Santa Fe New Mexican, Oct. 7, 2013

Page 1

Broncos capitalize on late Romo interception, edge Cowboys 51-48 Sports, B-1

Locally owned and independent

Monday, October 7, 2013

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Aging gay population faces new stigmas

An app for horse health

Experts say many feel less comfortable standing up for themselves as they age, and they are vulnerable to being pushed back into the closet. NAtIoN & WoRLD, A-2

A local veterinarian has developed an iPhone app to help horse owners with ailing animals. LocAL, A-10

House speaker stands firm on debt ceiling

Works of ‘love and light’

John Boehner rules out a House vote on a straightforward bill to boost the borrowing authority without concessions from President Barack Obama. NAtIoN & WoRLD A-3

Feds ignore tribes’ misuse of funds Review finds abuses add up to millions, rarely result in punishment By Justin Pritchard and P. Solomon Banda The Associated Press

Sally Dinwiddie and her husband, Stu, take a look at some of the paintings by Ross Soleil Palmer at his art show on Thursday. Sally Dinwiddie is one of Palmer’s teachers at Santa Fe High School. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Santa Fe High student delves beyond physical limitations, shares insight through paintings By Robert Nott

The New Mexican

R

oss Soleil Palmer estimates that he turns out about one artistic “masterpiece” a week. He can perform the “Quiennese waltz” — a dance he invented. He has memorized the texts of more than 100 books from listening to others read them and can, if prompted, start reciting from any page within those books. He did just that during the art opening for his first exhibition of

paintings Thursday evening. Palmer, an 18-year-old special needs student at Santa Fe High School, is both functionally blind — he only can see objects within 3 inches of his eyes — and physically challenged. Ross and his twin brother, Andrew, were born three months early to Raya Soleil. Andrew lived only 4½ months. Ross spent the first six months of his life in a hospital but survived despite

Please see PAINtINgS, Page A-4

today Plenty of sunshine. High 71, low 41. PAge A-12

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Al Staggs The poet reads from his latest collection, Fragments of Life, 6 p.m., Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

Index

Calendar A-2

Classifieds B-6

Viginia Stark, who has known Palmer since he was 6, talks to him at his art show on Thursday.

ETHETE, Wyo. — American Indian tribes have been caught misappropriating tens of millions of taxpayer dollars, according to internal tribal audits and other documents. But federal authorities do little about it — due to a lack of oversight, resources or political will. The result? Poor tribes like the Northern Arapaho of Wyoming suffer. One Arapaho manager pocketed money meant to buy meals for tribal elders. Another used funds from the reservation’s diabetes program to subsidize personal shopping trips. And other members plundered the tribal welfare fund, then gambled the money away at one of the tribe’s casinos. Altogether, employees drained at least a half-million dollars from the coffers of a tribe whose members have a median household income of about $16,000 a year. Federal agencies questioned millions more dollars the Northern Arapaho government spent, but decided not to recover any of the money — and even increased funding to the tribe. The Wyoming tribe is hardly unique. An Associated Press review of summaries of audits shows that serious concerns were consistently raised about 124 of 551 tribal governments, schools or housing authorities that received at least 10 years of substantial federal funds since 1997. Fraud and theft occur across the range of nonprofits and local governments that get federal money.

Please see MISUSe, Page A-5

Attendees share tips to make most of Balloon Fiesta By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

The 2013 Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta features more than 500 hot air balloons and thousands of visitors daily, and it can be daunting for those who have never attended. Luckily, on Sunday morning there was no shortage of fiesta veterans willing to dispense advice for newcomers. Ray and Beth Rondeau, who have attended since the event was held at the Coronado Center mall in the 1970s, insist the best way to experience the Balloon Fiesta is to trot among the inflating balloons. “You want to be right in there,” Ray said while pointing out a swelling balloon. “You won’t get the real feel otherwise.”

Comics B-12

Family A-9

El Nuevo A-6

That feel includes hearing the roar of balloon burners, rubbing against the coarse fabric of a balloon or even joining the cheering crowd when a balloon pulls away from the ground. But that’s not for everyone. Some families said they prefer sticking close to the picnic tables on the outskirts of Balloon Fiesta Park. There, they have a place to set their bags, they said, and some of the more adventurous folks can stand on the rickety tables for a better vantage point when snapping photos. Others, like the Shelton family of five, cart folding lawn chairs to the middle of the field. Jeremy Shelton, the father, said staying put reduces stress and allows him to view all the balloons at once. As for the children, he and his wife, Kelly,

Please see BALLooN, Page A-10

Opinions A-11

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com

Police notes A-10

Sports B-1

Justin Griego and Cassie Boren watch the balloons inflate Sunday at the Balloon Fiesta in Albuquerque. KATHARINE EGLI/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN

Tech A-7

Time Out A-8

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Two sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 280 Publication No. 596-440


A-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

NATION&WORLD

In brief

Clashes of security, Morsi supporters kill 51 in Egypt CAIRO — Clashes erupted Sunday across much of Egypt between security forces and supporters of the ousted president, leaving 51 dead, as rival crowds of supporters of the military and backers of the Islamist Mohammed Morsi it deposed poured into streets around the country to mark a major holiday. The capital, Cairo, saw multiple scenes of mayhem as street battles raged for hours in some neighborhoods, with Morsi supporters firing birdshot and throwing firebombs at police who responded with gunshots and tear gas. In some cases, pro-military crowds set upon supporters of the former president, with the two sides pelting each other with rocks. By late evening, several parts of the city resembled combat zones, with fires burning, black smoke rising and the crack of gunfire piercing the air, thick with tear gas. Streets were strewn with debris.

Inspectors begin destroying Syrian chemical stockpile

Seventy-one-year-old ABilly Jones-Hennin, sitting, and his 63-year-old partner Christopher Hennin on Sept. 10 at their home. NIKKI KAHN/WASHINGTON POST

With age comes stigma Gay men, lesbians experience discrimination as they grow old, become more dependent By Tara Bahrampour

Washington Post

W

ASHINGTON — When a physical therapist paid a home visit to ABilly Jones-Hennin after a back operation, one element of the “treatment” harked back to an era he thought he had left behind decades ago. “He took it upon himself to decide to pray for me,” said Jones-Hennin, 71, a qualitative researcher who identifies as bisexual and has been in a relationship with a man for 35 years. “He wanted to clear the demons out of me and my partner and started doing this ‘hell and damnation’ about homosexuality.” The resident of Washington’s Shaw neighborhood lived through the Stonewall era and resides in one of the nation’s most gayfriendly cities. Furious, he ordered the therapist out and complained to the agency that sent him. But older lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, including those among the first to come out as a political and social force, are increasingly apprehensive about encountering discrimination as they grow older and more dependent on strangers for care. An estimated 2 million Americans 50 or older identify as LGBT, with that number expected to double by 2030, according to the Institute for Multigenerational Health at the University of Washington. About 15,000 are estimated to live in the Washington metropolitan region. Those over 65 grew up in what their

younger counterparts now see as a dark age, when doctors viewed homosexuality as a disorder, and gay men and lesbians were sometimes committed to psychiatric wards. “They came of age and lived through an era when it was particularly dangerous to be out,” said Susan Sommer, senior counsel and director of constitutional litigation at Lambda Legal, an LGBT advocacy group. “They risked losing employment, losing family, losing friends, and even violence. They became habituated to a closeted existence.” Those in their 50s came of age during a more tolerant time. Nevertheless, anti-LGBT attitudes are still common among people over 50, with just 50 percent of baby boomers and 47 percent of the Silent Generation saying they think homosexuality should be accepted by society, according to two Pew Research Center polls conducted this year. Among Generation X, the number was 63 percent, and among millennials it was 71 percent. Since 2010, federal law has mandated such rights as hospital visitation for same-sex partners. But as they get older, many feel less comfortable standing up for themselves, particularly if they are not wealthy, and they are increasingly vulnerable to being pushed back into the closet, experts say. “If you’re getting public assistance, you often have very little say on who’s assigned to you,” said Wendy Lustbader, a University of Washington professor of social work who specializes in aging. “Many people actually accept various kinds of abuse from healthcare workers because they are dependent on their care.” A 2011 survey by six LGBT and older adult advocacy groups found that just 22 percent of LGBT aging adults said they felt it was all right to be open about their sexual identity in a nursing home or assisted-living facility.

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Monster truck kills 8, injures 79 at Mexican air show CHIHUAHUA, Mexico — An out-of-control monster truck shot into a crowd of spectators at a Mexican air show, killing eight people and hurting 79, officials said. The driver was detained Sunday on suspicion of manslaughter, and officials said they were investigating possible safety violations in the setup of the show. Carlos Gonzalez, spokesman for the Chihuahua state prosecutors’ office, said driver Francisco Velazquez appeared to lose control of the truck after leaping over cars it was crushing during a demonstration at the “Extreme Aeroshow” on Saturday. Video taken from the stands by spectator Krizthall Martinez and provided to The Associated Press shows the truck making an initial pass over two cars. It then makes a second pass at higher speed, coming down sharply nose first and bouncing violently before piling straight into the crowd, which stood directly in the path of the monster truck unprotected by any wall or barrier.

Italy’s migrant shipwreck death toll reaches at least 194 LAMPEDUSA, Italy — Pairs of divers plumbed calmer seas off the Italian island of Lampedusa on Sunday to recover the corpses of would-be asylum seekers who died when a fishing boat packed with 500 African migrants capsized within sight of land. By nightfall, 83 bodies were retrieved, including one child, raising the official death toll to 194. About 150 more are believed to still be missing, many likely trapped in the wreckage 154 feet below the surface. The enormous scale of the tragedy, which could become the largest death toll in a migrant shipwreck in the Mediterranean on record, has created momentum for a comprehensive EU immigration policy to cope with the tens of thousands fleeing strife in Africa and the Middle East. The Associated Press

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Fear of discrimination from other residents was almost as high as fear of discrimination from staff, the survey found, and 43 percent said they had experienced mistreatment at facilities. Older LGBT people are four times less likely to have children and grandchildren and twice as likely to live alone as their straight counterparts, according to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy Institute. Many became estranged from their families when they came out, and many also saw their social support systems decimated by the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and 1990s. “I lost 100 friends, and after 100, I stopped counting,” said Wes Morrison, 66, a District of Columbia resident. “So all the people that I would have relied on, people that would have been friends that I had known for years and years and years, are all gone.” The more isolated LGBT people are, the more likely they are to return to the closet, advocates say, especially if they are middle- or low-income. Many of the LGBT retirement communities popping up across the country are high-end, some with move-in fees in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But those LGBT people who earn less than their straight counterparts must find general-population facilities where they will feel comfortable. It is not an easy prospect. “The existing senior housing that’s out there has not been welcoming to the LGBT community,” said Daniel Reingold, president and chief executive of the Hebrew Home in Riverdale, N.Y., adding that it can be risky for a facility to openly advertise itself as gay-friendly. “If they put that in their marketing and bring in 10 or 12 people, is the rest of the world going to turn away? They might. ... I think the Greatest Generation will have difficulty accepting” openly gayfriendly facilities, he added.

BEIRUT — International disarmament experts on Sunday began dismantling and destroying Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal and the equipment used to produce it, taking the first concrete step in their colossal task of eliminating the country’s chemical stockpile by mid-2014, an official said. The inspectors from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons have about nine months to purge President Bashar Assad’s regime of its chemical program. The mission, endorsed by the U.N. Security Council, faces the tightest deadline in the watchdog group’s history and must simultaneously navigate Syria’s bloody civil war. Sunday marked the fifth day that an advance team of around 20 inspectors have been in the country and the first day that involved actually disabling and destroying weapons and machinery, an official on the joint OPCW-U.N. mission said. The production equipment included filling and mixing machinery, some of it mobile, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

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Monday, Oct. 7 AL STAGGS: The poet reads from his latest collection, Fragments of Life, 6 p.m. 202 Galisteo St. ARCHITECTURE + MISSION: Lecture and book signing with architect Jack DeBartolo, 5:30 p.m., Washington St. entrance, $15; discounts available, tickets available at architecturesantafe.org or at the door. 113 Lincoln Ave. WATER CATCHMENT AND DIVERSION: Reese Baker of The Raincatcher kicks off the Santa Fe Botanical Garden’s fall lecture series, 2 p.m., $10, 471-9103. 1616 Old Pecos Trail. EASTER ISLAND STATUES: EXCAVATIONS REVEAL MEGALITHIC ENGINEERING: A Southwest Seminars lecture with Jo Anne Van Tilburg, 6 p.m., $12 at the door, 466-2775. 1501 Paseo de Peralta.

NIGHTLIFE Monday, Oct. 7 COWGIRL BBQ: Cowgirl karaoke with Michele Leidig, 9 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. LA CASA SENA CANTINA: Best of Broadway, piano and vocals, 6-10 p.m., no cover. 125 E. Palace Ave.

Corrections LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Soulstatic, funk and R&B, 7:30 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. RIO AT EL FAROL: Featuring wistful vocals and lyrical guitar work, Rio offers intimate interpretations of Bossa Nova and Jazz. 808 Canyon Road. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, jazz and classics, 7 p.m.-close, call for cover. 427 W. Water St. WEEKLY ALL-AGES INFORMAL SWING DANCES: Lesson 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Rd., dance only $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955. 1125 Cerrillos Rd.

VOLUNTEER 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 prepare meals at the emergency shelters and perform other duties. Send an email to volunteer@steshelter.org or call Rosario at 982-6611, ext. 108. FIESTA FELA: Santa Fe’s Festival of African Art and Culture will be held from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Oct. 12 at the Railyard. Volunteers are need to help set up, break down, assist in staffing the Afreeka Santa

Fe booths and the Children’s tent, maintain the site/empty trash bins, assist with security, and collect donation fees. For more information or to volunteer, call Judith Gabriele at 231-7143. COMMUNITY FARM: The Santa Fe Community Farm in the Village of Agua Fría, 1829 San Ysidro Crossing, grows and gives fresh fruits and vegetables to the homeless, needy and less fortunate of Northern New Mexico. Volunteers of any age and ability are needed to help out with this great project. Drop in and spend time in the sunshine and fresh air. The hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, except Wednesdays and Sundays.For information, send an email to sfcommunity farm@gmail.com or visit the website at www. santafecommunityfarm.org. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. If you can give two to three hours a week to help, call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. PET PROJECT: Do you love “thrifting?” Would you like to help the animals of Northern New Mexico? Combine your passions by joining the Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s resale team. The stores, Look What

The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. The Cat Dragged In 1 and 2, benefit homeless animals, and volunteers are needed to maintain the sales floor, sort donations and create displays to show case our unique and high-quality merchandise. Two store sites are 2570-A Camino Entrada or 541 West Cordova Road. No experience necessary. For more information, send an email to krodri guez@sfhumansociety.org or agreene@sfhumansociety.org, or call Katherine Rodriguez at 983-4309, ext. 128, or Anne Greene at 474-6300. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. It will make a real difference in the lives of homebound neighbors. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www. kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnew mexican.com.


