Santa fe new mexican, oct 30, 2013

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District title a first for Santa Fe Prep since 1997 Sports, B-1

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A ‘big brew of skeletons’ Santa Fe chefs take fear out of cooking with animal carcasses. TAsTe, C-5

Search closes neighborhood

A WEDDING DESTINATION

Gay marriages help give city a tourism bump

Residents evacuate and schools shelter in place as a SWAT team seeks a robbery suspect. LOCAL, C-1

INsIDe u Insurance firms cancel plans that don’t meet requirements. PAge A-4

Business deadline looms for health exchange Some still wary of N.M. network, but nearly 800 have workers enrolled

Another balcony planned on Plaza Plaza Galeria on San Francisco Street hopes to update its façade with a view of the busy city park. LOCAL, C-1

By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Many small-business owners are still sitting on the fence about whether they should sign up with the state’s new health insurance exchange. And the first deadline is near. Business owners who want their employees to begin receiving insurance benefits by Jan. 1 must enroll by 5 p.m. Thursday. While the state-run health insurance exchange for small-business owners seems to be working for many, others, like Brian Lock of Santa Fe Brewing Co., are still undecided. They say they still have questions about how participating in the exchange will impact their bottom line, their employees, their taxes and even their own insurance coverage. Instead of providing health insurance for his employees, Lock gives them money, in addition to their wages, to help them buy private insurance. “They can take the supplement and pocket it, save it or apply it toward health insurance if they

Teen reform camps flourish, despite abuse allegations Sure, there’s shackles — but parents say tough programs put kids on right path By Jeri Clausing

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — David Hall was afraid of his own son. They were getting into violent, physical fights requiring police intervention. Fearing the teen would end up in juvenile detention, Hall had his son hauled away in handcuffs and shackles to a Southern New Mexico ranch for troubled youths. He didn’t see him again for 11 months, when police raided the Tierra Blanca ranch amid allegations of abuse. There are few options for parents like Hall, and in that vacuum, a relatively unregulated, off-the-grid industry of reform youth camps has flourished, despite a decade of high-profile cases alleging beatings and other abuse at some camps. Proponents of such programs — which can cost upward of $100,000 a year — say they are an effective, last-ditch solution to save troubled youth from the criminal justice system. “My feeling is that I would rather have my 17-year-old son in shackles than go to visit him at 18 in shackles in state prison,” Hall said. “He really is a changed young man. He laughs, he smiles and he is trying to make up for all of the bad things in the past.” Others insist stronger regulation and oversight are needed. A 2007 Government Accountability Office report found

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Please see HeALTH, Page A-4

Devey Napier, left, and her wife, Dorothy Alexander, both from Oklahoma City, are shown Tuesday at the Silver Saddle Motel. The couple, who came to Santa Fe to get married, are part of tourism boomlet. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican

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The Tierra Blanca Ranch, a facility for troubled youths near Hilsboro, N.M., is shown earlier this month, when it was raided by state authorities amid allegations of abuse. JUAN CARLOS LLORCA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

orothy Alexander and Devey Napier’s trip to Santa Fe this week was part of a tourism boomlet in a city long known as a gay-friendly destination: visits by same-sex couples who come to get married. The Santa Fe County clerk has issued 106 marriage licenses to same-sex couples from outside New Mexico since Aug. 23. That’s nearly a quarter of the 463 licenses the clerk has issued to gay partners. Alexander and Napier met about 20 years ago in Oklahoma, where they still call home — a state that prohibits same-sex marriage. Both were previously married and had children. Alexander decided after her son died, and Napier after her husband died, that it was time to come out as a lesbian. They have been together 18 years. “It’s something that never in my wild-

est dreams I thought would happen, ’cause I’m almost 80 years old,” Alexander, 79, said of her marriage to Napier. “It still makes me kinda dizzy when I think about it.” The couple originally planned to marry in December so that they could invite family and friends. But they decided to push up the date and wed before a decision in Griego v. Oliver, the New Mexico Supreme Court case on whether state law permits same-sex marriage. While gay-rights advocates believe the justices will rule that same-sex marriage is legal in the state, Napier, 68, said she and Alexander “thought we better do something quick and celebrate later.” Alexander is a municipal judge in Sayre, Okla., a conservative town more than 100 miles west of Oklahoma City. Being able to legally marry in New Mexico made her reflect Tuesday on the

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Culture experts: Blackface never en vogue on Halloween From actress’ slip-up to duo’s riff on slain teen, costumes renew painful memories of minstrelsy By Leanne Italie

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Is donning blackface to dress up as a favorite TV character ever OK for Halloween? How about a bloody hoodie and blackface for a costume riff on the slain teen Trayvon Martin, or full-on minstrel at a splashy Africa-themed party for the fashion elite in Milan?

Index

Calendar A-2

Classifieds D-1

Each of those costumes made headlines this Halloween season. And the answer to each, African studies and culture experts said, is never. “The painful hisJulianne tory of minstrelsy is Hough not that long ago for us to think that now, somehow, we can do it differently or do it better,” said Yaba Blay, codirector of Africana Studies at Drexel University in Philadelphia. Julianne Hough found that out the hard way. She apologized on Twitter

Comics B-6

Lotteries A-2

This 1927 image shows Al Jolson in blackface makeup in the movie The Jazz Singer. Historically, blackface emerged in the mid-19th century, representing a combination of put-down, fear and morbid fascination with black culture. COURTESY WARNER BROS.

over the weekend amid criticism for darkening her skin for a costume as Crazy Eyes from Orange is the New

Opinion A-5

Police notes C-3

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Sports B-1

Black at a Hollywood bash.

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Time Out B-5

Travel C-6

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Center for Contemporary Arts Atomic Surplus, a group exhibit surveying the global nuclear legacy; Tony Price and the Black Hole, an exhibit of ephemera from the Los Alamos Black Hole salvage yard and works from the estate of artist Tony Price, through Jan. 5, 1050 Old Pecos Trail. 982-1338. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

Obituaries Jane Barberousse, Oct. 26 Julio Chavez, 85, Santa Fe, Oct. 26 Mary Lou Cook, 95, Santa Fe, Oct. 7 Edward Delgado, 82, Española, Oct. 25 Jose Tito Duran, 72, Chupadero, Oct. 27 Richard Manuel Duran, 54, Oct. 23

Mary E. Encinias, 65, Oct. 26 Stanton H. Hirsch, 90, Santa Fe, Oct. 29 Chandler “Lani” Kahawai, 52, Santa Fe, Oct. 27 Eva Lopez De Larragoite, 93 Tina McDuff, 92, Oct. 22 Mary Elizabeth Strawn, 90, Santa Fe, Oct. 17 Tyra Allison Ulibarri, 34, Santa Fe, Oct. 20 PAge C-2, C-3

Today Partly cloudy, breezy, colder. High 53, low 28. PAge A-6

Four sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 303 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

NATION&WORLD

MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000

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Parents question anti-bullying message

By Joel Achenbach The Washington Post

By Matt Pearce and Melanie Mason Los Angeles Times

SANDY BABIES CELEBRATE 1ST BIRTHDAYS On the anniversary of superstorm Sandy, some New York babies celebrated their first birthday — and survival — at a hospital where they were only hours old when the killer storm flooded the city, leaving many in the dark. The newborns were rushed out of intensive care down the stairs on plastic sleds or in the arms of nurses and doctors. About 40 were rescued from Langone, as were vulnerable adult patients at the height of the storm. They were taken by ambulance to area hospitals. On Tuesday, many parents and their 1-year-olds returned to the medical center, where medical staff sang ‘Happy Birthday’ to the toddlers. VERENA DOBNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In brief U.N. confirms polio outbreak in Syria DAMASCUS, Syria — The U.N. confirmed an outbreak of polio in Syria for the first time in over a decade on Tuesday, warning the disease threatens to spread among an estimated half-million children who have never been immunized because of the civil war. The grim finding added another layer of misery to a brutal conflict that has already killed more than 100,000 people and uprooted millions. The aid group Save the Children urged a “vaccination ceasefire” to try to prevent an epidemic of the highly contagious disease. Meanwhile, hopes for a negotiated settlement to the three-year conflict appeared ever more distant as Syria’s President Bashar Assad sacked a deputy prime minister for meeting Western officials to discuss the possibility of holding a peace conference — the latest blow to diplomatic efforts to bring the country’s warring parties to the negotiating table. At least 10 cases of polio among babies and toddlers were confirmed in northeastern Syria, the World Health Organization said — the first outbreak of the crippling disease in 14 years. Nearly all Syrian children were vaccinated against polio before the civil war began.

Abortion dispute heads to high court WASHINGTON — Oklahoma’s high court set the stage Tuesday for the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on an abortion dispute over whether states may restrict doctors from prescribing the two drugs that are

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JOHANNESBURG — White extremists who set off a series of bombs, and plotted to overthrow the South African government and kill Nelson Mandela were given jail terms Tuesday, ending the first major treason trial under postapartheid laws that many hope will deter future radicals. The sentences for up 20 defendants between the ages of 32 and 74, ranged from five years to 35 years. Some will be released on suspended sentences, while the leaders will serve the longest terms. Members of the Afrikaner extremist group Boeremag, or white farmer force, last year were convicted of treason for a plot, in the late 1990s and early 2000, to violently overthrow South Africa’s government. The African National Congress formed the country’s government when Mandela was elected to office in 1994 to bring an end to

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commonly used by women who seek an abortion in the first weeks of their pregnancy. The Oklahoma case could be the first test of whether the court’s conservative majority will uphold the new state laws that seek to strictly regulate legal abortions. The legislatures in Oklahoma, Texas and several other states have adopted laws that require doctors to follow the Food and Drug Administration’s protocols for the use of “any abortion-inducing drug.” These laws forbid doctors to prescribe medications for “off-label use.” Sponsors of the laws said they want to protect the health of women. But medical experts said the laws would effectively ban medication abortions because the FDA protocol is outdated.

white minority rule. Some members were also convicted of culpable homicide and conspiring to murder for a thwarted plan to kill Mandela. The group claimed responsibility for a series of bombings that killed a woman and caused damage throughout the Johannesburg township of Soweto in 2002. Judge Eben Jordaan handed out the sentences in Pretoria. “For those that are going free, it’s not really freedom because they will serve their sentences at home,” he said.

Bite mark frees man in prison for murder NEWARK, N.J. — A New Jersey man imprisoned for nearly two decades for a murder he said he didn’t commit walked out of a federal courthouse Tuesday, a day after a judge threw out his 1995 conviction over bite-mark evidence. Gerard Richardson, 48, was met by family members and his attorney from the Innocence Project, the organization that got a courtordered DNA test that showed the bite mark left on the murder victim contained another man’s DNA. “I’m just happy to be home,” Richardson said. Richardson was convicted in 1995 of the murder of 19-year-old Monica Reyes, whose body was found in a ditch in Bernards Township in north-central New Jersey. The chief physical evidence included a bite mark on the victim’s back that a prosecution expert said was made by Richardson. Bite mark evidence has come under challenge in recent years, and the Innocence Project says more than two dozen defendants either convicted or charged using bite mark evidence have been exonerated since 2000. The Associated Press

SPARKS, Nev. — Two students from separate schools committed suicide within days of each other this month — which is National Bullying Prevention Month — and both boys apparently had been bullied. Now, parents are asking questions not just about bullying but about anti-bullying videos, which both schools aired shortly before the incidents. Brad Lewis’ son Jordan, 15, a sophomore at Carterville High School in Carterville, Ill., killed himself Oct. 17 by shooting himself in the chest. Jordan left an affectionate, apologetic note that, according to Lewis, concluded with: “Bullying has caused me to do this. Those of you know who you are.” Lewis criticized investigators for not pursuing the bullies more aggressively, but he also turned some of his questions toward his son’s school, which showed an anti-bullying video to students the day before Jordan killed himself. “All I know is they were discussing the bullying, and showing kids bullying, and at the end of the show, they showed pictures of kids that took their lives,” Lewis said. Carterville Unified School District Superintendent Bob Prusator said he didn’t know which program had been shown, but he thought it was one that many schools across the U.S. use. Prusator said school officials had never received reports of Jordan being bullied at school. He said local law officers were still investigating. Last week in Sparks, Nev., 12-yearold Jose Reyes brought a gun to school, shot two classmates and killed a teacher before killing himself. Those who knew Jose said sometimes he would cry and say people were calling him names. One witness to the shootings recalled Jose saying, “You guys ruined my life, so I’m going to ruin yours.” On Oct. 11, the documentary Bully reportedly was shown to all Sparks Middle School students during their sixth-period classes. The film, students said, depicted two stories in which bullying drove one student to commit suicide by hanging and another to bring a gun on a school bus. Some students and parents say the parallels are disturbing. Brad Lewis said parents from around the country contacted him after his son’s suicide. They were concerned not just about bullying, he said, but about bullying videos. Lewis wondered whether parents should be notified before schools show such videos — or should see the films first. “Sometimes it might be graphic,” he said, “but it can affect people, especially kids that are in a dark place.”

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Did videos trigger two suicides?

Dream Chaser test flight comes to inelegant end For the would-be spaceship named the Dream Chaser, everything on the first flight of a prototype went perfectly — until the craft touched down, toppled on its side, skidded off the runway and wound up in the sand of the Mojave Desert. The unmanned test flight, conducted in hushed conditions Saturday at Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California, came to an inelegant end after the left landing gear failed to deploy properly. But the creator of the space plane, Sierra Nevada Corp., which is hoping to win a NASA contract to carry astronauts to the international space station, found much to celebrate despite the rough landing. The vehicle, dropped by a helicopter at 12,500 feet, flew autonomously in a steep dive, pulled up perfectly, and glided to the center line of the runway, the whole flight precisely by the book until the very end, said Mark Sirangelo, head of Sierra Nevada’s space unit, in a teleconference Tuesday. “We had a very successful day with an unfortunate anomaly at the end of the day on one of the landing gears,” said Sirangelo. Putting an even more positive spin on the floppy landing, he said, “Even the final ending, which did not roll out perfectly, provided some very valuable data for us as well.” Sierra Nevada has put out a video showing the flight, but the video cuts off just as the Dream Chaser is landing. Sirangelo said the company is unlikely to produce additional footage while the “anomaly” is being investigated. Sierra Nevada is perhaps the underdog in the competition to win the NASA contract to haul astronauts to the international space station. Among the companies who have also received commercial crew subsidies are SpaceX and Boeing. SpaceX, founded by tycoon Elon Musk, is already taking cargo to the space station and hopes to add astronauts to its manifest in the near future, and Musk is vocal about his desire to send humans to Mars. Boeing is an aerospace giant for which human space flight is essentially a side business. SpaceX and Boeing are both developing crew capsules that would reenter the atmosphere the way Apollo capsules did nearly half a century ago, with the final descent slowed by parachutes. SpaceX would launch its capsule atop the company’s own rocket, the Falcon 9, while Boeing’s capsule would, like the Dream Chaser, ride atop an Atlas 5, the rocket owned by United Launch Alliance, a 50-50 joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed. Sierra Nevada believes that the relatively gentle flight profile of a winged vehicle will be appealing to NASA and other space agencies.

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AUTHOR SPEAKS SERIES: At 7 p.m. at the Mesa Public Library, 2400 Central Ave. in Los Alamos, Anne Hillerman reads from and discusses Spider Woman’s Daughter, a continuation of her father’s Leaphorn and Chee detective series. Free and open to the public. C. JOSEPH GREAVES AND DAVID EDGERLY GATES: Greaves reads from his novel Hard Twisted; Gates reads from his short stories, 6 p.m. 202 Galisteo St. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: Understanding the language of dreams is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. 5:30 p.m. Reservations required. Call 982-3214. 145 Washington Ave. HALLOWEEN COSTUME CONTEST — $100 TOP PRIZE: Now through today, Goodwill Industries of New Mexico is hosting a costume contest with $100, $50 and $30 prizes. Entry is free and online. Visit /www.goodwillnm. org/contest for details and to enter. 3060 Cerrillos Road. LANNAN IN PURSUIT OF CULTURAL FREEDOM SERIES: Jeremy Scahill discusses his new book Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield, followed by a conversa-

Lotteries tion with Tom Englehardt. 211 W. San Francisco St. THE THREE MARKS OF EXISTENCE: IMPERMANENCE, SUFFERING, NO-SELF: From 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the Upaya Zen Center, 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, a dharma talk by Shinzan Palma. Event is free and open to the public. Donations will be accepted.

NIGHTLIFE

Wednesday, Oct.30 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: At 7:30 p.m., Americana/blues guitarist Jim Almand. 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: At 8 p.m., folk-rockers Ian McFeron and Alisa Milner. 319 S. Guadalupe St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: At 7 p.m., Omar Villanueva, Latin fusion. 330 E. Palace Ave. LAURA MARLING: At 7:30 p.m., at Santa Fe Sol Stage and Grill, nu-folk singer/ songwriter, 37 Fire Place. THE PANTRY RESTAURANT: At 6 p.m., acoustic guitar and vocals with Gary Vigil. 1820 Cerrillos Road. TINY’S: At 9 p.m., 505 Electric Jam with Nick Wimett and M.C. Clymer. 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. VANESSIE: Kathy Morrow, piano and vocals, 7 p.m. 427 W. Water St.

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DOG WALKERS WANTED: Join our team, get in shape and help homeless dogs. The Santa Fe animal shelter needs volunteer dog walkers for all shifts, but especially our Coffee & Canines morning shift from 7 to 9 a.m. Send email to krodriguez@sfhumanesociety. org or call Katherine at 983-4309, ext. 128. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. It will make a real difference in the lives of homebound neighbors. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www. kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. SANTA FE WOMEN’S ENSEMBLE: Always in need of ushers for concerts; email info@sfwe.org or call 954-4922. BIENVENIDOS: Volunteers are needed at the tourist information window on the Plaza. Join Bienvenidos, the volunteer division of the Santa Fe chamber of Commerce. Call Marilyn O’Brien at 989-1701. ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Five separate resident facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — are operating by St. Elizabeth Shelter. Volunteers are needed to help pre-

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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.

pare meals at the emergency shelters and perform other duties. Send an email to volunteer@steshelter.org or call Rosario at 505-982-6611, ext. 108. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.


NATION & WORLD

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Food stamp cuts to dominate farm bill debate U.S.: Europeans handed us records By William Douglas

McClatchy Washington Bureau

Intelligence Committee, Gen. Keith Alexander, the NSA director, disputed published WASHINGTON — Stung reports that the NSA had by reports of widespread obtained data from more than spying on allies, U.S. officials 170 million French, Spanish and revealed Tuesday that EuroItalian phone calls in a 30-day pean intelligence services gave period, from early December the National Security Agency 2012 to early January 2013. records of tens of millions of The data allegedly came from telephone calls in joint surveil- an NSA software tool called lance operations. By pointing Boundless Informant. Alexanthe finger at European spy der said the call records were services and disclosing intelprovided by “foreign partners.” ligence efforts that normally “This is not information are carefully guarded secrets, that we collected on European U.S. officials demonstrated citizens,” he said. “It represents how deeply the agency has information that we and our been wounded by leaks from NATO allies have collected in former NSA contractor Edward defense of our countries and in Snowden that exposed its vast support of military operations.” operations around the globe. Under questioning from Rep. The phone records collected Mike Rogers, R-Mich., the comby the Europeans and shared mittee chairman, Alexander said with the NSA were from war the records were of calls “exterzones and other areas outside nal to the country in which it their borders, officials said. The was reported.” He said neither NSA still faces sharp criticism the reporters nor Snowden over a separate effort to listen in understood how to interpret the on the communications of forclassified documents. eign leaders, including German In interviews, U.S. intelChancellor Angela Merkel. ligence officials refused to say Despite the political outcry how the database was assemin much of Europe as disclobled or used, but suggested the sures of surveillance multiphone records were related to plied, U.S. intelligence officials counterterrorism and forcehad avoided blaming partner protection efforts for U.S. and agencies until now because of NATO troops in Afghanistan diplomatic sensitivities. The and elsewhere. latest twist in the Snowden The disclosures about eavessaga is likely to spark domestic dropping on foreign leaders anger against allied governhave put intense pressure on the ments, and could jeopardize NSA and the White House, and cooperation with the NSA and led to a scathing rebuke Monother U.S. intelligence agencies. day by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, But America’s top intelD-Calif., chairwoman of the ligence officials and their Senate Intelligence Committee. congressional allies clearly felt Feinstein, normally a staunch the need to refute damaging supporter of the Obama adminnews reports in Europe about istration, said the committee alleged NSA surveillance nets was not informed of the spyin France, Spain, Italy and else- ing on friendly leaders. Saying where, even if it meant blowshe is “totally opposed” to the ing sensitive agreements. practice, she vowed to launch a Testifying before the House committee investigation. By Ken Dilanian

Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Negotiators in the Senate and House of Representatives will convene Wednesday to begin resolving differences in a long-delayed farm bill. It won’t be easy. The 41-member panel must bridge a huge divide in the five-year, $500 billion reauthorization bill’s most contentious issue: cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly called food stamps. The Republican-controlled House passed a bill that would cut food stamps by $39 billion out of a projected $800 billion over 10 years. In addition, the House SNAP provision would require ablebodied adults without children to work or volunteer for 20 hours a week to receive federal assistance. The Democratic-held Senate’s farm bill also would cut food stamps, but by $4.5 billion over a decade. The Senate plan

wouldn’t add work requirements. The differences over food stamps could jeopardize a bill that sets farm policy and covers conservation programs, insurance and farm subsidy programs. In addition to the food stamp controversy, there are lesser disputes over a measure in the Senate bill that would lower crop insurance subsidies to farmers with gross adjusted incomes over $750,000 a year. The Senate bill also would require farmers who receive crop insurance to meet certain environmental standards. The House bill does not. It’s been a tough slog for the farm bill, which was authorized in 2008 and expired last year. Congress extended it through September, hoping to buy more time to reach a deal. If the conference committee fails to produce something for the House and Senate to vote

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on by the end of the year, consumers might feel the impact. Dairy supports are set to expire, meaning the cost of milk could jump significantly if a new farm bill isn’t in place. More than anything else, the talks face a division over how to cut food stamps. Several Democratic lawmak-

ers say they aren’t in a compromising mood. They said the House cuts would harm needy Americans. The number of people who receive food stamps has mushroomed from 26.3 million in 2007 to 47.6 million this month, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture figures.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

health: Law still confuses many business owners Continued from Page A-1

decide to get insurance,” Lock said. Now he wonders, “How does somebody transition from having their own insurance to moving into this insurance exchange? Do they have to jump through a bunch of hoops and paperwork?” Under the law, businesses with 51 or more full-time employees must offer health insurance and pay for a portion of it or face a fine. Small businesses — defined as those with 50 or fewer full-time employees — have the option to offer the insurance — or not. If they do buy coverage on the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange, however, they might qualify for a tax credit worth up to 50 percent of the premium costs in 2014. Lock is on the board of the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce, which claims almost 1,000 member businesses. Most of those have fewer than 10 employees. “Personally, I think there is still some confusion among small businesses,” Lock said. The Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce has offered two seminars for small businesses and two for large businesses to explain the health care exchange. The chamber is offering two more seminars Dec. 11. “There’s a lot of questions still and a lot of procrastination,” said Simon Brackley, the chamber’s president and CEO. He outlined the questions he’s heard: How does the exchange work for businesses like nurseries and ski areas that have full-time workers but for only part of the year? What about veterans who return to the workplace but are receiving veterans benefits? “There are businesses with 52 employees wondering if they should reduce their workforce so they don’t have to be part of the exchange,” he said. “There are business owners who bought a second business halfway through the year.” Most of all, business owners are so busy running their operations, they don’t have time to figure out health insurance, especially small businesses that lack a human resources person, Brackley said. As of Friday, however, more than 793 New Mexico small businesses had applied for insurance under the exchange. Small businesses can enroll and offer employees health insurance throughout the year; coverage for employees begins the first of each month after they sign up. Businesses that enroll in November can offer the insurance plans to their employees beginning Feb. 1. A total of 284 registered insurance agents are ready to help small businesses with the enrollment process at no cost to the business. Brackley recommends that businesses consult with a professional broker before enrolling in the exchange. Four insurance companies have been approved to offer small-business health insurance through the exchange: Presbyterian, New Mexico Health Connections, Lovelace and Blue Cross Blue Shield.

On the Web u Find out more about plans that businesses can offer employees: http://bewellnm.com/get-insurance/smallbusiness-owners/. u More about individual plans: www.bewellnm.com.

Firms cancel policies in health law’s latest hurdle Individual plans that don’t meet requirements are disappearing By Alex Nussbaum Bloomberg News

NEW YORK — The rollout of the Affordable Care Act is leading to the cancellation of hundreds of thousands of health insurance plans nationwide, contradicting President Barack Obama’s repeated pledge that people who like their coverage can keep it. The cancellation notices, which have been cited by Republicans as another reason to delay the health care law, started to arrive in recent weeks. They are compounding the political headaches for the White House from the troubled start of its health insurance exchange, the federal website created to give millions of people access to new plans by Jan. 1. The 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act says insurance policies that fail to offer added benefits, such as prescription drug coverage and free preventive care, can’t be sold after this year even if they’re cheaper. With the online site expected to face difficulties through November, Americans may have only weeks to find replacement coverage, and many may end up paying higher premiums. “I keep playing that over and over in my head: that you can keep your health plan, period,” said Terri Flay, a Manassas, Va., woman whose policy is being canceled, referring to Obama’s pledge. “But it isn’t ‘period.’ They put a gun to my head saying that I have to pay more because I need the health care insurance.” “There is no way to fix this monstrosity,” House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, told reporters Tuesday at the U.S. Capitol. “I’ve heard from hundreds of my constituents who are seeing their premiums rise, they’re seeing their policies being canceled; many are losing their plans.” But Jay Carney, a White House spokesman, defended the health care law, saying it eliminates “substandard policies that don’t provide minimum services.” The “80-plus percent” of Americans with employer plans or covered by government programs are unaffected. Obama’s oft-repeated pledge was a central selling point of his health care overhaul, aimed at calming consumers who feared being forced to give up policies and doctors they liked as the program expanded coverage to many of the nation’s 48 million uninsured. While it’s unclear how many consumers face cancellation of their insurance nationally, some individual carriers have released data. Florida’s Blue Cross and Blue Shield, for instance, said about 300,000 members are affected, while California’s Blue Shield and Oakland-based Kaiser Permanente will withdraw policies for a combined 280,000. Highmark Health Services of Pittsburgh said 40,000 customers will need to find new plans. CareFirst Blue Cross Blue Shield sent

notices to more than 70,000 customers in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia that their current plans don’t comply with the law. As many as 80 percent of people who don’t have a company-hosted plan or insurance through the Medicare or Medicaid government programs may have to find new health coverage, said Robert Laszewski, an insurance-industry consultant in Arlington, Va. About 19 million people are included in this market. Plans bought before March 23, 2010, when the law known as Obamacare was enacted, can stay in effect under a “grandfather” clause. In California, the insurance shift will affect about 2.5 percent of Kaiser Permanente’s members, said Won Ha, a spokesman for the insurer. About 600,000 to 700,000 consumers statewide who have individual health plans will be affected, said Peter V. Lee, the director of Covered California, the state’s health insurance exchange. About one-third will receive government subsidies to pay for the new plans or be eligible for Medi-Cal, the state’s health coverage for the poor, he said. Federal officials should have worked more closely with insurers to better manage the longcoming shift to new coverage, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. Instead, “the first thing you get that affects you personally is that you’ve lost your health insurance,” Gordon said. “That approach is going to backfire politically.” Republicans seized on the issue, citing Obama’s statements that no one would lose their current plan. “Probably no pledge made to sell the bill was more disingenuous than this one,” said Brendan Buck, a spokesman for Boehner, in an email. “But it’s more than just a broken promise; it means a significantly higher health insurance bill for far too many.” The law requires all Americans to be covered next year or pay a penalty. Those who want plans that begin Jan. 1 must enroll by Dec. 15 — either by mail, phone or the exchanges. The administration Tuesday said half of eligible adults younger than 34, the group most likely to be uninsured, can find coverage on the federal exchange for $50 a month or less. One million more may qualify for expanded coverage under Medicaid, according to a report by the Department of Health and Human Services. For Ian Hodge, 63, of Lancaster, Pa., the issue is all about getting the same care from the same doctors. When he learned his policy was canceled, his reaction was “surprise and disgust,” he said. Hodge said he tried 10 times to get information about a new policy Oct. 1, the day the online federal exchange went live. He’s still trying to figure out his options, he said in a telephone interview. “I had heard the repeated assurances by the president and people who work for him that if you have health insurance, don’t worry, you’ll be able to keep your health insurance,” Hodge said in a telephone interview. “Well, that’s clearly not true. I wasn’t allowed to keep my health insurance.”

