometimes might confuse others as you give off mixed vibes. You connect on a close one-on-one level with others, yet you absolutely need your freedom in an intimate relationship. Aquarius is always lively. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Holding yourself back to stick to the tried-and-true would be a mistake. Your significant other might need to join you on an adventure. Tonight: Where the action is. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Shaking up the status quo could be close to impossible, depending on your interests and the direction you want to head in. Tonight: A must appearance. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You might be in the mood for a spontaneous trip or a visit to someone who lives away from your immediate area. Tonight: Try a new type of cuisine. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH It seems as if everyone wants quality time with you. Honor your priorities and make some choices. You also might want to use your diplomatic skills in order to keep the peace. Tonight: Be with a favorite person. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Others come forward with suggestions. Know that you do not need to be the pivotal person. Tonight: Enjoy all the attention. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Your efficiency is a desired quality. Others recognize your ability to clear up quite a few problems with ease. Do this by saying “no” once in a while. Tonight: Hang with the gang.
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: FRIENDS (e.g., Traditionally, what or who is man’s best friend? Answer: Dog.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Who is Ernie’s best friend on Sesame Street? Answer________ 2. What East Coast restaurant chain is best known for its ice cream? Answer________ 3. In what TV sitcom did the characters Rachel, Monica and Phoebe appear? Answer________ 4. In what 1960 film is the line “A boy’s best friend is his mother”? Answer________ 5. Which Confederate general was killed by “friendly fire”? Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 6. What is the popular term for the Religious Society of Friends? Answer________ 7. The title of which TV show and book refers to a horse named Flicka? Answer________
8. What is the name of “The Friendly Ghost”? Answer________ 9. Who is the author of How to Win Friends and Influence People? Answer________ 10. In what novel did George kill his best friend Lennie? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 11. Who originally wrote and performed the song “You’ve Got a Friend”? Answer________ 12. John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote this song with friends in the title. Answer________ 13. In The Two Gentlemen of Verona, who is Valentine’s best friend? Answer________ 14. Which country has been called the “Friendly Islands”? Answer________ 15. Who circled Earth in Friendship 7? Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Bert. 2. Friendly’s. 3. Friends. 4. Psycho. 5. T.J.Stonewall Jackson. 6. Quakers. 7. My Friend Flicka. 8. Casper. 9. Dale Carnegie. 10. Of Mice and Men. 11. Carole King. 12. With a Little Help From My Friends. 13. Proteus. 14. Tonga. 15. John Glenn.
SCORING: 24 to 30 points — congratulations, doctor; 18 to 23 points — honors graduate; 13 to 17 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 5 to 12 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 4 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher
Cryptoquip
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
B-11
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Though your levity mixed with your creativity could be a tremendous asset for you at work, it also is a great quality that allows you to have a good time. Tonight: Play the night away.
Wife can’t get over husband’s affair Dear Annie: My husband works for a large mental health agency and five years ago had a two-year affair with a fellow employee. I found their illicit emails three years ago. Even though my husband and I are still together, I am broken and cannot heal. I pray and I strive and nothing works. It is the most painful and devastating experience of my life, and I wonder whether it has ruined me. I was a happy, cheerful woman before this, and everyone who knew me marveled at my good humor and vivacity. Not anymore. Please tell people to get divorced before having an affair. Otherwise, commit to your marriage and make it work. Infidelity is excruciating, and if you care at all for your partner, please, please have compassion and don’t cheat. — Broken in Omaha Dear Broken: Not being able to trust your partner is one of the most damaging elements of an affair and can impede attempts to reconcile. Your husband must be consistently transparent in all of his dealings, without complaint, for as long as it takes. This is a difficult process, and a trained professional can help guide you. Please ask your doctor or clergyperson to refer you to a marriage counselor, or contact the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy at aamft.org. While it would be best if your husband went with you, go alone if he refuses. Dear Annie: I am a well-educated retired business executive with upper middle-class resources. My wife passed away two years ago after 62 years of marriage. I met a remarkable woman who has many of the same endearing qualities as my late wife. “Beatrice” is twice widowed. Both of her husbands were quite wealthy, leaving her with substantial resources, a magnificent home, a large portfolio
Sheinwold’s bridge
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH If you can hang at home, do. You could be involved with a home project, or perhaps you might decide to clean up a room or two for the upcoming holidays. Tonight: Do your thing. Screen calls. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21) HHHH Your phone rings as others seek you out. You could have a difficult time saying “no” to invitations. Focus on the people around you. Tonight: With friends. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Honor what is happening. Even if you feel inclined to take a risk, be careful. Don’t get involved in any money risks after noon. Tonight: Make it your treat. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You are energized and ready to head right out the door. You might want to make some calls first to check out the lay of the land. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Know when to take the lead in a strategic situation. On the other hand, you might be happier kicking back. Tonight: You like to be mysterious, don’t you? Jacqueline Bigar
Chess quiz
BLACK WINS A PAWN Hint: Just take it. Solution: 1. … Nxe4! If 2. Bxe4 … Ne2ch! gets the queen [Hracek-Ernst ’13].
Today in history Today is Saturday, Nov. 9, the 313th day of 2013. There are 52 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Nov. 9, 1938, Nazis looted and burned synagogues as well as Jewish-owned stores and houses in Germany and Austria in a pogrom that became known as “Kristallnacht.”
Hocus Focus
of income properties and several second homes around the world. Beatrice and I have fallen in love and are considering marriage. My concern is, with my more modest resources and income, I cannot offer her a single thing she doesn’t already have, nor can I lavish on her the kind of things her previous husbands provided. Can this inequality of resources stand the test of time? Or am I going to find myself feeling grossly inadequate and not measuring up to her expectations? How do I handle this? — Uncertain in Love Dear Uncertain: How you feel is up to you. Money matters should be discussed before marriage, especially if you believe Beatrice’s expectations are not realistic. We assume she knows her income is greater than yours. It doesn’t seem to bother her. Perhaps she would rather give than receive. If it would make you feel better to put a prenup in place to protect her assets, by all means, see an attorney. But please stop focusing on the disparity in income and concentrate on those factors that make you compatible and loving toward each other. Otherwise, you risk ruining what you have by worrying about what you don’t. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Offended Wife,” whose husband was receiving pornographic pictures from his father. I had a similar situation when I started to receive inappropriate emails from my boss with pictures of partially or totally naked women, often as part of a supposedly funny joke. I ignored them. Six months later, he retired, and within a year, he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Maybe “Offended’s” husband should look at his father’s other behavior to see whether this could be what’s going on and, if so, get Dad to a doctor. — Been There
Jumble
B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, November WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
9, 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