NATION & WORLD

Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-3

Raids suggest what’s next Boehner says he doesn’t have Questions raised GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

votes for clean debt limit bill

regarding where to interrogate, try terrorist suspects

Still, the speaker has stuck to a hard line as he works to keep the Republicans unified and extract concessions from Obama. So far, that WASHINGTON — Speaker John Boehner, approach hasn’t yielded any talks with Obama or R-Ohio, said the House can’t pass an increase to movement toward heading off a default. the U.S. debt ceiling without packaging it with Lew, who made appearances on four of the other provisions — a nonstarter for President major Sunday television talk shows, said the Obama. administration would only be willing to negotiate “We are not going to pass a clean debt limit,” after the partial shutdown, now in its sixth day, Boehner said in an interview on ABC’s This Week comes to an end and the debt ceiling is increased. program. “The votes are not in the House to pass He also warned of the dangers of default, as well a clean debt limit.” as the possibility that Congress may actually fail Boehner said he believed the country could to pass an increase. end up in default if Obama doesn’t negotiate. “I’ve talked with John Boehner; I know he “That’s the path we’re on,” Boehner said. doesn’t want to default,” Lew said on Fox News Boehner’s comments came as the stalemate Sunday. “He also didn’t want to shut the governbetween the White House and House Republicans ment down. And here we are with a government showed little sign of thawing just 11 days from shutdown.” when Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew told lawmakThe U.S. will run out of borrowing authority ers the U.S. will exhaust measures to avoid breach- on Oct. 17 and will have $30 billion in cash after ing the debt ceiling. The House and Senate aren’t that. The country would be unable to pay all of scheduled to be in session Sunday, and there are no its bills, including benefits, salaries and interest, meetings planned between the two sides. sometime between Oct. 22 and Oct. 31, according The Obama administration has said it won’t to the Congressional Budget Office. negotiate with Republicans over funding the gov“Congress is playing with fire,” Lew said on ernment or raising the debt ceiling, arguing that CNN’s State of the Union. “If the United States it is part of the basic functions of Congress and government, for the first time in its history, shouldn’t be used as point of leverage. chooses not to pay its bills on time, we will be in Obama, in an interview with The Associated default, there is no option that prevents us from Press, said he expects Congress will reach an being in default if we don’t have enough cash to agreement to raise the nation’s $16.7 trillion debt pay our bills.” limit in time to avert a default. Unlike past fiscal feuds, this dispute is more “The nation’s credit is at risk because of the about Obama’s Affordable Care Act, his signature administration’s refusal to sit down and have a health care law, and less about the amount of conversation,” Boehner said. Asked if he’d conspending. The U.S. budget deficit in June was sider putting a clean debt ceiling increase on 4.3 percent of gross domestic product, down the floor, Boehner said the House would not be from 10.1 percent in February 2010 and the nar“going down that path.” rowest since November 2008, when Obama was Boehner said on ABC he doesn’t intend to let elected to his first term, according to data comthe government default, and he has told his mem- piled by Bloomberg from the Treasury Departbers the same thing behind closed doors, even if ment and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. it involves using Democratic votes, according to So far, the financial-market response to the aides and lawmakers. political gridlock has been muted. By Phil Mattingly

Bloomberg News

By Robert Burns

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The U.S. commando raids in Libya and Somalia suggest the future shape of U.S. counterterrorism efforts — brief, targeted raids against highly sought extremist figures — and highlight the rise of Africa as a terrorist haven. The strikes also raise questions about where to interrogate and try captured terrorist suspects such as Abu Anas al-Libi, accused by the U.S. of involvement in the 1998 bombings of two American embassies in Africa. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Sunday that al-Libi was in U.S. custody; officials would not say where. The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, said al-Libi has “vast intelligence value.” McKeon, R-Calif., said President Barack Obama should “fully exploit this potential” before moving on to his prosecution. The White House seemed to agree, saying Saturday’s raid in Tripoli was specifically designed to apprehend, not kill, the suspect. “The president has made clear our preference for capturing terrorist targets when possible, and that’s exactly what we’ve done in order to elicit as much valuable intelligence as we can and bring a dangerous terrorist to justice,” said the White House National Security Council’s spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden. The outcome of a second U.S. commando raid Saturday, targeting a leader of the alQaida affiliated terror group, al-Shabab, was less clear. A Navy SEAL team swam

In this Dec. 8, 2008, photo, armed al-Shabab fighters just outside Mogadishu prepare to travel into the city in pickups after vowing there would be new waves of attacks against Ethiopian troops. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

ashore in Somalia early in the morning and engaged in a fierce firefight. A U.S. official said afterward the Americans disengaged after inflicting some al-Shabab casualties, but it was unclear who was hit. The official was granted anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. The raid in Somalia reflected the importance the Obama administration attaches to combating al-Shabab, whose leaders are believed to be collaborating more with other alQaida affiliated Islamic insurgent groups across Africa. In a speech in May outlining his strategy for the use of drones, Obama counted Somalia as among the places where the U.S. and its allies face “lethal yet less capable al-Qaida affiliates.” The commando assaults unfolded against the backdrop of political paralysis in Washington, where the Congress and the White House are locked in battle over budgets but have agreed to keep the military operating and paid on time. Libya said Sunday it has asked the United States for “clarifications” regarding the capture of al-Libi by U.S. Delta Force commandos.

The Tripoli government said that al-Libi, as a Libyan national, should be tried in his own country. He is on the FBI’s most-wanted list of terrorists with a $5 million bounty on his head. He was indicted by the U.S. in November 1998. In a statement, Libya also said it hoped the incident would not affect its strategic relationship with the U.S., which is evolving in the aftermath of the 2011 ouster of longtime ruler Moammar Gadhafi. Ties were complicated by the Sept. 11, 2012, attack on U.S. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi, in eastern Libya. Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., a vocal advocate of placing captured high-value terrorist suspects in the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, said Sunday that al-Libi should be treated as an enemy combatant, detained in military custody “and interrogated to gather information that will prevent future attacks and help locate other al-Qaida terrorists.” Al-Libi was indicted by a federal court in New York for his alleged role in the bombings of the U.S. Embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, on Aug. 7, 1998, that killed more than 220 people.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

Paintings: Meets weekly with art therapist Continued from Page A-1 being considered medically fragile. “He came into this world with the sharpest, most positive attitude I’ve ever seen,” his mother said during Thursday’s art reception at the Santa Fe home of Frances and Jerry Freeman. Despite her own background as a performance artist, mime and singer, she said, when it comes to the fine arts, “he intimidates me.” Soleil began reading to Palmer when he was still in the hospital as an infant. One of those first books was Bill Martin Jr. and John Archambault’s Knots On a Counting Rope. Although she was mostly communicating with her son via sign language at the time, by the time he was 3 years old, he began reciting specific lines of dialogue from the book. Now, if she reads the book aloud and misses even one word, he’ll stop her and fill in the blank. “I can’t believe it — God must have something to do with it,” Jerry Freeman said of Palmer’s talent. The young artist’s paintings — acrylic, mixed-media and collage works — reflect a bright world where sunsets, flowers, rivers and birds exude their own sense of sunshine, even when the moon is out. Palmer is particularly enamored of his painting Breaking Through the Mist, which depicts a trio of blackbirds flying out of a blue maelstrom. “I had to just get through all my difficulties. The birds are flying through all their difficulties,” he explained to some observers Thursday. Palmer meets once a week with Santa Fe art therapist Sandi

I had to just get through all my “ difficulties. The birds are flying

through all their difficulties.”

Ross Soleil Palmer, on the painting he titled Breaking Through the Mist, which depicts a trio of black birds flying out of a blue maelstrom

PHOTO BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Wright, who has known him for about 10 years. “He improves each week,” she said. “He has real problems with vision. I try to think about how he sees things.” She lays out his palette of paints in a specific order so he knows where the various colors are before he starts painting. They start their sessions by talking about how he feels and what he wants to express. His pieces have been inspired by the seasons of the year, the news airing on the television or the music that Wright plays for him while they work. If she plays fast-paced music, he paints in staccato motions, she said. If she chooses classical music, he tends to work slower. Wright says she hopes he will be able to paint without supervision, in time. Sometimes Palmer will say he wants to paint something for a friend or acquaintance. According to his mother, he recently bequeathed one of his paintings to a friend who, unbeknownst to Palmer, had just lost a beloved dog. He painted one work depicting a friend’s backyard in Tesuque to someone who was

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about to relocate to the Northwest and was anxious about leaving New Mexico’s beauty behind. He also paints landscapes from other locales, and his mother still recalls a drawing he made of New York City more than 10 years ago, even though he never saw the place. Palmer chooses upbeat titles for his landscape paintings, including such titles as The Delightful Stream of Tranquility, Marriage of Love and The Rainbow Road to Rock ’N’ Roll. “I’m all about sending people love and light,” he said. Palmer plans to become a color therapist. As it is, he assigns what he calls healing colors to people he encounters. “You’re a sparkling green,” he told one attendee at Thursday’s event.

He takes part in aquatic therapy, likes to dance and enjoys a treehouse that his mom built on their property. Once he graduates from Santa Fe High, his mother hopes that the two of them can travel “so we can see the world he has been painting.”

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Misuse: Tribes are five times as likely to have ‘material weaknesses’ ern Arapaho, which shares tribes, for example, 39 percent a large reservation southeast of the time. Most prominent But tribes are five times as likely were programs funded by Inte- of Grand Teton National Park. as other recipients of federal For the most part, they live rior’s bureaus of Indian Affairs funds to have “material weakin trailers, lapped siding homes and Indian Education and the nesses” that create an opporand farm houses scratched Indian Health Service, under tunity for abuses, according to into the high plains at the foot the Department of Health and the review. Overall, 1 in 4 audits Human Services. of the Wind River Mountain concluded that tribal governRange. Many findings by auditors ments, schools or housing Officials at the Northern suggest mismanagement, not authorities had a material weak- theft or fraud. Arapaho Business Council, ness in their federally funded One barrier to proper admin- which governs the tribe, conprograms; the rate was one in tended in a statement that istration of tribal programs 20 for nontribal programs. numerous negative audits the is turnover among staff and Thousands of pages of audits leaders — entire governments tribe received were “primarily and dozens of reports by feda result of inadequate docucan be voted out of office eral investigators, obtained mentation and record-keeping.” every two years. Attracting by the AP under the Freedom The statement added that the qualified administrators to of Information Act, show management issues “were often-remote reservations in evidence of embezzlement, many years in the making and the first place is another chalpaychecks for do-nothing jobs, will take time and considerable lenge. “So they hire maybe the and employees who over-billed chairman’s nephew who had financial resources to fix.” hours and expenses. The audits, some accounting classes,” said The business council has conducted by private firms, are Pete Magee, a longtime auditor ordered a “top to bottom review required of tribes that spend of all programs, both tribal of tribal books. more than $500,000 in federal and federal, to determine if Sergio Maldonado, a Northfunds annually. improper spending is taking ern Arapaho member who is Agencies often cannot legally diversity coordinator at Central place and if personnel changes cut funding because of treaties, Wyoming College in Riverton, are required.” Supreme Court decisions and Gary Collins, a former chairsaid tribes generally are just acts of Congress, and frequently finding their self-governance man of the business council refuse to take control of failing who serves as the Northern footing after years of being programs. Arapaho liaison with the state, under federal control. He said “It’s basically a reluctance said the tribe participates in there are four goals for a sucto take on tribes. The Departmore than 60 federal programs, cessful tribal government — ment of the Interior bends over “academic preparation, profesa number that presents chalbackwards to be their friends,” lenges for auditing and accountsional experience, a collective said Earl Devaney, the former ability. “There’s nothing really consensus for the benefit of inspector general at the depart- the tribe and an ethical set of intentional,” he said of any ment that houses the bureaus shortcomings. guidelines.” of Indian Affairs and Indian Since the early 1970s, federal Maldonado, who also teaches Education. “It’s ‘make nice,’ and a class about the tribe on the policy has favored letting tribes what you don’t know, you don’t reservation, said it is relatively manage housing, health, welknow.” fare, law enforcement and other easy to address each point Many amounts were relaprograms as they see fit. As this individually. But all four must tively small. But there are so be done together, and that’s not “self-determination” approach many instances of abuses that easy, he added. “It’s not just our took hold, many tribes develthe total was substantial. oped the financial savvy and reservation; this is commonTribal council members in governmental infrastructure place with a lot of tribes.” Northern California used fedto handle millions in federal There are about 10,000 eral grants to pay their utility enrolled members of the North- money without major incident. bills and mortgages. A Nebraska tribe spent health clinic money on horses and ATVs. An environmental supervisor with INC. a Washington tribe received $16,000 for mileage and other charges he either exaggerated or never incurred. Among grant programs with a significant track record in a government database of audits, tribes ran Over 30 years experience in roof repair 16 of the 20 with the highest Michael A. Roybal 505-438-6599 rates of rule-breaking. Auditors flagged welfare grants to www.southwestplasteringcompany.com

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But others, like the Northern Arapaho, have not. Federal officials try to coach tribes to self-correct rather than punish them — both in deference to tribal “self-determination” and because there aren’t enough staff to closely monitor the thousands of service contracts between tribes and the government. Even when auditors raise concerns, there is no guarantee that tribal leaders will be investigated or prosecuted. Several auditors said their contracts were not renewed after they uncovered self-enrichment by tribal leaders. Indeed, agencies recoup a small fraction of what they conclude tribes owe. Since fiscal year 2008, the BIA and the Bureau of Indian

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Education have collected only $2.3 million of nearly $69 million in questionable expenditures, according to financial records. In several cases, the bureaus were legally barred from recouping money because they waited too long. Since 2003, auditors concluded that 79 tribes or Indian organizations couldn’t justify $33 million of Environmental Protection Agency money they spent. EPA said it had recouped “approximately $3 million” since October 2007. Indian Affairs and Indian Education can’t legally reduce funding even to corrupt governments. Funding levels are set by federal law, regardless of how well a tribe is managed.

Thomas Thompson, a senior budget official at Indian Affairs, said reducing funding based on past practices would penalize tribal members rather than address management issues. The standard punishment is requiring tribes to submit invoices for reimbursement, rather than giving full funding at the start of each year. Agencies can in theory wrest programs back from tribes, but almost never do. In 2012, for example, Indian Affairs had taken back the programs of three of 566 federally recognized tribes. “They don’t want to take the program back;” said Brian Pogue, a BIA employee for 30 years who retired as its director. “They want the tribe to succeed.”