Wedding: 106 licenses issued to out-of-state gay couples Continued from Page A-1 changes she has witnessed throughout her life in race relations and in attitudes toward homosexuality. Alexander recalled a time in the 1950s when she and some of her African American friends were denied entry to a Texas skating rink by the owner, who told them, “We can’t have white people and black people in the same social group and not in my house.” “It’s been a long hard journey” from that sort of thinking to a day when she and her partner are able to marry, Alexander said. “It’s a wonderful thing that I have lived to see this happen and to be able to do it.” Napier said she felt she was being denied her civil rights. The couple said their marriage was a statement about their rights as well as a symbol of their love. Dawn Aley, who owns the Silver Saddle Motel, where the Oklahoma couple are staying, said she has hosted other gay couples from out of state who have come to marry in Santa Fe. She said she has known Alexander and Napier from previous visits. “The fact that they’ve struggled for so many years and finally were able to get married — and

when they got to that point, it was such a pleasant experience,” said Aley, who attended the wedding at the Santa Fe County Administration Building downtown. If New Mexico’s Supreme Court rules in favor of allowing county clerks to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, the state would become the 15th in the nation to legalize samesex marriages. While Oklahoma doesn’t allow gay couples to marry, an American Indian tribe in that state has allowed gay marriages among tribal members. The issue arose in New Mexico after six samesex couples filed suit earlier this year against the state and the Santa Fe and Bernalillo County clerks, seeking the freedom to marry. The state’s 33 county clerks asked the New Mexico Supreme Court to decide whether such unions are legal after a state district judge in Albuquerque said it was unconstitutional to refuse to issue marriage licenses to gay couples. The court heard oral arguments Oct. 23 but has not indicated when it will issue a ruling. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ ujohnnyg.

Devey Napier, left, and her wife, Dorothy Alexander, both of Oklahoma, sign their marriage license earlier this week at the Santa Fe County Administration Building. COURTESY DOROTHY ALEXANDER

Camps: Many urge oversight of unlicensed programs Continued from Page A-1 thousands of allegations of abuse at such facilities from 1990 to 2007, including 1,619 reports against residential program staff members in 33 states in 2005. The GAO said it could not identify a more comprehensive number because it could not locate a single website, federal agency or other entity that collects comprehensive nationwide data. The National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs, a trade association that represents about 150 programs, estimates there are about 400 programs operating in the country. But Executive Director Cliff Brownstein admits that is just a rough guess based on a recruitment list, and he adds that many programs wouldn’t qualify to belong to his association because it requires members to be licensed by the state or otherwise certified by one of several independent bodies. That is one of the biggest problems in assessing such programs: How do

you verify information from troubled kids? At New Mexico’s Tierra Blanca ranch, for instance, some students allege they were beaten, starved and denied medical care. Others, like Hall’s son, Bryce, deny any abuse or neglect. “There is not a teenager alive that wants to be in one of those programs,” said Mark Sklarow, executive director of the Independent Educational Consultants Association, a nonprofit in Fairfax, Va., that helps families find the right programs for their troubled children. “You take a kid playing video games all day doing drugs with his buddies. You ship him off to one of these programs, they are going to say anything to get home.” Further exacerbating the problem is that many of the homes, like Tierra Blanca, are unlicensed and operate in remote Western states. They can prey on anxious parents in desperate situations, some facing court deadlines to place their child in a residential treatment program or have them sent to

juvenile detention, he said. Sklarow says the programs vary widely. Some are staffed by doctors and psychologists, and others hire people with no training, who have their own past behavioral and addiction issues. Although the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs says roughly 40 states have some sort of regulation over the programs, oversight and licensing procedures vary widely. For instance, its website lists New Mexico as having regulations, but state officials say there is no law requiring that programs be licensed or otherwise supervised. State officials say they will seek a new law to change that next year. Scott Chandler’s Tierra Blanca ranch has been operating in New Mexico for some 20 years, charging parents roughly $100 a day. Earlier this month, authorities raided the ranch to take possession of nine minors. State police have identified Chandler

as a person of interest in their investigation, but he has not been arrested or charged. Chandler continues to operate his program with a few 18-year-olds. Chandler said teens were sometimes shackled and that parents were aware of the practice. He denies children were abused. Hall said he chose Chandler’s program on the recommendations of a Tucson, Ariz., police officer and an Air Force officer. Bryce said he was in chains for the first three to four months of his stay at Tierra Blanca. And while he admits he would have said or done anything to get out during those months, he now thinks of Chandler as his second father. Both he and his dad credit Chandler’s program with saving Bryce. “I am so proud of him,” Hall said, breaking down as he described how his son has been helping him at his Tucson real estate business and calling him “sir” rather than spewing profanities.

blackface: Fine line between mockery and tribute Continued from Page A-1 Hough explained on Twitter: “I am a huge fan of the show Orange is the New black, actress Uzo Aduba, and the character she has created. It certainly was never my intention to be disrespectful or demeaning to anyone in any way. I realize my costume hurt and offended people and I truly apologize.” There’s a fine line between mockery and tribute — and it’s a line that blackface has the power to obliterate, said Marita Sturken, professor of media, culture and communication at New York University. “It’s never something very simple, and if you’re going to don a costume and put on a black face, there’s no possibility of nuance there,” she said. “It doesn’t matter that it was a character from a TV show. That doesn’t get her off the hook. If she’s going to put some substance on her face, that constitutes blackface and this incredibly complicated history gets evoked.” Historically, blackface emerged in the mid-19th century, representing a combination of put-down, fear and morbid fascination with black culture, said Eric Lott, a visiting American studies professor at City University of New York’s graduate center. Among the most prominent examples: Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor. “It’s constantly a form of entertainment that backs itself into all kinds of trouble, whether political trouble around slavery or a kind of mental trouble having to do with fantasizing about black people,” said Lott, who wrote the 1993 book Love & Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy & the American Working Class. As for Hough, he said: “It’s just a stupid thing to do. It’s a racist thing to do. What blackface does is give the white people privilege of representing black people, of taking black images and treating them as a thing owned.” Kelsey Crowe, who teaches social work in San Francisco, has been following the fracas on Facebook. She sees more tribute to Crazy Eyes than hatred in Hough’s costume. Other recent examples are far more troubling, she said. “Trayvon Martin, that’s awful,” Crowe said of two Florida men whose photo circulated on social media ahead of Halloween on Thursday. One was in blackface with a simulated bloody bullet hole at the chest and the other simulated a gun to the head of the faux 17-year-old while dressed as George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who fatally shot Trayvon in Florida and was acquitted in court. She was also “not into” the minstrel costumes in Milan. But the look for Hough “didn’t strike me as exploitative at all,” she said. “In other cases, blackface is used to make fun of people. I really saw this as a way to embody a character that you like,” said Crowe, who will be a cat for Halloween with her 3-year-old daughter. “Everybody likes the character of Crazy Eyes,” she added, “but I guess that could be said of Aunt Jemima, too.” Bad judgment on blackface for Halloween is nothing new to Blay. “I’ve taught at predominantly white institutions for seven years,” she said. “And every Halloween, like clockwork, there is a blackface incident, if not on our campus then on somebody’s campus.” What if Hough, the Rock of Ages singer, dancer and actress, had eliminated blackface from the equation, keeping her simulation of the Bantu knotted hairstyle worn by the character, along with the orange prison jumpsuit she and her friends zipped on as a posse of female inmates from the Netflix series? “Yes, leave the skin color alone ... and I would imagine to some degree that could be middle ground,” Blay said. “People dress up as other people all the time. ... And as far as Trayvon, no. Never.”


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Anti-Fan: A bright spot in sports

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’m highly disappointed that you have discontinued Jim Gordon. He was a bright spot in the Sports section every time his column appeared. He gave a unique view of sports that one seldom sees, and “tells it like it is” rather than glorifying players, managers, owners and all when they have behaved poorly. If your local news is going to continue to laugh at (and yes, that’s what it has been) a team like Albuquerque High because of its poor record, then I, for one, am not interested in seeing you concentrate on more local news. Bring back The Anti-Fan. Most of your other correspondents pale in comparison.

Santa Fe

Regarding the gentleman’s opinion on hunters and hikers (“Hunting not necessary on busy trails,” Oct. 26). Don’t be so selfish; the forests, are a “land of many uses.” Hunters have access to the forests for around three months per year to hunt for a variety of game. Hikers have access to the forest all year and don’t pay an entrance fee. Hunters, if lucky enough to get drawn, pay from $15 all the way up to $3,180 for an opportunity to hunt on public lands. For a solution to the apparent problem with the interaction of hunters and hikers, keep the recreational hikers out of the forests while sanctioned hunts are under way. How about if each group

SEND US yOUR lEttERS Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnewmexican.com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.

shows respect for other individuals in the forest and does not bother, harass or complain about each other’s presence. Mutual respect — what a concept! Most of us hunters also want to continue a family tradition. Jeff Little

Santa Fe

Canadian woes In Canada, my brotherin-law waited 15 years for a heart pacemaker and never received it. My niece’s hus-

band had to wait five years for his hip replacement, and lost his maple syrup business in North Bay because he could not walk to his trees. That is why some Canadians still come to the United States for operations. There is not enough room to tell you all the stories of poor health service and the tax to pay for it on every item purchased. Government-run health care is a poor provider to a large group of people. C. Ervin Lougheed

Santa Fe

COMMENTARY

Latin America tries flipped classrooms

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Ray Rivera Editor

T Mutual respect

Barbara Beasley Murphy

Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

What a stretch: Yoga won’t harm

Taos

Recently, I had to go see if teenagers, (so sensitive about their looks) can actually put on a play such as The Elephant Man. According to the Rev. Ralph Peterson, The Elephant Man, first performed in New York at his church theater, describes “who we are to a T.” And, Santa Feans, those kids under Reed Meschefske’s direction gave the greatest theater I’ve seen in 80 years of life, making me cry and cheer. I hope it’s performed at the Lensic so we all learn to “hold onto humanity,” as Robert Nott wrote in his article last Wednesday (“Holding onto humanity,” Oct. 23).

Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001

OUR VIEW

Suzanne D. Schutze

Moving performance

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n educational revolution that is well under way in the United States may soon start making inroads in Latin America. It’s focused on “flipped classrooms,” in which students learn at home and do their homework in school with the help of their teachers. The Khan Academy, a nonprofit website with free videos and interactive exercises for students that already has about 60 million unique visitors a year — most of Andres them in the United Oppenheimer States — has just started its SpanishThe Miami language website Herald es.khanacademy.org. It offers more than 800 videos in Spanish to help children in math, algebra and several other subjects for free. Last week I interviewed Salman Khan, the 37-year-old founder of the Khan Academy. Judging from what he has achieved so far, it’s no wonder that Time magazine has named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world. His story is amazing. After graduating with three degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and completing an MBA at Harvard, Khan took a job with a hedge fund in Boston. After work, he used to spend his nights on the phone helping his 11-year-old cousin Nadia, who lived in New Orleans, with her school math homework. Word got around his family that Khan was offering free tutoring, and he soon found himself helping more than a dozen cousins. A friend suggested that he make videos and post them on YouTube so that

all his cousins could see them. Khan did that and started noticing that many more people were watching his videos. Two years later, in 2009, more than 100,000 people were following Khan’s educational videos. Khan quit his day job and started his nonprofit academy. About a year later, the Gates Foundation gave the Khan Academy $1.5 million and Google donated another $2 million. The Khan Academy’s current $13 million annual budget comes entirely from donations. “It’s in our mission statement to provide a world-class education for anyone, anywhere. So we are not only committed to being free, but also to be non-commercial. You won’t see ads on our site,” Khan told me. Today, the Khan Academy is being used in more than 30,000 U.S. classrooms, Khan said. In addition to thousands of videos, it has developed software for personalized interactive exercises and tools to help teachers measure students’ individual progress. It is accelerating the trend away from the traditional classroom — the 200-yearold so-called Prussian model where students sit passively in class listening to their teachers’ lectures. “The idea of a flipped classroom isn’t actually my idea,” Khan told me. He said he first learned about it in 2007 or 2008, when several teachers began sending him emails “saying that they were flipping the classroom and using class-time for problem solving.” He added that the new technology allows for “personalized learning,” in which students can master concepts at their own pace before moving on to the next lesson. I asked him if technology has been oversold as a learning tool. After all, when radio became popular in the 1920s, people

MAllARD FillMORE

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

said it would revolutionize education. The same happened with television in the 1950s and with personal computers in the 1980s. Yet classrooms have remained pretty much the same, I added. That’s true, he responded, but there is a significant difference this time. When it comes to education, radio, television and personal computers were mostly focused on disseminating information — a passive experience. Now, the new technology is focused on interactive learning, which is an active experience, he said. “It’s not just putting up a video and letting kids watch things,” Khan told me. “What we see as the most important part of this new technology is the ability to track where students are, so that you can give them problems exactly at their level, and give the teachers dashboards so that they can keep track of each student’s progress.” My opinion: The Khan Academy’s free videos and exercises can become a fantastic tool for teachers throughout Latin America. True, this technology works best in rich countries, where most children are well-fed and have computers at home. But just as Latin American countries, which are increasingly becoming middleincome nations and in some cases already giving away laptops to their schoolchildren, are changing the educational landscape, so too can the Khan Academy have a big impact. The region’s outdated and poorly performing schools would greatly benefit from a dose of “flipped classrooms” and personalized learning. Andres Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for The Miami Herald.

o some, public schools would be better if students prayed — Christian prayers and Bible readings, of course. Such a mixture of church and state is just what the Founding Fathers wanted, supporters believe. Yet the Founding Fathers also believed in freedom of religion, a principle that seems lost on some of today’s most ardent self-professed Christians. However, the prospect of stretching before gym classes — seemingly noncontroversial exercises to loosen muscles and prevent injury — well, that presents a problem to many of these same folks. Witness the reaction of state Rep. Alonzo Baldonado, a Republican from Los Lunas and a nonvoting member of the Legislative Education Study Committee. At a recent meeting in Santa Fe, an Albuquerque P.E. teacher was discussing student health and childhood obesity, according to an article in the Albuquerque Journal. Encouraging good health and preventing obesity, we assume, is noncontroversial. Even with such a benign topic, however, minefields await. Consider the teacher’s approach to the exercise — a wise one, as it turns out, judging from Baldonado’s reaction. She made it clear to legislators that she calls what her students are doing “stretching,” rather than yoga. What the kids are doing, of course, is yoga — and so what? It’s an exercise often recommended for easing muscle strains, strengthening and toning and generally, helping people stay limber. Yet the teacher knew that the term “yoga” sounds alarms for some people, apparently including some legislators. To Rep. Baldonado, who home-schools his three children, yoga could become a link to such Eastern religions as Buddhism and Hinduism. That, evidently, is something to be feared. “Are we teaching yoga in public schools now?” he is quoted as asking. “Are parents notified?” Yes, parents are notified. One child even opts out of stretching, at his parents’ request. In the future, perhaps the teacher could just take her stretching exercises from the military.com website, where a former Navy SEAL shows how people can become more flexible. And shhhh, no one tell Rep. Baldonado that the forearm stretch, or the hamstring stretch, or that stomach stretch (looks like a cobra pose to us) demonstrated by this able military man, are also used in yoga. This story, naturally, has gone far and wide on the Internet, with people from all parts of the country laughing at one earnest New Mexico lawmaker. We’re not laughing. This fear of the other, a deliberate disdain for different worldviews and diverse ways of thinking is one of the chief weaknesses in American public life today. Of course, schoolchildren should stretch. Yoga, as an exercise, can be practiced for a lifetime, improving body and spirit. There should be nothing controversial about exercise and the health of children.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 30, 1913: Deming — Mayor Corbett of this city received a letter this morning from a prominent gentleman in Springfield, Mo., saying that he had received word from this vicinity that Mexicans were killing the people and committing robberies in this vicinity, and that as a result of Mexican raids, people were leaving this part of the country. The report was traced to a woman who thought she would perpetrate a joke on some of her friends back East and they have taken it seriously. Oct. 30, 1963: Cuba — The mystery surrounding three skeletons found near this Northern New Mexico community has been cleared up by the re-telling of an old tale of violence. The skeletons were identified as those of a 35-year-old man and his family, whom he had murdered before taking his own life more than 30 years ago. Old timers in the Cuba area told about Napolion Benavidez being pursued by a posse after killing two men in Lumberton. He took his wife and children with him in his flight. A deputy sheriff reported hearing shots as he rode through the area and assumed he was being shot at and rode back to town for help. A week later, lawmen found the bodies of Benavidez and his family. They were buried where they were found. Originally there were two children’s bodies. Oct. 30, 1988: All that stands between Santa Fe’s homeless and a warm bed is some flooring and an occupancy permit. Sister Jane McKenzie of St. Elizabeth Shelter said the shelter is expected to open Nov. 1. Electrical work at the new location on Alarid and Mercer streets should be finished today. New flooring for the twostory building should be finished by next week.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Three copies of Chaucers The Canterbury Tales are part of a privately owned collection of Middle English texts now on loan at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale University in New Haven, Conn. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

‘The Canterbury Tales’ in trove loaned to Yale By John Cristoffersen The Associated Press

NEW HAVEN, Conn. ale University has received what it calls the largest and most comprehensive privately owned collection of Middle English texts, including among the last three privately held copies of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales. Professor Toshiyuki Takamiya gave his collection of manuscripts to the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale on long-term loan to allow researchers and students to study it. Assembled over 40 years, the collection has 51 medieval English vernacular texts of literary, historical, scientific and cultural significance, Yale officials said. “His decision to lend these manuscripts is an enormous boon to medieval scholarship at Yale and throughout the world,” said Ray Clemens, curator of early books and manuscripts at Beinecke. The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories written by Chaucer at the end of the 14th century about pilgrims who tell tales on a journey to Canterbury Cathedral. They were written before the printing press was invented, and early copies are in manuscript form. The three 15th century copies have not been studied extensively and allow scholars to have a more complete picture of Chaucer’s landmark work and shed light on the period and different social classes that valued the literature, Clemens said. One manuscript includes a lavishly illuminated picture of Chaucer and is a very large book with expensive parchment, reflecting a high status owner, while another is smaller and known as a “gentleman’s copy” because it contains bawdy tales, Clemens said. “It tells us about a very different view of Chaucer and his

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Newsmakers Stevie Wonder plans two albums next year

Stevie Wonder

LOS ANGELES — Stevie Wonder plans to release two albums next year, including some newly written songs, and he’s working on a third. The 63-year-old performer said in an interview Tuesday that his first albums in eight years would be When the World Began and Ten Billion Hearts. Wonder, who filed for divorce last year, said the new music was inspired by “family, change, growth, heartbreaks.”

Bob Barker to mark his 90th birthday on ‘Price’

Bob Barker

LOS ANGELES — CBS says The Price is Right is planning a milestone birthday celebration for former host Bob Barker, who will celebrate his 90th birthday with an appearance on the game show Dec. 12, the network said Tuesday. He retired as host in 2007 after 35 years with The Price is Right. The show also will pay tribute to Barker’s animal activism by featuring pet adoptions during the week of Dec. 9-13. The Price is Right, with host Drew Carey, airs weekdays at 11 a.m. MDT. The Associated Press

TV

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Today’s talk shows

top picks

7 p.m. on CW Arrow Oliver (Stephen Amell) starts a “cash for guns” event to counter the activities of a man calling himself the Mayor (Cle Bennett), who’s been bringing illegal arms into The Glades. The Mayor and his gang crash the event and seriously injure Sin (Bex Taylor-Klaus), infuriating the Canary (Caity Lotz). Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) drops a bombshell about the Canary on Oliver in the new episode “Crucible.” 7:30 p.m. on ABC Back in the Game Danny (Griffin Gluck) invites his teammates to go trick-or-treating with him, but they’re worried about being targeted by David (Cooper Roth) and his fellow bullies, so Danny comes up with a way to outsmart them. Lulu (Lenora Crichlow) shows Terry (Maggie Lawson) how grown-ups celebrate Halloween. James Caan also stars in the new episode “Night Games.” 8 p.m. on ABC Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Rollins (Kelli Giddish, pictured) suspects the man she arrested for exposing himself in Central Park isn’t who he appears to be, and she’s right. As the SVU detectives attempt to determine his true identity, he stays one step ahead of them. A shocking theory

work,” Clemens said. “Each one of them is a witness onto what Chaucer may or may not have intended The Canterbury Tales to be.” The 83 known manuscripts of The Canterbury Tales are ordered in 27 different sequences, said Ardis Butterfield, an English professor at Yale. “I think they give us a more complete picture of how Chaucer’s work was read by his very early readers,” Butterfield said of the Yale collection. “There’s so many puzzles about The Canterbury Tales that need solving.” She said the collection brings researchers closer to understanding the order Chaucer wrote the stories, decisions he made while putting them together, and questions about the meter he wrote in. The collection also includes a copy of Chaucer’s Astrolabe, a treatise on a navigation tool that he wrote, a rare copy of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, several Wycliffite Bibles that were among the first translations of the Bible into English, the B-version of the William Langland’s Piers Plowman and several copies of John Lydgate’s Fall of Princes. Takamiya, professor emeritus at Japan’s Keio University, said he is impressed by the Beinecke Library’s research program and thinks it has the proper expertise to study the collection. “Now that I have had the satisfaction of collecting and studying these manuscripts for so long, it is high time to think of their future in a secure home, where they will be easily accessible to international scholars and students,” Takamiya said. The works are available for public viewing and can be found in the library’s electronic catalog at orbis.library. yale.edu.

surfaces, and Benson (Mariska Hargitay) winds up in mortal danger in “Her Negotiation.” Raul Esparza also stars. 8 p.m. on PBS NOVA We know that refrigeration keeps our food fresh, but what about our bodies? In the latest installment of his Making Stuff series, “Making Stuff Colder,” David Pogue explores how the power of cold could be harnessed to slow climate change and even save lives. Viewers also learn about the infant science of ultracold physics. 8 p.m. on CBS Criminal Minds A series of apparent ritualistic murders in Utah has Rossi (Joe Mantegna) and the team suspecting a killer who’s fascinated with the Salem Witch Trials. Back east, Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) prepares to host a Day of the Dead celebration in the new episode “In the Blood.” Thomas Gibson and A.J. Cook also star.

4 5

3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Mothers and daughters try to work out their issues. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KCHF The 700 Club FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor

7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan Johnny Knoxville; Casey Wilson; Queens of the Stone Age. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Johnny Knoxville; Casey Wilson; Queens of the Stone Age. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Kim Kardashian; Abigail Breslin; Two Door Cinema Club. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actor Will Arnett; The Avett Brothers perform.

11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Actor Ben Kingsley; comic Rob Delaney; No No No performs. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson TV host Drew Carey; journalist Pamela Silva. 12:00 a.m. E! Chelsea Lately Jen Kirkman; comic Greg Proops; actress Kate Bosworth; director Michael Polish. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Actor Aziz Ansari; The Weeknd performs. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly


Scoreboard B-2 Time Out B-5 Comics B-6

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

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Going for triple: Louisville seeks its 3rd straight conference title. Page B-4

NBA OPENING NIGHT

Heat get rings, then hold off Bulls By Tim Reynolds

The Associated Press

The Bulls’ Mike Dunleavy forces the Heat’s Dwyane Wade to pass the ball during the first quarter of Tuesday’s game in Miami. J. PAT CARTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — They got their rings before the game, then a challenge as it was winding down. The Miami Heat responded to both. Shane Battier went 4 for 4 from 3-point range, including a critical Heat 107 one from the right corner with 1:33 remaining, and Bulls 95 the Heat wasted most of what was a 25-point lead before holding off Derrick Rose and the Chicago Bulls 107-95 on

Tuesday night in the season-opener for both teams. “You never know what to expect when you’re trying to keep the main thing the main thing, and that’s the game,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But you can’t deny the emotions and what a special moment it was for everybody in the organization because we know how difficult that was and how harrowing that was last season. So it was great to actually get the win after that to cap off a very good night for the Miami Heat.” LeBron James had 17 points, eight assists

and six rebounds for Miami, which got its 2013 NBA championship rings and raised the franchise’s third banner in a pregame ceremony. The Heat trailed 9-2 early, then outscored Chicago 52-24 over the remainder of the first half. Rose finished with 12 points in 34 minutes in his first game since a serious knee injury in April 2012. Carlos Boozer had 31 points and seven rebounds for Chicago, which got within eight points in the final minutes. But Battier’s right-corner 3 — a staple for

VOLLEYBALL SANTA FE PREPARATORY SCHOOL

WORLD SERIES

16-year-old dream District regular season title first for Prep since 1997 By James Barron The New Mexican

I

n many ways, 1997 was a good year for the Santa Fe Preparatory volleyball program. It was the year that the Blue Griffins celebrated a second straight perfect season in District 2AA and their third straight district championship. It was also the year that the seeds for 2013 were sewn — literally, in some cases. The year signified the last time the Blue Griffins enjoyed a regular-season district title, and the current crop of Blue Griffins were in diapers, or a circle on the calendar, signifying their delivery date (Calendars? Smart phones weren’t around to mark the occasion yet). In some cases, they were just glints in their parents’ eyes, a dream that hadn’t yet materialized. The district title dreams of the 2013 Blue Griffins, though, came true on Saturday when they swept District 2AA nemesis Mora to secure the regular-season crown outright, plus the top seed and home court for insiDe the district tournament u Santa Fe next week. The long gap High will have between regular-season to work for crowns is slowly registerpostseason spot. Page B-3 ing with the current Blue Griffins. “Now, I look back and think, ‘Wow, that’s a long time,’ ” junior outside hitter Myle Borden said. “Now, we’re the team that’s making everything happen.” If anything, this group of 10 players — six of whom are juniors — has been making things happen for a couple of years now. Prep tied the Rangerettes for the 2AA title last year, but lost a playoff and the 2AA championship in the same week to give Mora district bragging rights. Four of the Blue Griffins — Borden, Courtney Timlen, Desiray Anderson and Alex Archuleta — were a part of the 2011 2AA Tournament championship team that traveled to Mora and beat the Rangerettes. If anything, the momentum has been building for a while. “Each year, they’ve gotten better,” said Kiran Bhakta, Prep head coach. “It goes to their credit that they put in the hard work in the offseason and it paid off. You see teams like Rio Rancho and Pojoaque putting in the effort in the offseason and it pays off now.” This offseason, the Blue Griffins did their work on the hardwood and in the sand. Prep participated in summer camps

Please see DReam, Page B-3

Please see Heat, Page B-4

Hot Papi: Streaking Ortiz one win from 3rd title By Howard Ulman The Associated Press

BOSTON — The banner hangs from a light pole on the sidewalk outside Fenway Park. It’s a profile of David Ortiz with that infectious smile and the words “OCTOBER BASEBALL” beneath it. He is, literally, the face of the Red Sox franchise. This is, once again, David Ortiz his time of year. “I don’t think you could ever ask for more out of an individual than what he does on and off the field,” Boston ace Jon Lester said. “The guy’s got a heart of gold.” And a bat that keeps smacking balls past fielders and over fences. One win from his third championship in 10 years, Ortiz will take a .733 World Series batting average into Game 6 on Wednesday night against the St. Louis Cardinals. Only Billy Hatcher did better in a single series, .750 in 1990 for the Cincinnati Reds when they swept the Oakland Athletics. But such World Series displays are nothing new to the only player left from the team that won the Red Sox their first championship in 86 years. St. Louis saw that on Ortiz’s first at-bat of the 2004 Series when he hit a three-run homer in Boston’s 11-9 win. He batted .308 in a fourgame sweep. The Colorado Rockies saw it in 2007 when he went 3 for 5 in a 13-1 rout in Game 1. That time, he hit .333 in another sweep. Now, he enters the potential clincher with 11 hits in 15 at-bats in this Series. He has two homers, two doubles,

Please see PaPi, Page B-4

toDay on tV Santa Fe Prep’s Joy Maran runs through some drills during practice Thursday at Santa Fe Prep. Prep won its first district title in 16 years by beating Mora on Saturday. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

u St. Louis at Boston 5:30 p.m. on FOX

NFL

Broncos’ rough-edged defense finally starting to work By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — While Peyton Manning was off the charts in the first half of the season, Denver’s defense went from dominant to dismal without Von Miller, Champ Bailey and Wesley Woodyard. Two of the three are back, and so is Jack Del Rio’s smile. Manning’s 29 TD throws and nearly 3,000 yards passing over the first half of the season have covered up many of the Broncos’ blemishes.

Not in Del Rio’s eyes. He had to make do with makeshift lineups and all too often found himself chewing out — or, as the Broncos’ defensive coordinator likes to say, “encouraging” — his players coming off the field after abysmal coverages or boneheaded blunders. Whether it was Danny Trevathan dropping a pick-6 at the goal line in the opener against Baltimore in his first NFL start or Bailey blowing coverage on an easy touchdown toss at Indianapolis in his 211th career start, exasperation enveloped Del Rio. Before pumping the breaks heading

into the bye this week, the Broncos (7-1) had gone from one of the best defenses in the league last year to one of the worst, ranking dead last against the pass until Sunday, when they tormented Robert Griffin III, who threw for just 132 yards and ran for only 7 more. It was just the kind of performance this defense needed so the players — and Del Rio — could feel good about themselves as they head into their four-day weekend furlough before a brutal November schedule in which they’ll face AFC West leader Kansas City twice and also trek to San Diego

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

and New England. “We have too much talent in here to be last in the league in pass defense and we really took ownership of that,” cornerback Chris Harris said. “And we don’t want to be the group that lets this team fall short of our goals.” Harris had one of Denver’s five takeaways Sunday when the Broncos knocked down RG3 18 times, sending him to the sideline in the fourth quarter and then harassing his replacement, Kirk Cousins, into throwing two interceptions, one of which Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie returned 75 yards

for the score. The Broncos are scoring 42.9 points a game thanks to a turbo-charged offense led by Manning’s 2,919 yards passing — a record through eight games — but they know championships are built on defense even in this age of aerial fireworks. Denver, which inched up to 24th in the overall defensive rankings this week, is allowing 27.25 points a game. Only four teams are allowing more — the Vikings, Giants, Redskins and Jaguars — and their combined record is 5-25.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

HOCKEY NHL Eastern Conference

Atlantic GP Toronto 13 Tampa Bay 12 Montreal 13 Boston 10 Detroit 12 Ottawa 12 Florida 12 Buffalo 14 Metro GP Pittsburgh 12 Carolina 12 N.Y. Islandrs 12 Columbus 11 Washington 12 New Jersey 12 N.Y. Rangers11 Philadelphia11

W L OL Pts GFGA 9 4 0 18 44 30 8 4 0 16 40 33 8 5 0 16 37 23 7 3 0 14 30 17 6 4 2 14 27 33 4 6 2 10 35 38 3 7 2 8 26 42 2 11 1 5 23 41 W L OL Pts GFGA 8 4 0 16 38 29 4 5 3 11 26 36 4 5 3 11 37 39 5 6 0 10 31 29 5 7 0 10 34 38 3 5 4 10 26 37 4 7 0 8 18 37 3 8 0 6 20 30

Western Conference

Central GP W L OL Pts GFGA Colorado 11 10 1 0 20 35 16 Chicago 13 8 2 3 19 45 38 St. Louis 10 7 1 2 16 38 25 Minnesota 13 6 4 3 15 30 31 Nashville 12 6 5 1 13 23 32 Winnipeg 14 5 7 2 12 34 40 Dallas 12 5 6 1 11 31 36 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GFGA San Jose 12 10 1 1 21 48 20 Anaheim 13 10 3 0 20 42 33 Vancouver 14 9 4 1 19 41 39 Phoenix 13 8 3 2 18 43 40 Los Angeles 13 8 5 0 16 36 33 Calgary 11 5 4 2 12 34 39 Edmonton 14 3 9 2 8 36 54 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 3, N.Y. Islanders 2 Anaheim 3, Philadelphia 2 Montreal 2, Dallas 1 New Jersey 2, Tampa Bay 1 Chicago 6, Ottawa 5 St. Louis 3, Winnipeg 2 Toronto 4, Edmonton 0 Phoenix 3, Los Angeles 1 Monday’s Games Dallas 4, Buffalo 3 Pittsburgh 3, Carolina 1 Montreal 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Chicago 5, Minnesota 1 Vancouver 3, Washington 2 Wednesday’s Games Boston at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Toronto at Calgary, 6 p.m. Detroit at Vancouver, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Anaheim at Boston, 5 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m. Nashville at Phoenix, 8 p.m.

Blackhawks 6 Senators 5

Ottawa 1 3 1—5 Chicago 1 2 3—6 First Period—1, Chicago, Shaw 2 (Sharp, Keith), 6:54 (pp). 2, Ottawa, Michalek 3 (Ryan), 19:00. Penalties—Z.Smith, Ott (roughing), 3:02; Brookbank, Chi (roughing), 3:02; Neil, Ott (high-sticking), 6:45. Second Period—3, Ottawa, Turris 2 (MacArthur, E.Karlsson), 6:51 (pp). 4, Chicago, Hossa 5 (Toews, Hjalmarsson), 7:41. 5, Ottawa, Corvo 1 (Spezza, Michalek), 10:19. 6, Ottawa, Zibanejad 2 (Turris, MacArthur), 11:14. 7, Chicago, Toews 5 (Sharp, Hossa), 14:30. Penalties—Seabrook, Chi (tripping), 4:57; Grant, Ott (tripping), 14:49. Third Period—8, Chicago, Toews 6 (Oduya), 1:20. 9, Chicago, Toews 7 (Seabrook, Hossa), 9:13. 10, Chicago, Shaw 3 (Morin), 14:10. 11, Ottawa, Z.Smith 3, 14:23. Penalties—None. Shots on Goal—Ottawa 15-11-11—37. Chicago 12-15-13—40. Power-play opportunities—Ottawa 1 of 1; Chicago 1 of 2. Goalies—Ottawa, Anderson 4-4-2 (40 shots-34 saves). Chicago, Khabibulin (22-18), Crawford 7-2-2 (11:14 second, 15-14). A—21,123 (19,717). T—2:29. Referees—Dan O’Halloran, Justin St. Pierre. Linesmen—Andy McElman, Jay Sharrers.

Rangers 3 Islanders 2

N.Y. Rangers 1 0 2—3 N.Y. Islanders 0 2 0—2 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 1 (Richards, Stepan), 12:30 (pp). Penalties—Hagelin, NYR (slashing), 9:45; Okposo, NYI (hooking), 11:03. Second Period—2, N.Y. Islanders, Clutterbuck 1 (Carkner), 3:40. 3, N.Y. Islanders, Regin 2 (Hamonic, MacDonald), 19:19. Penalties—Okposo, NYI (interference), :31; Dorsett, NYR, major (fighting), 10:25; Martin, NYI, major (fighting), 10:25; Stepan, NYR (tripping), 10:40; Hamonic, NYI (holding), 15:30. Third Period—4, N.Y. Rangers, McDonagh 2 (Stepan, Zuccarello), 4:59 (pp). 5, N.Y. Rangers, Pouliot 2 (Hagelin, Del Zotto), 13:46. Penalties—New York bench, served by Okposo (too many men), 4:29; Hagelin, NYR (slashing), 6:44; Okposo, NYI (roughing), 6:44; Zuccarello, NYR (boarding), 8:32; Richards, NYR (roughing), 20:00; Dorsett, NYR, misconduct, 20:00; Clutterbuck, NYI (roughing), 20:00; Tavares, NYI, minor-misconduct (roughing), 20:00. Shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 4-155—24. N.Y. Islanders 9-7-8—24. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 2 of 4; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 3. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Talbot 2-1-0 (24 shots-22 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Nabokov 4-3-3 (24-21). A—16,170 (16,170). T—2:30. Referees—Kelly Sutherland, Darcy Burchell. Linesmen—Don Henderson, Steve Miller.

Devils 2 Lightning 1

FOOTBALL FOOTBALL

HOCKEY

Tampa Bay 0 1 0—1 New Jersey 0 2 0—2 First Period—None. Penalties—None. Second Period—1, New Jersey, Henrique 4 (Elias), 1:36 (sh). 2, New Jersey, Jagr 3, 10:54. 3, Tampa Bay, Stamkos 9 (Purcell, Malone), 15:23 (pp). Penalties—Volchenkov, NJ (interference), :21; Henrique, NJ (hooking), 14:15. Third Period—None. Penalties—Sustr, TB (high-sticking), 5:39; Carter, NJ (high-sticking), 5:39; Gudas, TB (tripping), 9:36; Ryder, NJ (hooking), 15:08; Tampa Bay bench, served by Purcell (too many men), 17:15; New Jersey bench, served by Carter (too many men), 19:56. Shots on Goal—Tampa Bay 4-9-4—17. New Jersey 10-7-5—22. Power-play opportunities—Tampa Bay 1 of 4; New Jersey 0 of 2. Goalies—Tampa Bay, Bishop 7-2-0 (22 shots-20 saves). New Jersey, Brodeur 2-2-2 (17-16). A—13,501 (17,625). T—2:24. Referees—Eric Furlatt, Kyle Rehman. Linesmen—Brian Murphy, Bryan Pancich.

Canadiens 2 Stars 1

Dallas 0 1 0—1 Montreal 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Montreal, Bournival 3 (Diaz, Plekanec), 12:02. Penalties— Roussel, Dal, major (fighting), 10:40; Bouillon, Mon, major (fighting), 10:40; Horcoff, Dal (hooking), 17:06. Second Period—2, Montreal, Bourque 4 (Diaz), 12:55. 3, Dallas, Eakin 3 (Dillon), 17:27. Penalties—Goligoski, Dal (high-sticking), 10:26. Third Period—None. Penalties—Daley, Dal (holding), 5:19; Murray, Mon (interference), 11:48; Lehtonen, Dal, served by Whitney (roughing), 17:39; Gallagher, Mon (goaltender interference), 17:39. Shots on Goal—Dallas 9-9-9—27. Montreal 9-12-3—24. Power-play opportunities—Dallas 0 of 1; Montreal 0 of 3. Goalies—Dallas, Lehtonen 4-2-1 (24 shots-22 saves). Montreal, Price 6-5-0 (27-26). A—21,273 (21,273). T—2:30. Referees—Dave Jackson, Don Van Massenhoven. Linesmen—Greg Devorski, Kiel Murchison.

Blues 3 Jets 2

Winnipeg 1 0 1—2 St. Louis 1 0 2—3 First Period—1, St. Louis, Morrow 2 (Reaves, Shattenkirk), 6:36. 2, Winnipeg, Wheeler 5 (Ladd, Byfuglien), 11:20 (pp). Penalties—Enstrom, Wpg (high-sticking), 7:39; Morrow, StL (roughing), 9:50; Roy, StL (interference), 9:50; Kane, Wpg (roughing), 11:57; Morrow, StL (slashing), 15:20. Second Period—None. Penalties— Shattenkirk, StL (slashing), 5:06; Polak, StL (delay of game), 8:58; Halischuk, Wpg (high-sticking), 16:43. Third Period—3, St. Louis, Pietrangelo 2 (Oshie), 4:16. 4, Winnipeg, Little 7 (Ladd), 10:27 (sh). 5, St. Louis, Steen 11 (Bouwmeester, Pietrangelo), 19:00 (pp). Penalties—Stuart, Wpg (cross-checking), 4:58; Setoguchi, Wpg (elbowing), 8:31; Enstrom, Wpg (interference), 17:47. Shots on Goal—Winnipeg 5-9-9—23. St. Louis 10-10-13—33. Power-play opportunities—Winnipeg 1 of 5; St. Louis 1 of 6. Goalies—Winnipeg, Pavelec 4-6-2 (33 shots-30 saves). St. Louis, Halak 7-1-1 (23-21). A—15,287 (19,150). T—2:26. Referees—Francis Charron, Marc Joannette. Linesmen—Shane Heyer, Pierre Racicot.

Ducks 3 Flyers 2

Anaheim 0 1 2—3 Philadelphia 2 0 0—2 First Period—1, Philadelphia, Read 3 (Simmonds, Grossmann), 3:40. 2, Philadelphia, Lecavalier 5 (Giroux, Simmonds), 16:34 (pp). Penalties— Simmonds, Phi (hooking), 6:41; Getzlaf, Ana (slashing), 15:21. Second Period—3, Anaheim, Cogliano 2 (Getzlaf), 16:25. Penalties—Giroux, Phi (diving), 10:12; Bonino, Ana (hooking), 11:11. Third Period—4, Anaheim, Palmieri 2, 1:01. 5, Anaheim, Palmieri 3 (Bonino, Vatanen), 15:51. Penalties—Anaheim bench, served by Palmieri (too many men), 17:05. Shots on Goal—Anaheim 10-11-16— 37. Philadelphia 15-7-6—28. Power-play opportunities—Anaheim 0 of 2; Philadelphia 1 of 3. Goalies—Anaheim, Hiller 5-2-0 (28 shots-26 saves). Philadelphia, Mason 3-6-0 (37-34). A—19,615 (19,541). T—2:23. Referees—Jean Hebert, Wes McCauley.Linesmen—Derek Amell, Scott Cherrey.

Coyotes 3 Kings 1

Los Angeles 0 0 1—1 Phoenix 0 2 1—3 First Period—None. Penalties—Morris, Pho (roughing), 3:08; Richards, LA (hooking), 6:04; Doughty, LA (slashing), 9:03; Bissonnette, Pho (diving), 9:03; Stoll, LA (hooking), 11:46; Williams, LA (roughing), 15:23; Klinkhammer, Pho (high-sticking, roughing), 15:23; Muzzin, LA (tripping), 15:51; Stoll, LA (interference), 15:53. Second Period—1, Phoenix, Morris 3 (Chipchura, Miele), 18:19. 2, Phoenix, Doan 3 (Ekman-Larsson, Yandle), 19:54 (pp). Penalties—Carcillo, LA, major (fighting), 3:48; Chipchura, Pho, major (fighting), 3:48; Williams, LA (roughing), 18:50. Third Period—3, Phoenix, Chipchura 2 (Moss, Miele), 5:38. 4, Los Angeles, Stoll 1, 16:39 (pp). Penalties—Michalek, Pho (boarding), 14:50. Shots on Goal—Los Angeles 9-1518—42. Phoenix 17-10-6—33. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 1 of 3; Phoenix 1 of 5. Goalies—Los Angeles, Scrivens 1-1-0 (33 shots-30 saves). Phoenix, Smith 7-2-2 (42-41). A—10,452 (17,125). T—2:36. Referees—Dean Morton, Brad Watson. Linesmen—Lonnie Cameron, Derek Nansen.

Maple Leafs 4 Oilers 0

Toronto 1 2 1—4 Edmonton 0 0 0—0 First Period—1, Toronto, Kessel 8 (Kadri, Raymond), 1:08. Penalties— Gardiner, Tor (roughing), 14:50; Yakupov, Edm (goaltender interference), 14:50; Gagner, Edm (tripping), 17:00. Second Period—2, Toronto, van Riemsdyk 6 (Kessel), 1:41. 3, Toronto, Kessel 9 (Phaneuf, Kadri), 8:42. Penalties—None. Third Period—4, Toronto, Kadri 5 (Rielly, Kessel), 6:14. Penalties— Franson, Tor (kneeing), 8:27; Orr, Tor, misconduct, 11:42; Gazdic, Edm, misconduct, 11:42. Shots on Goal—Toronto 12-9-5—26. Edmonton 14-10-19—43. Power-play opportunities—Toronto 0 of 1; Edmonton 0 of 1. Goalies—Toronto, Reimer 4-0-0 (43 shots-43 saves). Edmonton, Bachman 0-1-1 (26-22). A—16,839 (16,839). T—2:28. Referees—Paul Devorski, Tom Kowal. Linesmen—Steve Barton, Brian Mach.

Calendar

Nov. 8 — Hockey Hall of Fame game: New Jersey Devils at Toronto Maple Leafs Nov. 11 — Hockey Hall of Fame induction, Toronto. Nov. 12 — NHL general managers meeting, Toronto. Nov. 29 — NHL Thanksgiving Showdown: New York Rangers at Boston Bruins Dec. 1 — Signing deadline for Group 2 free agents. Dec. 19-27 — Holiday roster freeze. Dec. 24-26 — Holiday break. Dec. 26-Jan. 5 — IIHF World Junior Championship, Malmo, Sweden.

NFL American Conference

East New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo South Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland

W 6 4 3 3 W 5 3 2 0 W 6 3 3 2 W 8 7 4 3

L 2 4 4 5 L 2 4 5 8 L 2 4 5 5 L 0 1 3 4

T Pct PF PA 0 .750 179 144 0 .500 143 211 0 .429 152 167 0 .375 176 213 T Pct PF PA 0 .714 187 131 0 .429 145 146 0 .286 122 194 0 .000 86 264 T Pct PF PA 0 .750 197 144 0 .429 150 148 0 .375 148 179 0 .286 125 153 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 192 98 0 .875 343 218 0 .571 168 144 0 .429 126 150

National Conference

East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 4 4 0 .500 230 186 Philadelphia 3 5 0 .375 176 211 Washington 2 5 0 .286 173 229 N.Y. Giants 2 6 0 .250 141 223 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 6 1 0 .857 196 120 Carolina 4 3 0 .571 170 96 Atlanta 2 5 0 .286 166 184 Tampa Bay 0 7 0 .000 100 163 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 5 2 0 .714 212 158 Detroit 5 3 0 .625 217 197 Chicago 4 3 0 .571 213 206 Minnesota 1 6 0 .143 163 225 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 7 1 0 .875 205 125 San Francisco 6 2 0 .750 218 145 Arizona 4 4 0 .500 160 174 St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 165 198 Monday’s Game Seattle 14, St. Louis 9 Thursday, Oct. 31 Cincinnati at Miami, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 3 Minnesota at Dallas, 11 a.m. Tennessee at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Carolina, 11 a.m. New Orleans at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Kansas City at Buffalo, 11 a.m. San Diego at Washington, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Oakland, 2:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Seattle, 2:05 p.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 2:25 p.m. Pittsburgh at New England, 2:25 p.m. Indianapolis at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Open: Arizona, Denver, Detroit, Jacksonville, N.Y. Giants, San Francisco Monday, Nov. 4 Chicago at Green Bay, 6:40 p.m.

AP Pro32 Power Rankings

The Associated Press Pro32 NFL Power Rankings, as voted by a 12member panel, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 29, total points based on 32 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 32nd-place vote, and previous ranking: W L T Pts Pr 1. Kans. City (6) 8 0 0 369 2 1. Seattle (4) 7 1 0 369 1 3. Denver (2) 7 1 0 360 3 4. New Orleans 6 1 0 342 4 5. Indianapolis 5 2 0 339 5 5. San Francisco 6 2 0 339 6 7. Green Bay 5 2 0 305 7 8. Cincinnati 6 2 0 304 8 9. New England 6 2 0 296 9 10. Detroit 5 3 0 276 12 11. San Diego 4 3 0 254 11 12. Carolina 4 3 0 249 16 13. Dallas 4 4 0 236 10 14. Chicago 4 3 0 221 14 15. Baltimore 3 4 0 212 15 16. Arizona 4 4 0 208 24 17. N.Y. Jets 4 4 0 184 13 18. Oakland 3 4 0 157 28 19. Miami 3 4 0 152 17 20. Buffalo 3 5 0 141 18 21. Tennessee 3 4 0 134 22 22. N.Y. Giants 2 6 0 128 29 23. Washington 2 5 0 112 23 24. St. Louis 3 5 0 111 26 25. Philadelphia 3 5 0 110 19 26. Cleveland 3 5 0 106 25 27. Atlanta 2 5 0 88 21 27. Pittsburgh 2 5 0 88 19 29. Houston 2 5 0 74 27 30. Minnesota 1 6 0 35 30 31. Tampa Bay 0 7 0 23 31 32. Jacksonville 0 8 0 14 32

NCAA The AP Top 25

Thursday, Oct. 31 No. 25 Arizona State at Washington State, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 2 No. 3 Florida State vs. No. 7 Miami, 6 p.m. No. 4 Ohio State at Purdue, 10 a.m. No. 8 Auburn at Arkansas, 4 p.m. No. 9 Clemson at Virginia, 1:30 p.m. No. 10 Missouri vs. Tennessee, 5 p.m. No. 12 Texas A&M vs. UTEP, 7 p.m. No. 14 South Carolina vs. Mississippi State, 10:21 a.m. No. 15 Texas Tech vs. No. 18 Oklahoma State, 5 p.m. No. 16 Fresno St. vs. Nevada, 8:30 p.m. No. 17 UCLA vs. Colorado, 5:30 p.m. No. 21 Northern Illinois at UMass, 10 a.m. No. 22 Wisconsin at Iowa, 10 a.m. No. 23 Michigan at No. 24 Michigan State, 1:30 p.m.

BASEBALL BASEBALL

MLB PLAYOFFS World Series

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Boston 3, St. Louis 2 Wednesday, Oct. 23 Boston 8, St. Louis 1 Thursday, Oct. 24 St. Louis 4, Boston 2 Saturday, Oct. 26 St. Louis 5, Boston 4 Sunday, Oct. 27 Boston 4, St. Louis 2 Monday, Oct. 28 Boston 3, St. Louis 1 Wednesday, Oct. 30 St. Louis (Wacha 4-1) at Boston (Lackey 10-13), 6:07 p.m. x-Thursday, Oct. 31 St. Louis at Boston, 6:07 p.m.

2013 GOLD GLOvE WINNERS

(With player, team and gold gloves won) American League P — R.A. Dickey, Toronto, 1 C — Salvatore Perez, Kansas City, 1 1B — Eric Hosmer, Kansas City, 1 2B — Dustin Pedroia, Boston, 3 SS — J.J. Hardy, Baltimore, 2 3B — Manny Machado, Baltimore, 1 LF — Alex Gordon, Kansas City, 3 CF — Adam Jones, Baltimore, 3 RF — Shane Victorino, Boston, 4 National League P — Adam Wainwright, St. Louis, 2 C — Yadier Molina, St. Louis, 6 1B — Paul Goldschmidt, Arizona, 1 2B — Brandon Phillips, Cincinnati, 4 SS — Andrelton Simmons, Atlanta, 1 3B — Nolan Arenado, Colorado, 1 LF — Carlos Gonzalez, Colorado, 3 CF — Carlos Gomez, Milwaukee, 1 RF — Gerardo Parra, Arizona, 2

BASKETBALL BASKETBALL NBA Eastern Conference

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

W 0 0 0 0 0 W 1 0 0 0 0 W 1 0 0 0 0

L Pct 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 L Pct 0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 1 .000 L Pct 0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 1 .000

TENNIS TENNIS GB — — — — — GB — 1/2 1/2 1/2 1 GB — 1/2 1/2 1/2 1

Western Conference

Southwest W L Pct GB Dallas 0 0 .000 — Houston 0 0 .000 — Memphis 0 0 .000 — New Orleans 0 0 .000 — San Antonio 0 0 .000 — Northwest W L Pct GB Denver 0 0 .000 — Minnesota 0 0 .000 — Oklahoma City 0 0 .000 — Portland 0 0 .000 — Utah 0 0 .000 — Pacific W L Pct GB L.A. Lakers 1 0 1.000 — Golden State 0 0 .000 1/2 Phoenix 0 0 .000 1/2 Sacramento 0 0 .000 1/2 L.A. Clippers 0 1 .000 1 Tuesday’s Games Indiana 97, Orlando 87 Miami 107, Chicago 95 L.A. Lakers 116, L.A. Clippers 103 Monday’s Games No games scheduled. Wednesday’s Games Miami at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Brooklyn at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Boston at Toronto, 5 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at New York, 5:30 p.m. Orlando at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Charlotte at Houston, 6 p.m. Indiana at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Memphis at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Utah, 7 p.m. Portland at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Denver at Sacramento, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games New York at Chicago, 6 p.m. Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.

Pacers 97 Magic 87

ORLANDO (87) Harkless 6-13 0-1 14, Maxiell 0-5 0-0 0, Vucevic 4-11 0-0 8, Nelson 4-13 1-1 12, Afflalo 3-14 2-3 9, Oladipo 4-11 3-5 12, Nicholson 8-10 0-0 18, Moore 3-6 0-0 6, O’Quinn 3-7 0-0 6, Price 1-2 0-0 2, Jones 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 36-93 6-10 87. INDIANA (97) George 8-16 5-7 24, West 4-11 5-5 13, Hibbert 3-6 2-4 8, G.Hill 2-8 3-4 7, Stephenson 8-12 1-2 19, Johnson 3-4 2-2 9, Scola 4-7 0-0 8, Watson 2-5 0-2 5, S.Hill 0-1 0-0 0, Mahinmi 0-1 4-6 4, Butler 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-71 22-32 97. Orlando 18 26 20 23—87 Indiana 23 17 29 28—97 3-Point Goals—Orlando 9-19 (Nelson 3-7, Harkless 2-2, Nicholson 2-2, Oladipo 1-2, Afflalo 1-5, Moore 0-1), Indiana 7-17 (George 3-6, Stephenson 2-3, Johnson 1-2, Watson 1-4, G.Hill 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Orlando 52 (Vucevic 10), Indiana 56 (Hibbert 16). Assists—Orlando 17 (Nelson 7), Indiana 17 (Stephenson, George 5). Total Fouls—Orlando 26, Indiana 13. Technicals—Orlando delay of game, Indiana delay of game, Indiana defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls—Vucevic. A—18,165 (18,165).

Heat 107 Bulls 95

CHICAGO (95) Deng 2-8 0-0 4, Boozer 13-18 5-5 31, Noah 1-4 0-2 2, Rose 4-15 3-4 12, Butler 6-12 6-7 20, Dunleavy 3-9 2-2 10, Gibson 4-8 2-3 10, Hinrich 2-6 0-0 6, Mohammed 0-0 0-0 0, Snell 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 35-83 18-23 95. MIAMI (107) L.James 5-11 7-9 17, Haslem 2-4 2-2 6, Bosh 6-11 3-4 16, Chalmers 3-8 6-7 13, Wade 5-13 2-5 13, Allen 3-7 2-2 11, Battier 5-6 0-0 14, Cole 5-7 0-0 11, Andersen 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 37-72 22-29 107. Chicago 15 18 25 37—95 Miami 17 37 24 29—107 3-Point Goals—Chicago 7-26 (Hinrich 2-4, Dunleavy 2-4, Butler 2-4, Rose 1-7, Snell 0-2, Deng 0-5), Miami 11-20 (Battier 4-4, Allen 3-6, Wade 1-1, Bosh 1-2, Chalmers 1-3, Cole 1-3, L.James 0-1). Fouled Out—Hinrich. Rebounds— Chicago 47 (Noah 11), Miami 48 (Andersen 8). Assists—Chicago 23 (Deng, Rose 4), Miami 26 (L.James 8). Total Fouls—Chicago 27, Miami 21. Technicals—Chicago defensive three second. A—19,964 (19,600).

Lakers 116 Clippers 103

L.A. CLIPPERS (103) Dudley 2-6 0-0 5, Griffin 8-15 3-10 19, Jordan 8-10 1-2 17, Paul 5-13 5-5 15, Redick 5-12 1-1 13, Barnes 3-6 1-1 8, Crawford 5-13 2-2 15, Collison 4-5 0-0 9, Hollins 0-2 0-2 0, Bullock 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 41-83 13-23 103. L.A. LAKERS (116) Young 3-10 6-8 13, Williams 1-5 1-2 3, Gasol 5-12 4-4 15, Nash 1-3 0-0 3, Blake 2-3 0-0 6, Kaman 5-10 0-0 10, Meeks 4-8 2-2 13, Farmar 6-10 2-4 16, Henry 8-13 3-8 22, Johnson 1-11 0-0 3, Hill 6-8 0-0 12. Totals 42-93 18-28 116. L.A. Clippers 30 27 22 24—103 L.A. Lakers 28 27 20 41—116 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 8-21 (Crawford 3-6, Redick 2-5, Collison 1-1, Barnes 1-3, Dudley 1-4, Paul 0-2), L.A. Lakers 14-29 (Henry 3-4, Meeks 3-6, Blake 2-2, Farmar 2-3, Nash 1-1, Gasol 1-2, Johnson 1-4, Young 1-4, Williams 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 49 (Jordan 11), L.A. Lakers 64 (Gasol 13). Assists—L.A. Clippers 27 (Paul 11), L.A. Lakers 23 (Farmar 6). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 21, L.A. Lakers 23. Technicals—L.A. Clippers defensive three second, L.A. Lakers delay of game. Flagrant Fouls—Barnes, Jordan. A—18,997 (18,997).

SOCCER SOCCER

MLS PLAYOFFS KNOCKOUT ROUND

Eastern Conference Thursday, Oct. 31 Montreal at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Western Conference Wednesday, Oct. 30 Colorado at Seattle, 8:30 p.m.

ATP WORLD TOUR BNP Paribas Masters

Tuesday At Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy Paris Purse: $4.42 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, def. Michael Llodra, France, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-3. Michal Przysiezny, Poland, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 6-3, 7-6 (6). Nicolas Mahut, France, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, 7-6 (6), 6-1. Pablo Andujar, Spain, def. Vasek Pospisil, Canada, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 7-6 (6), 6-4. Marcel Granollers, Spain, def. Dmitry Tursunov, Russia, 6-4, 6-4. Kevin Anderson, South Africa, def. Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, 4-6, 7-6 (0), 2-1, retired. Second Round Richard Gasquet (9), France, def. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, 7-5, 6-7 (6), 6-3. Kei Nishikori, Japan, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (8), France, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (7). Jerzy Janowicz (14), Poland, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Pierre-Hugues Herbert, France, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Doubles First Round John Isner and Nicholas Monroe, United States, def. Jonny Marray, Britain, and Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 3-6, 6-3, 10-4. Fabio Fognini and Andreas Seppi, Italy, def. Treat Huey, Philippines, and Dominic Inglot, Britain, 7-6 (5), 6-3. Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, and Scott Lipsky, United States, def. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers, Australia, 6-4, 7-5.

WTA TOUR Garanti Koza Tournament of Champions

Tuesday At Armeec Arena Sofia, Bulgaria Purse: $750,000 Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Singles Group Serdika Alize Cornet (7), France, def. Maria Kirilenko (3), Russia, 5-0, retired. Simona Halep (1), Romania, def. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (6), Russia, 6-3, 6-3. Standings Cornet, 1-0 (sets 2-0); Halep, 1-0 (2-0); Pavlyuchenkova, 0-1 (0-2); Svitolina, 0-0 (0-0); Kirilenko, 0-1 (0-2), withdrew. Group Sredets Ana Ivanovic (2), Serbia, def. Tsvetana Pironkova (8), Bulgaria, 6-0, 6-2. Standings Ivanovic, 1-0 (2-0); Pironkova, 1-0 (2-0); Stosur, 0-0 (0-0); Vesnina, 0-0 (0-0).