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THE NEW MEXICAN Lunes, el 7 de octubre 2013

EL NUEVO MEXICANO Aprendiendo desde dentro Hombre escribe sus recuerdos de su niñez en una prisión territorial

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Por Tom Sharpe The New Mexican

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pifanio “Orlando” González pasea alrededor de la esquina de Córdova y Pen en una tarde de verano, pero no encuentra ningún vestigio de lo que fuera el túnel subterráneo que recuerda de la antigua prisión territorial donde pasó 2 años y medio siendo un adolescente. “La única cosa que es igual es la vista,” dice mientras mira al oeste hacia las Montañas de Jemez. “Claro, uno debe tomar en cuenta, yo estaba dentro, detrás de la pared.” González, 76, nació en la aldea de San José de un padre alcohólico que mudó a la familia a Las Vegas, N.M., para él trabajar como albañil en la Universidad de Highlands, después a Silver City para trabajar en una mina de cobre, luego a Bristol, Colo., para cosechar betabeles, cebollas y melones. “Toda la familia trabajaba en los campos,” dice. “Mi mamá hacía todo lo posible para obtener más dinero y así poder comprar provisiones antes de que [su padre] lo gastara todo.” A la edad de 10, González hizo su primer atraco, usando un alambre para abrir la puerta de una bodega y robar una herramienta. Después entró a través de una ventana y tomó $92 de la caja de la oficina de correos. Fue detenido y enviado a un reformatorio. Al salir, regresó a los campos a trabajar con su familia. “Trabajé ahí hasta juntar suficiente dinero para mantenerme sólo,” dice. “Cada vez que dejaba la casa, yo sabía lo que pasaban los esclavos fugitivos”. Ya a los 13 o 14, González había aprendido la falsificación de cheques. Tomaba un cheque en blanco del mostrador de un banco, lo llenaba y falsificaba la firma de alguna persona que encontraba en el directorio. Luego el sábado cuando el banco estaba cerrado, entraba a una tienda, decía a los dependientes que tenía una nuevo trabajo y necesitaba ropa y si podían cambiar su cheque. Cuenta que en esos días, nadie solicitaba identificación de un chico tan joven. Así compraba algunas prendas de vestir, tomaba el cambio, subía a un camión, viajaba al siguiente pueblo y repetía la estafa. La ley finalmente lo alcanzó en Flagstaff, Ariz. Fue extraditado a Las Vegas, donde huyó de la cárcel y logró llegar sólo hasta Albuquerque donde fue de detenido nuevamente. “No tiene sentido enviarte a Springer,” recuerda que le dijo el juez. “No te quedarías allí.” Para Noviembre de 1952, a los 15 años, González se encontró entonces lanzado junto con asesinos, violadores y otros adultos reclusos en la prisión que había abierto en 1885 en lo que era entonces la orilla suroeste de Santa Fe, al final de Pen Road, cerca del estacionamiento del edificio Joseph Montoya y donde hoy está la estación de tren Rail Runner. “Todo era de ladrillo,” dice de la Antigua prisión territorial. “Tenía las torres de guardia como agujas. … Pero me fue bien. Ya había estado en reformatorios. No me resultaba extraño estar encarcelado. No me violaron”. Asignado a hacer baldosas – ladrillos huecos de los que son hechos muchos de los edificios de Santa Fe – González estaba cavando una fosa cuando uno de los presos le pregunto si estaba buscando un túnel. El hombre le dijo que algunos de sus amigos habían comenzado a cavar el túnel en 1928, pero lo abandonaron después de una revuelta y lo cubrieron con ladrillos. Le mostró el lugar a González, quien removió los ladrillos y encontró

Canutito is scared of getting ‘mesquinos’

Epifanio ‘Orlando’ González con una foto de él durante su niñez. González, 76, pasó un tiempo en la Antigua prisión territorial cuando tenía 15 años. González tenía 18 años cuando fue liberado en 1955, justo antes de que la Antigua prisión fuera derrumbada, para ser remplazada por la penitenciaria al sur de Santa Fe en la carretera N.M. 14. Jubilado en Las Vegas, González ha estado trabajando en su autobiografía. Dice que desea mostrar cómo se pueden mejorar las correccionales. TOM SHARPE/THE NEW MEXICAN

el túnel de 4 por 4 pies, de 4 a 7 pies bajo tierra y se extendía cerca de 7 pies horizontalmente. Se las arregló para escarbar otros 14 pies, pero el oxígeno se hizo tan ligero que un cerillo no podía encenderse para dar luz, así que dejó de cavar y cubrió la entrada. Aunque González no pudo encontrar ningún rastro del túnel 60 años más tarde, un contratista trabajando en el estacionamiento del Edificio Montoya encontró hace un mes uno mientras perforaba un hoyo para un poste de luz. El portavoz del Departamento de Servicios Generales Tim Korte dijo que el túnel bien construido, de ladrillo con un arco arriba, de 3 pies de ancho, 4 a 5 pies de alto y 3 a 5 pies de profundidad, se cree que sirvió como un conducto de servicios para la antigua prisión.

González tenía 18 cuando fue liberado en 1955, justo antes de que la antigua prisión fuera derrumbada, para ser remplazada por la penitenciaría del sur de Santa Fe en N.M. 14. Pero su mal rato de 2 años y medio en la cárcel lo prepararon para seguir una vida criminal. Falsificó más cheques, comenzó un exceso de robos comerciales y luego se graduó en robo de bancos en Wyoming y Dakota del Sur. Fue detenido y encarcelado en Leavenworth, Kan,. donde comenzó a educarse al leer periódicos y revistas en inglés y español, obteniendo su GED (examen de Desarrollo de Educación General) y tomando clases universitarias. Bajo libertad condicional en agosto del 1970, González se reformó. Fue a Kansas donde vivía su madre, cavó canales de riego y se unió a un programa de gobierno para capacitarse en reparación de partes eléctricas de automóviles. Trabajó en eso varios años en Kansas, luego regresó a Nuevo México para tomar clases de enfermería en Luna Vo-Tech, ahora Colegio Comunitario Luna, así obtuvo un trabajo en la unidad de geriatría del hospital estatal de salud mental. A su retiro en Las Vegas, N.M., González ha trabajado en su autobiografía. Dice que quiere mostrar como las correccionales pueden mejorar. “En vez de poner a todos estos tipos juntos en el mismo lugar, mi idea es separar a la gente.” dice. “Habrá gente que ha crecido en el barrio o ghetto que no puede soportar estar en nada constructivo o que los desafía. Ellos prefieren estar encerrados en su dormitorio o con otros con su misma forma de pensar.” Gonzáles dice que los primerizos, que no tienen un récord criminal, debería tener la oportunidad de independencia para aprender a cocina, lavar platos, lavar su ropa, leer o hacer cosas que les interesan y así enseñarlos a hacer algo que los ayude a vivir una vez fuera. “Ellos necesitan tener la actitud …`No voy a salir de este lugar peor de cómo entré,’ ” dice. Ponte en contacto con Tom Sharpe en 986-3080 o tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.

El túnel en la Antigua prisión territorial. EL DEPARTAMENTO DE SERVICIOS GENERALES IN NUEVO MÉXICO

Traducción de Patricia De Dios para The New Mexican

En vez de poner a todos estos tipos juntos en el mismo lugar, mi idea es separar “ a la gente. Habrá gente que ha crecido en el barrio o ghetto que no puede soportar

estar en nada constructivo o que los desafía. Ellos prefieren estar encerrados en su dormitorio o con otros con su misma forma de pensar.” Epifanio ‘Orlando’ Gonzales

ra una mañanita muy bonita. El otoño había llegado and Canutito was out en la acequia watching Grampo Caralampio clean out the ditch. It was el mero tiempo de sacar la acequia before winter set in and so grampo was digging about with his shovel. As he moved the debris out of the way con la pala, he frightened a una ranita that had been hiding entre el zoquete. He smiled down at the little frog in the mud and he yelled at Canutito to come catch it y llevarla a un lugar donde podía estar más safe. Canutito came running todo excited a ver la ranita and he tripped, falling en sus Larry Torres rodillas. Se levantó and he rubbed his Growing up bruised knees. Spanglish Grampo Caralampio called out to him: “Sana, sana, colita de rana. Si no sanas hoy, sanarás mañana.” Canutito looked up to him sin saber lo qué estaba saying so he translated: “Be healed, be healed, little frog’s tail. If not healed today, then tomorrow, without fail.” Canutito got up giggling porque ése era el poema más silly que he had ever heard. In any case, pronto Canutito was de rodillas otra vez, trying to catch the little rana that was trying to hide from him. He soon caught it and cupping it entre las manos, he rushed with it pa’la casa to see if Grama Cuca tenía un frasco grande where he could keep it. He ran into the house tan recio que he didn’t even notice que Grama Cuca tenía gente. Grama looked up from where she was entertaining her company and she said, “Mira, m’hijo, come here. Aquí está mi prima Prudencia. She brought a su nietecito for me to see.” Canutito looked down at the little grandchild de la prima Prudencia. He was still un baby-to recién nacido. He was so taken por el niño que era tan cute que he almost forgot de la ranita que tenía entre sus manos until Grama Cuca asked him: “¿Qué tienes allí, m’hijo?” “Tengo una ranita, grama,” Canutito replied. I was looking por un jar to put it in pero yo no sé where you keep los frascos.” “Mis frascos are jars que yo uso para empacar jelly, m’hijo,”Grama Cuca said. “No son frascos where you can keep ranas. Go put the frog allá afuera and come back y lávate las manos. Don’t you know que si una frog pees on you entonces vas a agarrar warts en los dedos?” De repente Canutito se puso todo grossed out and he ran and set a la ranita down allá en el patio. He hurried back pa’la cocina and he scrubbed sus manos muy bien porque he didn’t want to get mesquinos en sus fingers. Después de que se hizo dry his hands, he went pa’l living room a ver el baby-to de la prima Prudencia. Canutito siempre había sido muy amante de los babies. He had always loved a los niños. He sidled up to la prima Prudencia and he asked her, “Can I hold him, tía? I promise que voy a ser muy careful con él.” “Voy no veo por qué no,” la prima Prudenia answered, smiling at the little boy and she held al baby so that Canutito could cradle him entre sus brazos and support su cabecita con su shoulder. Canutito rocked al baby-to real gently so that he wouldn’t cry. The little baby smiled up at him muy contento and he kicked up sus piernitas, thrashing his little legs about. Suddenly Canutito felt que todo su brazo y su mano were all wet. Con un look of panic, comenzó a llorar. “Why are you crying, m’hijo?” Grama Cuca called over to him. “You told me que si hacía hold a una ranita en mis manos and it peed on me, entonces I would get warts en los dedos. This little baby peed en mi brazo y en mi mano; ahora I think que voy a agarrar mesquinos all over the place!” He started llorando otra vez as grama lo miraba helplessly …

Tuesday has LOCAL BUSINESS You turn to us.


Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

TECH

TECH REVIEW

iPad backfire

L.A. students crack firewall, play games on school-issued Apple tablets By John Rogers

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES ducation officials in the nation’s second-largest school district are working to reboot a $1 billion plan to put an iPad in the hands of each of their 650,000 students after an embarrassing glitch emerged when the first round of tablets went out. Instead of solving math problems or doing English homework, as administrators envisioned, more than 300 Los Angeles Unified School District students promptly cracked the security settings and started tweeting, posting to Facebook and playing video games. “Temple Run. Subway Surfing. Oh, and some car racing game I can’t remember the name of,” said freshman Stephany Romero, laughing as she described the games she saw fellow Roosevelt High School students playing in class. That incident, and related problems, had both critics and supporters questioning whether LAUSD officials were being hasty or overreaching in their attempt to distribute an iPad to every student and teacher at the district’s more than 1,000 campuses by next year. “It doesn’t seem like there was much planning that went into this strategy,” said Renee Hobbs, director of the Harrington School of Communication and Media at the University of Rhode Island. “That’s where the debacle began.” It’s crucial, she said, to spend extensive time drawing students into a discussion on using iPads responsibly before handing them out. And, of course, installing a firewall that can’t be easily breached. At Roosevelt High, it was the unanimous opinion of more than a dozen students that the school district’s security setup was so weak that even the most tech-challenged parent could have gotten past it. “It was so easy!” said freshman Carlos Espinoza. He explained that all one needed to do was access the tablet’s settings, delete the profile established by the school district and set up an Internet connection. He did it, he said, because he wanted to go on Facebook. “They kind of should have known this would happen,” said Espinoza’s friend Maria Aguilera. “We’re high school students after all. I mean, come on,” she added. As word spread, with the speed of a microprocessor, that anyone could crack the firewall, officials quickly confiscated the devices and put a freeze on using them off campus. In the meantime, they promised to improve the security settings. When they started distributing the iPads at 47 district schools in August, administrators touted the move as a means of leveling the

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A student unpacks a new iPad. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

academic playing field in a public school system where 80 percent of the students come from low-income families. Now, they said, everyone would have equal access to the most cutting-edge educational software programs, not just the children of parents with deep pockets. But after the first shot in that digital revolution led to a flood of tweets, other concerns arose. Among them: u Who pays if a kid drops one of these $678 gadgets into a toilet or leaves it on a bus? u Is it realistic to tell a student she can use it to do her homework, then not allow the device to connect to the Internet from home? (Schools will be wired.)

Roosevelt High School students Carlos Espinoza and Maria Aguilera were among the 650,000 students who received iPads from the Los Angeles Unified School District. Espinoza says he cracked the iPad’s security settings to use Facebook. Aguilera says district officials shouldn’t have been surprised that hundreds of high school students would do that. JOHN ROGERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

u And since the tablet without Web access is only as good as the educational software placed on it, how good is that software? A parent, Scott Folsom, said he heard from one source that families would have to pay for broken iPads and from another that the school would. District officials have said there was confusion over that issue but that it’s been decided schools will cover the cost of an iPad accidentally broken, lost or stolen, while families are on the hook for one negligently damaged. Of more serious concern to Folsom is the software. He sampled one of the new iPads, he said, and found no program to adequately support English-as-a-second-language students. That would seemingly be crucial for a district whose students are 73 percent Hispanic and where only 14 percent of English learners can speak the language fluently, according to a 2011 Department of Education study. As a parent representative to the district’s bond oversight committee, Folsom voted to recommend spending $30 million last June to buy the first batch of iPads. He says he still supports the program but worries that maybe educators are trying to implement it too quickly. “This is the future,” he said. “But whether LAUSD is stepping too quickly into the future — based on the fact that it’s so big, and we seem to be in such a hurry — those are questions to consider.”

‘Legends’ champs win in legendary venue By Derrik J. Lang

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — When it comes to sports, the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles is usually home to awardwinning basketball and hockey. However, the behemoth arena hosted a very different kind of competition recently: the soldout season three championships of League of Legends, a free-toplay video game that attracts more than 32 million players a month. It wasn’t much of a contest though. South Korea’s SK Telecom T1 completely dominated China’s Royal Club on Friday night in the first three rounds of a best-of-five series. This earned team members Jung “Impact” Eon-yeong, Chae “Piglet” Gwang-jin, Lee “Faker” Sanghyeok, Lee “PoohManDu” Jeonghyeon and Bae “bengi” Seongung the Summoner’s Cup trophy

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and a $1 million grand prize. The virtual battle at the famous venue marked another milestone for e-sports. The genre has yet to totally achieve mainstream success in North America, though it’s basically a national pastime in places like South Korea. That’s shifted over the past few years, as technology has evolved, Internet speeds have become more reliable and a generation of gamers have grown up watching competitive bouts on streaming video sites like Twitch and YouTube. Unlike many games, League of Legends was created to be a sport. Each match features two teams of five players selecting superhero-like characters from a list of more than 100 champions, then attempting to slaughter one another and destroy their jungle arena bases. Riot Games mostly makes money from the free-to-play

game by selling virtual items and characters. “It’s a huge honor and privilege for us to put this on at a storied venue like the Staples Center,” said Marc Merrill, president and co-founder of League of Legends publisher Riot Games. “My partner and I grew up in L.A., and we thought it would be appropriate to end season three at a fantastic arena where Kobe Bryant and the Lakers play and win world championships.” Friday’s festivities kicked off with a musical performance by the Crystal Method, who composed an original song for one of the game’s champions. The electronic duo was joined by an orchestra, drummer Joe Letz, bassist Danny Lohner, cellist Tina Guo and former Limp Bizkit guitarist Wes Borland, who was clad in a white LED suit. The studio moved the championships to Staples Center after holding last year’s matchup at the

University of Southern California’s Galen Center. The Staples Center hosted more than 10,000 spectators Friday night — with millions more watching online. Merrill said booking the Staples Center was less about making a statement to outsiders about the ever increasing popularity of League of Legends and e-sports and more about making die-hard fans proud of their favorite sport. “We lose money with e-sports, but we think of it as an investment on delivering cool experiences that are memorable for our players,” Merrill said. “We’re also building an ecosystem and raising awareness about e-sports. As the sport continues to gain even more awareness and appreciation, we hope it will become more sustainable and not cause us to lose money.”