AUTO RACING MOTORSPORTS

NASCAR SPRINT CUP Leaders

Through Oct. 27 Points 1, Matt Kenseth, 2,294. 2, Jimmie Johnson, 2,294. 3, Jeff Gordon, 2,267. 4, Kevin Harvick, 2,266. 5, Kyle Busch, 2,258. 6, Clint Bowyer, 2,239. 7, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,238. 8, Greg Biffle, 2,236. 9, Kurt Busch, 2,219. 10, Carl Edwards, 2,218. 11, Joey Logano, 2,209. 12, Ryan Newman, 2,188. 13, Kasey Kahne, 2,170. 14, Jamie McMurray, 953. 15, Brad Keselowski, 929. 16, Martin Truex Jr., 892. 17, Paul Menard, 887. 18, Aric Almirola, 843. 19, Jeff Burton, 838. 20, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 827. Money 1, Jimmie Johnson, $8,185,992. 2, Kyle Busch, $6,485,956. 3, Matt Kenseth, $6,374,568. 4, Kevin Harvick, $6,037,665. 5, Brad Keselowski, $5,952,167. 6, Jeff Gordon, $5,498,161. 7, Carl Edwards, $5,473,299. 8, Dale Earnhardt Jr., $5,230,628. 9, Ryan Newman, $5,200,712. 10, Joey Logano, $5,178,638. 11, Clint Bowyer, $5,093,747. 12, Martin Truex Jr., $5,047,249. 13, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $5,013,456. 14, Kasey Kahne, $4,925,869. 15, Kurt Busch, $4,816,823. 16, Aric Almirola, $4,669,348. 17, Jamie McMurray, $4,632,898. 18, Greg Biffle, $4,546,009. 19, Juan Pablo Montoya, $4,475,511. 20, Paul Menard, $4,452,541.

FORMULA ONE Points Leaders

Through Oct. 27 1. Sebastian Vettel, 322. 2. Fernando Alonso, 207. 3. Kimi Raikkonen, 183. 4. Lewis Hamilton, 169. 5. Mark Webber, 148. 6. Nico Rosberg, 144. 7. Romain Grosjean, 102. 8. Felipe Massa, 102. 9. Jenson Button, 60. 10. Paul di Resta, 40. 11. Nico Hulkenberg, 39. 12. Sergio Perez, 33. 13. Adrian Sutil, 28. 14. Daniel Ricciardo, 19. 15. Jean-Eric Vergne, 13.

INDYCAR Points Leaders

Through Oct. 19 1. Scott Dixon, 577. 2. Helio Castroneves, 550. 3. Simon Pagenaud, 508. 4. Will Power, 498. 5. Marco Andretti, 484.

8. James Hinchcliffe, 449. 9. Charlie Kimball, 427. 10. Dario Franchitti, 418. 11. Tony Kanaan, 397. 12. Sebastien Bourdais, 370. 13. Simona de Silvestro, 362. 14. Josef Newgarden, 348. 15. E.J. Viso, 340.

NASCAR NATIONWIDE Points Leaders

Through Oct. 11 1. Austin Dillon, 1,067. 2. Sam Hornish Jr., 1,059. 3. Regan Smith, 1,015. 4. Justin Allgaier, 997. 5. Elliott Sadler, 989. 6. Trevor Bayne, 976. 7. Brian Scott, 974. 8. Brian Vickers, 970. 9. Kyle Larson, 910. 10. Parker Kligerman, 893. 11. Alex Bowman, 824. 12. Nelson Piquet Jr., 772. 13. Mike Bliss, 759. 14. Travis Pastrana, 689. 15. Michael Annett, 609.

TRANSACTIONS TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League

BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Name Dave Wallace pitching coach. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with 1B-DH Jose Abreu on a six-year contract. MINNESOTA TWINS — Sent LHP Pedro Hernandez outright to Rochester (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Extended their player development contract with New Hampshire (EL) through the 2016 season.

Eastern League

AKRON RUBBERDUCKS — Announced their new nickname.

American Association

LAREDO LEMURS — Exercised the 2014 option on RHP Bradley Blanks.

Can-Am League

QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed LHP Ari Ronick.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association

DALLAS MAVERICKS — Announced the resignation of Gersson Rosas, general manager. UTAH JAZZ — Exercised the club contract options on G Alec Burks and C Enes Kanter.

FOOTBALL National Football League

BUFFALO BILLS — Released DT Jay Ross. Signed WR Cordell Roberson to the practice squad. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Placed CB Leon Hall on the injured reserve list. Signed LB J.K. Schaffer from the practice squad. Waived DE DeQuin Evans. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed OL Reid Fragel from the practice squad of Cincinnati. Signed WR Armanti Edwards. Placed WR Travis Benjamin on injured reserve. Re-signed WR Tori Gurley to the practice squad. DALLAS COWBOYS — Released DE Jason Vega. Released RB Davin Meggett from the practice squad. Signed DE Everette Brown. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Re-signed TE Weslye Saunders to the active roster. Signed OT Xavier Nixon to the practice squad. Waived CB Daxton Swanson. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Acquired DT Isaac Sopoaga and a 2014 sixthround draft pick from Philadelphia for a 2014 fifth-round draft pick. Placed OL Sebastian Vollmer on injured reserve. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Claimed DB Bobby Felder off waivers from Minnesota. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Waived S Jordan Pugh. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Waived TE Chase Ford. Signed DE Justin Trattou.

HOCKEY National Hockey League

COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Reassigned F Cody Bass to Springfield (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS — Assigned F Patrick Holland to Hamilton (AHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Recalled G Keith Kinkaid from Albany (AHL). WINNIPEG JETS — Recalled D Ben Chiarot from St. John’s (AHL). Placed D Paul Postma on the injured reserve list, retroactive to Oct. 27.

American Hockey League

AHL — Suspended Milwaukee D Bryan Rodney two games for an illegal check to the head of an opponent in an Oct. 26 game against Texas. HARTFORD WOLF PACK — Announced F Jesper Fast was loaned to the team by the New York Rangers. Reassigned F Michael Kantor to Greenville (ECHL). Loaned G Jeff Malcolm and F Andrew Rowe to Greenville. NORFOLK ADMIRALS — Agreed to terms with C Dave Steckel. Released G Aaron Dell from his PTO contract and returned him to Utah (ECHL).

ECHL

GWINNETT GLADIATORS — Announced D Sacha Guimond was assigned to the team by Utica (AHL). Released D Brad Nunn.

SOCCER Major Soccer League

VANCOUVER WHITECAPS — Announced the contract of coach Martin Rennie will not be renewed.

National Women’s Soccer League

CHICAGO RED STARS — Acquired the rights to D Casey Short and a 2015 third-round draft pick for the No. 11 overall pick in the 2014 draft.

COLLEGE NCAA

BIG EAST CONFERENCE — Named Amber Cox associate commissioner for women’s basketball. KANSAS — Suspended G Naadir Tharpe from the Jayhawks’ season opener against Louisiana-Monroe after playing in an unauthorized summer league game. MISSISSIPPI — Suspended men’s basketball G Marshall Henderson three regular-season games for his behavior since the end of the season. WYOMING — Fired defensive coordinator Chris Tormey. Named defensive line coach Jamar Cain as interim coordinator.

BOXING BOXING

Fight Schedule

Nov. 2 At Madison Square Garden Theater, New York (HBO), Gennady Golovkin vs. Curtis Stevens, 12, for Golovkin’s WBA World/IBO middleweight titles; Ola Afolabi vs. Lukasz Janik, 12, for the vacant IBO cruiserweight title; Mike Perez vs. Magomed Abdusalamov, 10, heavyweights; Dusty Hernandez Harrison vs. Josh Torres, 10, welterweights. Nov. 9 At Corpus Christi, Texas (HBO), Roman Martinez vs. Mikey Garcia, 12, for Martinez’s WBO junior lightweight title; Nonito Donaire vs. Vic Darchinyan, 10, featherweights; Demetrius Andrade vs. Vanes Martirosyan, 12, for the vacant WBO junior middleweight title; Nicholas Walters vs. Alberto Garza, 12, for Walters’ WBA World featherweight title. Nov. 10 At Tokyo, Shinsuke Yamanaka vs. Alberto Guevara, 12, for Yamanaka’s WBC bantamweight title; Richar Abril vs. Jorge Linares, 12, for Abril’s WBA World lightweight title; Takahiro Ao vs. Edgar Alejandro Lomeli, 10, lightweights; Roman Gonzalez vs. Oscar Blanquet, 10, flyweights. Nov. 11 At Cowboys Dancehall, San Antonio (FS1), Fidel Maldonado Jr. vs. Luis Ramos Jr., 10, junior welterweights; Fernando Guerrero vs. Raymond Gatica, 10, middleweights.


SPORTS

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Dream: Stability helps team’s performance Continued from Page B-1 in Española, sometimes playing AAA and AAAA programs in the process. The players also got a taste of beach volleyball, something Bhakta introduced to them in the summer of 2012. He rotated four or five players weekly to go with him to beach volleyball courts, where they learned the finer points of the sport, where only three players are on the court. “At first, they were kinda unfamiliar with the ground, because they had never played it before,” Bhakta said. “As they got used to it, they got to where they were playing well in sand. And I think it helped them conditioning-wise, too.” Archuleta, one of two seniors on the team, said beach volleyball helped players work on their skills, especially passing, and they felt it strengthened their legs. Now if the school could provide the team a beach court to use in the summer … “Right outside [the gym],” Archuleta said. “It would be great.” What’s also been great is stability, something that wasn’t there in 2012. Prep lost its head coach, Diana Ronquillo, and best hitter, Ronquillo’s daughter Sarah Ihlefeld, late in the summer when Ronquillo accepted a promotion with First Citizens Bank and moved to Albuquerque. Ronquillo had been a part of the program since 2008 and was the head coach since 2009, so it was a jarring and sudden change for a young team. “Diana was like a mother figure to us,” Anderson said. “We didn’t know we lost them until the season almost started, and then we were like, ‘What are we going to do?’ ” While Bhakta took over and didn’t change much since he assisted Ronquillo for 10 years, the players had to adjust to new roles. Anderson played mostly middle hitter as a freshman, and moved to the outside and setter. Joy Maran took on a larger role up front as a middle hitter and occa-

This is the “Win now or get ready to stay home” edition of the notebook, where we dissect some bubble teams and their chances of advancing to the state tournament in three weeks.

Class AAAA Santa Fe High (13-5 overall, 3-3 District 2AAAA). Who’d have thought the Demonettes would be fighting for a spot in the postseason, instead of fighting for the district title? Santa Fe High has not performed well over the past week, with sweeps at the hands of Española Valley and Los Alamos. The loss to the Lady Hilltoppers hurts more because it puts the two teams in a neck-and-neck battle for second place. Chances are both teams win out this week and the tiebreaker for second would be determined by number of games won since they split the season series. Los Alamos wins by a 4-3 count. Selection odds: 2-1. The Demonettes do have a win over a district champion in Los Lunas from 6AAAA. And a likely 15-5 overall mark is hard to ignore, even in

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — Cincinnati at Memphis GOLF 9 p.m. on TGC — PGA Tour-WGC, HSBC Champions, first round, in Shanghai MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5:30 p.m. on FOX — World Series, game 6, St. Louis at Boston NHL HOCKEY 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Boston at Pittsburgh

Santa Fe Prep’s Desiray Anderson spikes the ball during practice Thursday. LUIS SáNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

sional outside hitter. It took Prep until midseason before players felt comfortable with their positions. There has been no transition like that this year. “Until last year, I would have never known I was going to be a setter and an outside hitter,” Anderson said. “I never knew that was going to be my role, but it’s so nice just to focus on your position and know what your role is.” Some roles have expanded as the Blue Griffins matured. The biggest development over the past month has been the play of Borden, Tilmen and Bae Lee Harman at the net. The trio has become a nice complementary piece to the one-two punch of Anderson and Maran. Against Mora on Saturday, Borden has six kills, while Maran added five. When the Blue Griffins faced Monte del Sol on

a competitive AAAA field. Los Alamos (11-7, 4-3). The Lady Hilltoppers helped themselves with a strong showing at Española Valley (loss in five games) and beating Santa Fe High. They are 6-3 in their last nine matches and should beat Capital on Wednesday to make it seven out of 10. Odds: 10-1. If there was ever a year where the bottom four seeds will be hard to select in AAAA, this is the year. Los Alamos might need to make a run to the district championship to help its case.

AAA Las Vegas Robertson (7-10 overall, 2-4 2AAA). District 2AAA might be the strongest in AAA, and that could help Robertson, which is ranked 10th in the latest MaxPreps.com rankings. Also in their favor is a five-game win over third-place Raton, which is ranked sixth. They also own a win over St. Michael’s, which is key. Odds: Even money. Once you get past the top 10 teams, Robertson is the best of the rest. St. Michael’s (6-13, 2-3 5AAA). That 1-9 start might have put the Lady Horsemen in too deep of a hole. While they are 5-4 since then, their wins are over a 1-16

Maxpreps. Class AAAA Class AAA Team (Record) Rating Team (Record) Rating com volleyball 1. Artesia (18-1) 22.70 1. Hope Christian (16-2) 19.45 2. Piedra Vista (16-2) 21.50 2. Portales (13-5) 17.00 rankings 3. Roswell Goddard (14-5) 17.05 3. Pojoaque Valley (13-4) 15.19

Here are the Top 10 volleyball teams, according to MaxPreps. com, as of Monday. The website uses a computer-based ratings system based on wins, quality of those wins over other highly ranked opponents and strength of schedule to determine its rankings. For more information about the system, go to MaxPreps.com. Northern teams are in bold.

4. Farmington (13-4) 15.82 5. St. Pius X (10-6) 13.25 6. Española Valley (13-6) 13.24 7. Centennial (14-4) 12.52 8. Albuquerque Academy (12-6) 11.65 9. Santa Fe High (13-6) 9.82 10. Los Lunas (12-6) 8.99 Also: 11. Los Alamos (11-7) 8.81 25. Capital (1-16), -17.28

SCOREBOARD ON THE AIR

Oct. 15, Timlen and Harman each had three kills in a 25-12, 25-8, 25-5 sweep, and Bordan added four. Teams focused heavily on Anderson and Maran last year and the early part of this season, knowing they were the keys to Prep’s hitting attack. That task is not so easy when there are other weapons as Prep’s disposal. “I think I’ve become stronger,” Borden said. “We’ve been working at it since August, and it’s a long time, but over that time, you get to work with your setters, and get better as hitters.” That might be the X factor as the Blue Griffins get ready for the postseason. And who knows? Perhaps in 2030, people will talk about how this year was a good one for Prep volleyball — in more ways than one.

SFHS will have to work for postseason spot The New Mexican

Northern New Mexico Local results and schedules

VOLLEYBALL NOTEBOOK

By James Barron

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4. West Las Vegas (14-4) 10.75 5. Silver (14-4) 8.69 6. Raton (9-8) 5.87 7. Sandia Prep (9-9) 5.29 8. Ruidoso (9-9) 4.86 9. Wingate (13-5) 3.89 10. L.V. Robertson (7-10) -0.58 Also: 14. St. Michael’s (6-13) -4.82 16. Taos (3-12), -8.15 17. S.F. Indian School (1-15), -11.55

Santa Fe Indian School (three times), and a 3-16 Hot Springs (twice). Not good résumébuilding material. Odds: 30-1. St. Michael’s needs to make a run to the 5AAA championship, if not win it outright, to play in Rio Rancho.

Class A Desert Academy (12-7, 7-4 2A). The Lady Wildcats can compete, but they lack a signature win. Getting swept by McCurdy was not good, even if they lost two games by 29-27 and 25-23 counts. Their best might be against a 5-10 Monte del Sol team. Odds: 10-1. Desert Academy has one objective next week: Get to the 2A semifinal and beat Mountainair. If that happens, it might be enough of a push for the Lady Wildcats to get in — other than winning the tournament.

uuu

One last thing: Pojoaque Valley’s 2AAA battle with Robertson is set for Wednesday, and it doubles as the team’s “Dig Pink” night. The team will be fundraising throughout the night and it will sell T-shirts to help to that end, as all proceeds go toward breast cancer prevention awareness.

Class AA

Class A

Class B

Team (Record) Rating 1. Santa Rosa (18-0) 19.10 2. Bosque School (13-4) 11.29 3. Cuba (17-2) 9.85 4. Santa Fe Prep (16-3) 9.82 5. Eunice (10-4) 9.69 6. Texico (12-7) 9.67 7. Hatch Valley (14-4) 7.97 8. Newcomb (12-4) 3.75 9. Navajo Prep (12-3) 3.56 10. Tularosa (10-7) 2.65 Also: 16. Mora (8-7) -0.27. Mesa Vista (8-7) -0.67 22. Pecos (6-13), -6.73 27. Monte del Sol (5-10), -10.39 32. Peñasco (0-17) -18.07

Team (Record) Rating 1. Fort Sumner (13-6) 12.18 2. Hagerman (14-3) 10.38 3. Questa (16-2) 10.01 4. Tatum (12-5) 8.87 5. Magdalena (17-2) 8.77 6. Springer (14-5) 7.78 7. Logan (12-6) 7.37 8. Mountainair (13-4) 5.11 9. McCurdy (13-5) 3.08 10. Cloudcroft (11-7) 1.54 Also: 12. Desert Academy (12-7) -0.43 13. Coronado (8-6) -2.85 22. Escalante (2-12), -14.18

Team (Record) Rating 1. Elida (17-1) 11.83 2. Carrizozo (19-1) 11.66 3. Corona (19-1) 6.96 4. Santa Fe Waldorf (15-3) 3.10 5. Mosquero (10-6) -0.72 6. San Jon (8-5) -1.27 7. Maxwell (6-3) -1.68 8. Evangel Christian (13-2) -1.70 9. Gateway Christian (9-9) -2.73 10. Victory Christian (9-7) -7.59 Also: 17. NMSD (6-11) -13.53

SOCCER 8:30 p.m. on NBCSN — MLS, playoffs, knockout round, Colorado at Seattle 9 p.m. on ESPN2 — International Friendly, Mexico vs. Finland, in San Diego

HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, call 986-3045.

Today Volleyball — Santa Fe High at Bernalillo, 7 p.m. Los Alamos at Capital, 6:30 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. McCurdy School at Escalante, 7 p.m. Mora at Pecos, 7 p.m.

Thursday Football — Santa Fe High at Bernalillo, 7 p.m. Volleyball — Evangel Christian Academy at New Mexico School for the Deaf, 5 p.m. Raton at Taos, 7 p.m.

Friday Football — Los Alamos at Capital, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Raton, 7 p.m. Taos at Robertson, 7 p.m. Volleyball — Victory Christian vs. Santa Fe Waldorf School at Christian Life Academy, 6 p.m. Escalante at Coronado, 5 p.m. Cross-country — District 2AAAA Championships at Capital, 3:30 p.m. District 2AA Championships at Academy for Technology and the Classics, 4:20 p.m. District 6AA Championships at Pojoaque Wellness Center, 4 p.m. District 4A Championships at Cimarron High School, 3 p.m.

Saturday Football — St. Michael’s at Albuquerque Academy, 11 a.m. Escalante at McCurdy School, 1 p.m. Boys Soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament, first round Class A-AAA: No. 12 Ruidoso at No. 5 Santa Fe Preparatory, 3 p.m. No. 9 Silver at No. 8 Taos, 1 p.m. Class AAAA:No. 12 Albuquerque St. Pius X at No. 5 Capital, 7 p.m. No. 11 Las Cruces Centennial at No. 6 Los Alamos, 11 a.m. Girls Soccer — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Tournament, first round Class A-AAA: No. 11 East Mountain at No. 6 Las Vegas Robertson, 1 p.m. No. 10 Rehoboth at No. 7 Santa Fe Preparatory, 1 p.m. Class AAAA: No. 11 Piedra Vista at No. 6 Los Alamos, 1 p.m. Volleyball — Capital at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Albuquerque Menaul vs. Desert Academy at New Mexico School for the Deaf, 2 p.m. Raton at Pojoaque Valley, 4 p.m. Los Alamos at Farmington, 4 p.m. Bernalillo at Española Valley, 6:30 pm McCurdy School at Coronado, 7 p.m. Mesa Vista at Dulce, 5 p.m. Cross-country — District 2AAA Championships at Pojoaque Valley, 10 a.m. District 5AAA Championships at Albuquerque Hope Christian, TBA

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Swimming u Practice for the Santa Fe High and Capital swimming and diving teams begins on Monday from 4:15 to 6:15 p.m. at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center pool. The team is open to all high school students plus eighth graders who must compete for the school they will attend. A sports physical is required. For more information, call coach Theresa Hamilton at 660-9818.

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

PREP ROUNDUP

Dominating Lady Wolves seal 2nd straight District 5B title The New Mexican

It had been more than a month since the Santa Fe Waldorf volleyball team faced a stiff challenge. On Tuesday night, the Lady Wolves sealed their second straight District 5B title by passing their toughest test of the district season. Evangel Christian pushed Waldorf to the limit, but the Lady Wolves prevailed, 25-13, 25-20, 22-25, 26-38, 15-13. It looked like another dominating performance for Waldorf (16-3 overall, 9-0 5B), but Game 2 saw middle hitter Brooke Reiche go down with an ankle sprain. The Lady Eagles took advantage of her absence to push it to a fifth game, but they could not account for the Lady Wolves’ hitting power. Cecelia Barnard had 34 kills on the night, as Waldorf recorded 74 overall. Keifer Nace added 15, while also dish-

ing out 45 assists, and eighth grader Beatrice Lowe had 12. Alex Chastenet had nine. “It was a phenomenal [match],” said Josie Adams, Waldorf head coach. “It was emotionally charged, but we were mentally focused. We are incredibly tough, especially being led by Cecelia and Keifer. They played the smartest volleyball we’ve ever played.” The defense continued its strong play, as Sophie Linett recorded 45 digs, Gabby Chastenet added 34 and Lowe collected 33. SANTA FE PREP 3, MONTE DEL SOL 0 The Blue Griffins (17-3, 10-0) scratched another goal off their list as they ran the 2AA schedule undefeated after completing a 25-5, 25-11, 25-11 win, the first time they’ve done that since 1997. Desiray Anderson and Joy Maran dominated the net, as Anderson had a team-high 12 kills and Maran had five

blocks at the net to go with nine kills. Alex Archuleta highlighted a strong serving night with seven aces, while Bianca Gonzales added four and Elana Wirth two. Gonzales also did a strong job of stepping into the setter’s spot as Courtney Timlen missed the match. “The girls knew the importance of today’s match,” Prep head coach Kiran Bhakta said. “An undefeated season, no matter where you accomplish it, is a great thing.” Monte del Sol head coach Alfredo Lujan lauded the play of Anderson and Maran, but he’s looking to the future. “They have Joy and Desiray, who are pounding the ball, and we have eighth and ninth graders in the back row,” Lujan said. “And when Joy and Desiray are going to be gone, my eighth and ninth graders are going to be juniors and seniors. They will grow up some day, and I can’t wait for that to happen.”

POJOAqUE VALLEY 3, WEST LAS VEGAS 1 The Elkettes faced an inspired bunch of Lady Dons lacking head coach Mary Bustos, who went to the hospital before the match. West Las Vegas came away with a Game 3 win before Pojoaque (14-4, 6-0) left Gillie Lopez Memorial Gymnasium with a 25-13, 25-18, 18-25, 25-19 2AAA win. “They played really spirited, and I knew that was going to happen,” said Pojoaque head coach Eric Zamora. “You could tell pretty early they were shaken [by Bustos’ absence], but once they settled down, they played well. I think we took that for granted.” Kristen Woody is not a player opponents can take for granted. She had 24 kills to lead the way for the Elkettes, and she added six aces. Zamora was especially happy of the play of Micah Espinosa, as she played in the front row and performed admirably.

Cheyenne Law had seven kills, and Gabby Gonzales added five. NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF 3, VICTORY CHRISTIAN 1 The Lady Roadrunners rebounded from a tough 5B loss to Evangel Christian to pull out a 25-13, 25-13, 21-25, 25-9 win in Albuquerque. Amberley Luna and Cheyenne Price demonstrated strong serving, as Luna had 19 aces among her 28 service points. Price had seven aces in 16 service points, and she served 10 straight points in Game 4 that gave NMSD momentum. Luna served seven straight points to start and finish in Game 2. “Our win was attributed to good serving, and our team working well together this evening,” said Amanda Lujan, NMSD head coach. “They recovered well. Usually we start out strong and then fade, but this time they were able to recover well and finish strong.” Luna had 14 kills and 11 assists, while Janell Miller added 16 kills.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

sPOrTs

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Louisville seeks a 3rd straight conference title By Gary B. Graves

The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Louisville coach Rick Pitino believes the defending national champions have a chance at being a “mini-dynasty.” After back-to-back Big East championships, Pitino believes the Cardinals can carry that momentum over to their lone season in the upstart American Athletic Conference. Louisville heads to the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2014. Winning the reorganized league could also propel Louisville toward a third straight Final Four and maybe consecutive NCAA titles. The Cardinals certainly have a chance to accomplish both goals with a returning nucleus led by leading scorer Russ Smith and a veteran frontcourt featuring Wayne Blackshear and Montrezl Harrell. They’ve also added some promising newcomers in their quest for a fourth national title. “It’s not probable, but it is possible to do both,” Pitino said of winning the conference and the national title. “You want to make your goals lofty anytime you go into a season. We don’t expect it. We’re going to work very hard to

Cardinals rally past Wichita State in the national semifinal, is also back and figures to play substantial minutes while junior Kevin Ware regains form after a horrific right leg injury sustained in the Midwest regional final. Having passed on the NBA draft to work on his game, Smith is eager to see how the changes mesh with a group that is already showing impressive shooting skills. “They’re hungry, they want to get after it and want to win,” Smith said of the new faces. “It’s different because we’ve been to a Final Four, we’ve won multiple Big East championships and have a national championship. “These new guys want to get a taste of that.” Blackshear, meanwhile, is finally over shoulder issues that bothered him Louisville Cardinals guard Wayne Blackshear, center, is caught between Western Kentucky defenders T.J. Price, left, and George Fant, right, during the past two years and ready to step up his game at small forward. Pitino has a Dec. 22, 2012, game in Nashville, Tenn. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO even contemplated using him to back up Harrell, who will start at power achieve it.” the NBA but retains Smith and his forward because of Chane Behanan’s The last school to win three consec- team-best 18.7 points-per-game scoring indefinite suspension. utive league championships and reach average. The Cardinals also brought An ankle injury slowed Final Four in junior college transfer Chris Jones three Final Fours was UCLA from MVP Luke Hancock in preseason but 2006-08, according to STATS LLC. along with a strong freshmen group the senior swingman is expected to led by Terry Rozier and Anton Gill. Louisville’s chances seem realistic. recover and provide perimeter shootSenior reserve Tim Henderson, The Cardinals lost floor leader ing and defense. Six-foot-10 redshirt whose timely 3-pointers helped the freshman center Mangok Mathiang Peyton Siva from the 35-5 squad to

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Players can struggle when heckling turns into hate By Eric Olson

The Associated Press

LINCOLN, Neb. — College coaches and administrators concerned about their tweeting athletes also should be wary of their tweeting fans. Social media experts pointed to vitriolic messages directed at football players from Missouri and Nebraska last weekend as examples of why schools should counsel athletes on how to cope with criticism that crosses the line from heckling to hate. “What I worry about is some of the psychological outcomes. Does it lead to decreased selfesteem? Does it lead to depression? Does it lead to guys not eating and sleeping right?” said Jimmy Sanderson, a Clemson researcher who collaborated on a 2012 study of how college athletes react to negative encounters with fans on social media. College athletes have always been targets for criticism, whether through the mail, on radio shows or catcalls from the stands. Because of Twitter and other platforms, direct access to college and professional athletes has never been greater. Most interaction is positive. But the messages can get nasty when upset fans type words they surely wouldn’t say to an athlete’s face. Last Saturday, after Missouri kicker Andrew Baggett missed a short field goal in overtime against South Carolina, he was

This computer screen grab made from the public Twitter feed of Nebraska wide receiver Kenny Bell on Oct. 29 shows his reaction to unfriendly tweets. NATI HARNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

accosted on Twitter. There were comments about his ability, homophobic slurs and one tweet that said “go kill yourself everyone in Missouri hates you.” Baggett said this week that supportive tweets outnumbered the negative “20 fold.” “Nobody’s comment made me feel worse than what I did on that field,” he said. Nebraska’s Kenny Bell dropped a couple passes, including one in the end zone, during a loss to Minnesota. Like Baggett, Bell expressed appreciation for encouraging tweets, but he clearly was troubled by caustic ones. Especially disturbing was a tweet that played off the fact Bell’s dog had been hit by a car. That person later apologized on Twitter. “Tonight was the first night that I have been truly bothered by the hateful comments by people,” Bell wrote in back-toback tweets. “That being said.... It takes so much more effort to be mean [and] hateful than it is to be positive [and] supportive.

I just don’t understand it.” It would be unrealistic to cut off players from social media — though some coaches have tried — because online communication is ingrained in the culture and can be beneficial, Sanderson said. An athlete can use Twitter to build an online identity, which helps with networking, job searches and promoting the team and university. Southern California last year began listing football players’ Twitter handles on online biographies and in weekly game previews available to fans and media. “This is how people communicate today, especially those from the generation of our current student-athletes. Why not embrace it?” USC spokesman Tim Tessalone wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “It also helps our fans engage with our players and vice versa. Sure, there will be some mistakes, but that’s all part of the learning process for college kids.”

Judge to issue written opinion on Paterno family lawsuit A lawyer for the plaintiffs, Joseph Loveland, called the sanctions “coercion and a cram-down of the highest order.” He said his clients wanted BELLEFONTE, Pa. — A Pennsylvania judge to compare the Penn State matter with how the said Tuesday he would decide later whether to NCAA has handled other cases. allow a lawsuit against the NCAA filed by the “The truth of the matter is they were acting family of longtime Penn State football coach Joe completely in uncharted waters with nothing Paterno and others to go forward. whatsoever to support them on it,” Loveland said. After hearing more than three hours of arguThe court session was held a day after Penn ments, Judge John B. Leete said he planned to State announced $59.7 million in settlements with issue a written opinion but did not say when. 26 young men over claims of abuse by Sandusky, A lawyer for college sports’ governing body who was the school’s longtime defensive coach. He urged him to throw out the complaint. was convicted last year of 45 counts of child sexual The lawsuit and the court are “a poor forum for abuse and is serving a lengthy prison sentence. the venting of frustration, and the NCAA should Paterno’s estate and family and the other plainnot be made the scapegoat for the errors and tiffs filed the lawsuit in May, saying the NCAA omissions of university officials,” NCAA lawyer had no authority to impose sanctions based on Everett Johnson said. criminal matters that were not related to the sports it oversees. Leete is considering a host of issues, including whether Penn State itself is an indispensable Paul Kelly, another lawyer for the plaintiffs, party to the lawsuit, which challenges the NCAA explained how former coaches Jay Paterno and penalties imposed on Penn State as a result of the William Kenney were harmed by comments critiJerry Sandusky child-molestation scandal. cal of the way the coaching staff handled Sandusky. The Paterno family — joined by four university Being the subject of the NCAA’s legal settletrustees, four faculty members, nine former play- ment with Penn State makes a person “radioacers and two former coaches — allege breach of tive in the coaching world, and most other procontract, contract interference, defamation, civil grams aren’t going to want to touch you,” Kelly said. conspiracy and commercial disparagement. By Mark Scolforo

The Associated Press

is preparing to fill the big void in the pivot left by Gorgui Dieng’s move to the pros, with 6-9 senior Stephan Van Treese ready to come off the bench. Here are some things to watch as Louisville tries to repeat as NCAA champions: Filling in for Behanan: During Behanan’s suspension, Harrell must provide the muscle and scoring. He might have started anyway given his play during the Cardinals’ title run and an impressive summer helping lead the U.S. men’s under-19 team win the gold medal at the world championships. The 6-8, 235-pounder has returned stronger and more vocal along with adding a jumper. Pitino can’t wait to turn him loose. Nice to meet you: Jones, the former Tennessee signee, and Rozier highlight a group of newcomers who could make the backcourt one of Louisville’s deepest positions. The duo figures to share the point guard role along with Smith, with freshmen guards Dillon Avare, Anton Gill and David Levitch ready to contribute. Forward Akoy Agau joins Mathiang in the frontcourt. Team defense: Last season saw Smith and Siva put on a clinic in fullcourt pressure that often got Louisville’s transition game going. Time will tell whether the Cardinals can duplicate Pitino’s trademark stifling defense.

Heat: Miami finished with seven players in double figures Continued from Page B-1 the Heat — snuffed out the comeback, and Miami wasn’t in trouble again. “We’re not trying to pull close. There were a lot of corrections that we have to make,” Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. “It always comes back to the same thing — our defense and our rebounding. And if we could have taken better care of the ball early on, we would have been in position to win down the stretch.” Chris Bosh scored 16 points, Battier finished with 14 and Dwyane Wade and Mario Chalmers each had 13 for Miami, which had seven players score in double figures. Ray Allen and Norris Cole each scored 11 for Miami. Rose shot 4 for 15 for the Bulls. Said Rose: “If anything, I’m disappointed in the loss. My performance, I can easily change that by making shots and keep down the turnovers.” By halftime, Miami was rolling, up 54-33 — putting the game on pace for a 108-66 final, which would have exactly matched the score of the game in 2006 when Chicago came into Miami and spoiled the Heat franchise’s first ring night. Not this time, though the Bulls made it plenty interesting down the stretch. A layup by Butler with 5:34 left got the Bulls within 15, and after he missed the ensuing free throw, the rebound made its way to Kirk Hinrich — who made a 3-pointer that cut Miami’s lead to 91-79. Hinrich fouled out on the ensuing Miami possession. Wade scored seconds later, the Heat followed that with a stop, and James simply overpowered Luol Deng in the post on the next trip to restore the 16-point lead.

But again, the Bulls weren’t done, cutting the lead to 95-87 on a drive by Boozer with 2:47 left. They would get no closer. Rose’s start was promising early, with two drives for impressive scores. The Bulls led 15-10 when Rose checked out for the first time with 3:36 left in the opening quarter. Pacers 97, Magic 87 In Indianapolis, Paul George scored 24 points, and Roy Hibbert added 16 rebounds and seven blocks to lead Indiana. George’s buzzer-beating 3-pointer at the end of the third quarter gave the Pacers a 69-64 lead and sparked the decisive 17-4 run to open the fourth. Hibbert nearly matched his career-high for rebounds (17) in the first half. He had eight points but left the game midway through the fourth quarter after injuring his knee in a spill underneath his own basket. Team officials said it was not serious and he could have returned. Victor Oladipo, the ex-Hoosiers star and No. 2 overall draft pick, had 12 points and three turnovers for the Magic. Lakers 116, cLiPPers 103 In Los Angeles, Xavier Henry scored a career-high 22 points, Jordan Farmar added 16, and five Lakers reserves surged past the Clippers in the fourth quarter for a surprising victory. With Kobe Bryant watching in street clothes behind Pau Gasol and Steve Nash on the Lakers’ bench, Jodie Meeks scored nine of his 13 points in the fourth quarter as the Lakers stunned their Staples Center rivals in Clippers coach Doc Rivers’ debut. The Lakers did it down the stretch with a lineup comprised entirely of backups — including three who weren’t on the team last season. Henry scored 12 points in the fourth quarter while leading a decisive 28-8 run.

Papi: Ortiz has one-third of Boston’s hits against St. Louis Continued from Page B-1 six RBIs, five runs and four walks. Ortiz has one-third of Boston’s hits against St. Louis, while the rest of the Red Sox are batting .151. “I was born for this,” he said. Strikeouts in this Series? None. And the best designated hitter in baseball even fields flawlessly at first base. In three games in St. Louis under NL rules, Ortiz handled all 23 chances without an error after playing just six games there — also without an error — during the regular season. Indeed, it’s been a charmed month for Big Papi, who has even legged out a few infield hits lately — albeit with the second baseman often playing 50 feet or so out in right field. Slugger. Speedster. Fielder. Is there anything David Ortiz can’t do? Pitch? “Hopefully, it won’t get to that point,” manager John Farrell said Tuesday. How about making more than one out in a game? Ortiz hasn’t done that either in a World Series in which he’s all but locked up the MVP award if the Red Sox can finish off the Cardinals. “He’s a guy that you still have the ultimate respect for because of what he’s done in the biggest situations,” Boston outfielder Daniel Nava said. Cardinals ace Adam Wainwright made the mistake of pitching to Ortiz in the first inning of Game 5 on Monday night. Jacoby Ellsbury

led off the game by striking out, but Dustin Pedroia doubled to left. Up strode Big Papi with first base open. “I don’t like walking anybody,” Wainwright said. “Got a guy on second already. It’s the first inning. He hit a good pitch. He’s out of his mind right now.” It didn’t matter much that the 19-game winner fanned the next two batters. Ortiz already had done his damage. He’s also done it with his voice. With the Red Sox trailing 2-1 in Game 4, Ortiz huddled his teammates in the dugout for a pep talk before the sixth inning. “I’m the veteran dude on this team, that’s why I have to say something,” he said. “I sensed everyone was feeling down, frustrated, like a sinking boat. “I told them, ‘Don’t do anything more than you’re capable, don’t force things out.’ I mean, if you’re a David Ross, don’t try to do things as if you’re David Ortiz,” he said. Moments later, Jonny Gomes hit a threerun homer that sent Boston to a 4-2 win. “The way he treats us, the way he treats the fans, you would never know he’s a superstar,” Gomes said. “I truly can’t say enough good things about him.” One day after Gomes’ homer, the lighthitting Ross lined a run-scoring double that broke a 1-all tie in the seventh. “He’s David Ortiz. That says enough,” the catcher said. “The guy is a postseason stud, and a stud in general. That’s why we call him ‘Cooperstown,’ because he does Hall of Fame stuff.”


Wednesday, October 30, 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 Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013: This year you achieve many of your key goals. Your strength emerges from an ability to detach and see the big picture. Virgo is a remarkable example of efficiency. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Note the back-and-forth tug between risk-taking and following the status quo. You waver less than other signs do. Tonight: Try to relax. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH A brainstorming session could trigger even more of your high energy. You might decide to pursue an unusual course. Tonight: Take a midweek break. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You might want to hang close to home. Consider making your office more comfortable or try working from home. Tonight: Stay centered. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You naturally stumble upon the right words. Keep the lines of communication open. Tonight: Express your creativity around a special friend! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Be aware of your spending in a situation that has implications. Listen to your instincts; they will guide you. Tonight: No one knows how to have a good time like you do! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Take advantage of all your supporters, especially if you want to start a new project. You can do it! Remember that. Tonight: Act like the world is your oyster.

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: GEOGRAPHY (e.g., Which river runs through Budapest? Answer: Danube.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What is the capital city of Libya? Answer________ 2. What Mexican town is known as the birthplace of the drink tequila? Answer________ 3. Name two American states with the letter combination “ex” in their name. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. What border is straddled by the Cheviot Hills? Answer________

5. In which harbor was the U.S. battleship Maine when it blew up? Answer________ 6. Which country of Central America has a name that is also the name of a hat? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Which country was previously known as the Republic of Upper Volta? Answer________ 8. In which British city would you see Arthur’s Seat, and what is it? Answer________ 9. What island is separated from mainland Italy by the Strait of Messina? Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Tripoli. 2. Tequila. 3. Texas, New Mexico. 4. England-Scotland. 5. Havana’s harbor. 6. Panama. 7. Burkina Faso. 8. Edinburgh; the peak of a group of hills. 9. Sicily. SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher

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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH The less said, the better. A boss or someone you look up to has a very different image for you, which he or she would like you to fulfill. Tonight: Get some muchneeded rest.

Wife wants some happiness in life Dear Annie: I am retiring at the end of the week and am worried. I have been married for 27 years to my second husband. For the past 24, he has not once touched me, said “I love you” or displayed any affection. He is a good stepfather to my children and a wonderful grandfather, but there is absolutely nothing for me. When we do something together, it is invariably what he wants to do. We go where he wants to go and eat what he wants to eat. I feel I have let life pass me by. My marriage vows said “until death us do part,” so divorce is out of the question. Will I be able to find happiness in retirement? I’m dreading it. — Is There Hope for Me? Dear Hope: Since divorce is not an option, please use your energy to carve out your own life within your marriage. Assert your independence, and do some things just for yourself. Join a book club, choir, theater group or political organization. Volunteer your time at a children’s hospital. Take a trip with friends. You also might find it beneficial to get some counseling, with or without your husband, to help you navigate the rest of your life in a way that brings you some type of happiness and satisfaction. It’s not too late. Just take the first step. Dear Annie: What happens if you invite your son’s classmate to his birthday party, and the parent gives you a list of things he’s not allowed to eat — not for health reasons, but for religious or moral ones, and the kid wants to eat them anyway? For example, what if the family keeps kosher, but the kid wants the nonkosher hamburgers? Or the parents are strict vegans and don’t want their child to eat anything with meat, milk or eggs, but the kid doesn’t care and wants the hot dogs and birthday

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Tension builds because others have expectations that you do not want to meet. You could feel stuck. Tonight: Go till the wee hours. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH If you experience some discomfort with several situations, detach. You must have a favorite way of distancing yourself from trigger issues. Tonight: Put on some great music. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Relate to key people directly. You might be able to relate far more easily without “in-between” people. Tonight: Out to dinner with a loved one. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Others seem to be unable to contain themselves around you. They keep testing your boundaries. Tonight: Make sure that you are ready for tomorrow. Jacqueline Bigar

Chess quiz

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Win a piece. Solution: 1. Qb8! pins and wins the knight. If … Ne8!, simply 2. Qxe8! [adapted, Kramnik-Korobov ’13].

Today in history Today is Wednesday, Oct. 30, the 303rd day of 2013. There are 62 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Oct. 30, 1938, the radio play The War of the Worlds, starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS. (The live drama with fake breaking news reports, panicked some listeners who thought the portrayal of a Martian invasion was real.)

Hocus Focus

Dear Gary: We know it can be difficult when you feel you are catering to a wide swath of food restrictions, but the parents’ rules apply. You must tell the child, “Sorry, but your parents said you aren’t allowed to have that.” Of course, it would be a kindness to serve something that all the kids can eat, and it’s not as complicated as you might think. Ask the parents for assistance. And if you cannot accommodate the child’s requirements, please inform the parents ahead of time. They may prefer to pack him his own food or not send him. Dear Annie: This is in response to “Tired of Poor Customer Service.” I have been in customer service for 30 years. I have been cussed at, threatened, had food thrown at me and worse, all the while with a smile on my face. I love working with the public, but the public needs to remember that I am there to provide a service. I’m not your slave. I deserve to be treated with respect the same as you. I don’t respond well to rudeness and demands. I will help any way I can, but if I can’t get you what you want, don’t blame me, swear at me and tell me I’m stupid. It is not my fault that you lost your job, your marriage is failing, your car broke down or your dog died. I am sympathetic, but don’t take it out on me. I agree that customer service is becoming a thing of the past. But, dear customer, take a look at yourself, as well. Would you want to be treated the way you have treated me? A smile, a kind gesture and a positive attitude go a long way on both sides of the counter. — Still Smiling in Indiana

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Your sense of direction points you to getting feedback and support from others. News from someone at a distance puts a smile on your face. Tonight: Go for exactly what you want.

Cryptoquip

cake? Do I forcibly keep the child away from the unapproved food? Or do I say, “My house, my rules”? — Gary, Ind.

Jumble


B-6 THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

30, 2013

THE ARGYLE SWEATER

PEANUTS

LA CUCARACHA

TUNDRA

LUANN

RETAIL

ZITS

STONE SOUP

BALDO

KNIGHT LIFE

GET FUZZY

DILBERT

PICKLES

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

ROSE IS ROSE

PARDON MY PLANET

NON SEQUITUR


Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-3 Taste C-5 Travel C-6

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

LOCAL NEWS Plaza mall plans for balcony By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican

A trend toward building balconies atop the covered sidewalks around the Santa Fe Plaza is bringing a subtle change to the heart of the city’s historic district. Greer Enterprises, which owns the Plaza Galeria, a mini-mall on the south side of the Plaza, is the latest to seek approval for a balcony overlooking the busy city park. The building at 66-70 E. San Fran-

cisco St. was constructed in 1955 in the Spanish-Pueblo Revival style as a J.C. Penney store and later became a Dunlaps department store. In 1967, “Santa Fe style” architect John Gaw Meem added the Spanish-Pueblo Revival portal over the sidewalk. Earlier this month, the city Historic Districts Review Board approved alterations to the Plaza Galeria’s north facade that will accomodate a balcony. When asked at the board’s Oct. 8 meeting whether dining would be

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Taste: Santa Fe chefs take fear out of cooking with bones. Page C-5

allowed on the open roof, architect Jeff Seres said that hadn’t yet been proposed. But because the city owns the land upon which the portal sits, City Council approval would be needed for such a use. The new balcony will be adjacent to one added a couple of years ago for the Marble Brewery Tap Room on the second floor of the Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E. San Francisco St. That balcony is diagonally across

Please see PLaZa, Page C-4

Balcony proposed at Plaza Galeria Building at 66-70 E. San Francisco St., facing the Plaza

Elevator override

New doors

Balcony parapet

Image courtesy Greer Enterprises

New entry doors

New storefront

The proposed changes to the Plaza Galeria. COURTESY GREER ENTERPRISES

SWAT search ends in vain

Democrat nominated to replace Rep. Easley State lawmaker died unexpectedly in August By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

By 3 p.m., police reopened the street, and public schools lifted their shelter in place. Police also allowed members of the media to view the previously barricaded home. The front door and two front windows were wide open, but little could be gleaned from the street. The family living in the home declined to speak to reporters. The evacuation was frustrating for residents, especially those forced to leave without their vehicles. Fred Tapia, who lives in the area, said he and some other neighbors had borrowed lawn chairs and sat down to wait at the Siringo Road and Calle Ensenada intersection. He added that police hadn’t shared much information with the neighborhood. Tapia said Pacheco wasn’t from the area and that he hadn’t heard about him prior to the SWAT situation. But Johnson said police believed that Pacheco did visit the house periodically. Tapia said he and his neighbors weren’t worried

The Santa Fe County Commission on Tuesday nominated Ann Jenkins, a retired information manager for a pharmaceutical company, to complete the term of the late Rep. Stephen Easley in the state House of Representatives. Jenkins also has been nominated for the position by the Bernalillo County Commission. Two other counties in the sprawling Ann Jenkins District 50 have nominated other candidates. Valencia County nominated former Albuquerque City Councilor Vickie Perea while the Torrance County Commission chose its own chairman, LeRoy Candelaria. A spokesman for Gov. Susana Martinez said she is expected to make a decision on the appointment by Friday. Both Perea and Candelaria are Republicans, as is the governor. If Martinez picks a Republican to replace Democrat Easley, the political makeup of the House would be 37 Democrats to 33 Republicans. Jenkins in an interview Tuesday described herself as a centrist Democrat. “I’m fairly conservative on financial issues but liberal on social issues,” she said. “It depends on the issue.” Her husband of 43 years, Jim Jenkins, is a Republican, she said. Jenkins said that she will run for the seat next year if Martinez selects her. She also said she might run if the governor doesn’t chose her, as long as she has “the support of the community.” In District 50, Democrats outnumber Republicans with about 46 percent of registered voters to 33 percent as of Sept. 30, according to the Secretary of State’s Office. Easley in 2012 won the seat with nearly 56 percent of the vote. More than half the votes cast in the district last

Please see seaRcH, Page C-3

Please see RePLace, Page C-4

A Santa Fe police SWAT team member walks back to his car Tuesday after officers found that Robert Pacheco, 32, was not hiding in the home at 2083 Calle Ensenada. Pacheco is wanted on several armed robbery charges. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Man wanted on armed robbery charges not found in midtown home The New Mexican

T

he Santa Fe Police Department closed down a small midtown neighborhood Tuesday during an ultimately fruitless four-hour search for a man wanted on multiple armed robbery charges. Deputy Chief William Johnson said detectives spotted Robert Pacheco, 32, enter the home at 2083 Calle Ensenada at about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Police had obtained a warrant to search the house for Pacheco and firearms. Pacheco is wanted in connection to a Sept. 14

armed robbery of the Weck’s restaurant at 2000 Cerrillos Road. During the four-hour investigation, city police called in a negotiator in addition to the SWAT team, bomb squad, patrol units, firetrucks and an ambulance. Police evacuated several homes, and Santa Fe High School, Capshaw Middle School and De Vargas Middle School were put on “shelter in place,” meaning no one was allowed to enter or exit the schools. At about 2 p.m., police announced they sent in a bomb squad robot to survey the house, and about 15 minutes or so later, Johnson said the search had revealed that Pacheco wasn’t inside. Johnson said it’s unclear when Pacheco left the area, but he likely escaped in the period before officers were able to set up a perimeter. Johnson said that as of 5 p.m. Tuesday, police are still looking for Pacheco and that his apprehension is a “top priority.”

Installation of boilers at Chavez Center near completion Project prompted by ‘backfire’ at facility last month

From left, Shane McKinney, Tucker Piper and John Piper, all with Welch’s Boiler Services of Albuquerque, drag the new boiler for the kid’s pool to the boiler room at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center on Tuesday. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

type of a backfire,” Lisa Martinez, facilities division project manager, said Tuesday. An outside engineer brought in to evaluate the problem believes all the boilBy Daniel J. Chacón ers tried to start up at the The New Mexican same time, which rarely hapThe city is in the final stages pens, and there wasn’t enough gas pressure to service them of installing new boilers that all at once, Martinez said. heat three of the four pools at “It’s sort of similar to what the Genoveva Chavez Comhappens at home with a gas munity Center. stove. If it’s just kind of running The installation project was real low and then you turn it prompted by an incident in off and try to turn it on again, it the boiler room Sept. 12 that sort of goes, ‘poof.’ That’s probled to an evacuation of the ably the easiest way for me to building and even caused a describe it,” she said. ceiling tile in a nearby office The city found no evidence to break loose. of chemical or gas leaks or an “It appears to have been a explosion.

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

“At no time were any of the customers at the Chavez Center in any danger,” city spokeswoman Jodi McGinnis Porter said. The boiler that heats the hot tub has already been replaced. The city is in the process of replacing the boiler that heats the 50-meter lap pool with two, smaller boilers that are more energy efficient. The boiler for the leisure or kiddie pool will be replaced last because it’s being used to heat the 50-meter lap pool, which has remained open. The leisure pool has been closed since the incident. The hot tub reopened last week. The therapy pool, which is serviced by a separate boiler

room, was unaffected. “Our hope would be to have everything fully open and operational maybe by the end of this week,” Martinez said. The project, which cost about $86,000, includes “a few changes” to the gas piping to ensure there is enough gas pressure to match the design of the boilers, she said. Nearly 77,000 people used the pools last year. The number does not include people with memberships to the Chavez Center or who reserved a pool for a special event. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3086 or dchacon@ sfnewmexican.com.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

FUNERAL SERVICES & MEMORIALS

JANE BARBEROUSSE A longtime resident of Santa Fe, died unexpectedly October 26, 2013. Jane was born in Wichita Falls, TX on April 30, 1941 and was raised in Lubbock, TX. She graduated from Columbia College in Columbia, MO. After graduation she met her husband of fifty two years, Bob Barberousse. She ran a testing laboratory while Bob attended law school. After law school they moved to Santa Fe in 1967. In Santa Fe Jane worked at the old St. Vincent Hospital and for many years was seminar manager and event planner for the School of American Research. Jane was active in many social and civic organizations including the Santa Fe Garden Club, Opera Guild and Junior Welfare. She enjoyed gardening, was an avid bird watcher and loved her trips to Italy, Switzerland and Hawaii. She is survived by her loving husband, Bob, daughter Jennifer Brewer (Phil) and son Douglas Barberousse, brothers James Mead (Joan) and John Mead (Michelle). She is preceded in death by her father and mother Mack and Frances Mead. The family would like to thank the members of the Santa Fe Fire Department and the emergency room and the ICU doctors, nurses and technicians at Christus St. Vincent Hospital for the care and compassion they gave to our dear wife, mother and friend. A Mass of the Resurrection in celebration of the life of Jane Barberousse will be on Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 11:00 AM at The Church of the Holy Faith, 311 West Palace Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501. In lieu of flowers, please contribute to the Wild Life Center, P.O. Box 246, Espanola, NM 87532.

STANTON H. HIRSCH, 1923 ~ 2013 Retired Dentist, Social Figure, Arts Lover Well known Santa Fean, Stanton Harrington Hirsch, age 90, died at a Santa Fe, NM care facility, October 29, 2013 after several months of failing health. He was born in New York City October 23, 1923, the son of the late Charles and Rose Hirsch. His younger brother Don preceded him in death in 1994. Stan is survived by Leda T. Hirsch, Don’s widow, and niece Judy Hirsch; both live in Florida. Stan (he did not like to use the title Dr.), was educated in dentistry at the University of Louisville, KY and served as a military dentist at the end of WWII. He spent most of his professional career at Niantic, CT. He moved in 1971 to Santa Fe with his partner James Baird, a retired literary professor, who died in 1989. Stan was a lively social figure who attended and gave parties with style and enthusiasm. He was a supportive patron of the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, and Santa Fe Opera. Cremation and burial will be private. The family extends thanks to the staff at El Castillo; the medical team at PMS Hospice Care, and especially to his care givers and friends Gary Denmark and Patrick Christopher. Memorial tributes may be sent to Santa Fe Opera or Chamber Music Festival.

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

JULIO CHAVEZ

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

CHANDLER "LANI" KAHAWAI Chandler "Lani" Kahawai, age 52, of Santa Fe, NM, passed away after battling Esophageal Cancer on Sunday October 27, 2013. Lani was preceded in death by his mother, Eleanor Kahawai; brother, Charles Kahawai; brothers-in-laws, Paul (Tony) Nuanes, Steve Nuanes, and Steve Moya. He is survived by his loving wife of 19 years, Debbie; sons, Paul Lopez and wife Melissa, Chandler Kahawai, Joshua Kahawai and Jordan Kahawai; and daughter, Janelle Lopez; grandchildren, Shayla, Nylie, Xavier and Tayden. Lani is also survived by his father, Charles Kahawai of Hawaii; father-in-law, Paul R. Nuanes and wife Grace; siblings, Charlene Inouye and husband Yoshi, Carl Kahawai and wife Ahulani, Chanley Kahawai and wife Kelly; Anthony Moya and wife Patricia, Stanley Moya and wife Priscilla, Andrew Nuanes and wife Marina, Richard Nuanes, Arnold Moya; sister-in-laws, Marilyn Kahawai, Sylvia Nuanes, Lori Nuanes, Bea Nuanes and Anna Moya; Hawaiian sister Kalani Hawn and husband Bill; and many aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, and nephews; numerous friends; and colleagues who will miss him dearly. Lani was employed with United States Post Office. His hobbies included working out, spending time with family, and dancing hula. Condolence line will begin Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 12:30 p.m. followed by services starting at 1:00 p.m. at the Santa Fe Vineyard Christian Fellowship, 1352 San Juan Drive, Santa Fe, NM, 87505. Burial will be held Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. at the Santa Fe National Cemetery, 501 N. Guadalupe St, Santa Fe, NM, 87501. Reception will follow burial back at the Santa Fe Vineyard Christian Fellowship. In lieu of flowers, please send contributions to wife; Debbie Kahawai, 29 Calle Prado, Santa Fe, NM, 87507, to help defray funeral costs.

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

MARY E. ENCINIAS

9/28/1948 - 10/26/2013 Mary, our beloved daughter, mother, sister, grandmother, great grandmother and aunt has gone to be with our Lord. She passed away peacefully at home October 26, 2013, surrounded by her loving family. She is proceeded in death by her parents, Jose Ruben and Beatrice Corriz; brothers, baby Gilbert Corriz and Gil Corriz; nephews, Ivan And Justin Archuleta and Gerald Viarrial. She is survived by the father of her children, George Encinias; children, Michael and fiancé Carol, Virginia and husband Aaron; grandchildren: Michael, Renee, Tiffany, Derrick wife Rochelle, Alysha, and Lukas; great grandchildren, Aaliyah and Lane; sisters: Yolanda, Rosella husband Joseph, Ramona, Bernadette husband Ted, Carla and Lorraine King, Brothers Ruben, Frank wife Darline, George, Ernie, Pat wife Gloria,;and many nieces and nephews. Mary was loved by many. She had a special way of touching your heart. Her love for the Lord was evident by her big heart and bright spirit. Mary lived her life to the fullest. She loved to dance, cook and hang out at the casino with her sisters. Many went to her for advice she patiently listened and never judged. She loved to make everyone smile by telling jokes and singing. We were blessed to have her and will forever keep her in our hearts. Rosary- 7 pm Wednesday October 30, 2013 at the Historic San Isidro Catholic Church 3688 Agua Fria. Funeral Mass- 10 am Thursday October 31, 2012 at San Isidro Catholic Church 3522 Agua Fria.

85, of Santa Fe, passed away Saturday, October 26, 2013 surrounded by his loving family. He was the beloved husband of Rafaelita Larranaga Chavez. Born in Ojo De La Vaca, he was the son of the Late Julio Chavez and Juanita Rael. Mr. Chavez was a US Army Veteran serving in both the Korean War and in World War II, in the 240th Artillery, where he earned several metals including; The Purple Heart, Meritorious Service Medal and the Distinguished Service Medal. Before becoming a groundskeeper for the National Guard Armory in Santa Fe, and retiring after 31 years, he enjoyed hunting, woodwork, home projects, music and camping. He is survived by his loving wife, Rafaelita; his devoted children; Michael Chavez, Ben Chavez (De’Ann), Julio Chavez, Joanne Gianardi (Mark), Carmella Flores (Leonard) and Cathy Chavez. He is also survived by his cherished 13 grandchildren, 11 greatgrandchildren and numberous nieces and nephews. A visitation will be held on Wednesday, October 30, 2013 from 5 to 7 PM at Berardinelli Family Funeral Service. A Funeral Service will be held on Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 12:45 PM with burial to follow at Santa Fe National Cemetery. Serving as Pallbearers, grandsons; David Yardman, Ben Chavez, Jr., Doug Chavez, Craig Chavez, Jeff Chavez, Jeremy Chavez and Anthony Chavez.