On thE WEb u www.leagueoflegends.com

New Kindle proves a good contender for Amazon users By Anick Jesdanun The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Amazon’s new Kindle Fire HDX tablet resembles Google’s Nexus 7 in many ways — from its light weight to its sharp display. Both tablets run a version of Google’s Android operating system, and they even have the same starting price of $229. The similarities end when you turn them on. Amazon.com Inc. has modified Android so much that it no longer resembles Android. The company calls it Fire OS 3.0, or Mojito. Amazon’s services are front and center on the Fire, and Google’s are nowhere to be found. It’s the other way around on the Nexus 7 and other Android devices. For a day or two, I even forgot the Kindle Fire can do much more. Regular customers of Amazon will appreciate that integration. A row of tabs at the top of the screen offers quick access to various Amazon services, including e-books, music, videos and audiobooks, the latter from the Audible business that Amazon bought in 2008. Another tab gets you Amazon’s shopping site, where you can buy TVs, vacuum cleaners and tennis rackets. The Kindle is already tied to your Amazon account, so it’s easy — perhaps too easy — to just click and buy. You also get Amazon’s excellent recommendation technology. Browsing the e-book section, The Great Gatsby came up, likely because I had just added a movie version to my video watch list. Kindle versions of Buffy The Vampire Slayer comic books came up, likely because I own the entire television series on DVD. Under music, digital copies of physical CDs I had purchased were waiting for me, along with recommendations for other songs and albums from artists in my shopping history. If you spring for Amazon’s $79-a-year Prime membership, you also get quick access to thousands of free movies and television episodes and the ability to borrow one e-book a month from a select list. For the first time, you can download the free Prime video to watch on a plane or anywhere else lacking an Internet connection. On older Kindle Fires and other devices, you’re limited to streaming, which requires a constant Internet connection. Amazon plans to start shipping the smaller version of the Kindle Fire HDX on Oct. 18. Like the Nexus 7, it has a 7-inch screen, measured diagonally. A larger, 8.9-inch version is expected Nov. 7 and starts at $379. Amazon is also updating last year’s 7-inch HD model, lowering the price to $139 but cutting a few features, including the camera. All three models expand on an X-Ray feature that Amazon introduced last year. While watching a movie or TV show on older Fires, you can get a list of actors appearing in that scene. Click on one for more information, mostly culled from Amazon’s IMDb celebrity-database service. With the new devices, you also get summaries on major characters and opportunities to buy songs played during the show My favorite new feature is Mayday on the HDX. It’s free, live technical support 24 hours a day, seven days a week. A tech adviser appears in a small window on your Kindle, but the adviser can only hear you and see what’s on your screen. Advisers can guide you by highlighting certain settings and buttons with a virtual orange marker. Advisers can also take control of your device and do the task for you, though you’re better off learning to do it yourself. I tried three times to stump the tech advisers. For the most part, I found them patient and knowledgeable. It appeared to me they were really thinking through the problem, rather than following a script, as I typically find with my cable company. That said, one late-night staffer was willing to give up easily and dismiss my issue as a device malfunction, until I nudged him to walk me through the steps to discover one I had inadvertently skipped. I’ll wait until the support center is fully staffed and trained before making a final judgment, but I’m pleased with what I’ve seen so far. I particularly like the security protocols; the adviser made sure to pause the screen sharing whenever I typed a password. As devices get complex, we could use more of this type of offering. I’m hoping Amazon’s approach to customer service gets adopted by Apple, Samsung and other rivals. One area where the HDX falls short is in app selection. The iPad Mini reigns with access to the thousands of apps adapted for tablets. But even compared with other Android tablets, the HDX doesn’t have as wide a selection, as Kindles work only with Amazon’s app store, not Google’s broader Play store. But I was surprised to see one Amazon video rival, Hulu Plus, available. And Netflix is supposed to get an update that works with the HDX by the time it ships. You won’t find everything at Amazon’s app store, but you’ll find plenty to keep you busy. I’ve been skeptical with the Kindle Fires in the past because they don’t do everything other Android tablets can do. But after trying out the HDX, I find it a worthy contender. Ultimately, it comes down to whether you regularly buy from Amazon and want to make its content work easily on your device.

Amazon has three tablet computers out this fall: the Kindle Fire HDX in two sizes and an entrylevel, 7-inch Kindle Fire HD. They all come with similar features, though the HDX has better hardware and comes with Mayday technical support. AMAZON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


A-8 THE NEW MEXICAN

Monday, October 7, 2013

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

TIME OUT Horoscope

Crossword

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Oct. 7, 2013: This year you seem naturally happier to others; you have a smile for nearly everyone. You also tend to look at situations more positively than you have in the past. Scorpio can cause you a lot of stress. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You are a very independent sign, yet you demonstrate an ability to keep your eye on the big picture. You interact well with a partner who clearly has different ideas. Tonight: Look at the bottom line. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Defer to others, and keep in mind that you can’t force them to think as you would like them to. Fun opportunities will open up in response to this change. Tonight: Let the party begin. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You believe that a lot can happen and be established if you encourage a free exchange of ideas and let everything happen as it needs to. Tonight: Get some exercise. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your playful side emerges when dealing with others. Remember, not everyone feels as carefree as you do. Tonight: Funnel your playfulness into a fun happening. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Tension seems to build at the slightest setback. You even might decide to stay home and work from there, if possible. Tonight: Plan a get-together with friends. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You will want to understand what is happening with a close associate, neighbor or relative. Instead of playing the guessing game, make the call. Tonight: Stay open-minded.

Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Subject: SCIENCE (e.g., The highest mountain on Earth. Answer: Mount Everest.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What is magma? Answer________ 2. What is the claim to fame of the Mariana Trench? Answer________ 3. What is an anemometer used to measure? Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Term for a change of the DNA in an organism that results in a new trait. Answer________

5. The innermost part of bones contains what? Answer________ 6. Which desert is said to be the driest desert on Earth? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Term for a single piece of coiled DNA. Answer________ 8. Cynophobia is the fear of what? Answer________ 9. What is the name of Saturn’s largest moon? Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Hot liquid rock inside the earth. 2. Deepest location in the oceans. 3. Wind speed. 4. Mutation. 5. Bone marrow. 6. Atacama Desert. 7. Chromosome. 8. Dogs. 9. Titan.

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

Cryptoquip

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

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Do not allow your more possessive side to take over. How you see a money matter might be a lot different from how someone else sees the same situation. Tonight: Call a close friend.

Screening is first step toward healing Dear Annie: Six years ago, I tried to take my own life. I was a popular high school student, excelled at sports and had a girlfriend and a supportive family who were always there for me. People thought I had it all. What they didn’t realize was that I was struggling with debilitating depression. One night, when things seemed hopeless and I felt my life was too much for me to handle, I decided to jump out of my ninth-story bedroom window. Luckily, I survived and am able to share my story in the hope that it will help others. Why would I suffer from depression? As a male, statistics say I am far less likely to have depression than females. I am also African American — a group that traditionally has low depression and suicide rates. But statistics don’t matter if you are the one who is suffering. What I want everyone who reads this to know is that depression affects all walks of life. It doesn’t matter your age, gender, economic status, race, color or creed. Depression does not discriminate. The good news is that help is available. October 10 is National Depression Screening Day. I encourage anyone who may be struggling to visit HelpYourselfHelpOthers.org and take an online depression screening. The screenings are free, easy and anonymous, and provide resources that allow people who may be depressed to take a first step toward healing. While I still deal with depression, I am alive today because I got the help I needed. Sincerely — Jordan Burnham Dear Jordan: Thank you for sharing your inspiring story and mentioning National Depression Screening Day. Depression can affect anyone, no matter their circumstance. A screening can be a helpful

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might want to revisit a personal matter. Discussions need to be not forced too much in someone else’s face. Tonight: Opt for some rest. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Zero in on your priorities quickly and efficiently. You know what is reasonable and what needs to occur in order to expand and head in a new direction. Tonight: Catch up on a friend’s news. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH As nice as you might want to be with someone, you could find that you have a problem. Understand what is happening within your immediate circle. Tonight: Get together with a friend. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You see and understand some of the miscommunications that are occurring. Your detachment permits this perspective. Tonight: Relax and choose a favorite pastime. Jacqueline Bigar

WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Gain a piece. Solution: 1. f5ch! Kh6 2. Rxh7ch! Kxh7 3. Kxh5.

Today in history Today is Monday, Oct. 7, the 280th day of 2012. There are 85 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Oct. 7, 1929, former Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall, one of the main figures of the Teapot Dome scandal, went on trial in Washington, D.C., charged with accepting a bribe from oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny.

Hocus Focus

Dear Annie: My granddaughter is having a destination wedding in Hawaii, where she lives and works. I live on the East Coast, and so do all of the other family members. Going to Hawaii would mean a long, expensive trip, plus the cost of a hotel and meals. What is the protocol concerning gifts in lieu of attending this high-cost wedding? — Grandma’s Not Going Dear Grandma: Etiquette says the wedding gift should be the same regardless of your personal expenses. But we understand that people often give more or less depending on what it costs them to attend. We only ask that you keep in mind the fact that as the grandmother, any gift from you will have special significance. Dear Annie: I wanted to thank you for printing my letter years ago. I asked what to do about my two sisters who were not speaking to each other, yet one secretly sent Christmas presents to me to give to the other. I signed it, “Tired of Being in the Middle.” You told me to stop enabling them and instead offer to mediate. That was a relief. I was honest with both of them. They still don’t want to meet, but now I don’t have to lie about the presents. I am friendly with both and willing to keep each up to date on what the other is doing. I recently took a vacation with one sister and told the other about the adventures we had. I simply refuse to let this feud force me to choose sides. Thanks. — Not in the Middle Now

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Pull back and distance yourself from a trying matter. You will see life from a totally different perspective as a result. Tonight: All smiles.

Chess quiz

way for those struggling with depression to receive the help they need. We encourage our readers to visit HelpYouselfHelpOthers.org. If you or someone you know is in suicidal crisis or emotional distress, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255).

Jumble


Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

FAMILY

A-9

The root of your kid’s bad behavior? Look in the mirror

Superstars: Learn about supernovas at the SFCC Planetarium, 7 p.m. Thursday. www.sfcc.edu/planetarium

Giving shake to AIDS shame M Rattled by school lesson on HIV, mother sets out to update teaching materials, erase stigma of disease

Michael and Jodie Howerton are shown with their children Alex, 13, left, Caleb, 11, and Mduduzi, 8, at their home in Woodinville, Wash., in September. Three years ago, the Howertons adopted Mduduzi, who is HIV-positive.

By Lornet Turnbull The Seattle Times

SEATTLE hen her daughter was going into the fifth grade two years ago, Jodie Howerton reviewed the HIV/AIDS educational materials that would be used in her child’s class — and was appalled by what she saw. The opening clip of a video, circa early 1990s, featured this headline: “Thousands die of AIDS.” In it, the human immunodeficiency virus was dressed as a growling, red monster and there was a cameo appearance by the Grim Reaper. The outdated images and statistics about AIDS and the virus that causes it were particularly troublesome to the Woodinville, Wash., mother of three, who had adopted a son born with HIV and who worried the video would perpetuate existing stereotypes. Treatment for HIV/AIDS has advanced light-years in the three decades since the first U.S. cases were reported. Now, with proper medications, those infected can live long and relatively healthy lives. “There was not a word about being born with the virus,” Howerton said of the video, which the district has since stopped using. “It was a scary, fear-based video that would teach people how to be afraid of my son.” Working with the Northshore School District, where her daughter was enrolled, Howerton scoured the Internet for current and age-appropriate videos to replace the district’s last-century set. Finding none, the communications specialist set about to make some. As part of a campaign she’s calling Redefine Positive, Howerton sat down a year ago with representatives from the state Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, Seattle Children’s Hospital Foundation, Public Health — Seattle & King County, Northshore schools and other parents and advocates to discuss a

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MARCUS YAM SEATTLE TIMES

series of documentary-style educational videos that could be used not just at her children’s school, but in elementary, middle and high schools throughout the state. Production work on the first two videos is to begin in November. “Not many kids are being born in the U.S. with this disease, but a number of kids who are HIV-positive are being adopted,” she said. “These kids, like my son, are going to sit down in classrooms where inaccurate, outdated information is being presented.” Howerton says she worries that without the latest and most accurate information, children like her son would be discriminated against and ostracized. “It’s time to educate all our kids in a way that reduces the devastating stigma still associated with HIV.” Washington is one of 33 states along with the District of Columbia that mandate schools teach children about HIV/AIDS. The state Legislature passed the law at the height of the AIDS epidemic in 1988, requiring that education on the “lifethreatening dangers of the disease, its spread and prevention begin in the fifth grade.” After Howerton raised concerns, the district replaced the fifth-grade video with the one used for sixth-graders — a perhaps less engaging one that features adults talking to children about AIDS. Howerton first met her son, Mduduzi (they call him Duzi), six years ago on a humanitarian trip to South Africa, where

he was living in a group home. Duzi came home with the family three years ago, when he was 5. Self-employed, Howerton has spent hours over the past year working on promotion and fundraising for her video campaign. She estimates it will cost $125,000 to produce all four videos. She’s using the crowdfunding platform. The videos will feature people from all walks of life living with the disease and will carry current statistics and information about prevention, transmission and compassion. “The idea is to remove the stigma,” Howerton said. “You don’t want to get this, but you don’t have to be afraid of people who have it.” To draw attention to the effort, the Howertons posted online a promotional video that features them as a family — Duzi, now 8, and his siblings jumping on a trampoline, playing with the family dog, being children. Howerton said the family agonized over revealing Duzi’s HIV status in such a public way and that she’s been criticized by other parents for the decision to do so. “Our decision was about guaranteeing he gets to live in the light — no matter what,” she said. “If this was leukemia or some other disease, there wouldn’t be a question about whether to share it.” She acknowledges that her son, as he gets older, might be mad at his parents for disclosing his condition. “But we believe we are preparing him to be unashamed forever.”

ost parents describe discipline problems as if they are “coming out” of their kids, that the problems in question reveal facets of their kids’ personalities — things like “strong-willed.” The fact is that, in nearly every instance, discipline problems with a child tell more about the parents than they do the child. Take, for example, the complaint “my child is argumentative.” Arguments between parent and child occur because the parent gives explanations for decisions. “My friend is coming over, and I’d like to serve coffee and talk with her in this room, so I’d like you to pick up your toys and move to another room” is likely to John evoke “I was here first!” or “Why can’t Rosemond you talk with your friend in the kitchen?” Living With And the argument is on. Children The form of the instruction is the problem. The parent should have simply said, “I want you to pick these toys up and move them to another room. Why? Because I said so.” Yes, I know that’s horribly old-fashioned, but the use of authoritative, nonexplanatory instructions along with those very “incorrect” four words prevented many an argument in those old-fashioned days. And allow me to point out that parent-child arguments benefit no one, no matter who “wins.” “My child won’t do what he’s told” is another example of how parents fail to realize their role in a discipline problem. Children will do what they are told — most of the time, that is, but that’s at least 80 percent. The reality is that most of today’s parents don’t tell. Instead, they plead, bargain, bribe, cajole, reason, explain, encourage, suggest and promise. When none of that works, they threaten. And when that doesn’t work, they scream. Then they feel bad and go right back to trying to be “nice,” meaning pleading, bargaining, bribing and so on. A “tell” is an instruction that uses the fewest words possible and, again, is devoid of explanation. A “tell” is not “I think you’ve been up long enough, and it’s obvious to me that you’re getting overtired, and I think it’s important that you be alert for tomorrow’s test, so how about let’s go to bed, OK?” The proper form: “It’s time for you to go upstairs and get ready for bed.” Why? Because you said so. Then there’s “my child won’t leave me alone.” That simply means the parent has failed to define and enforce a boundary. The parent has never said to the child, “I am not your servant. I am your mother, but the fact is you don’t need a mother right now, and I’m not going to be one.” I heard those very words from my mother on several occasions. Several was all it took. And by the way, that sort of reprimand did not “traumatize” me, nor do I need to speak to a counselor to “resolve” conflicted feelings concerning my mom. I have no conflicted feelings about her. Today’s mothers don’t set clear limits. Under the circumstances, it’s understandable that their children treat them as if they were vending machines. The long and short of it is, your child is a mirror. Look carefully at the image reflected therein. Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions at johnrosemond.com.