RIVERA FAMILY MORTUARIES

TYRA ALLISON ULIBARRI

SANTA FE ~ ESPAÑOLA ~ TAOS Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Santa Fe (505)989-7032 Mary Baca, 77, Santa Fe, October 14, 2013 Robert Morris, 74, Santa Fe, October 16, 2013

Tyra Allison Ulibarri, 34 of Santa Fe passed away on October 20, 2013. She is preceded in death by her father, Robert (Bobby) Ulibarri, paternal grandparents, Gilbert and Margaret Ulibarri, Maternal grandparents, Antonio and Juanita Gurule, godfathers, Clyde C. Carter and Joe Maestas. Uncles, Robert, Leo, Rudy, Mario and Peter Gurule, and Patrick Catanach. She is survived by her mother, Joan (Gurule) Ulibarri, stepfather, Henry Garcia, stepsiblings, Mariah and John Garcia, godmothers, Martha Carter and Sofia Maestas. Aunts and uncles Gilbert and Paula Ulibarri, Tommy and Linda Medina, Cathy Catanach, David and Ricky Ulibarri, Joe and Tita Gurule, Carlos Gurule, James and Helen Letnicky and numerous other relatives. Special thanks to Community Options Caregivers for taking care of Tyra. Presbyterian Hospice Services for their wonderful care for Tyra in her final days. A special thanks to Laura Moore and the Critter and Me Staff. A Rosary will be recited at St. Anne’s Catholic Church on Wednesday, October 30, 2013 at 7:30 pm. Funeral Mass will be held at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi on Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 10:00 am. Interment will be at the Santa Fe National Cemetery following mass. Pallbearers will be Liz Carter, Carmella Carter, Jennifer Cintas, Krystyna Bernholdt, Steven Gurule and Christopher Catanach. Arrangements by Rivera Family Funeral Home (505) 753-2288. To share a memory, please visit our website at www.riverafuneralhome.com

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

EDWARD DELGADO 82, a resident of Española, passed away unexpectedly on Friday, October 25, 2013. He was preceded in death by his infant daughter, Dolores; parents, Eduardo S. and Josie Delgado; sisters, Betty Bustos and Agnes Gonzalez; in-laws, Juan and Ernestina Martinez; brothers-in-law, Frido Martinez, Juan F. Martinez and sister-in-law, Marie Martinez. Edward was retired from the New Mexico State Highway Department where he was District 5 Engineer. He served his country in the Korean War where he was wounded in action. Mr. Delgado is survived by his wife, Liria Martinez of San Pedro; sons, Danny Delgado and wife Anita of Albuquerque, John Delgado and wife Klara of San Pedro; daughter, Maria Teresa Mantelli and husband Tony of Albuquerque; grandchildren, Estevan and Gisella Delgado of Albuquerque, Christopher Delgado of San Pedro and Dominic and Gabriella Mantelli of Albuquerque and numerous other relative and friends. A memorial mass will be celebrated on Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 11:00 a.m. at La Iglesia de Santa Cruz de la Cañada. Burial to take place on Friday, November 1, 2013 at 9:45 a.m. at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. The family of Edward Delgado has entrusted their loved one to DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Española Valley. 505-747-7477 www.devargasfuneral.com

JULIO CHAVEZ Julio Chavez, 85, of Santa Fe, passed away Saturday, October 26, 2013 surrounded by his loving family. He was the beloved husband of Rafaelita Larranaga Chavez. Born in Ojo De La Vaca, he was the son of the Late Julio Chavez and Juanita Rael. Mr. Chavez was a US Army Veteran serving in both the Korean War and in World War II, in the 240th Artillery, where he earned several metals including; The Purple Heart, Meritorious Service Medal and the Distinguished Service Medal. Before becoming a groundskeeper for the National Guard Armory in Santa Fe, and retiring after 31 years, he enjoyed hunting, woodwork, home projects, music and camping. He is survived by his loving wife, Rafaelita; his devoted children; Michael Chavez, Ben Chavez (De’Ann), Julio Chavez, Joanne Gianardi (Mark), Carmella Flores (Leonard) and Cathy Chavez. He is also survived by his cherished 13 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. A visitation will be held on Wednesday, October 30, 2013 from 5:00 to 7:00 PM at Berardinelli Family Funeral Service. A Funeral Service will be held on Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 12:45 PM at Berardinelli Family Funeral Service with burial to follow at Santa Fe National Cemetery. Serving as Pallbearers, grandsons; David Yardman, Ben Chavez, Jr., Doug Chavez, Craig Chavez, Jeff Chavez, Jeremy Chavez and Anthony Chavez.

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

Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican

William Bluffton, 2013

Ruddell, SC, October

70, 19,

Mary Ann Caldwell, 66, Santa Fe, October 20, 2013 Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Taos (575)758-3841 Susan Bachrach, 79, Taos, October 21, 2013 Gary Cisneros, 46, Questa, October 21, 2013 Jeanelle Livingston, October 22, 2013 Fred Quintana, 52, Llano de San Juan, October 22, 2013 Lucinda "Lucy" Anglada, 85, Canon, October 23, 2013 Rivera Family Funeral Home ~ Espanola (505)753-2288 Tyra A. Ulibarri, 34, Santa Fe, October 20, 2013 Leo Perry, 88, Santa Fe, October 21, 2013 Joe Naga Barela, Santa Fe, October 23, 2013

TINA MCDUFF

Tina McDuff, 92, beloved wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandma, was called to her eternal resting home in Heaven on Tuesday, October 22, 2013. She is survived by her loving husband of 63 years, Gerald McDuff, daughter Maria Mcduff-Baldwin, son Don McDuff and daughter Louella Martinez, 7 grand daughters; Christina Enriquez (Pete), Roberta Roybal (Jeremy), Kimberly Wheelan, Crucita White, Lynette Gonzales, Angela and Stephanie Mcduff. 12 great grand children, brother John B. Catanach (Rebecca), sisterin-law Amelia Catanach, nieces, nephews and many relatives. Tina is preceded in death by her father Leo D. Catanach and brother Alfredo Catanach. Tina and Gerald were married in 1950, making Santa Fe their home. Tina had various occupations, retiring from the State of New mexico after 26 years. When Tina was still healthy, she was a member of the Carmelite Nuns, Catholic Daughters, Union Protectiva, Cristo Rey Alter Society and she was an Euchristic Minister. Tina enjoyed spending time with her family, going camping, watching the spanish novelas and going to the casinos. She will be greatly missed by all who knew and loved her. Cremation has taken place. A Rosary will be held on Tuesday, November 5th, 2013 at San Isidro Church on Agua Fria at 10:00 a.m., Mass at 11:00 a.m. and a celebration of Tina’s life will follow mass at the La Cienega Community Center. Special thanks to the Hospice team of nurses who made mom’s last days bearable.

986-3000


LOCAL & REGION

Funeral services and memorials EVA LOPEZ DE LARRAGOITE (1920-2013) After 93 years of laughter and love, Eva Lopez de Larragoite has gone to her rest. Eva was a dynamic, creative, independent woman who was a special presence in many lives. Eva was a talented artist, award winning gardener, craftswoman, folk musician, Senior Olympian, champion speller, and enthusiastic line dancer. She had many good friends from the years she lived on Hano Road in the Casa Alegre neighborhood, as a member of La Sociedad de Folklorica, and from the Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center. Born to Genaro and Domitila (Tila) Martin Lopez in Carlsbad, New Mexico, Eva’s family moved to Agua Fria Street in Santa Fe when she was a child, and then to Franklin Avenue where she grew up with her sisters Lena, Helen, and Virginia. She married Alfonso Larragoite in 1937, and they had three children, Alfonso Jr., Jeanette, and Patricio. Eva received honors and awards for her community service and activities, including Zonta Club’s 1995 Woman of the Year, and the 1993 Prime Time Expo VIII Circles of Excellence Award for volunteer lifetime achievements, which included: president of the Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Council, member of the St. John’s Catholic Church Altar Society, member of the Historic Santa Fe Foundation, counselor with the Benevolent Patriotic Order of Does, docent at the Santuario de Guadalupe, volunteer for the American Cancer Society, and as a member of the Que Suave Kitchen Band. Additionally, Eva won awards for her roses and flower gardens from the Santa Fe Rose Society and Casa Alegre Garden Club. She developed the rose garden at the Harvey Cornell Park on Cordova Road, and was presented the Jardin de Eva rose garden at the Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center. Eva was also a Santa Fe County Fair and New Mexico State Fair prize winner for her needlework and paintings, including oils and retablos. She was a guest storyteller for Friends of Open Hands, appearing with the well-known artist Pablita Velarde, and was a co-author of "1990 Cuentos: Telling Our Stories", writings by Santa Fe Elders published by Open Hands. Eva was also proud of the time she spent working at the Maytag Mansion, and delighted in setting a perfect, formal dining table. In her later years, Eva and Alfonso moved to the historic Larragoite home at 803 Agua Fria Street, which she helped restore, proudly maintained, and where she took great pleasure in hosting various social events. Her dream was to open an arts and crafts studio in the space where the Larragoite Store once operated. During Eva’s last days, her sons Patricio and Alfonso Jr., kept vigil night and day at her bedside. Also in dedicated daily attendance were her husband, her daughter, her daughter-in-law Loretta, granddaughter Teresa, and namesake, great-granddaughter Eva. "Mama Eva" was greatly loved by her grandchildren Teresa, Stephen, and Carlos, step-grandson Matt, and great-grandchildren Diana, Eva, Cruz and Clio. She was a loving sister to Helen Perry and John Mac Lopez, beloved aunt to many nieces and nephews, and beloved mother-in-law and sister-inlaw. Eva’s infectious laughter and zest for life will remain with all those who loved her. Service arrangements are pending.

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

MARY ELIZABETH STRAWN Born October 17, 1923 and reared in Jacksonville, Illinois, died peacefully at home October 28, 2013 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Beth married Robert Strawn, now deceased, in her home in Jacksonville Illinois, May 3, 1944. In 1954 Beth moved with her family to Denver, Colorado. After living in Colorado for 27 years, Beth and Bob moved to Santa Fe. Beth was known by her friends to be an avid and knowledgeable bridge player, voracious reader, accomplished knitter, enthusiastic golfer and traveled extensively throughout the world. She is survived by two sons, David, (Deborah) of Manitou Springs, Colorado; Mark, (Kathy) of Springfield, Illinois; as well as grandchildren Megan Strawn, Jake Strawn, (Katie), and Lindsay Strawn. Sister Helen Kohr and brother Robert Robinson, along with numerous nieces and nephews and their children, and her loving companion Dorset Sanford also survive. Interment will be with husband Bob at Arlington National Cemetery at a later date.

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

JOSE TITO DURAN 72, of Chupadero, NM passed away October 27, 2013. He was born to Rosalia and Patricio Duran whom have preceded him in death. Also preceding him in death his wife, Martha, brothers, Lino and Aniceto Duran, sisters, Rosalia "Rosie" Jimenez, Sara "Sarita" Trujillo, son, Raymond "Wedo" Duran. He is survived by his son, Robert "Bobby" Duran, daughters, Judy Vanchaik, Rosa "Rose" McBride (Gary), Isabelle Duran (Roman Valdez), Angela Duran (Jorge Mata), grandsons, Patrick Duran, Marcos Vanchaik, Robert Houston, and Daniel Houston, granddaughters, Angelica Vanchaik, Martha Duran, Shantel Mata, Monique Valdez, Vangie Valdez, 6 great grandchildren as well as other family members, and friends. He was a very hard working man, always there to lend a helping hand, and true champion. He loved fishing, hiking, and the outdoors. He will be missed dearly. Special thanks to Heritage Hospice and a very special thanks to his niece, Edwina Gonzales. Visitation will be Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 6 p.m. at Rosario Chapel. Rosary will follow at 7 p.m. at Rosario Chapel. Mass of a Christian burial will be held Friday, November 1, 2013 at 10 a.m. at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church. Pallbearers will be: Patrick Duran, Marcos Vanchaik, Martha Duran, Joseph McBride, Gary McBride Jr., and Shantel Mata. Honorary Pallbearers will be: Robert Houston and Daniel Houston.

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

RICHARD MANUEL DURAN

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

search: Police believe suspect’s brother is involved in burglary Sept. 14. They believe Robert Pacheco used a handgun to about Pacheco returning to the force the manager to open the area. safe and, with an accomplice, Police believe that Pacheco’s stole an undisclosed amount brother, Thomas Pacheco, 34, of money before fleeing. The an employee of the Weck’s res- manager later told police that taurant, let Robert Pacheco and Thomas Pacheco had returned an unidentified other man into to the restaurant after closing to pick up something he had the restaurant after closing on

Continued from Page C-1

The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Burglars carried off a TV and an Xbox from a home in the 1100 block of Harrison Road between 7:45 and 9:45 a.m. Monday. u A purse containing a driver’s license and a Social Security card were taken from a car parked in the 1100 block of Maez Road between 2 and 2:30 p.m. Monday. u A thief grabbed a wallet, an iPod and two sports bags from an unlocked car in the 2800 block of Bellamah Drive between 1:30 and 6 a.m. Sunday. u A man in the 600 block of Velarde Street reported that his vehicle was stolen between 7 p.m. Sunday and 6 a.m. Monday. u A laptop computer worth $800 was taken from a vehicle parked in the 100 block of Park Avenue between 4:30 and 8 p.m. Monday. u Burglars hauled away a laptop computer and a 48- to 50-inch TV from a home in the 600 block of E. Barcelona Road between 4 and 5:45 p.m. Monday. u Someone stole $5,000, an iPod, a Luminox watch and some foreign currency from a home in the 2000 block of Avenida de las Alturas between noon Saturday and 6 p.m. Monday. u A Coach purse was taken from a car parked in the 1000 block of Marquez Place between 6:30 and 7:45 p.m. Monday. u A woman reported that she was parked at the Del Norte

Horse Liniment Erases Pain

MARY LOU COOK

HIALEAH, FL — An ingredient often used to treat inflammation in race horse legs, is now back on the market in its original doctor recommended clinical strength formula. According to a national drug store survey, the formula at one time became so popular that it rose to the top of pharmacy sales for topical pain relievers. But the company marketing the product at the time changed the formula and sales plummeted. One of the inventors of the original formula has brought it back to the market under the trade name ARTH ARREST and says it can relieve pain for millions. ARTH ARREST works by a dual mechanism whereby one ingredient relieves pain immediately, while a second ingredient seeks out and destroys the pain messenger signal before it can be sent to the brain. Considered a medical miracle by some, the ARTH ARREST formula is useful in the treatment of painful disorders ranging from minor aches and pains to more serious conditions such as arthritis, bursitis, rheumatism, tendonitis, backache and more. ARTH ARREST is available in a convenient roll-on applicator at pharmacies without a prescription or call 1800-339-3301. Now available at: 877-581-1502

PAYNE’S N URSERIES Payne’s South 715 St. Michael’s 988-9626 Payne’s North 304 Camino Alire 988-8011 Fall Hours Mon-Sat 9-5

Mary Lou Cook, 95, of Santa Fe, passed away peacefully on October 7, 2013. Mary Lou Cook lived a life full of miracles, love & creativity. A Memorial Service will be held at the St. Francis Auditorium, 107 W. Palace Ave, Santa Fe, on October 30, 2013 at 11:00 a.m.

allegedly forgotten. Thomas Pacheco was arrested on robbery and other charges. Police have been actively searching for Robert Pacheco since Saturday. Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.

Police notes

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Born on August 31, 1959, Richard M. Duran passed away on October 23, 2013. He is preceded in death by his father Alfonso Duran. He is survived by his daughter Jennifer Carmack, his mother Mary Duran, siblings: Rose Marie Duran, Sylvia and Edward Nickerson, Alfonso Duran, Sandra and Michael Mares, several nephews and nieces and other direct family members. May his soul rest in peace. A rosary will be recited at St. Anne’s Parish on Thursday October 31, 2013 at 9am. Mass will immediately follow. The burial will be at the Agua Fria Cementerio.

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Closed Sunday Payne’s Organic Soil Yard 6037 Agua Fria 424-0336 Mon-Fri 8 - 4 Closed Weekends

Credit Union, 403 W. Cordova Road, when a man entered her car and tried to steal the $100 she had withdrawn from an ATM at 3 p.m. Monday. She reported that she fought off the man and managed to hold onto a $20 bill. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A 42-inch TV was stolen from a home on Erica Road between 8 and 9 p.m. Sunday. u A woman reported that someone stole checks from her mother’s home on Shasta Lane on Oct. 11 and used them to buy about $100 worth of goods at a Giant gas station.

DWI arrest u Luis Marquez, 54, 1018 Calle Margarita, was arrested and booked on charges of drunken driving and failure to appear. County deputies reported they found him passed out in the Zia Center parking lot, 4600 block of Airport Road, at 1 a.m. Tuesday. He reportedly blew a .30 and .31 in Breathalyzer tests.

speed suVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following

locations for mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Gonzales Community School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on West Alameda Street at Cedar Street at other times; SUV No. 2 at E.J. Martinez Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on West San Mateo Drive between Galisteo Street and St. Francis Drive at other times; SUV No. 3 on Zia Road at Vo Tech Road.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)

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ObItuARy NOtICEs

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Obituaries can be purchased through a funeral home or by calling our classifieds department at 986-3000, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you need to place a death notice after business hours, please call The New Mexican newsroom at 986-3035.

Additional savings at both stores. www.paynes.com

Sale ends 11/2/13 and limited to stock on hand, while supplies last.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Plaza: Thunderbird had 1st Plaza balcony Continued from Page C-1 from the Plaza’s southwest corner from the Thunderbird Bar & Grill (formerly the Ore House) at 50 Lincoln Ave., which decades ago created the first balcony overlooking the Plaza in modern times. (Historic photographs show others during the late 1800s.) Renovations to Plaza Galeria approved by the design board include: u Replacing four historic windows on the second story’s north facade with doors of the same width that would provide access onto the extended roof. u Building a 589-square-foot addition on the second floor that would house an elevator, stairway and restrooms. u Replacing first-floor display cases and entry doors with new doors and windows, including two French doors for a new storefront to the west of the main entrance. u Using the roof of the portal

as a restaurant via lease agreement with the city and raising the parapet to 31/2 feet above the roof deck to meet city codes. Board member Karen Walker told Seres that umbrellas on the portal roof would disturb the facade of the Plaza Galeria. But the board agreed to approve the changes with the stipulations that the replacement doors would be made of wood and the elevator in the new addition would be moved back to where a restroom was previously planned. So far, Greer Enterprises hasn’t announced a date to begin the remodeling. The First National Bank of Santa Fe, 62 Lincoln Ave., built a new second-floor patio overlooking the Plaza’s west side for its executive offices during its recent remodel of the bank’s main office.

LOCAL & REGION

In brief Free well water testing in Pojoaque today The public can bring water from their wells for free testing from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Ohkay Casino Convention Center on N.M. 68. The New Mexico Environment Department, New Mexico Department of Health and the Ohkay Owingeh Wellness Center are offering the free water testing for residents of Ohkay Owingeh, Española, Alcalde and surrounding communities of Rio Arriba County. The testing is for people with private wells serving homes not connected to a public water utility. To collect a sample: u Use a clean glass or plastic container

that does not have a strong odor (at least a liter). u Collect the sample before any water treatment or filters such as reverse osmosis or water softener. u Let the water run a couple of minutes before collecting and collect the sample as close to the time of testing as possible. For more information, call 222-9574.

Reward offered for info on starving dog The Santa Fe animal shelter is offering a reward for information about the circumstances of a starving dog picked up in Pojoaque. The emaciated animal was found late Monday evening, Santa Fe County Animal Control officers said. The 2-year-old mixed breed canine weighs 49 pounds. An average dog of his size should weigh about 75 pounds. The

Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.

Santa Fe County

Replace: Jenkins a past library president Continued from Page C-1

shelter’s clinic team will work to regain the dog’s health through proper nutrition. Anyone with information about the dog is urged to call the shelter at 983-4309, ext. 139. The shelter is offering a $1,000 reward for information about the dog’s circumstances and the owner’s identity. The New Mexican

Estancia

El Centro

Galisteo

El Norte

Where

Edgewood Senior Center

Nancy Rodriguez Community Center

Galisteo Community Center

Benny J. Chavez Community Center

Address

114 Quail Trail, Edgewood

1 Prairie Dog Loop, Santa Fe

36 Avenida Vieja, Galisteo

354A Juan Median Medina Road, Chimayo

Date & Time

Tuesday, October 15 6:00 pm

Tuesday, October 22 6:00 pm

Wednesday, October 30 6:00 pm

Thursday, November 7 6:00 pm

The SLDC contains detailed regulations to guide future growth and development in the County in accordance with the Sustainable Growth Management Plan (SGMP) which was adopted in 2010. The webpage www.santafecountynm.gov/sldc provides an electronic copy of the October 2013 Sustainable Land Development Code Adoption Draft. Reference copies of the Sustainable Land Development Code Adoption Draft are available at all of the Satellite Offices and County Administrative Offices. Printed copies are available for $20 or compact disks (CD) are available by contacting Chrisann Romero at (505) 995-2717 or cnromero@santafecountynm.gov

career working for Merck & Co. between 1977 and 2004. Easley died unexpectedly in August in the middle of his first term.

6

Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.

VOLUNTEER

year came from Santa Fe County. Jenkins, who has lived in Santa Fe for eight years, is a past president of the Vista Grande Public Library in Eldorado. She worked as a information consultant between 2004 and 2007 and spent most of her

Sustainable Land Development Code Adoption Draft Public Meeting Schedule

The Santa Fe animal shelter is working to save a severely malnourished dog found this week. COURTESY IMAGE

Serve your Community, Make a Difference.

Contact Mike Jaffa, 505-992-3087, mjaffa@santafecountynm.gov www.santafecountyfire.org/fire/employmentvolunteer_opportunities_

Community Announcements, Workshops, Classes and Alternative Healing Services in Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico

The SanTa Fe RailyaRd CommuniTy CoRpoRaTion

will have its monthly Board of Directors' Meeting on Tuesday, November 5th 2013 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Southwest Conference Room at Christus St. Vincent's Regional Medical Center located at 455 St. Michael's Drive. The public, neighbors, tenants, and all interested persons are encouraged to attend. Agenda will be available 24 hours in advance of the meeting at the office at 332 Read Street (505-982-3373) and posted at www.sfrailyardcc.org http://www.sfrailyardcc.org/.

FRom GRieF To lauGhTeR. A free six week class for adults with disabilities, chronic illness or other challenges. Fridays, November 1 December 6 from 2:00 to 4:00 at New Vistas, 1205 Parkway Drive, Ste

A, Santa Fe, NM 87507. Talk about: Loss and positive coping strategies in a supportive environment. To register call Ken at New Vistas, 505-471-1001 ext. 118 or e-mail Ken at ksearby@newvistas.org.

GeRaRd'S houSe 2nd annual dia de loS mueRToS CelebRaTion and memoRializinG evenT, FREE

to the Community, Friday, November 1st, 4 - 6:30 at Gerard's House. Live music, dancing and art projects for kids! Free New Mexico style soups, desserts and hot cocoa. Bring a photo to place on the altar in remembrance of loved ones who have died, or write a message on our prayer wall. Gerard's House is your Santa Fe center for grieving kids, providing free grief support services to northern New Mexico families since 1997. Gerard's

House, 3204-C Mercantile Court, Call 424-1800 for more information.

C. G. Jung institute of Santa Fe - Open Public Forum

Friday, November 15th, 7-9pm, on “Cultural and Intrapsychic Reflections on Radicalization, Terror and Fundamentalism, based on The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid.” In this panel discussion, local Jungian analysts Donald Kalsched, Barry Williams, & Jacqueline West will show clips from the film and open a group conversation about this vexing and controversial topic. Attendees are encouraged to read Hamid’s short novel before the presentation. $10, 2 CEUs. At Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe. For information contact Jerome Bernstein, 505-989-3200. www.santafejung.org.

Call 986-3000 or email classad@sfnewmexican.com to place your Bulletin Board ad


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

TASTE

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Pasatiempo restaurant reviews: Wonder where you can find the best food in town? Find out how many chiles your favorite restaurant earned at www.santafenewmexican.com/pasatiempo/restaurants/reviews.

HALLOWEEN

Bone chilling

Santa Fe chefs take fear out of cooking with animal carcasses

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Cheese brooms, a veggie skeleton, marshmallow witches and acorn kisses. AKRON BEACON JOURNAL

Story by Carlos Andres López Photos by Jane Phillips

Treats to try at home

The New Mexican

S

ay the word pâté, and chef Rocky Durham is brought back to his earliest lesson in cooking with animal bones. The year was 1983, the place was La Frogerie in Santa Fe, and the savory paste made of minced duck and chicken livers was on the menu. As Durham remembers, the finicky French spread required a bone stock, and the process went from pleasant to shocking in a matter of moments. Case by case, bird by bird, he watched the chef butcher each duck, taking care to sever the necks, wings and feet with precision. As the carcasses quickly piled up, they were then unceremoniously tossed into large stock pots, he said. “It was gruesome,” Durham said. “When they asked if I wanted to try the stock, I said, ‘No way, I’m not eating a big brew of skeletons!’ ” More than three decades later, and with a countless number of stocks under his belt, Durham, who co-founded the Santa Fe Culinary Academy in 2012, is less squeamish when he uses bones to make stock. “Now I look back on that memory, and it’s just gorgeous — cases of ducks, gallons of stock.” Today, along with chef Tanya Story, Durham teaches the fundamentals of stock making to the academy’s inaugural class of professional students. Both instructors consider the process an essential technique for aspiring chefs and home cooks alike. The key to a successful stock, they say, is using the right bones and method. “For stocks, you need cartilaginous tissue,” Durham said, referring to collagen, a structural protein found in animal connective tissue that yields gelatin when boiled. “So any bone that has a joint is good for stock making. With chickens, you want the sternum bone, keel bone, back bone and even the feet.” For a rich stock with deep color, Durham recommends roasting the bones in a moderate oven until golden brown. He’ll then toss the bones in a large pot along with chopped

By Lisa Abraham

Akron Beacon Journal

Ordinarily, I don’t advocate playing with your food. But as often happens this time of year, I’ve been inundated with photos in magazines, emails, and of course, on the Facebook pages of friends and relatives, showing all the adorable things you can do with food to make it so crafty for holidays. “Look, you can turn an Oreo into a spider by sticking pretzel sticks in its cream filling!” Uh huh. This year, however, I decided to embrace the challenge. Here are my findings, which are most definitely not scientific. Chef Greg Menke of The Beestro prepares a stock on Tuesday. Menke said he makes about 25 gallons of stock daily, which he uses in a variety of soups.

carrots, onions and celery — the trio of aromatic vegetables commonly referred to as mirepoix in French cooking. Next, he’ll cover the bones and vegetables with water and simmer it for a few hours. For Durham’s palate, a stock with clarity is essential. To prevent a murky stock, he uses cold water to begin the steeping process, which coaxes more flavor out of the bones while keeping the liquid clear, he said. Chef Story, meanwhile, cautions students and home cooks to never boil stock. She said cooking the stock on a gentle simmer over a few hours will help produce a clearer product. “When the stock is boiled, the fat will emulsify into the liquid, and you’ll get a really unclear stock,” she said. After the stock has been simmered and carefully strained, Durham suggests reducing its volume by about 50 percent to concentrate

Chicken feet, necks and backs, above, give stocks a gelatinous consistency.

BasiC CHiCKen sToCK Courtesy Santa Fe Culinary Academy 2 chicken carcasses (or 2 chicken necks and backs) 2 medium yellow onions, large dice 2 medium carrots, large dice 4 ribs celery, large dice ½ cup fresh parsley stems 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns Cold water to cover Preparation: Blanch chicken carcasses in simmering water for 90 seconds. This will rid the bones of “loose proteins” that will cloud the stock. Add all the ingredients to a large stock

pot and cover with cold water. Bring to a simmer over medium heat, and then turn to a low simmer. Have the pot positioned just slightly off-center from the flame. This will cause the “scum” to form on one side of the pot. Skim the “scum” off with a spoon and discard. Cook stock for 2 to 2½ hours, and then strain into a large bucket. Return stock to the pot, bring to a simmer and reduce the volume by half. Pour reduced stock into small containers that can go into the freezer once cooled to room temperature. (Do not freeze large pots of stock. Stock is much more userfriendly if frozen in smaller, easier to thaw containers.)

its flavor. And to give the stock more versatility, he advises keeping its flavor neutral. “Some people when they’re making stocks, add thyme, ginger or chiles — that’s making soup,” he said. “With stocks, there shouldn’t be salt, and they should be kept very, very neutral, because they’re an ingredient.” Chef Greg Menke of The Beestro on Marcy Street agrees that good stock is usually free of salt, but he’s a firmer believer in adding fresh herbs to his stocks. “One thing I learned when was at the Inn at Little Washington [in Washington, Va.], was the fact that stocks need a good amount of herbs, especially stems,” said Menke, who sources herbs for his take-out bistro from a farm in Edgewood. For Menke, this time of year is all about stocks. Every morning, he begins his day at 4 a.m. by making stock in his commercial kitchen at the former Cloud Cliff Bakery on Second Street. “Stocks are the foundation of everything we do,” he said, “and they’re our building blocks for our soups.” Menke said his signature soups make up a majority of his business sales, and he credits his homemade stocks for setting his soups apart from others. To build those stocks, he turns to bones. “We buy a lot of primal cuts of meat, which gives us bone material.” Along with beef and ham bones, Menke also frequently uses chicken feet to make stock. “Chicken feet are fun,” he said. “They make stocks very gelatinous, and after the the stock is cooled, it’s hard like Jell-O, and it tastes like an aspic.” Menke said he makes about 25 gallons of stock daily, which he uses in a variety of soups, including most recently a butternut squash posole, beef bourguignon and a Portuguese bean soup, among others. He also makes a shellfish stock, as well as a slew of vegetable broths. And while Menke admits that it’s possible to buy a good store-bought stock or stock base, he insists his food, especially his soups, wouldn’t be the same without homemade stock. “Stocks are an important part of a kitchen serving the type of food we serve,” he said. Plus, he said making stock puts his bone and vegetables trimmings to good use. “Because we roast our own meat and peel and chop our own vegetables every day, we already have everything to make beautiful stocks. Everything is there, it’s just the matter throwing everything into a pot.” Durham, who said he regularly makes stock at homes, added, “Even if you got the ratio of carrots mixed up, it’s so much better than using a boxed stock. If you’re making soup or stew, you might as well use an ingredient that brings flavors to the table from the get-go.” Contact Carlos Andres López at clopez@ sfnewmexican.com.