© 2013 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 29, No. 43

A pit crew works quickly, changing four tires in seconds. How fast can you find the four matching wheels?

The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc. (NASCAR) is one of North America's premier sports. NASCAR races are broadcast in more than 150 countries. Special thanks to Sonoma Raceway, Ed Rueda and Danica Patrick for providing great access to our student reporter for this page!

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anica Patrick is one of the few women in racing and is, by far, the most famous women racer of all time. “I always wanted to be the first me, not the next somebody else,” says Danica about how she never really had role models, she just strived to be her best.

Danica Patrick may seem like a rough and tough girl that races with the boys, but she says, “I’m girly away from the track!” When asked what gets her pumped up before a race, she said that she gets ready by being introduced and waving to the fans. “I feel like I do better on the track when I’m in a better mood, so I try to just have a good time.”

Danica’s number 10 bright lime green Go Daddy car is always an impressive sight to see at NASCAR races. Danica races in NASCAR which is a type of stock car racing. Stock car racing started with drivers racing cars that were the exact same as the cars on the streets today. Today, AR cars still stock car racing and NASCA NASCAR look like the cars that we drive, drivve, but are much faster.

“I’ve done things that are more fulfilling that as a driver, tha place,” aren’t first plac says Danica. “Even if you don’t win, always you should alway remember that you sometimes how yo did all day is better than winning.”

Danica didn’t dn’t always race in NASCAR. ASCAR. She used to racee in IndyCar. IndyCar ndyCar is a lot different nt from NASCAR because IndyCar cars ars are smaller and d lighter. But, just because ecause the two types pes of cars are different, doesn’t mean ean one of them is easier to drive. W When Danica raced in IndyCar, she was very successful. She won in Japan in 2008. However, that was not her favorite moment. She raced in Texas in 2010 and she was in the top five all day. Even though she didn’t win, she felt like she did better in that race because she drove well the entire day. When I asked her for the highlight of her NASCAR career, she said that her favorite moment in her NASCAR career so far was when she raced in Martinsville, Va. She started in the very back and finished 12th, and that was satisfying Daytona. more satisfy yingg than at Dayt y ona.

Our student reporter, Kimberly Uzzo, interviewed drivers and found out more about NASCAR at Sonoma Raceway in California. Read more of her articles and interviews exclusively at kidscoopnews.com Kimberly is an eighth-grader whose favorite quote is “Don’t let the fear of striking out keep you out of the game.”

Danica has knownn that she wanted to be a racer since she was as 10 when she was racing cing go-karts. But before ore that, she wanted to be what a lot of young girls want to be, a veterinarian,, a singer, then finally, y, a race car driver.

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anica said she loves being with kids, whether it is at the track or away from the track. Because Danica is such a famous racer, a lot of kids go up to her and say, “I want to be just like you when I grow up.” And when wh I asked Danica what her reply to this is, sshe said, “If somebody ever says they wa want to be like me when they grow up, I always alw tell them that they should want better than me.” to be be

Color your own NASCAR vehicle. Add stripes and logos and your favorite number, too. Take a look at www.NASCAR.com for ideas!

Standards Link: Investigation: Find similarities and differences in common objects.

REPORTER INDYCAR DANICA RACING NASCAR DRIVER WAVING FASTER TRACK GREEN PRESS STOCK EXACT FANS LIME

Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.

Standards Link: Language Arts: Use alphabetic order.

Kid Scoop supporter Ed Rueda is the owner of Hybrid Haven in Petaluma, Calif. Ed is a proud member of the 7-11 Petaluma Lions Club and the Petaluma Odd Fellows. Both organizations _________ on giving back to the community, especially to the elderly and making equal opportunities for children.

R G N I C A R T R Y E R T O C B E B W P V T E I N D Y C A R I C N T E M I L V E R A A T R A C K I S D X S E S O C T N S T E C N E O P R G T H F A S T E R E A N M F R S E N E E R G Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

Pit Crew

Pit crews take care of racing cars. Look through the newspaper for the people and organizations that care for kids in your community. Send one of them a thank you note, thanking them for their care and concern.

Standards Link: Writing: Produce writing appropriate to task, purpose and audience.

How many different sports can you find in today’s newspaper? Write them down in alphabetical order.

Replace the missing words in this article using these words:

Imagine that you are in a NASCAR race. Describe the action as you are racing neck-and-neck with two other drivers. Who wins?

Kid Scoop News supporter Ed Rueda and Tex Powell the inventor of the first NASCAR transmission.

Because of the ___________ he faced as a child, Ed believes that you should always give back to your community. “You’ve got to remember where you come from and who you are.” Ed says some people forget what is really ____________ in life. He learned a lot about giving back from his father. His father and his stepmother where both ______________ when Ed was growing up. “Dad’s always trying to help kids out. That’s where I got it, from him.” Ed has helped many kids, including myself, to _________ for Kid Scoop. He helped coordinate our meeting with Danica Patrick and other NASCAR __________. Thanks to Ed, Kid Scoop has had opportunities to ___________ more students with more stories. Standards Link: Language Arts: Use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly.


A-10

LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone stole locking mechanisms and brass fittings from city parks between Monday and Friday. u Someone stole an electronic cigarette and black purse from a car parked in the 400 block of Guadalupe Street between 4:15 and 4:45 p.m. Thursday. u A man reported that someone attempted to strike him following an argument at Rodeo Road and Richards Avenue at 3:10 p.m. Saturday. u Someone stole a wallet from an unlocked truck in the 3300 block of Cerrillos Road about two months ago. u Pins and earrings were taken from a home in the 100 block of Candelario Street between 12:45 and 1:15 p.m. Saturday. u Someone broke a house window in the 1200 block of Camino Monte y Cielo between 5 and 5:50 p.m. Saturday. u Robert Mondragon, 29, of Española was arrested on charges of burglary and shoplifting after security personnel at Wal-Mart Supercenter, 5701 Herrera Drive, said he tried to shoplift at about 8:45 p.m. Saturday. u Someone broke a window at Kai Sushi & Dining, 720 St. Michael’s Drive, sometime Saturday. The register looked as though someone tried breaking into the machine, and the owner said money was missing. u City police responded to a domestic violence call in the 1800 block of Espinacitas Street at 5:22 a.m. Saturday, but the suspect fled before officers arrived. u Ryan Lujan, 18, of 2101 Yucca St., was arrested on charges of resisting, negligent use of a deadly weapon and unlawful possession of a handgun after city officers stopped him at Cerrillos Road and St. Michael’s Drive at 5:03 a.m. Sunday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Douglas Gerash, 59, of 1802 Village Way, was arrested on a charge of violating an order of protection at a home off Village Way sometime Saturday. u A 44-year-old woman was found deceased in the 3300 block of Calle Po Ae Pi on Saturday. Foul play is not suspected.

DWI arrests u Glenin Sabillon, 38, of 6332 Entrada de Milagro, was arrested near the intersection of Cerrillos Road and Zafarano Drive at 2:27 a.m. Saturday, on his second drunken driving charge. u Robert Boulanger, 35, of New Orleans was arrested on a charge of driving while intoxicated along Cerrillos Road at 12:44 a.m. Saturday. u Albert Hubina, 56, was arrested on a charge of a driving with a revoked license after city officers stopped him for running a red light at St. Francis and St. Michael’s drives at 3:43 p.m. Saturday.

Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for its mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Sweeney Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on South Meadows Road between Jaguar Drive and Airport Road at other times; SUV No. 2 at César Chávez Community School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Jaguar Drive at Cerros Grandes Drive at other times; SUV No. 3 at Calle Atajo at Acequia Borrada.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)

Local veterinarian creates horse health app dealing with common horse health dilemmas, such as “My horse broke into A Santa Fe veterinarian has developed the feed room” or “My horse cut his a mobile phone software application to leg above the pastern and it is bleeding help horse lovers when their equines pretty badly.” are injured or acting ill. The software is meant as a guide and Doug Thal, an equine specialist who not as a replacement for a horse owner’s was raised on a cattle ranch in Northern regular veterinarian, Thal said. It also New Mexico, said he had an epiphany in includes a list of skills horse owners 2011 and began desiging the Horse Side should develop, like how to take their Vet Guide. equine’s pulse and heart rate. EssenThe app is loaded with horse anattially, the app is a mobile first-aid tool omy illustrations, basic care videos and for horse owners. links to some basic veterinary diag“Making HSVG was the hardest thing I have ever done,” Thal said. “I had no nostics. It suggests initial steps when The New Mexican

software experience and it took two and a half years to make from scratch. It was quite an adventure.” Thal and colleagues launched the app for the iPhone in August. In its first three weeks, it had buyers in more than 20 countries worldwide. The app is available from the App Store for $4.99. Thal said a version for Android phones will be ready soon. The app features several hundred observations with answers to fairly common horse ailments. It also features descriptions of more than 80 diagnostics used by veterinarians

to determine what is wrong with a horse. Thal graduated from the University of California at Davis Veterinary School and launched his own practice a few years later. His equine clinic is located south of Santa Fe. A 2005 report by the American Horse Council estimated there were more than 147,000 horses in New Mexico and more than 9 million in the United States. Find out more at www.horseside vetguide.com or www.facebook.com/ horsesidevetguide.

Balloon: Festivities slated to continue through Sunday If yOU GO

Continued from Page A-1 agree that the key to keeping them happy is wrapping them up in layers — each child had his or her own blanket — and providing them with food. Hundreds of people mill about the park at any given time, so it’s imperative, according to 25-year-old Austin Silva, to have a meeting place in case you get separated from your group. Silva, who claims to have missed only two Balloon Fiestas in his life, said that if you do get separated from your friends or family, it helps to send them a text describing the nearby balloons or a photo to give them a sense of your location. Others, such as Thomas and Jill Gentry, prefer less subtle methods for tracking each other. Thomas dons a hat with a stuffed turkey, while Jill wears a stuffed chicken on her head. They said they can always find each other, and they look good doing it. Attendees can bring outside food and drinks to the fiesta, but one might regret it upon seeing hordes of other fiestagoers with tinfoil-wrapped breakfast burritos and hot chocolate in paper cups. The Gentrys said there are dozens of food vendor choices — the official Balloon Fiesta Guide claims the food strip is a third of a mile long — and it doesn’t matter which one you choose. On a typical day, balloons may ascend

What: Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta Where: Balloon Fiesta Park, Albuquerque When: Daily through Sunday; view the complete schedule with this story on the web at www.santafenewmexican.com. Cost: General admission is $8, but those younger than 12 attend for free. More information: 821-1000 or www.balloonfiesta.com

less likely to see balloons actually leave the ground. Some fiestagoers said the best days to visit are those that feature From left, Sharon Tucker of Chicago and Susan Potts enjoy the view from a the special shape rodeos, with unique picnic table Sunday at the Balloon Fiesta. KATHARINE EGLI/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN balloons such as Airabelle, The Flying Cow, the multi-limbed Purple People Eater, Darth Vader, a red Angry Bird as late as 9:30 or 10 a.m., but if you want If you opt instead to use one of the from the popular game of the same to catch a multitude of balloons reaching five park-and-ride locations, keep in name and even a penguin dressed like skyward, prepare to wake up early for mind it will also take a while for the Sherlock Holmes. the 7 a.m. mass ascension. buses to cart you to and from the fiesta, Other suggestions are to dress in layDriving to Albuquerque from Santa Fe so plan accordingly. Also note that the ers for the freezing temperatures, check can take up to an hour, and if you ch0ose park-and-ride service is only available the morning news for weather condito park at the fiesta grounds, anticipate Thursday through Sunday. Fiestagoers a half-hour wait and a $10 fee to access also can ride a bike to the event and park tions and bring cash for the vendors. But the most common refrain was the general parking lot. The earlier you it at the Balloon Fiesta grounds. to see the spectacle in person, and that arrive, the better the parking space you’ll The fiesta’s dawn patrol starts just video and photos, while beautiful, can’t snag. If you are running late, remember before 6 a.m., and for many, it’s worth do the fiesta justice. you’ll get to the event sooner and avoid the extra hour of lost sleep to see the “Until you’re here,” said fiestagoer the ire of your fellow drivers if you focus flames illuminating the balloons against on driving instead of gawking at balthe dark sky. There’s also the option of Brenda Vickers, “you just don’t underloons, several fiestagoers said. catching an evening glow, though you’re stand it.”

How they voted By Targeted News Service

WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.

House votes House vote 1

Services for veterans: The House has concurred in the Senate amendments to the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act (HR 1412), sponsored by Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo. The amendments would provide several million dollars of funding for sports activities by disabled veterans, extend for one year the Department of Veterans Affairs’ authority to provide child care assistance to veterans receiving intensive health care services, and extend the VA’s authority to recover from third parties the cost of care and services that are furnished to veterans with health plan contracts for conditions not related to military service. The vote, on Sept. 27, was unanimous with 402 yeas. Yeas: Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M. Not voting: Rep. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M.

House vote 2 House rules and a government shutdown: The House has passed a resolution (H Res 361), sponsored by Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, to waive a House procedural rule in order to allow the House to quickly consider legislation to avert a government shutdown and to increase the debt ceiling. The vote, on Sept. 28, was 226 yeas to 191 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 3 Medical devices tax: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Erik Paulsen, R-Minn., to the continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59). The amendment would elimi-

nate the 2.3 percent sales tax on medical devices used to help fund the health care reform law, or “Obamacare.” The vote, on Sept. 28, was 248 yeas to 174 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House Vote 4 Delaying Obamacare: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., to the continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59). The amendment would delay by one year the implementation of the health care reform law. The vote, on Sept. 28, was 231 yeas to 192 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 5 Military pay and government shutdown: The House has passed the Pay Our Military Act (HR 3210), sponsored by Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo. The bill would ensure that members of the military continue to receive their paychecks from the government should the government shut down during fiscal year 2014. The vote, on Sept. 28, was unanimous with 423 yeas. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján, Pearce

House vote 6 Funding State Department: The House has passed the Department of State Operations and Embassy Security Authorization Act (HR 2848), sponsored by Rep. Edward R. Royce, R-Calif. The bill would authorize funding for the State Department in fiscal year 2014, including $4.83 billion to maintain and enhance security at U.S. embassies. The vote, on Sept. 28, was 384 yeas to 37 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján, Pearce

House Vote 7 Congressional awards: The House has passed the Congressional Award Program Reauthorization Act (S 1348), sponsored by Sen. Thomas R. Carper,

D-Del., to extend the Congressional Award program, which issues achievement awards to Americans of 14 to 23 years of age, until 2018. The vote, on Sept. 30, was 387 yeas to 35 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján, Pearce

House vote 8 Motion to avert government shutdown: The House has agreed to a motion sponsored by Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky., for the House to recede from its amendments to the continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59), and instead concur in an amendment to delay for one year the individual mandate in the health care reform law, eliminate a health insurance subsidy for members of Congress and their staffs, and fund the government through Dec. 15. The vote, on Sept. 30, was 228 yeas to 201 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 9 House-Senate continuing appropriations conference: The House has passed a resolution (H Res 368), sponsored by Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, to request a conference with the Senate to negotiate differences between the versions of the continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59) passed by the House and Senate. The vote, on Sept. 30, was 228 yeas to 199 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 10 Government shutdown and tourist attractions: The House has passed the National Park Service Operations, Smithsonian Institution, National Gallery of Art and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Continuing Appropriations Resolution (HJ Res 70), sponsored by Rep. Michael K. Simpson, R-Idaho. The bill would provide funding in fiscal 2014 for operations of the National Park Service, the Smithsonian Institution, the National Gallery of Art

and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, despite the government shutdown that began last week. Simpson said that by keeping open tourist attractions operated by the government, the bill would preserve the availability to the public of the national parks, as well as facilities that generate up to $200 million a day of economic activity for the Washington, D.C., area. An opponent, Rep. James P. Moran, D-Va., said the bill would keep open only a small number of agencies affected by the government shutdown, unfairly keeping all other affected agencies closed and failing to resolve the shutdown. The vote, on Oct. 2, was 252 yeas to 173 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 11 Funding the NIH: The House has passed the National Institutes of Health Continuing Appropriations Resolution (HJ Res 73), sponsored by Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga. The bill would provide funding for the National Institutes of Health in fiscal 2014. The vote, on Oct. 2, was 254 yeas to 171 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 12 Funding veterans benefits: The House has passed the Veterans Benefits Continuing Appropriations Resolution (HJ Res 72), sponsored by Rep. John Abney Culberson, R-Texas. The bill would provide $2.46 billion to fund the Veterans Affairs Department’s payments of benefits to veterans in fiscal 2014 despite the government shutdown. The vote, on Oct. 3, was 259 yeas to 157 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

Senate votes Senate vote 1 Continuing appropriations and Obamacare: The Senate has passed its amended version of a continuing appropriations

resolution (HJ Res 59), sponsored by Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky. The amended resolution would fund government programs through Nov. 15, at the level provided in fiscal 2013, while maintaining funding for implementation of the health care reform law and raising the debt limit. The vote, on Sept. 27, was 54 yeas to 44 nays. Yeas: Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.

Senate vote 2 House continuing appropriations proposal: The Senate has tabled the House amendments to the continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59). The amendments would have delayed for one year the individual mandate in the health care reform law, eliminated a health insurance subsidy for members of Congress and their staffs, and funded the government through Dec. 15. The vote to table the amendments, on Sept. 30, was 54 yeas to 46 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall

Senate vote 3 Rejecting House-Senate continuing appropriations conference: The Senate has tabled a resolution (H Res 368), sponsored by Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, under which the House requested a conference with the Senate to negotiate differences between the versions of the continuing appropriations resolution (H.J. Res. 59) passed by the House and Senate. The vote to table the resolution, on Sept. 30, was 54 yeas to 46 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall

Senate vote 4 House-Senate budget negotiations: The Senate has tabled a message from the House accompanying a continuing appropriations resolution (HJ Res 59) that would have established a House-Senate conference committee to negotiate an agreement on the resolution. The vote to table the message, on Oct. 1, was 54 yeas to 46 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall


Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Take care of only Earth we have T he front page of your Sept. 28 edition has three headlines: “Shutdown looms,” “U.S. ends 3 decades of silence with Iran” and “Experts set a threshold on climate calamity.” The first shows the nuttiness into which the once serious and respected Republican Party has descended. The second shows the USA finally understanding what everyone knows (you have to talk to an adversary to resolve problems). But the third is by far the most important. If we don’t stop dumping huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the air we breathe, in a mere 20 to 30 years, we’ll be wrecking our beautiful planet Earth, our only home in the unfriendly, desolate vastness of space. Ironically, the technical fix is easy and well-known — stop burning enormous amounts of coal and fossil fuels and stop treating the Earth’s atmosphere as a garbage pail. Instead, make intelligent use of the enormous amount of energy pouring on Earth daily from the sun, as Germany, Great Britain and Spain are.

Marvin A. Van Dilla

Santa Fe

Try praying There is hardly a day that goes by that one does not pick up a newspaper, magazine or some sort of news media where someone does not have some sort of negative comment on the gay and lesbian marriage controversy. It

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Tombstones tell of a deadly flu

I amazes me that so many of us forget where the Lord took us out of. We have to remember when we point fingers, we have three pointing right back at us. If the Lord himself did not come to condemn, but to redeem, who are we to judge? The Lord hates the sin, but loves the sinner. That, people, includes us all! Let’s try “praying” instead of “preying.”

been an eyesore for years. We all thank you. J.A. Brennan

Santa Fe

No laughing here Please “de-fund” Millard Fillmore. It does not belong in a self-respecting newspaper. Rod Lievano

Santa Fe

Marti E. Rodriguez

Pecos

Time well spent

A notable production

I would like to thank the city of Santa Fe Parks Department crew who cleaned up Via Caballero del Sur. The overgrown weeds, brush, chamisa and dead trees have

My wife and I are always on the prowl for first-rate theater in Santa Fe, and we succeeded this month at Teatro Paraguas, with the beautifully acted and directed production of Pulitzer

Prize-winning dramatist Nilo Cruz’s Two Sisters and a Piano. It reconfirmed for us the consistently high quality of Teatro Paraguas’ productions over the years, and how lucky Santa Fe is to have this jewel of a company. I am concerned that this off-Broadway-quality production merited no preview article in The New Mexican and no review, only a listing in the calendar of events, once with a small photo. While the paper can’t cover everything going on in town, in our view it would be a real service to local theatergoers to pay more attention to future Teatro Paraguas productions. Drew Stewart Anna Hargreaves

Santa Fe

COMMENTARY: JOHN BATESON

Golden Gate Bridge: Magnet for suicides

T

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here were 10 confirmed suicides from the Golden Gate Bridge in August. It was the most suicides in any month in the bridge’s history. Monday, Tuesday, suicide. Thursday, Friday, suicide. Sunday, Monday, suicide. Over and over, a suicide every three days. The 10th was a 17-year-old girl from Marin County, Calif. This information doesn’t come from the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District. The district considers itself the official source of all information related to the bridge — except information on suicides. The number comes from the coroner who does the autopsies. One reason the bridge has so many suicides is its magnetic appeal. Suicide sites tend to draw despairing people to them, and the numbers show that the Golden Gate Bridge exerts a stronger pull than anywhere else. Another reason may be the mistaken belief that jumping from the bridge results in a quick, near-certain death with no messy cleanup. In fact, 5 percent of jumpers survive the impact and subsequently drown, their bodies retrieved by Coast Guard crews. A handful survive — miraculously — but they usually suffer permanent physical injuries. A third reason is because access is easy. There are parking lots at both ends of the bridge and year-round walkways for pedestrians and bicyclists. One doesn’t need to procure a firearm, stockpile drugs or learn how to tie a noose. One just needs to go to the bridge and jump. The most important reason, though, is because the existing railing is only 4 feet high. Anyone can climb over it, from a 5-year-old girl — the bridge’s youngest official suicide — to people in their 80s. In 2008, Golden Gate Bridge District officials approved the addition of a net under the bridge to prevent suicides. However, they have never approved any funding for the net’s construction. They

Nine of the 10 people who jumped last month would still be alive if the Golden Gate Bridge had a suicide deterrent. did just approve more than $25 million in construction fees for a new median barrier even though there hasn’t been a fatal head-on crash on the bridge in 12 years, and only 16 since 1970. As a result, the Golden Gate Bridge continues to be the only major international suicide landmark without a barrier. In recent years, an average of three people a month have jumped from the bridge. Imagine if three people died every month in cable car accidents in San Francisco, or in falls from the bleachers at Dodger Stadium, or in traffic collisions at an unregulated intersection in Sacramento. The problem would be fixed immediately. Now imagine that 10 people died in one month. There would be public outrage, harsh media stories and lawsuits — but not where the Golden Gate Bridge is concerned. The No. 1 suicide site in the world — the Golden Gate Bridge — is in our backyard and no one seems to care. We’re closing in on 2,000 suicides from the bridge and there hasn’t been a peep, not from the public, the bridge district, city officials. There are those who believe that a suicide barrier won’t make any difference, that if people want to kill themselves and can’t do it from the bridge, they will resort to other means. Though this makes sense intuitively, it’s absolutely false. Research shows that most suicidal people fixate on one means of death. If that

MAllARD FillMORE

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

means isn’t available to them, they don’t choose another means. Instead, they choose to live. Of the small number of people who have survived jumping from the Golden Gate Bridge, nearly all have said afterward that it was the Golden Gate Bridge or nothing. They didn’t have a Plan B. A UC Berkeley professor tracked what happened to 515 people who were stopped from jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge. Twenty-five years later, 94 percent of them were still alive or had died by means other than suicide. Fewer than 6 percent went on to kill themselves. This suggests that nine of the 10 people who jumped last month would still be alive if the Golden Gate Bridge had a suicide deterrent. At least 68 of the 72 people who died jumping from the bridge in the last two years also would be alive. One explanation for the recent increase in suicides is that toll collection for the bridge has been completely automated. Many potential jumpers are seen first by passing motorists. They used to inform toll collectors, who alerted the police, who in turn sometimes could prevent jumpers from making the leap. This year, when the bridge converted exclusively to FasTrak, the motorists have had no one to tell. There is no reason for another terrible month of suicides from the Golden Gate Bridge. The bridge district should re-examine its priorities and press forward on the construction of the safety net. It would forever end the association between suicide and the world’s most famous suicide span. John Bateson is executive director of John F. Kennedy University’s community counseling centers and former executive director of a 24-hour crisis center in the San Francisco Bay area. He is the author of The Final Leap: Suicide on the Golden Gate Bridge. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

n the old part of the cemetery at the church of the Sagrado Corazón in Nambé, among the tumbleweeds, gopher holes and wooden crosses so weathered the names on them are obliterated, are three stone grave markers: Consesion García, que falleció el día 31 de Octubre de 1918; Concepción L. Sena, que falleció el día 3 de Noviembre AD 1918; Nestora Ortiz, murió Nov. 9, 1918. This is unusual. Even today, when the population of the village is 10 times what it was a hundred years ago, it is seldom that three people die in the space of 10 days. The church ledger shows that between Oct. 18 and Nov. 26 of 1918, some 20 people died. A clue to the cause of these many deaths is in an obituary preserved in the archives of The Santa Fe New Mexican for Nov. 18, 1918: “Delfina Catanach, age 11, died of influenza at her home in Nambé yesterday.” Locals didn’t know where the flu came from. One theory printed in the newspaper was that it came from the sky, because several young, otherwise healthy sheepherders who spent their lives outside died suddenly from it. Nor did locals know how to treat the flu. An advertisement ran at the time hawked a patent medicine laxative, touted to ward off the disease. The New Mexican printed a report by the editor of the newspaper in Taos, saying local stores were unable to furnish enough coffins, keeping carpenters busy making ordinary boxes to bury the dead. The director of the Los Alamos Boys School kept his students quarantined and out of harm’s way. Doctors and nurses at area pueblos saved many patients by insisting that flu victims follow their orders for strict bed rest. These and other heroes of the flu epidemic helped prevent some deaths, but their knowledge was limited. At that time, no one knew that the flu was a virus incubated in barracks and trenches of World War I, spread by homecoming soldiers and world trade. Since that time, state departments of epidemiology have studied and tried to prevent contagious diseases such as the flu. We have antibiotics for infections that can be an aftermath of the virus. And we have flu vaccine, which is extremely effective in prevention. These shots are easy to come by. They are available for free or for a nominal charge at workplaces, doctors’ offices and pharmacies. As easy as it is to get a flu shot, many people pass them up, because of laziness or fear of the needle, or from mistrust of modern medicine. What wouldn’t the parents of 11-year-old Delfina Catanach have given for a flu shot back in 1918? It’s important not to forget the lesson of the graves in the Nambé cemetery. Get a flu shot.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 7, 1913: His Excellency, Don Juan Riano, minister of Spain to the United States, is expected to arrive at Lamy at 8:24 and reach Santa Fe on the special “stub” train at 9:30 p.m. He will be the guest of honor at the banquet to be given by the city and the chamber of commerce at the DeVargas hotel. It will begin at 10:30 p.m. and if the speeches prove to be long, it will probably last until the wee small hours in the morning. Oct. 7, 1963: There is a growing resignation among legislators that the special session in November on reapportionment will result in nothing but trouble. Various solons, after lengthy study of the problem, have confided that nothing can be done but go along with District Judge Caswell Neal’s District Court order to reapportion according to population. Under the plan considered most likely to get the court’s approval, there would be a loss of 14 representatives and creation of five multi-county districts. Oct. 7, 1988: Penitentiary of New Mexico Warden Robert Tansy and three top aides are being given lie-detector tests as part of an investigation into the possible erasure of a videotape allegedly showing excessive use of force. A state health official reported the 50th case of pertussis (whooping cough) this year in New Mexico has been confirmed in a 3-year-old Santa Fe County boy.