Section editor: Carlos A. López, 986-3099, clopez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com

The acorn kiss This one looked easy enough. You take a Hershey’s Kiss, and using frosting as glue, top it with a miniature vanilla wafer, and then glue a chip (either peanut butter or butterscotch) on top to look like a stem. Once it’s done, it looks like an acorn. Now this is where you all should be saying, “Oh, isn’t that cute. How clever.” Yes, it is cute and clever. And this one’s not too hard either.

The veggie skeleton The idea here is to use cut vegetable sticks to form the shape of a skeleton. Use a bowl of dip for its head. Can’t picture it? Don’t worry. Just Google “veggie skeleton,” and you’ll get hundreds of images. Now I’m an expert at cutting vegetables, so I’ll rate this one easy-peasy. Using curved red pepper strips for the ribs really gives it a nice skeletal feel.

The marshmallow witch Whoever made up this little witch either was drinking or has a self-punishing personality. First put some coconut in a zipper bag with a few drops of green food coloring. Now toss that around until the coconut is dyed green. That’s step one. The next 10 steps only get more tedious and frustrating. Frost a marshmallow with white icing where the hair would be. Then roll the marshmallow in the coconut to attach the hair. Next, use some frosting to glue miniature chocolate chips onto the face of the marshmallow for the eyes and nose. By the time I got the frosting on the back of one of those tiny chips, it was starting to melt in my fingertips before I was able to attach it. This is the point where, I believe, the creator of this craft reached for her first gin and tonic. I got out the tweezers. Shouldn’t tweezers be reserved for important jobs like removing splinters and unwanted facial hair? Still, I soldiered on. Eyes in place, check. I set aside the witch to work on her hat. First take a plain chocolate cookie disk (like Nabisco’s Famous Wafers) and, using some frosting, glue a miniature Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, upside down, on top. Then glue a Hershey’s Kiss to the top of the peanut butter cup, creating the pointy top of the witch’s hat. This sounds easy enough, but rest assured, the cookies break, the icing glue spreads and leaks, and you may find yourself, as I did, consuming hundreds of extra calories in chocolate, because it seemed a shame to waste the ones that didn’t turn out. When the hat is dry, tint some of the frosting orange, then pipe it around the hat to form a decorative trim and to help secure the candy to the cookie. I admit, I cheated here. I purchased cake decorator frosting already tinted orange to make my trim. Once the hat is complete, use some frosting to attach the hat to the top of the marshmallow and voilà! Your witch is complete.

The cheese broom String cheese and a pretzel stick: How hard can that be? Just take a log of string cheese, cut it into three or four pieces, stick a pretzel stick in the end of one piece to form a broom handle then shred the cheese to look like the broom bristles. Take that, Martha Stewart.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sanTafenewmexiCan.Com


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

TRAVEL DETROIT CRIME TOUR TELLS AND SELLS MACABRE HISTORY

Park Service recommends national park for Chávez Sites in California, Arizona being considered for labor leader’s park By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press

Karin Risko, center, leads a tour group through a Detroit alley Oct. 18 during the Notorious 313 True Crime & Ghost Tour. The blackcaped woman guides more than two dozen people through downtown as night falls, spinning ghoulish and grisly tales grabbed from the city’s gritty history. CARLOS OSORIO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SINISTER STREETS By Jeff Karoub

The Associated Press

DETROIT — A black-caped woman with a lantern guides more than two dozen people through downtown Detroit as night falls, spinning ghoulish, grisly tales from the gritty city’s history. The visitors, including a woman from Denver and a couple from Bay City, some 90 miles north, take the theatrical attire and tales of murder, mayhem and mystery in stride on a recent evening. While none of the participants seemed perturbed, some Detroit residents say the tour is in poor taste. It’s been criticized as an attempt to capitalize on the crime that still plagues the Motor City, also derisively dubbed “Murder City.” Locals also say that the last thing they want is more bad publicity for a city that recently became the nation’s largest to file for bankruptcy and already draws tourists who gawk at its widespread blight. The “Notorious 313 True Crime & Ghost Tour” routinely sells out, drawing hordes that hoof it through the city’s slowly rebounding business district. With the excursion, Detroit joins a crime-tour club: London is “on the trail” of Jack the Ripper, New Orleans shows off its haunts, and Milwaukee has Jeffrey Dahmer tours — though the last has been protested by parents of murder victims who say operators profit from a serial killer’s murderous acts.

“Not to be weird or anything, but crime makes history, and people care about history,” said Nick Avila, who came from Bay City with Susan Stankiewicz to take the tour. Tour operator and guide Karin Risko aims to minimize exploitation of the macabre by avoiding stories ripped from recent headlines. Her tales range from the 1700s to the mid-1990s. The first stop is down the street on what Risko calls a “creepy corner.” Enthusiasts claim there’s a high level of paranormal activity, including ghost sightings. The spot was once home to the Wayne County Morgue, where there were allegations of unauthorized medical experiments on corpses, organ harvesting and body dismemberment in the 1970s. A murder occurred in 1994 across the street at a hotel, where authorities say Lowell Amos poisoned his wife, Roberta, with cocaine. And a fire in 1886 at the D.M. Ferry & Co. seed warehouse claimed the life of a firefighter, who fell 90 feet off a ladder. “A lot of people have seen an apparition of a fireman,” Risko said. “He looks human-like until he goes to turn around and there’s not a face.” The $25 tour includes the site of an 1895 explosion and fire that destroyed the former Detroit Journal building and killed dozens of people. The group also stops at the Buhl Building, where in 1982 Eve August was fatally shot in a law office where she worked as an intern. An insurance salesman named

Robert Harrington killed her and injured dozens of others with gunfire or the fire he set with gasoline. Jamie Grossman, who lives in suburban Royal Oak, loves what he’s learning. An unabashed Detroit fan, he says “every town and every city has their ups and downs” — and ghost stories help bring history to life. Still, Risko’s crime tour isn’t for everybody. She’s been criticized in local media and on social networking sites for cashing in on Detroit’s reputation. One critic is Julie Johnston, a Dearborn resident who went to school in Detroit and often visits the city. “When are we going to get to the point where we [stop being] the butt of the joke and we’re not a target?” said Johnston, who hasn’t taken the tour but says she had a visceral reaction when she learned about it. “I think it’s capitalizing on other people’s demise.” Tourist Catherine Wylie, a Denver resident visiting her mother in Michigan, sees it differently. “If people are doing a tour down here, then it’s obviously not so dangerous,” she says. Risko says the city’s persistent violent crime problems have been good for her business, but she says that she takes the critics’ concerns seriously. “Communities and cities much smaller than Detroit all over the country do some sort of a ghost or true-crime tour,” she says. “Detroit has a wonderful history, just like everyone else. For the longest time, we haven’t been telling it.”

LASTING IMAGES TIGER’S NAP TIME In July, Jane and Sanford Brickner of Santa Fe traveled to the Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation in Tampa, Fla., and took this photo of a sleeping Siberian tiger. COURTESY JANE BRICKNER

The National Park Service is recommending that Congress create a new historic park to honor farm labor leader César Chávez, one that would be made up of four sites in California and a former Phoenix church hall where the now-famous rallying cry Sí se puede was popularized. The recommendation Thursday comes after years of study on sites that are significant to the life of Chávez and the U.S. farm labor movement. Congress authorized the study in 2008, and the Park Service narrowed a list of about 100 sites to five to become a multistate national historic park. Marc Grossman, Chávez’s longtime spokesman, speech writer and personal aide, said including sites in Arizona and California is fitting because it recognizes the length and breadth of Chávez’s labors. As head of the United Farm Workers, the Arizonaborn Chávez staged a massive grape boycott and countless field strikes, and forced growers to sign contracts providing better pay and working conditions to the predominantly Latino farmworkers. He was credited with inspiring millions of other Latinos in their fight for more educational opportunities, better housing and more political power. United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta was at Chávez’s side in downtown Phoenix during a 1972 fast that helped reshape Arizona’s political landscape. Chávez and other UFW leaders had been talking about an Arizona law that restricted the rights of farmworkers to strike or boycott crops. The response from farm workers and other labor leaders was one of defeat. Huerta responded by saying that workers should focus on thinking positively, saying: Sí se puede, or “It can be done.” Ultimately, thousands of farm workers and supporters such as Coretta Scott King participated in rallies and Masses in downtown Phoenix, giving voice to the United Farm Workers slogan. The Santa Rita Center, constructed as an extension of the Sacred Heart Church, is a small building on an inner-city street near the airport. The Park Service’s recommendation is for the agency to work through agreements with local communities to educate the public not only on Chávez, the farm labor movement and its organizers, but the art and music associated with it, and contemporary struggles for human and labor rights, said Martha Crusius, the project manager on a study of sites significant to Chávez’s life. The other sites in California are: u Forty Acres National Historic Landmark in Delano, home to the union hall where grape growers signed their first union contracts after five years of grape strikes and boycotts. It’s also here that Chávez held his other public fast, this one to protest the use of pesticides. The building serves as a field office for the United Farm Workers of America. u Filipino Community Hall in Delano became a symbol of multiethnic unity during the 1960s, serving as a joint headquarters for farm labor movements led by Filipino organizer Larry Itliong and Chávez. u McDonnell Hall in San Jose is recognized as the place where Chávez made his start as a community organizer. u Nuestra Senora Reina de la Paz in Keene served as the planning and coordination center of the UFW starting in 1971. It’s where Chávez and many organizers lived, trained and strategized. Chávez taught farmworkers how to write contracts and negotiate with growers. President Barack Obama last year designated part of this 187-acre site, known more simply as “La Paz,” as the César E. Chávez National Monument. Convincing Congress to designate the five sites as a national historic park could be a tough sell.

In brief Dish, airline strike iPad 2 deal DALLAS — Southwest Airlines Co. says passengers on some routes can now borrow an iPad 2 at the airport to watch on-demand TV during the flight. It’s an expansion of a deal that the airline has with Dish satellite TV. Dish Network Corp. said Tuesday that the offer will apply to Southwest customers who are flying on WiFi-enabled planes between Chicago’s Midway Airport, Denver and Oakland, Calif. Dish and Southwest announced in July that passengers would be able to watch certain live TV networks on their own devices for free on most Southwest planes, with Dish picking up the tab for the promotion through the end of the year. Southwest had been charging $5 a day for a similar service.

Flame restored at JFK grave

Share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed twice a week as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.

Travel page information: Brian Barker, 986-3058, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

ARLINGTON, Va. — The eternal flame at the gravesite of former President John F. Kennedy has been restored at Arlington National Cemetery. On Tuesday, the cemetery transferred the flame from a temporary burner to the restored permanent eternal flame that is part of a memorial to the 35th president. Repairs began in April to replace components of the eternal flame’s burner. Contractors installed new gas and air lines, a new burner assembly and new drainage lines below the flame. The Associated Press

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SantafenewmexiCan.Com


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

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sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad call

986-3000 or Toll Free (800) 873-3362 or email us at: classad@sfnewmexican.com »real estate«

SANTA FE

Cozy Cottage

In Pecos area, 3 beds, 1 bath on 6 treed acres. Panoramic views of Pecos Wilderness. Horses ok. Shared well. $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001

SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

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

(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.

OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE 10/27, 10:00-1:00 , 3058 Plaza Blanca. Unique three bedroom, three bath home with Jemez Mountain views. 438-0701 by appointment.

STUNNING VIEWS! 5.8 acres

ELDORADO

3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, plus Den, 2 Fireplaces, 1920 Square Feet. Easy acces paved road, 2 car finished garage. New granite countertops in kitchen & baths. Kohler sinks & fixtures. Jennair gas cooktop. $294,500.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.

SANTA FE

Architect designed 3 Bedroom, 2.5 Baths, 2850 sq.ft., open floorplan, custom kitchen with kiva, radiant heat, brick floors, 18ft. high beamed ceilings! $659,000. Silverwater RE, 505-690-3075. www.silverwaternmrealestate. com

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

Now Showing Rancho Viejo Townhome $237,500

UNDER CONTRACT! NAVA ADE

New wood floors, high-end kitchen appliances, new blinds. 3 bedrooms, upstairs Master Suite, 2 baths, 20’ ceilings, vigas, fireplace. 1635 square feet. 2 car garage. $279,900.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818. 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.

ACALDE ADOBE Green and Irrigated, wood floors, brick fireplace, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car garage. Seperate Large workshop. Great Deal at $130,000. TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

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

988-5585

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

575-694-5444

FARMS & RANCHES

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000 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.

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000 OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395 PLEASE SEE PHOTOS ON PECOSRIVERCLIFFHOUSE.COM

OFFICE FOR SALE

LOTS & ACREAGE [2] CHIMAYO 1 acre lots, private, quiet, irrigation, views, adjacent to BLM, 1/2 mile from Santa Cruz River $95,000, 970-259-1544

RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000

MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com

»rentals«

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane. laundry facility on-site, balcony & patio, near Wal-mart. $625 monthly. ONE MONTH free rent, No application fees!! Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Ra n ch o Siringo Rd. Fenced yard, laundry facility on-site, separate dining room Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

2 Bedroom Apartmant off Agua Fria Behind Home Depot. Available Now! Call 505-603-4622 for details.

2 bedroom, non-smoker, no pets $600, $1200 deposit required. Appointment only. 505-471-2929 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. NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405

ATTRACTIVE, QUIET 1 BEDROOM.

Walk-in closet, carpet and tile floors, off-street parking. Camino Capitan, near city park, walking trails. $665 plus utilities & deposit. NO PETS. 505988-2057.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED ADOBE DUPLEX near railyard. Fireplace, skylights, oak floor, yard. $775 month to month. Incdludes gas and water. $625 deposit. 505-982-1513 or 505-967-6762.

Great in town office with reception, 5 private offices, conference room or 6th office, file room, break area, 2 baths & storage closet. Total remodel 7 years ago. Plenty of parking. Great views! $375,000. Owner/Broker. 505-690-4709

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane, washer & dryer hook-ups, near Wal-mart, single story complex. ONE MONTH free rent, No application fees!! Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Well water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.

426 ACRE Ranch with water rights. Adjacent to Tent Rocks National Monument. Call Bill Turner, (LIC. No. 13371) at 505-843-7643. PUEBLO STYLE, CUSTOM BUILT 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Drop dead Sangre views, minutes from the hospital. LOGIC REAL ESTATE 505-820-7000

FOR SALE. Old store and residence. Adobe 2 story, 2,700 sq.ft., on 1.048 acres. Ideal for B&B. On highway State Road 518, Cleveland, NM 87715. Owner financed at 3%. $96,000. Call, 575-387-2490 leave message.

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre

426 ACRE Ranch with declared water rights. Adjacent to Tent Rocks National Monument. Call 505-843-7643. (NMREC Lic. 13371)

ACT NOW

We lowered the price to $330,000 for this great semi-custom, gated home in Cienega. 1 acre with great views! Over 2,000 sq.ft. of well planned, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, study room, country kitchen and great living room area. You’ll love the tiled floors – beamed ceilings – 2 fireplaces – radiant heat and 2 car garage.

Near downtown, Quiet, complete 2 bedroom. Hilltop Views. Washer, Dryer. No pets or smoking. $895 monthly, utilities included. 505-9837408, 505-310-7408.

CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily

1804 San Felipe Circle, Beautiful midcentury multi generational Stamm Home, significant additions, upgrades, and remodeling. Must See to Believe. Main, Guest, 3,352 squ.ft., 4 bedroom, 3 bath, cul-de-sac lot on Acequia, 2 plus car garage, private well, incredible irrigated landscaping. $565,000. Sylvia, 505-577-6300.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED

OUT OF TOWN

CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

CHARMING 1 BEDROOM Compound. Private Patio. Lots of light. Carport, Laundry facilities. No pets. Non-smoking. $600 monthly, $600 deposit. (505)474-2827 CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 B A T H , new heater, upgraded appliances. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References needed. No Credit Check. Available November 1st. 505-470-5188 LARGE 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, kitchen, private patio, brick floors, quiet neighborhood. Driveway parking, Price negotiable. Small pet ok. 505603-8531

SOUTH CAPITOL NEIGHBORHOOD Charming 1 bedroom, spacious kitchen, beautiful vigas, hardwood floors, mudroom, portal, private parking. $695. Pet considered. 505898-4168

service«directory CALL 986-3000

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! CABINETRY

CLASSES

LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073

PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $35 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684

CHILDCARE

A+ Cleaning

CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT

Windows, carpets and offices. Own equipment. $18 an hour. BNS 505-920-4138.

Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS 505-316-6449.

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

FLORES & MENDOZA’S PROFESSIONAL MAINTENENCE. Home and Office cleaning. 15 years experience, references available, Licensed, bonded, insured. (505)7959062.

GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE

Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed and Insured. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072

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!

HANDYMAN

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

CLEANING

GREEN HEALTHY CLEAN. Chemical & Fragrance Free Products, or yours. Licensed & Insured. Meticulous. Excellent local references. Free estimates. 505-577-6069 Tree removal, yard Cleaning, haul trash, Help around your house. Call Daniel, 505-690-0580.

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.

CONSTRUCTION REMODELING. Our Specialty is Showers. Expert workmanship. License #58525 since 1982. Life-time Workmanship Warranty. 505-466-8383

FIREWOOD

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000 I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.

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

Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

WEGETRESULTS! CALL 986-3000

LANDSCAPING

PLASTERING

COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510

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

TRASH HAULING, Landscape clean up, tree cutting, anywhere in the city and surrounding areas. Call Gilbert, 505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ESTIMATES!

ROOFING

MASSAGE SWEDISH, HOT STONE, THAI AND DEEP TISSUE MASSAGE. Polarity Therapy. Chakra Balancing. Healing professional touch. $80 per session. 505-920-3193. LMT 7724

MOVERS Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881. PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.

PAINTING TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583

A.C.E. PLASTERING INC. Stucco, Interior, Exterior. Will fix it the way you want. Quality service, fair price, estimate. Alejandro, 505-795-1102

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. ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster and stucco. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

sfnm«classifieds APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

Available Now!

1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. $620-1bdrms $680-2bdrms $720-3bdrms Includes: Washer/Dryer and Gas Stove $0 Security Deposit (OAC )

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

15 minute application process

SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS

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.

505-471-8325

STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648

CONDOSTOWNHOMES 1 BEDROOM, 1 bath Los Arroyos. Section 8 accepted, pet ok. Washer, Dryer. $975, water, gas included. 505603-1111, 505-984-0011, stormymiller@msn.com.

DOS SANTOS, one bedroom, one bath, upper level, upgraded, reserve parking. $800 Western Equities, 505-982-4201

3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190 3 bedroom, 3/4 bath. Single car garage, quiet street, wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1200 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196.

GUESTHOUSES EASTSIDE WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936

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 $925 plus utilities DESIRABLE NAVA ADE COMMUNITY 3 bedroom, plus library, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, enclosed backyard, 2 wood burning fireplaces, $1800 plus STUNNING SOUTHSIDE HOME 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, vigas, open concept, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, beautifully landscaped backyard $1700 plus utilities DARLING 1 bedroom, 1 bath, walk in closet, close to park, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, $725 plus utilities

Furnished 1 Bedroom 1 Bath. Skylites, radiant heat, off-street parking, sunny & warm. Includes utilities, internet, TV. $1250. Available 11/1. 505-577-6300. PRIVATE QUIET, SOUTH SIDE CENTRAL LOCATION. Washer, dryer, small patio, tile floors, one bedroom, bathroom with walk-in shower living area and kitchen, private driveway, $800 monthly, includes utilities. 505795-0195 Sunny and inviting one bedroom furnished Tesuque guesthouse. Portal, vigas, saltillo tile, washer & dryer, no pets, no smoking, $1095 including utilities. 982-5292.

HOUSES FURNISHED

NEW SHARED OFFICE

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

NORTH SIDE CONDO 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, kiva fireplace, vigas, covered patio, washer, dryer, $950 plus water & electric. 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 COZY GUEST HOUSE 1 bedroom, 1 bath, enclosed private yard, fireplace, $675 plus utilities NEWLY RENOVATED CASITA 1 bedroom, 1 bath, quiet and secluded location, $495 plus utilities $800 HILLSIDE STREET. 1 BEDROOM. Great neighborhood. Walk to Plaza. Utilities included. Private patio. Clean. Off-street parking, Nonsmoking. No pets. Quiet Tenant Preferred! 505-685-4704 ARROYO HONDO (SF) award winning contemporary gated 4 acres. Bright, spacious 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, plus guest quarters - studio. $5000 monthly + utilities. 505-9860046

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.

CHARMING 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom. Quiet neighborhood. $1100 monthly plus utilities and deposit. Available November 1st. Please call 505-4735396 or 505-660-4289.

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

CHARMING NEIGHBORHOOD. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Wood stove, laminate & tile. $1300 first 6 months. www.enchantedcity.com 505-204-3309

TESUQUE GUEST HOUSE. Fully furnished, fireplace, washer, dryer. $1900. By appointment only. 505-660-3805, 505-982-8328.

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. EASTSIDE 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Fireplaces, garage, & storage, plus 1 bedroom, 1 bath guest house. $2700 plus utilities. By appointment only. 505-660-3805 EASTSIDE ADOBE. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, fireplace, hardwood floors, washer, dryer. Off-street parking $1600 monthly, some utilities included. 303-908-5250

Spotless, breathtaking views of the Pecos River Valley. Brand New Treetop House on 1 acre, deluxe 1 bedroom, granite, radiant and private. Non-Smoking. $1,300 for 1,200 squ.ft. 505-310-1829.

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 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

ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603

FOR RENT. Large backyard, detached 2 car garage, front yard, walled in, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Showing 11/1. Call 1-877-693-2276. LAS CAMPANAS Immaculate. Classic Santa Fe-style. Big views. 3 bedrooms, office, 3+ baths, 3 car garage. Large, private 3bedroom, guest house. Main house $5000 month or both for $6,500 month. Deposit and utilities. Pets negotiable. Call, 505 690 2728.

REDUCED PRICE FOR RENT OR SALE:

4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage; approximately 3200 sq.ft. enclosed yard, private cul-de-sac, mountain views. Beautiful house in Rancho Viejo. $2,000 + deposit + utilities. Call Quinn, 505-690-7861. NAVA ADE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Garage, all appliances. Fireplace, storage unit, Access to clubhouse (workout, pool). Low maintenance. 1500 sq.ft. $1400. 505-660-1264

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.

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

RANCHO MANANA stunning views off Tano Road; 3 bedroom 4 bath executive home; open plan; dramatic gourmet kitchen; available now $3200 per month. St. Clair Properties 505-955-1999, www.stclair-properties.com 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.

Be Seen & Read Your

L og o

ADMINISTRATIVE

Here

Now available in-column in The Classifieds from

2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE 1200 & 600 SQUARE FEET

800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

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

LOT FOR RENT

TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE

"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"

505-989-9133

VACANCY

1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH

Single & Double Wide Spaces

MANUFACTURED HOMES $600. 2 small bedrooms. Very clean, quiet, safe. Off Agua Fria. Has gas heating. Pay only electric. No pets. 505-473-0278 VEGAS VERDES # 5 2 . 3 BEDROOM, 1.75 BATHROOMS. Non-smoking, no pets. $850 monthly plus utilities. First month, $500 deposit. 505-471-5964

OFFICES 1000 SQUARE FOOT COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE, GALISTEO STREET . 4 offices, file room, reception. $1200 plus electric & gas. By appontment only. 505-660-3805, 505-690-5162.

Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.

ROOMMATE WANTED

»announcements« $450 INCLUDES UTILITIES, 200 SQ.FT ROOM. Shared bath & kitchen. Upstairs, fireplace, wet bar. No dogs. Month-to-month. $450 deposit. 505470-5877

Lots of light, off street parking, elevator. 500 sq feet, $700 a month. Utilities plus wifi included. Pomegranate Studios 535 Cerrillos Road at Paseo de Peralta (above Sage Bakehouse) Call 505-986-6164 or email: pomegranatesfnm@yahoo.com

Kingston Residence of Santa Fe has an opportunity for a Marketing professional to join our worldclass senior housing community. Position requires: *An Associates degree in business, Bachelors preferred, with a concentration in Marketing or Sales. and at least 2 years successful sales experience in a housing or senior care setting. *Proven track record on closing sales, meeting and consistently exceeding sales goals and quotas *Ability to identify and develop new leads, build relationships with community referral sources and represent the community in the senior service and support industry. *Outstanding organizational and computer skills, ability to maintain and develop Excel spreadsheet applications and compose correspondence using Microsoft Word. *Flexibility to get the job done Apply at: www.kingstonhealthcare.com 505-471-2400

CENTRALLY LOCATED ROOM. Private entrance, private bath. Partially furnished. Off-street parking. No pets. $500 utilities included. 602-481-2979. PRIVATE BEDROOM, BATH, LARGE TOWNHOUSE OFF SAWMILL. Nicely furnished. Near grocery store. Good closet space. $600 utilities included. 505-660-9376.

STORAGE SPACE

AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL

FOUND FOUND TUESDAY- Women’s bracelet. 300-block of Artist Road. May be valuable? Call 983-3282 and describe.

LOST

Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330 A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00 VACATION

Her name is Zelda. She is a female Black & Tan Calico-Tortoise Shell. She is shy but sweet. She went missing 10/22 in the morning in area of Pacheco & Siringo. $100 cash reward if found. 505-570-1138. "PRINCESS", A 19 lb female poodleterrier mix, white & black, matted long hair. Last seen near West Alameda, Via Veteranos and 599. Please call 438-8764 if you have seen her.

Two Camera SD cards, 8gb and 14gb card both in a sandwich ziplock bag with marker written on bag (I believe with months October - December written on it). May have dropped it at Sams Club, either inside or in parking lot. I have precious family photos, memories are dear to my heart. If found please call 505-3100822 or 505-455-7517.

2 OFFICES WITH FULL BATH & KITCHENETTE. Excellent signage & parking. 109 St. Francis Drive, Unit #2. $650 monthly plus utilities. 505-988-1129, 505-6901122. $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

MARKETING DIRECTOR

SENA PLAZA Office Space Available

TESUQUE, 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath on horse property, wood stove, no dogs, horses possible. $800 monthly plus electric. 505-983-8042

»jobs«

Arroyo Hondo Studio 4 acre compound. 1,000 ft, with loft. Overhead door, views, quiet, W/D. $600, monthly, plus utilties. 505-670-7958.

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

BEAUTIFUL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT

AFFORDABLE LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA

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.

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.

LIVE IN STUDIOS

RANCHO SANTOS, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pretty unit, 2nd story, 1 car garage. $1000. Western Equities, 505-982-4201.

OFFICES

$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

3 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Recently remodeled, new carpets, new tile. Quiet neighborhood. $980 plus deposit. 505-471-3907, 505-930-3907. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage. Upscale 2,300 sq. foot south side home. $1800 plus utilities. 505-6033821.

986-3000

CENTRAL LOCATION. Professional bookkeeper will share 2-story office complex on St. Francis Drive. Plenty of parking and amenities. $ 5 0 0 MONTHLY. 505-983-9265

2BR, 1BA, Adobe House in scenic Chimayo. Minutes from El Santuario. Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator, $700 monthly + Utilities, No smoking. References required. 505-662-3927.

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

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

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

$1,750 monthly. House with guest house with 2 car garage in Jaconita. Main: 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 Kiva fireplaces, 2-3ft Adobe plaster walls, brick floors, flagstone counter tops, aircon, washer & dryer. Guest house(studio): kitchen, bath, fireplace. Utilities not included. Sublet in past for $600. $1,750 deposit. Pets OK with deposit. Call: 303-359-8334. 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

2029 CALLE LORCA Call for appointment

to place your ad, call

PUBLIC NOTICES BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 1 BEDR O O M GUESTHOUSE. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Close to town. Pets on approval. $ 1 , 3 5 0 month. 505-699-6161.

WAREHOUSES 1500 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE

$900 monthly. Bathroom, skylights, large office, 12’ ceilings. 1364 Rufina Circle. Sharp, Clean. Available NOW. 505-480-3432.

A special, one-night, home-based business galeria-sharing their wares! Includes drawings every 15 minutes, refreshments, and caroling fun!,entry fee: a donation to operation christmas child shoe box: small non-war related toy, grooming item, or school supply for a child in a wartorn or disaster struck country. Businesses represented: accessories, women’s clothing, cosmetics, supplements and fitness nutrition, culinary items, childrens books, photography, purses, home decor, jewelry, and chocolate!

PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTOR

Kingston Residence of Santa Fe has an opportunity for a public relations professional to join our world-class senior housing community. Position requires: *An Bachelor’s degree in marketing or public relations and at least 2 years successful experience in a public relations role within the community. *Proven ability to develop relationships and actively represent the company within the community. *Experience managing media partners and implementing communication strategies. *Outstanding organizational and communication skills. Strong written communication skills and experience with development of promotional plans. *Proven track record of involvement in community boards and organizations. Apply at: www.kingstonhealthcare.com 505-471-2400

Sell Your Stuff!

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

986-3000

SUPERSTAR WANTED Don’t Even Email Unless You Are A Truly Awesome Salesperson With Bookeeping & Front Desk Experience. The Taos News is searching for a unique combination of sales and bookeeping- front desk experience. If you believe you are best and can prove it, EMAIL US TODAY! Full-Time Position 70% Sales & 30% Bookkeeping & Front Desk Medical & Dental Package & 401K Experience in selling, cash handling, balancing, etc. EMAIL RESUME TO: business@taosnews.com


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds ADMINISTRATIVE Water Resources Coordinator Assistant The Water Resources Coordinator Assistant provides technical research, analysis, data collection, monitoring and project management support to the Water Bank Program, water resource management and planning and research projects; and performs and, or assists with the professional and technical coordination and support of hydrologic, environmental and permit compliance. The City of Santa Fe offers competitive compensation and a generous benefit package including excellent retirement program, medical, dental, life insurance, paid holidays, generous vacation and sick leave. For detailed information on this position or to obtain an application, visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. Position closes 11/7/13

Have a product or service to offer?

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

CONSTRUCTION

Plans Examiner Coordinator

Performs professional and technical duties related to the examination and coordination of residential and commercial construction permit plans for compliance with building, electrical, mechanical and plumbing codes. The City of Santa Fe offers competitive compensation and a generous benefit package including excellent retirement program, medical/dental/life insurance. Visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. Closes 11/5/13.

DOMESTIC JOBS

DOG LOVER TO CLEAN HOUSE AND LIVE ON PROPERTY Call, 505-660-6440. Retired Lawyer needs experienced, intelligent, and healthy housekeeper for 3 hours per day, 2 days per week at $16 an hour. Send resume to: 221 Sereno Drive, Santa Fe, NM 87501

DRIVERS INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR Drivers needed. Full and part time scheduled routes available now. Metro and rural routes available now. Excellent settlement reimbursement. Must have own reliable vehicle. Call DMC Logistics 888-202-5388.

MEDICAL DENTAL

EDUCATION COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS o f New Mexico (CISNM) is seeking full-time

PRIVATE HOME SCHOOL TEACHER wanted for 7 year old student ASAP. Must be Energetic, fun, and motivated. Teaching experience, certification, and references required. Fax resume: 505-819-5849.

GALLERIES PART TIME PHOTOGRAPHER: Need part-time gallery assistant who can create publication ready photography files and who will also unpack artwork. Skills should include MacIntosh and PCs, Adobe Photoshop, and Outlook. Send resume to info@altermann.com.

PCA, Caregiver $11 hourly, LPN $25 hourly, RN $32 hourly. Call 866-902-7187 Ext. 350 or apply at: procasemanagement.com 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, eyecatching pages and graphics; and keep our website up-to-date and looking sharp. We’re seeking candidates with at least two years of experience in editing and design. Email your cover letter, résumé and five best design clips to Presentation Editor Brian Barker at bbarker@sfnewmexican.com.

»merchandise«

GREY TRADITIONAL Justin Western Boots. Size 5 1/2 Medium. $40, 505954-1144

COLLECTIBLES Approximately 90 Reader’s Digest condensed hard back books. Great condition. $60. 505-690-6050. BOOK COLLECTION: First editions, Fiction to non-fiction. $3 and up. 505474-9020

ANTIQUES 1880’S CANVAS Stagecoach $95, 505-995-0341.

Trunk.

EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER for Elderly Gentleman in Santa Fe; 2 Days a week. Please email resume to stampdood@cnsp.com.

WANTED! Old Joseph Murphy horse drawn wagon or buggy. Please call Tom at, 800-959-5782.

MEDICAL DENTAL

ART

Santa Fe Animal Shelter.Adopt. Volunteer. Love. 983-4309 ext. 610

We Always Get Results!

Call our helpful Ad-Visors Today!

JEWELRY AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $90. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.

Classy Black PELLET BUCKET for pellet stove. Great for other uses as well. $20, 505-954-1144.

FURNITURE

OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT HP PRINTER. Deskjet D4160. Works great. $20. 505-231-9133.

NEVER BEEN USED 48" sandwich prep table, with under counter refrigeration. 3 year compressor warranty. $1,600 OBO. 505-852-0017

ATLAS snow shoes. Small size. 17" long by 6.5" wide. Great shape. $45. 505-474-9020

SOUTH SEAS PEARL BRACELET. Lovely, green, South Seas pearl bracelet with 14K links, toggle clasp. Very wearable. Perfect for that special someone. Call 505-920-4420.

KIDS STUFF GRACO CARSEAT for baby boy, brown, brand new. $50 Breastpump, $50. 505-473-5920.

Summer video monitor set $90; graco infant carseat & base $30, packnplay $30; whistle n’ wink wildflowers bumper & cribskirt $50; toys $20, baby girl dresses & clothing $20. 575208-8773.

AUTHENTIC BRONCOS JERSEY, size 52, $100, OBO. 505-819-9712, 505-4691373.

HAND push Golf Cart, $30. 505-9541144

TV RADIO STEREO 36" Toshiba tube TV, excellent condition. $35. Please call, 505-438-0465. PANASONIC HOME Theatre, 1,ooo watts, 5.1 surround, blueray, HDMI, amp. $100, OBO. 505-819-9712, 505469-1373. SONY 10" Woofer speakers. 3’Hx12"W. Like new condition! $80 OBO. 505-204-1888.

»animals«

40’S GRANITE wear top Table, $75 505-995-0341. BLACK 4 piece living room set. Sofa, loveseat, ottoman, and chair. $800. 505-438-4428 or 505-231-5029.

STAINED GLASS. Contemporary design, multi-color. 49"x10.75". $45. 505-474-9020

BLACK TV S T A N D with shelf $30, Please call 505-438-0465.

FRAMES, ALL SIZES. Whole Collection, Reasonable. $4 - $25. 505-4749020.

1972 HOWARD - by Baldwin, Upright Piano, great condition. Stool included. $400. 505-983-4618

BRUNSWICK 7’ slate pool table, in great condition. $400. 505-930-1862

ORIGINAL ART work by Assia Popoff. email for more details and pictures. dogeyesllc@gmail.com.

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES

1921 MASON and Hamlin, Model A, 5.8" Baby Grand, wonderful condition. Please call for an appointment. 505-984-9849

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

MISCELLANEOUS

CARVED ST. Francis, $100. 505-9824926

make it better.

WERE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

A-1 FIREWOOD INC. Seasoned Cedar, Pinon, Juniper; 1 cord, $260 2 cords, $250 3 cords $245 4 or more $240 Cedar, Pinon, Oak; $375 Oak and Hickory; $450 Each Delivered 505-242-8181 All CC accepted.

IN HOME CARE

Santa Fe Animal Shelt 983-4309 ext. 610

NICE DROP leaf stenciled Table, $75 505-995-0341.

FIREWOOD-FUEL

Life is good ...

pets

ELLIOTT LUCCA leather shoulder bag. Gorgeous! Silver & gold with braided tassels. Brand new! $80. 505-4749020.

SHAWN’S CHIMNEY SWEEP Accepting applications for Chimney cleaning and installers.Clean driving record, Experience a plus. 505-474-5857.

VINTAGE SLED, original finishes. Paris Champion. $50, 505-954-1144

pets

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

986-3000

Painted Kachinas on Canvas, $100. 505-982-4926

Interviewing for Class B CDL Deliver Drivers for our Santa Fe branch If you are looking for a great career opportunity with benefits stop by and talk to us! ABC Supply Co. 2710 Sawmill Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 EOE/Drug Free

HANDCARVED WOODEN Eagle Sculpture. 5’ tall x 3’ wide. $4,500, OBO. Call for details, 505-818-2948.

BOY’S DOCKERS, Khaki pants. Brand New. Size 30"x30". $10, 505-954-1144

TRADES

Sell your car in a hurry!

Full time positions available in conjunction with our Memory Care facility opening and our Health Center expansion -- RNs, LPNs, CNAs, Housekeepers. Experience with dementia and/or Alzheimer’s a plus. All shifts available. Wonderful work environment with great medical and retirement benefits. Email resume to: humanresources@elcnm.com or fax to 505-983-3828

GREAT DISPLAY Pueblo Ladder, $45. 505-995-0341.

A-1 LANDSCAPING MATERIALS #1, 9 foot Railroad Ties, $13.50. #2, 8 foot Railroad Ties, $8 . #3, 8 foot Railroad Ties $6.75. Delivery Available, 505-242-8181 All CC accepted.

COMPUTERS

Applicants my apply on-line at www.santaclaran.com

HEALTH CENTER POSITIONS:

MISCELLANEOUS

24"X 24" cream porcelain tiles. Asking $2.25 per sq.ft. Paid $5 per sq.ft., Call 505-231-9133.

TILES. 40, 4"x4"; 24, 6"x1"; 16 talavera 3"x3". $18 OBO. 505-9821010.

The Santa Claran Casino Hotel is hiring Food & Beverage managers and line cooks. Pay DOE.

Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

FURNITURE

CLOTHING

DOMINO’S PIZZA HIRING ALL POSITIONS. Part-time, evenings, w e e k e n d s . Must be 18 for all positions & have own car with insurance to drive. Apply at 3530 Zafarano.

Driver’s License, background check required. Email resume to nhoefner@asrlodging.com or deliver to Front Desk.

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

BUILDING M A T E R I A L S Gre en House, Flea Market kits, Landscaping, Fencing, Vehicles, Trailer. Contact Michael at 505-920-4411 or Jackalope 505-471-8539.

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

HOSPITALITY

FORT MARCY SUITES HIRING MAINTENANCE TECH .

986-3000

BUILDING MATERIALS

P C M is hiring PCAs, Caregivers (FT & PT Hours), LPNs, RNs, for in-home care in the Santa FE, NM area.

SITE COORDINATORS

to help redress student dropout in Santa Fe Public Schools through the nationally-recognized Communities In Schools integrated student services framework. Working in partnership with a school principal, the CISNM Site Coordinator is responsible for the overall planning and management of CISNM operations at their assigned CISNM school site. Bilingual Spanish/English Required. Experience working with children and or youth in an educational setting, strong interpersonal and organization skills are essential. Education requirements: Bachelor’s degree and demonstrated relevant equivalent experience in education, social work or related field. Please submit cover letter, resume and 3 references to johnsona@cisnewmexico.org by Friday, October 18, 2013

to place your ad, call

D-3

HAND PAINTED GIRLS Bedroom Furniture. Bed, desk, armoir, dresser, chair, dolls. $1,500. Call Helen, 505989-3277. PILLOW TOP Twin Mattress, no box spring. Doctor’s choice. good condition. $40, 505-819-8447.

PINE PATIO Chair, $90, 505-982-4926.

DECORATIVE METAL Christmas Sled, $35 505-995-0341. Electric Oil heater $55. Artist professional adjustable table top wood easel New, $95. Plate glass mirror 22 x 28, 24 x 36, Both $47. Marble slab, 26 1/2 x 27, $80. Cochiti drum, 2 sided, 15h x 12.5d good condition $50

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES ALFALFA GRASS Mix bales. $11 each Bale. Barn stored Ribera, NM. 505-473-5300.


D-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

sfnm«classifieds FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

PETS SUPPLIES

to place your ad, call

»cars & trucks«

986-3000

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

DOMESTIC

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

SUBARU IMPREZA WRX Turbo AWD 2013 This car is still new. Only 6000 miles, $26,500.00 OBO. 505-455-2177

2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 LAND Rover Range Rover Sport HSE SUV Certified Pre-Owned. Climate Comfort Package, Satellite and HD Radio, and Anigre Wood. 30,296 miles. One owner. Showroom Condition! $52,995. Call 505-474-0888.

CLEAN BERMUDA 3 twine 90 pound bales at $15 per bale including delivery. By truckload of 512 only. Call Pete at 623-251-8018.

HORSES

CLASSIC CARS

THEODORE THE Mustang yearling. 14 hands, halter broke, great kids horse. BLM Adoption, $125. Will Deliver. 505-419-9754 John.

4X4s

Meg is an 8 week old chihuahua puppy who wants a home that will dress her like a princess!

LIVESTOCK

1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339

PUPPPIES & KITTENS GALORE! The Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s Mobile Adoption Team is bringing dozens of kittens and puppies to PetSmart Saturday for a Kitten & Puppy Palooza, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Regular adoptions will be at the Zafarano Drive store on Sunday, noon-4 p.m. www.sfhumanesociety.org

2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.

2002 BMW 540i. Amazing 45k miles! another 1-owner Lexus trade! clean CarFax, excellent condition $13,931. Call 505-216-3800.

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.

Gavin is a 9 week old buff tabby whose personal ad reads, "Have cat toys, will travel." For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505753-8662 or visit their website at www.evalleyshelter.org

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

1956 FORD Custom Cab, big window, new rims, white wall tires and leather interior, front suspension from and drive train from 1980 olds. $19,000 obo. 505-699-9100

Toy Box Too Full?

CAR STORAGE FACILITY

2011 HONDA CIVIC COUPE One owner, no accidents, 28k miles, automatic, factory warranty. Silver with grey interior, nonsmoker. Below Blue Book $13995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com 1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $16,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039

2008 Land Rover LR3 V8 SE SUV Cold Climate Package, Bluetooth Sirius Radio Package. No accidents! Low Mileage. 65,301 miles. $23,995. Please call, 505-474-0888.

DOMESTIC

95 MITSUBISHI Montero, mechanically sound, second owner, service receipts. $3,400. 505-231-4481. 2004 HONDA Accord LX, Clear title, 70k mi, Automatic, exterior color Gold. $2750. 828-919-9835. The car is in excellent condition. Non-smoker.

PETS SUPPLIES

AWESOME!

1990 FORD F-150 Lariat extended cab. Low mileage, ready to make you money, 4x2. Great shape! Nice truck. $4,295. Ask for Lee 505-316-2230.

3 FEMALE CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. 6 weeks old. Will be 5 to 6 pounds full grown. Call 505-901-1532. AKC STANDARD POODLE PUPPIES 2 SILVER boys, 3 BLUE boys, 2 BLUE girls and one WHITE girl. Delivery available. 432-477-2210 www.hyattstandardpoodles.com.

’97 BUICK PARK AVENUE . Loaded, like new. Silver. Needs minor repairs. High highway miles. Asking $1,350 cash only. Was $2,650. 505-577-4209 1991 CAMERO RS, Runs Good, Ttop, $2,000. 575-483-5987

2011 Nissan Frontier Crew Cab PRO-4X. Only 28k miles! leather, moonroof, Rockford Fosgate sound, new tires, 1 owner clean CarFax $27,641. Call 505-216-3800. 2007 Infiniti M35. Unbelievable 33k miles! another 1-owner Lexus trade! clean CarFax, Nav, Bose, pristine $19,621. Call 505-216-3800.

Pomeranian Puppies, 1 teacup $800, 1 toy $500, registered, first shots, quality. POODLE PUPPIES, $350 to $400. 505-901-2094.

BENGALS SILVER KITTENS from Supreme Grand Champion, $950 to $1,600. New Litter will be ready in December. 720-434-6344, chateauxchampagne@gmail.com

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1982 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505471-3911

2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800. 2001 JAGUAR-XK8 CONVERTIBLE Local Owner, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 77,768 Original Miles, Every service Record, Custom Wheels, Books, X-Keys, Navigation, Soooo Beautiful! $14,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE

EXCEPTIONAL BOXER-HEELER mix looking for exceptional home. Loves people, intelligent, affectionate, athletic, and house-trained. Neutered male, 7yrs, 50lbs. 505-672-8003 adopt.boomer@gmail.com

FREE TO good home. Spayed female Tortise Calico cat. 2 years old. Well behaved and indoor only. Call 505629-9215.

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2007 LAND ROVER RANGE ROVER SUPERCHARGED SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.

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2006 TOYOTA Tundra 4D Crew Cab Limited 4WD. This Tundra is in great mechanical condition. 62,000 miles, leather interior, loaded with options, a few dents. $19,300. 505-690-9999, 505-570-3072

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.

TOYOTA PRIUS, 2008. $14,750. Navigation, leather, bluetooth, keyless entry, new tires, excellent condition. 57,000 miles. One owner. 505-9301954 or vignettesf@gmail.com.


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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. $20,650 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE!

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!

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1989 Larson Senza 16ft with traile r. Lots of extras! Asking $3,200 OBO (trades possible). Please leave message at 505-690-2306, serious inquiries only.

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2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book $29,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

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2007 ALFA Gold 5th wheel 35RLIK 3 slide-outs, generator, basement, A/C, 2 refrigerators, ice maker, deepfreeze, central vacuum, W/D, 3 TV’s, leather chairs and hide a bed, and more!! $35,000 OBO, Trade, part trade considered. 505-660-2509 1976 Chevy Holiday RV Motorhome, new tires, carpet, floormats, upholstery. Motor is in good condition. $5,000 OBO. 505471-2763 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.

1999 MERCEDES-BENZ E320 Excellent condition . 93k miles, no accidents, everything works, Barolo red metallic with tan leather. $6,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

2010 TOYOTA RAV4 4WD. Low miles, 1-owner clean CarFax, new tires, recently maintenanced, NICE $17,921. Call 505-216-3800

2008 FORD F-450 Super Duty 4X4. Flat bed, access cab, 126,000 miles. $23,000. Call: 505-455-9150 or 505-6603670.

SUVs

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

2012 BMW X3 xDrive35i. 21k miles, excellent condition, totally loaded: panoramic sunroof, navigation, xenon, etc. Deep Sea Blue exterior, tan leather interior. BMW certified in 2013, CarFax report available. $41,000. barry@frenchesabroad.com.

BMW X-5 3.0I 2002 AWD Auto, Leather, Sunroof, Sport, Cold, Premium Packages, Premium Sound, 109K, Exc. Condition, $12,595. 505-982-9693.

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2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .

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2012 Toyota Camry LE. Only 3k miles! just like new, 1 owner clean CarFax $19,641. Call 505-216-3800.

flock to the ball. 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

2010 Toyota Matrix S 2.4L, 31,311 miles, MP3 capability, Remote keyless entry, four wheel drive. $16,919. Call 505-216-3800.

2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.

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2011 Mini Cooper S Hardtop. 19,864 miles, SIRIUS Satellite HD Radio, Fun and sporty ride. $19,977.Call 505-216-3800.

D-5

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D-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 30, 2013

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

g Grab Bags $45.00 Other misc. items with various prices. NOTICE IS HEREBY Items are subject to GIVEN that a Work change. All items are Session of the used items they are “as-is” “where-is” Board of Education with no guarantee or for the Pecos Indewarrantee. Inspection pendent School Disof items will be on trict will take day of sale. All sales Place on Tuesday, No- are final no refunds vember 5, 2013 at 5:30 or exchanges. Only Cash, debit/credit pm in the Pecos cards or Cashiers Schools Checks will be accepted; sorry no perBoard Room. sonal checks. For An Executive Session questions please call our office 476-1949. may take place during the agenda to discuss limited person- Legal #96028 Published in the Sannel matters and/or pending litigation as ta Fe New Mexican on October 28, 29 & 30, per NM Statutes Article 15 Open Meetings 2013 10-15-1 Subparagraph H (2 & 8). REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (If action is necessa- AUDIT SERVICES ry, agendas will be The New Mexico Deavailable prior to the partment of Finance work session.) and Administration (DFA) is seeking FRED TRUJILLO, sealed Requests for SUPERINTENDENT Proposals (RFP) for Audit Services of the THE PECOS INDE- State of New MexiPENDENT SCHOOL co’s Comprehensive DISTRICT IS AN EQUAL Annual Financial ReOPPORTUNITY EM- port (CAFR) for the PLOYER AND DOES fiscal year ended NOT DISCRIMINATE June 30, 2013, with an ON THE BASIS OF option to renew the RACE, NATIONAL ORI- contract for two addiGIN, RELIGION, AGE, tional subsequent fisSEX, MARITAL STA- cal years. Sealed TUS, HOMELESSNESS proposals must be reOR DISABILITY IN ceived by DFA by 2:00 COMPLIANCE WITH PM, Mountain StandFEDERAL AND STATE ard Time on NovemLAWS. ber 25, 2013. RFPs submitted to DFA afLegal #95992 ter the closing date Published in The San- and time stated ta Fe New Mexican on above will not be acOctober 30 and 31, cepted or considered. 2013. RFP specifications can be obtained from the Procurement NOTICE Manager, Sanjay Bhakta, CPA, AdminNotice is hereby givistrative Services Dien that on Thursday October 31, 2013 the vision Director, DFA, New Mexico State 407 Galisteo Street, Memorial Agency for Surplus Bataan Property will open Building, Room 313, Store Front Opera- Santa Fe, NM 87501, tions to the public phone number 505from 9:00am to 827-3943, email adr e s s 4:00pm; at 1990 d Siringo Rd., Santa Fe, Sanjay.Bhakta@state. nm.us or DFA’s NM 87505. at Items for sale will in- website http://www.nmdfa.st clude: Select Chairs $2.00 ea ate.nm.us/. All delivVehicles ranging from eries of the sealed proposals must be $700.00 to $5,000 Computer equipment addressed as follows: ranging from $10 to Name: $300 Office furniture rang- Sanjay Bhakta, Procurement Manager ing from $5 to $300 Reference RFP Name: NOTICE

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RFP AUDIT SERVICES, RFP #14-341-13-10377 Address: Department of Finance and Administration 407 Galisteo Street Bataan Memorial Building, Room 313 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 Legal #95798 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, Novemer 1, 4 2013 RIESTER V. DAY, ET AL - Navajo County Superior Court Case CV2013-00078 THE STATE OF ARIZONA TO: William A. Quelle P.O. Box 13155 Show Low, AZ 85901 YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend, within the time applicable, in this action in this Court. If served within Arizona, you shall appear and defend within twenty (20) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you, exclusive of the day of service. If served out of the State of Arizona - whether by direct service, by registered or certified mail, or by publication - you shall appear and defend within thirty (30) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you is complete, exclusive of the day of service. Where process is served upon the Arizona Director of Insurance as an insurer’s attorney to receive service of legal process against it in this state, the insurer shall not be required to appear, answer or plead until expiration of forty (40) days after date of such service upon the Director. Service by publication is complete thirty (30) days after the date of first publication. Direct service is complete when made. Service upon the Arizona Motor Vehicle Superintendent is complete thirty (30) days after filing the Affidavit of Compli-

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p ance and return receipt or Officer’s Re- YOU ARE HEREBY NOturn. TIFIED that a Petition for Adoption has YOU ARE HEREBY NO- been filed by TIFIED that in case of Petitioners in the your failure to appear above-entitled Court and defend within the and cause on October time applicable, judg- 16, 2013. The ment by default may Petitioners are rebe rendered against quired to give you for the relief de- Edwardo Marquez manded in the Com- a/k/a Edwardo plaint. Marquez-Diaz, the birth father, notice REQUESTS for reason- that the aboveable accommodation referenced Petition for persons with disa- for Adoption was bilities must be made filed which requests to the Court by par- a decree allowing ties at least three (3) petitioners to adopt working days in ad- Baby Boy Gonzales vance of a scheduled a/k/a Baby Boy Marquez, born Sepcourt proceeding. tember 21, 2013, in YOU ARE CAUTIONED Santa Fe, New Mexithat in order to ap- co. YOU ARE NOpear and defend, you must file an Answer TIFIED that pursuant §35A-5-8 or proper response in to NMSA writing with the Clerk (1978), the identity of of this Court, accom- the Petitioners shall panied by the neces- not be made known sary filing fee, within to the biological birth the time required, father, unless otherand you are to serve wise agreed upon by Since a copy of any Answer the parties. or response upon the there has not been any agreement beplainatiff’s attorney. tween yourself and A copy of the Com- the Petitioners, all inplaint can be ob- formation pertaining to the Petitioners has tained from: been modified to preCORONADO LAW vent disclosure. PLEASE BE FIRM, P.L.L.C. NOTIFIED Eduardo H. Coronado, FURTHER that pursuant to Esq. 4700 White Mountain NMSA §35A-5-27 (A) (1978), you have Blvd., Ste A Lakeside, Arizona twenty (20) days from the date of service in 85929 which to respond to (928) 532-4529 the Petition if you inTelephone tend to contest the (928) 532-0753 Fax adoption with the Second Judicial DisLegal #95711 Published in The San- trict Court, Children’s ta Fe New Mexican on Court Division, 5100 October 9, 16, 23 and 2nd Street, N.W., Albuquerque, New Mex30, 2013 ico 87107. Your failSTATE OF NEW MEXI- ure to so respond shall be treated as a CO COUNTY OF default and your consent to the adoption BERNALILLO SECOND JUDICIAL shall not be required. WITNESS the DISTRICT COURT Reed CHILDREN’S COURT Honorable Sheppard, District DIVISION Court Judge of the Second Judicial DisNo. SA 2013 85 trict Court, State of IN THE MATTER OF New Mexico, and the Seal of the District THE ADOPTION Court of Bernalillo PETITION OF R and T County, New Mexico. NOTICE OF ADOPRICHMOND L. NEELY TION PETITION Attorney for TO: E D W A R D O Petitioners MARQUEZ a/k/a P. O. Box 1787 NM EDWARDO MARQUEZ- Albuquerque, 87103 DIAZ

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LEGALS

LEGALS

CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: Stacy A. Archuleta Deputy Dated: October 21, 2013 Legal #95912 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 30 2013

BEGINNING at the northeast corner of the tract, marked by a PK Nail & SMITH & WILLIAMSON washer found, from whence the City of Santa Fe Sanitary Sewer Manhole No. W3-2, in the intersection of West Water and Ortiz Street, bears N.66° 56’ 16"E., 31.83 feet; THENCE along the Westerly R.O.W. of Ortiz Street, S.38° 26’ 22"W., 155.80 feet to a PK Nail & S & W Washer found;

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT MSCI 2007-IQ13 REa TAIL 126, LLC, New Mexico limited liability company,

THENCE leaving said R.O.W., N.52° 58’ 32" W., 103.95 feet to a No.4 Rebar found;

Plaintiff,

THENCE N.23° 38’ 48" E., 111.63 feet to a PK Nail & S & W Washer found;

v. WATER STREET, LLC, d/b/a WATER STREET ILLINOIS, LLC, an Illinois limited liability company, Defendant.

THENCE along the Southerly R.O.W. of West Water Street, S.72° 24’ 42" E., 141.70 Feet to said point and place of beginning.

D-101-CV- INCLUDING ANY AND ALL IMPROVEMENTS, FIXTURES, ATTACHMENTS, AND PERSONNOTICE OF SALE AL PROPERTY BENOTICE IS HEREBY LONGING TO DEFENDGIVEN that on No- ANT. vember 15, 2013, at the hour of 1:00 p.m. THE FOREGOING SALE MT, the undersigned shall be made to satSpecial Master will, isfy a Stipulated In at the west entrance Rem Judgment For of the Santa Fe Coun- Foreclosure And Orty Courthouse in San- der Of Sale rendered the aboveta Fe, New Mexico, by sell all the right, title referenced Court in the above-entitled and interest of the above-named De- and numbered cause fendant in and to the on September 5, 2013, hereinafter described being an action to real property, im- foreclose a Mortgage, provements, fixtures, Assignment of Leases attachments, and and Rents and Securipersonal property to ty Agreement, UCC Fithe highest bidder for nancing Statements, cash. The property to and all other security on the be sold is located at interests 132 W. Water Street, a b o v e - d e s c r i b e d Plaintiff’s Santa Fe, New Mexico property. 87501, and is situate in rem judgment is which in Santa Fe County, $7,013,596.98, the outNew Mexico, and is includes standing principal more particularly debalance, interest, late scribed as follows: attorney A certain tract of land charges, and costs lying and being sit- fees, uate within the Santa through that date, Fe Grant, City of San- plus any remaining fees and ta Fe, Santa Fe Coun- attorney ty, New Mexico and costs accruing prior to the date of sale. being more particularly described by The judgment bears metes and bound as interest at the rate of 8.75%, with the Court follows: reserving entry of fiCase No. 2013-01735

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LEGALS g y nal judgment against Defendant for the amount due after the foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney fees, plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. However, Plaintiff is not entitled to a money judgment against Defendant or the Guarantor described in the Loan Agreement for any amounts awarded herein, including a deficiency judgment for the difference between the amounts realized from the sale of the Property and the total amount of this Judgment, if such amounts realized are not sufficient to pay the amount of this Judgment. Plaintiff and/or its assignee has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the undersigned Special Master. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property, improvements, fixtures, attachments, and personal property of Defendant concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. If personal property of Defendant, its agents, or its representatives, or of any other person or entity separately ordered to vacate and quit possession of the Property remains on the real property after entry of the Order Approving Sale, such personal property is deemed abandoned and the purchaser may dispose of the property in any manner pursuant to applicable law. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the sub-

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LEGALS ject property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any building or improvements to the land, deactivation of title to any improvement to the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to Defendant’s onemonth right of redemption. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the real property, improvements, fixtures, attachments, and personal property of Defendant described above for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorney fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a reasonable receiver and Special Master’s fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the in rem judgment due is $7,013,596.98, plus interest to and including date of sale. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. WITNESS MY HAND this 17th day of October, 2013. /s/ Jay G. Harris The Honorable Jay G. Harris, Special Master 1021 5th Street Las Vegas, New Mexico 87701-4333 Tel: (505) 454-0438 6461616_1 Legal#95855 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2013

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