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.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Plenty of sunshine

Tonight

Partly cloudy

Tuesday

Partly sunny

41

71

Wednesday

Thursday

Pleasant with plenty of sunshine

74/43

Saturday

Mostly sunny, breezy Mostly sunny and pleasant

73/45

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

Friday

68/36

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Sunday

Bright sunshine and warmer

61/37

Humidity (Noon)

Mostly sunny

69/40

73/36

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

18%

36%

21%

24%

22%

41%

24%

30%

wind: WSW 6-12 mph

wind: E 3-6 mph

wind: W 6-12 mph

wind: SSW 8-16 mph

wind: SW 15-25 mph

wind: WNW 8-16 mph

wind: W 6-12 mph

wind: SW 4-8 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 67°/36° Normal high/low ............................ 72°/41° Record high ............................... 79° in 2007 Record low ................................. 28° in 1969 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/9.05” Normal month/year to date ... 0.33”/11.03” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/8.96”

New Mexico weather 64

40

The following water statistics of October 3 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 0.000 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 1.170 City Wells: 3.410 Buckman Wells: 4.293 Total water produced by water system: 8.873 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.277 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 71.8 percent of capacity; daily inflow 6.14 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Santa Fe 71/41 Pecos 71/40

25

Albuquerque 73/49

25

87

56

412

Clayton 79/48

AccuWeather Flu Index

25

Las Vegas 73/45

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

54

40

40

285

Clovis 80/49

54

60 60

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

64

Taos 70/35

84

Española 72/48 Los Alamos 69/44 Gallup 72/34

Raton 78/40

64

666

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 83/47

Ruidoso 69/49

25

70

Truth or Consequences 76/50 70

Las Cruces 80/52

54

70

70

380

380

Hobbs 83/48

285

Alamogordo 77/49

180 10

Water statistics

285

64

Farmington 72/41

Area rainfall

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/7.86” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ Trace/15.27” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/9.91” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.00”/14.34” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/8.19”

Air quality index

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

Carlsbad 83/50

State extremes

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 72/36 s 68/39 s 62/13 s 73/39 s 77/40 s 62/25 s 69/21 s 71/32 s 60/24 s 74/40 s 64/23 s 76/37 s 67/38 s 64/29 s 75/39 s 71/19 s 70/22 s 75/37 s 74/45 s

Hi/Lo W 77/49 s 73/49 s 66/32 s 81/51 s 83/50 s 66/35 s 76/38 s 79/48 s 65/44 s 80/49 s 72/38 s 79/48 s 72/48 s 72/41 s 82/46 s 72/34 s 73/37 s 83/48 s 80/52 s

Hi/Lo W 81/55 pc 77/50 pc 65/34 pc 88/58 s 88/57 s 66/36 pc 77/39 pc 82/49 s 66/38 pc 81/49 s 73/39 pc 84/50 pc 76/50 pc 74/42 pc 85/48 s 72/37 pc 74/38 pc 86/51 s 82/53 pc

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

Hi/Lo 66/30 77/45 64/40 71/37 75/37 69/39 59/23 68/38 76/37 68/37 75/38 72/36 73/38 66/23 73/42 76/34 74/46 67/35 67/21

W s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s

Hi/Lo W 73/45 s 83/56 s 69/44 s 77/46 s 81/47 s 78/40 s 65/36 s 75/43 s 83/47 s 69/49 s 81/49 s 75/50 s 79/49 s 70/35 s 76/50 s 83/49 s 83/52 s 71/45 s 72/36 s

Hi/Lo W 76/46 pc 85/54 s 70/43 pc 80/50 pc 83/49 s 82/42 pc 64/35 pc 76/43 pc 87/53 s 72/50 pc 85/50 pc 79/49 pc 83/52 pc 69/37 pc 81/53 pc 87/50 s 85/55 pc 73/44 pc 72/39 pc

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

Weather for October 7

Sunrise today ............................... 7:04 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 6:40 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 9:50 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 8:33 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 7:05 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 6:38 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ...................... 10:54 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 9:24 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 7:06 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 6:37 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................. 11:56 a.m. Moonset Wednesday .................. 10:21 p.m. First

Full

Last

New

Oct 11

Oct 18

Oct 26

Nov 3

The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 47/43 84/65 86/65 64/41 65/28 77/37 60/56 86/67 84/65 64/50 72/64 79/68 77/50 67/32 73/62 45/33 65/39 86/73 80/57 64/54 59/42 82/53 93/59

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Hi/Lo 48/42 73/54 77/57 72/44 68/40 72/43 74/61 83/65 77/52 63/48 63/45 64/49 84/57 79/48 64/46 44/31 70/36 87/74 84/54 60/46 71/49 85/63 83/58

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Hi/Lo 50/41 75/54 73/53 59/39 69/41 59/40 70/51 77/60 72/52 67/49 67/47 62/46 86/59 79/47 64/46 45/31 66/41 86/74 86/59 67/48 75/52 83/63 72/57

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Rise 9:13 a.m. 10:54 a.m. 3:05 a.m. 12:10 a.m. 9:10 a.m. 6:27 p.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 7:35 p.m. 8:41 p.m. 4:36 p.m. 2:32 p.m. 7:59 p.m. 6:52 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

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

The Associated Press

Sun and moon

Sun. High: 77 ................................ Carlsbad Sun. Low 13 ................................ Angel Fire

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

Hi/Lo 72/67 73/56 88/75 61/53 55/42 86/72 70/65 71/47 90/72 86/67 93/61 84/66 74/43 89/67 60/51 67/38 84/57 88/60 83/56 73/46 59/42 78/65 91/69

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Hi/Lo 64/47 73/49 89/77 62/47 67/48 80/58 76/65 80/50 88/72 81/60 94/70 64/45 61/48 83/59 68/49 75/50 88/56 74/60 69/52 57/48 71/46 79/55 76/59

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Hi/Lo 72/49 74/55 88/76 64/51 71/54 80/62 72/55 80/53 88/70 73/54 94/70 65/42 60/44 76/50 72/51 68/48 89/59 69/60 69/52 57/45 75/48 69/48 72/53

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World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Cold front

Warm front

Stationary front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 97 .................... Lake Forest, CA Sun. Low: 13 ...................... Angel Fire, NM

On Oct. 7, 1902, a waterspout was spotted off Cape May, N.J. When the first chilly air masses of fall cross warm bodies of water, waterspouts form.

Weather trivia™

What type of cloud has been mistaken Q: for a UFO? A lenticular cloud which is saucer A: shaped

Weather history

Newsmakers NEW YORK — Miley Cyrus cautioned viewers she wouldn’t be twerking on Saturday Night Live. But she commanded the stage on this week’s edition of the NBC sketch comedy show, serving as both host and musical guest. And she did some shimmying as an oversexed Congresswoman Michele Bachmann in a parody video about the government shutdown. During Saturday’s open, Cyrus joked that she used to think twerking was cool but changed her mind now that white people are doing it.

Penn sponsors Haitians to run in NYC marathon

Sean Penn

Hi/Lo 64/47 68/48 90/68 90/81 73/64 76/54 59/50 68/43 73/48 77/62 94/74 75/49 61/52 66/55 64/50 79/63 88/70 87/75 68/56 66/57

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Hi/Lo 64/51 72/61 84/55 88/74 70/56 78/55 63/46 68/47 74/51 79/60 87/72 79/55 62/52 66/52 63/49 75/60 86/72 87/75 72/53 69/56

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Hi/Lo 63/53 75/60 83/57 87/74 70/56 71/50 64/46 65/48 75/52 81/62 85/71 83/56 62/51 62/44 63/48 74/61 88/72 86/75 78/59 68/58

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 81/59 66/46 75/54 74/54 59/46 54/39 94/76 66/52 57/41 79/65 75/63 73/45 79/54 88/75 55/43 90/57 73/66 70/48 52/46 63/55

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

Hi/Lo 78/61 68/54 77/52 70/51 75/48 53/48 92/75 64/49 59/43 73/61 72/57 79/45 77/66 90/77 61/52 68/55 80/70 57/48 61/48 62/45

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

Hi/Lo 81/64 68/49 77/54 72/52 58/40 55/49 94/76 64/51 61/43 73/63 72/54 75/42 73/63 88/77 63/50 72/52 80/72 56/43 65/50 61/44

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Today’s talk shows

Miley Cyrus rules ‘SNL’ as host and musical guest

Miley Cyrus

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

NEW YORK — Sean Penn is ecstatic that his organization will sponsor runners from Haiti to participate in the New York City Marathon. The J/P Health Relief Organization will include five Haitians on the nation’s 10-person team for next month’s 26-mile run. The 53-year old actor just came back from Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, where he visited the runners. He spoke of his admiration for their great discipline and spirit. The Associated Press

3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Julianne Moore (“Carrie”); Demi Lovato performs. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren

6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor 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 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Drew Barrymore; D. L. Hughley; the Avett Brothers. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actor Tom Hanks; Two Door Cinema Club perform.

Kate Baldwin on ‘Big Fish,’ life as a Broadway star By Mark Kennedy

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

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This undated publicity photo shows Kate Baldwin and Norbert Leo Butz during Act II of Big Fish at the Neil Simon Theatre in New York. Big Fish, a musical adapted from the 1998 Daniel Wallace novel and a 2003 Tim Burton movie, opened Sunday. THE HARTMAN GROUP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live 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 Actress Zooey Deschanel; actor Ed Weeks. 12:00 a.m. E! Chelsea Lately Actress and singer Jennifer Hudson. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren TBS Conan 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Actor Dylan McDermott; Paul McCartney 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

NEW YORK — Kate Baldwin’s dressing room on Broadway may be small, but there’s something special about it. Her window looks out at the last huge lit-up N in the Neil Simon Theatre’s marquee. “I kind of like that. That feels very Broadway to me,” she says happily. Little can get Baldwin down these days. Her new musical — Big Fish — made a splash Sunday on Broadway, and she works just a few blocks away from her husband, who performs in Mamma Mia! Both are giddily raising their first child, a toddler named Colin. “It feels like a flush period,” says Baldwin. Big Fish features music by Andrew Lippa and co-stars two-time Tony Award winner Norbert Leo Butz. It’s a touching tale of a son who is about to start his own family and is determined to find the truth behind his father’s epic tales. Baldwin plays the wife and mother stuck in the middle. Baldwin appeared in the Broadway casts of The Full Monty, Thoroughly Modern Millie and Wonderful Town before getting noticed in Finian’s Rainbow, which earned her a Tony nomination. She sat down to talk about the show, family life and the crazy thing that happens just before the curtain goes up every Saturday night between the actors in Big Fish and the ones across the street in Jersey Boys. AP: This is a musical about a father and son. What’s your role? Baldwin: I am the peacemaker. I’m the steady center in between these wildly different characters. I’m trying to make sure no one comes crashing down. To me, that’s a lovely thing to play every night. AP: This is your fifth time on Broadway. Does it get old hat? Baldwin: It feels special because it’s my first Broadway show as a mother. It changes your world completely. AP: How is it balancing work and mommy-hood? Baldwin: My day is spent being a servant to a small person who I love and cherish and will do anything for. And then I come here and I have loads of people who take care of me. I have somebody to put my clothes on for me. I have somebody who does my laundry, somebody who brings me something to drink and change my shoes for me. It used to make me feel uncomfortable to have someone tend to me, now I’m like ‘Bring it on!’ AP: You’ve played mothers quite a lot before. Why? Baldwin: I’m tall. For the most part, I project a certain maturity onstage. I have a lower speaking voice. I’ve sort of always been cast as older than I am. And in that sense, I’ve played mothers. AP: Can you now channel motherhood easier because you are one? Baldwin: Now I really know the nuts-and-bolts of it, don’t I? Now I truly understand it. AP: Graham Rowat, your husband, is also a stage actor. How did you meet? Baldwin: We met in a show. It was 1776 in Washington, D.C., at the Ford’s Theatre, and it was 10 years ago. He played Richard Henry Lee, who is kind of a buffoon. AP: At home, do you guys sing to your baby? Baldwin: No, he doesn’t want me to sing, and he doesn’t want Graham to sing. Neither of us is allowed to sing. We start and he says, ‘No, mama! No sing!’ AP: Can you tell us a secret that only theater pros would know? Baldwin: Every Saturday at 7:55 — 5 minutes before places — the ‘Jersey Boys’ go crazy, open all their windows, moon us, shout things, all that kind of stuff. Our guys’ ensemble is two floors above and they do the same thing back. It’s super-fun. I don’t know if anybody on the street notices. I think most people are inside, hopefully.

TV

1

top picks

7 p.m. on CBS How I Met Your Mother After discovering that Ted (Josh Radnor) still has feelings for Robin (Cobie Smulders), Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) tries to work through his anger with Marshall (Jason Segel) Skyping in to play mediator. Tim Gunn (Project Runway) guest stars as himself in the new episode “The Broken Code”; Alyson Hannigan also stars. 7 p.m. on KWBQ Hart of Dixie As Season 3 opens, Zoe (Rachel Bilson) has spent the summer in New York and is ready to stay there, but she has some loose ends to tie up in BlueBell, where only Lavon (Cress Williams) is happy to see her. Hoping for a good reference, she agrees to help Brick (Tim Matheson) find George (Scott Porter) and try to get the Founders Day parade reinstated. She asks Lemon (Jaime King) for help and learns a dirty secret in “Who Says You Can’t Go Home.” 7:30 p.m. on CBS We Are Men Stuart’s (Jerry O’Connell) ex-wife offers to settle their divorce if he’ll let her keep the dog. Not willing to give up his beloved pet, Stuart asks Frank, Gil and Carter (Tony Shalhoub, Kal Penn, Chris Smith) to help him get the animal back. Gil is upset when his daughter cancels their plans to go camping. Carter asks

2

3

Frank for permission to ask Abby (Rebecca Breeds) out in the new episode “We Are Dognappers.” 8 p.m. on KWBQ Beauty and the Beast Vincent and Catherine (Jay Ryan, Kristin Kreuk) are reunited three months after his abduction, but he’s changed. His scar and his memory are gone, and he’s on a mysterious mission. Catherine must figure out what’s behind these changes if she wants to rekindle their love — which will be easier said than done. Nina Lisandrello also stars in the season premiere, “Who Am I?” 9 p.m. on NBC The Blacklist In this new episode, the FBI searches for a high-ranking Chinese spy known as Wujing (Chin Han), who has reportedly hired Red (James Spader) to help him decode a classified transmission from the CIA. Liz (Megan Boone) poses as an FBI cryptographer to accompany Red on his decoding mission in hopes of protecting government secrets. Ryan Eggold and Diego Klattenhoff also star in “No. 84: Wujing.”

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Classifieds B-6 Comics B-12

SPORTS

MLB PLAYOFFS

Pirates outscore Cards for 2-1 lead By Will Graves

The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — Pinch-runner Josh Harrison stood on second base in the bottom of the eighth inning and pointed to Pirates 5 Pittsburgh Pirates third base coach Cardinals 3 Nick Leyva. “I told him to get that arm ready, because I’m coming,” Harrison said. Moments later, Harrison was streaking across home plate to give the Pirates the lead. Minutes after that, the Jolly Roger that’s been a fixture on the Pittsburgh skyline all summer climbed up the flagpole again. Harrison scored on Pedro Alvarez’s tiebreaking single Sunday, sending the Pirates to a 5-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals that staked Pittsburgh to a 2-1 lead in the best-offive NL division series. Russell Martin followed with a sharp RBI single against reliever Kevin Siegrist, who took over after Carlos Martinez (0-1) faltered. The go-ahead single was the latest big hit by Alvarez. He homered in the first two games against St. Louis and is 4 for 10 with four RBIs in the series. Alvarez also kept the Pirates’ famous flag flying high in October. “Raise the Jolly Roger!” is the rallying cry for this wild-card team, now one victory from its first postseason series win since Willie Stargell, Dave Parker and the “We Are Family” gang won it all in 1979. “We’re continuing to surprise a lot of people, I believe. We’re continuing to show people that we’re not done, that we’re not just happy to be in the postseason,” star center fielder Andrew McCutchen said. “We’re fighting to win a World Series.” Heady territory for a franchise

B

Perfect record: Kansas City Chiefs rally in win over Tennessee Titans. Page B-4

Defense boosts Lobos’ momentum By Will Webber

The New Mexican

Its nonconference schedule now a thing of the past, the University of New Mexico football team is experiencing an unfamiliar sensation heading into the final seven games of the season. Momentum. The Lobos’ 66-17 rout of visiting New Mexico State on Saturday night marked the second straight game in which the UNM offense produced huge numbers. The past two weeks, the Lobos have scored

We have a lot of playmakers on that side of the ball. They came out and played and showed it.” Kasey Carrier, Lobos running back 108 points and ground out more than 1,000 rushing yards. Behind the boost is the defense, of all things. Lambasted in a 56-42 loss to UNLV two weeks ago, the unit rose to the occasion against winless NMSU by forcing three turnovers and making stops in plus territory

inside u Statement loss for Huskies and AP Top 25 poll gridlock. Page B-4

when it needed to. “Mostly we were just hungry for a win,” said defensive end Brett Bowers. “We kinda forgot about [the game against UNLV] and came out and played this week.”

Please see LoBos, Page B-2

NFL BRONCOS 51, COWBOYS 48

shootout in texas

Please see PiRates, Page B-3

inside u Dodgers rout Braves to take 2-1 NLDS lead. Page B-3

PRESIDENTS CUP

Americans make it 5 in a row By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

DUBLIN, Ohio — The Presidents Cup ended Sunday the same way it always goes — an American celebration after Tiger Woods delivered the winning point. Woods’ back flared up on him again in the final hour at Muirfield Village. He still managed to hang on to beat Richard Sterne, 1 up, to give the Americans the 18 points they needed to win the Presidents Cup for the fifth straight time. It was the third straight Presidents Cup that Woods won the cup-clinching match — all three with Fred Couples as the captain. “It was a team effort this whole week,” said Woods, who went 4-1 for the best record of any player. “We really played well to give ourselves a nice lead.” The biggest surprise was not so much the outcome — United States 18½, International 15½ — but that the matches ended without going to Monday. Rain interrupted the matches all week and made the course Jack Nicklaus built so soft that it was mere target practice for the best players in the world outside Europe. The fourth session of foursomes had to be completed Sunday morning because of the delays. That might have been the end of International hopes. The Americans were 3 down in

Please see ameRicans, Page B-3

With Broncos’ Britton Colquitt holding, kicker Matt Prater kicks the game-winning field goal against the Cowboys during the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game in Arlington, Texas. SHARON ELLMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Field goal, Romo interception lift Broncos past Cowboys By Schuyler Dixon

The Associated Press

a

RLINGTON, Texas — Peyton Manning spent all afternoon putting the Broncos in the end zone during a wild shootout with Tony Romo and the Dallas Cowboys. The last time he got the ball, Manning kept Denver out of the end zone — and that was the best way to win the game. The four-time MVP kept up his record pace for touchdown passes, Matt Prater kicked a 28-yard field goal as time expired after an intercep-

tion by Romo spoiled the first 500-yard game in Dallas history, and the Broncos stayed unbeaten with a 51-48 victory Sunday. “It was pretty amazing that it came down to the defense making a big play at the end,” Denver coach John Fox said. “Thank God our offense kept us in the game all day long.” In the waning seconds of one of the highest-scoring thrillers in NFL history, Manning ensured that his kicker — not Romo — had the last chance to score. And with that, the Broncos ran their total to 230 points this season -- the most by an NFL team through

the first five games. The Broncos have also won 16 consecutive regularseason games. The Broncos had moved the ball to the Dallas 2 after Danny Trevathan’s diving interception at the 24 in the final 2 minutes. Needing a first down but not a touchdown so they could run out the clock, Manning and Knowshon Moreno shouted at each other in the backfield just before the snap. “He basically was asking me, ‘How am I supposed to do that? How can I get a half a yard but not get a yard and a half?’ ” said Manning, who threw for 414 yards and four touchdowns

to give him a record-setting 20 in the first five games. “I just said, ‘You can’t! You can’t score! You can’t do it!’ ” Moreno managed to pull off the first down without scoring, and Manning took three snaps to drain the clock to 2 seconds for Prater, who also had a 50-yarder among his three

Please see sHootoUt, Page B-2

inside u Perfect Chiefs rally in win over Titans. u Brees-Graham connection leads Saints past Bears. Page B-4

NASCAR

Harvick wins wreck-filled race at Kansas Speedway By Dave Skretta

The Associated Press

Kevin Harvick does a burnout as he celebrates Sunday after winning a Sprint Cup series race at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan. CHARLIE RIEDEL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Kevin Harvick didn’t simply have his hands full with the rest of the Sprint Cup field Sunday. He also was trying to tame a squirrely surface at Kansas Speedway. He handled both better than anybody else. Harvick pulled away from Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon on a late restart to win a wreck-filled race over the recently repaved track, keeping his No. 29 Chevrolet out of trouble all afternoon and making a big move in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. “It was an interesting weekend, to say the least,” said Harvick, who moved into third in points behind leaders Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson.

“Everybody was battling the tires and the track, and I think it was like driving on a razor blade.” Harvick sat on the pole for the first time in 254 races, and that should have given him some confidence. He also won the last time he qualified first, at New Hampshire in 2006. “These guys just did a great job all weekend,” Harvick said. “To have a car fast enough for me to qualify on the pole says a lot about how fast this thing is.” Harvick was chased across the line by Busch and Gordon. Joey Logano finished fourth, Carl Edwards was fifth, and Johnson finished sixth despite a hiccup with his engine on the final lap that cost him a spot on the track.

Please see HaRVicK, Page B-3

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

BASEBALL BaseBall MLB PLayoffs Division series

(Best-of-5; x-if necessary) american League Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0 friday, oct. 4 Boston 12, Tampa Bay 2 saturday, oct. 5 Boston 7, Tampa Bay 4 Monday, oct. 7 Boston (Buchholz 12-1) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 11-3), 4:07 p.m. (TBS) x-Tuesday, oct. 8 Boston (Peavy 12-5) at Tampa Bay, 6:07 or 6:37 p.m. (TBS) x-Thursday, oct. 10 Tampa Bay at Boston, 3:37 or 5:07 p.m. (TBS) Detroit 1, oakland 1 friday, oct. 4 Detroit 3, Oakland 2 saturday, oct. 5 Oakland 1, Detroit 0 Monday, oct. 7 Oakland (Parker 12-8) at Detroit (Sanchez 14-8), 11:07 a.m. (MLB) Tuesday, oct. 8 Oakland (Straily 10-8) at Detroit (Fister 14-9), 3:07 or 5:07 p.m. (TBS) x-Thursday, oct. 10 Detroit at Oakland, 4:07 or 7:07 p.m. (TBS) National League Pittsburgh 2, st. Louis 1 sunday’s Game Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 3 Thursday, oct. 3 St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1 friday, oct. 4 Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1 Monday, oct. 7 St. Louis (Wachia 4-1) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 1:07 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday oct. 9 Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 3:07 or 6:07 p.m. (TBS) Los angeles 2, atlanta 1 sunday’s Game Los Angeles 13, Atlanta 6 Thursday, oct. 3 Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 1 friday, oct. 4 Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3 Monday, oct. 7 Atlanta (Garcia 4-7) at Los Angeles (Nolasco 13-11), 7:37 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday oct. 9 Los Angeles at Atlanta, 6:37 p.m. (TBS)

League Championship series

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) american League all games televised by fox saturday, oct. 12 Oakland-Detroit winner at Boston or Tampa Bay at Oakland-Detroit winner sunday, oct. 13 Oakland-Detroit winner at Boston or Tampa Bay at Oakland-Detroit winner Tuesday, oct. 15 Boston at Oakland-Detroit winner or Oakland-Detroit winner at Tampa Bay Wednesday, oct. 16 Boston at Oakland-Detroit winner or Oakland-Detroit winner at Tampa Bay National League all games televised by TBs friday, oct. 11 Atlanta-Los Angeles winner at St. Louis or Pittsburgh at Atlanta-Los Angeles winner saturday, oct. 12 Atlanta-Los Angeles winner at St. Louis or Pittsburgh at Atlanta-Los Angeles winner Monday, oct. 14 St. Louis at Atlanta-Los Angeles winner or Atlanta-Los Angeles winner at Pittsburgh Tuesday, oct. 15 St. Louis at Atlanta-Los Angeles winner or Atlanta-Los Angeles winner at Pittsburgh

BoXsCoREs Pirates 5, Cardinals 3

st. Louis

Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b 3 0 0 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 Beltran rf 3 1 2 3 Walkr 2b 4 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 4 0 0 0 McCth cf 2 2 2 0 YMolin c 4 0 1 0 Mrnea 1b 4 1 1 0 Freese 3b 4 0 0 0 JHrrsn pr 0 1 0 0 CMrtnz p 0 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Byrd rf 3 1 2 2 MAdms 1b 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 1 1 Jay cf 4 1 1 0 RMartn c 3 0 1 2 Kozma ss 3 1 2 0 Barms ss 2 0 1 0 J.Kelly p 2 0 0 0 Tabata ph 1 0 0 0 SRonsn ph 1 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 Snchz 1b 1 0 0 0 Descals 3b1 0 0 0 Liriano p 0 0 0 0 Mercer ss 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 28 5 8 5 st. Louis 000 020 010—3 Pittsburgh 200 001 02x—5 E—Kozma (1). DP—St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Kozma (1), McCutchen (1), Byrd (2). HR—Beltran (2). SB—Jay (1), Kozma (1). S—Liriano. SF—R.Martin. IP H R ER BB so st. Louis J.Kelly 5 1-3 5 3 2 4 5 Maness 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Axford 1 0 0 0 0 0 Ca.Martinez L,0-1 1-3 1 2 2 1 0 Siegrist 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Liriano 6 3 2 2 2 5 Watson H,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Mlncn W,1-0 BS,1-11 2 1 1 0 0 Grilli S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Liriano (M.Carpenter). WP—Liriano. Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Sam Holbrook; Second, Jim Joyce; Third, Paul Nauert; Right, Wally Bell; Left, Tony Randazzo. T—2:58. A—40,489 (38,362). Atlanta

Dodgers 13, Braves 6

Los Angeles h bi ab r h bi 1 2 Crwfrd lf 5 3 2 3 2 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 1 0 0 2 0 HRmrz ss 4 3 3 2 3 1 PRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 0 1 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 1 2 AGnzl 1b 5 0 2 2 0 0 Puig rf 5 3 3 2 0 0 Uribe 3b 5 2 2 2 0 0 Schmr cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 A.Ellis c 2 1 1 0 0 0 Ryu p 0 0 0 1 0 0 MYong ph 1 0 0 0 1 0 Ethier ph 1 0 0 0 Punto ss 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 6 10 6 Totals 37131413 atlanta 202 000 002—6 Los angeles 042 400 03x—13 E—El.Johnson (1), A.Wood (1). DP—Atlanta 1, Los Angeles 2. LOB—Atlanta 8, Los Angeles 5. 2B—J.Upton (1), H.Ramirez (4). 3B—H.Ramirez (1). HR—Heyward (1), C.Crawford (1), Uribe (1). S—A.Wood. SF—Ryu. IP H R ER BB so atlanta Teheran L,0-1 2 2-3 8 6 6 1 5 A.Wood 2 1-3 3 4 0 0 3 Ayala 1 0 0 0 1 1 Walden 1 2-3 1 3 3 1 2 Avilan 0 2 0 0 0 0 Hale 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Los angeles Ryu 3 6 4 4 1 1 Capuano W,1-0 3 0 0 0 3 3 Howell 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 Belisario 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 P.Rodriguez 2-3 3 2 2 1 1 Jansen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Walden (A.Ellis). WP—Teheran, Wood. Umpires—Home, John Hirschbeck; First, Bill Miller; Second, Tim Welke; Third, Laz Diaz; Right, Marvin Hudson; Left, Hunter Wendelstedt. T—4:01. A—54,646 (56,000). ab Heywrd cf 5 J.Upton rf 4 FFrmn 1b 4 Gattis lf 5 McCnn c 4 CJhnsn 3b 4 Smmns ss 3 ElJhns 2b 3 Tehern p 1 A.Wood p 0 BUpton ph 1 Ayala p 0 RJhnsn ph 1

r 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

HOCKEY Hockey

NHL Eastern Conference

atlantic Toronto Boston Detroit Ottawa Montreal Florida Tampa Bay Buffalo Metro Pittsburgh Carolina N.Y. Islanders Columbus Washington New Jersey N.Y. Rangers Philadelphia

GP 3 2 3 2 2 2 2 3 GP 2 2 2 2 3 2 1 3

W 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 W 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0

L 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 3 L 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 3

oL 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 oL 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0

Pts 6 4 4 3 2 2 2 0 Pts 4 3 3 2 2 1 0 0

Western Conference

Gf Ga 12 8 7 2 6 7 5 5 7 5 4 9 4 5 2 7 Gf Ga 7 1 4 4 6 6 6 6 10 12 3 7 1 4 3 9

Central GP W L oL Pts Gf Ga St. Louis 2 2 0 0 4 11 2 Colorado 2 2 0 0 4 9 2 Winnipeg 3 2 1 0 4 12 10 Chicago 2 1 0 1 3 8 7 Dallas 2 1 1 0 2 4 5 Minnesota 2 0 0 2 2 5 7 Nashville 2 0 2 0 0 3 7 Pacific GP W L oL Pts Gf Ga San Jose 2 2 0 0 4 8 2 Vancouver 3 2 1 0 4 12 10 Anaheim 3 2 1 0 4 8 11 Calgary 3 1 0 2 4 12 13 Phoenix 2 1 1 0 2 5 5 Los Angeles 2 1 1 0 2 6 7 Edmonton 2 0 2 0 0 6 11 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. sunday’s Games Carolina 2, Philadelphia 1 Anaheim 3, Winnipeg 2 Vancouver 5, Calgary 4, OT saturday’s Games Toronto 5, Ottawa 4, SO Columbus 3, N.Y. Islanders 2, SO Tampa Bay 3, Chicago 2, SO Boston 4, Detroit 1 Montreal 4, Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 4, Buffalo 1 St. Louis 7, Florida 0 Dallas 2, Washington 1 Anaheim 4, Minnesota 3, OT Vancouver 6, Edmonton 2 San Jose 4, Phoenix 1 Monday’s Games New Jersey at Edmonton, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Colorado at Toronto, 5 p.m. Phoenix at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Florida at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Nashville, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Vancouver, 8 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.

Hurricanes 2, flyers 1

Philadelphia 0 1 0—1 Carolina 1 1 0—2 first Period—1, Carolina, Harrison 1 (R.Murphy, Skinner), 8:11. Penalties— None. second Period—2, Philadelphia, L.Schenn 1 (Newbury), 3:01. 3, Carolina, Dvorak 2 (Skinner), 8:20. Penalties—Voracek, Phi (hooking), 9:20; Streit, Phi (roughing), 15:14; Jo.Staal, Car (roughing), 17:52. Third Period—None. Penalties—Grossmann, Phi (cross-checking), 5:08; Semin, Car (high-sticking), 11:57; Meszaros, Phi (boarding), 13:19. shots on Goal—Philadelphia 5-10-3—18. Carolina 17-10-7—34. Power-play opportunities—Philadelphia 0 of 2; Carolina 0 of 4. Goalies—Philadelphia, Mason 0-2-0 (34 shots32 saves). Carolina, Khudobin 1-0-0 (18-17). a—16,088 (18,680). T—2:24.

AUTO RACING aUTo

BASKETBALL BaskeTBall

SOCCER socceR

sunday at Kansas speedway Kansas City, Kan. Lap length: 1.5 miles (start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 267 laps, 138.4 rating, 48 points, $364,636. 2. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 267, 101.3, 42, $229,810. 3. (14) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 267, 105.8, 41, $216,776. 4. (5) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 118.7, 41, $176,473. 5. (9) Carl Edwards, Ford, 267, 102.6, 39, $164,765. 6. (3) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 267, 116.2, 39, $164,376. 7. (8) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 267, 114.3, 37, $146,456. 8. (6) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 120.8, 37, $126,140. 9. (25) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 267, 77.5, 35, $137,154. 10. (20) Aric Almirola, Ford, 267, 82.1, 34, $145,601. 11. (7) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267, 105.2, 34, $144,096. 12. (16) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 267, 78.5, 33, $113,355. 13. (26) Greg Biffle, Ford, 267, 71.4, 31, $117,655. 14. (22) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 267, 81, 30, $141,613. 15. (15) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 267, 82.6, 29, $116,880. 16. (24) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 267, 84.7, 28, $128,625. 17. (4) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267, 89.2, 28, $150,871. 18. (12) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 267, 90.8, 26, $127,394. 19. (13) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 267, 73.1, 25, $131,555. 20. (28) A J Allmendinger, Toyota, 267, 62.5, 24, $126,138. 21. (37) Casey Mears, Ford, 267, 58.6, 24, $122,238. 22. (23) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 267, 63.4, 22, $140,905. 23. (10) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 267, 83.7, 21, $113,255. 24. (34) David Gilliland, Ford, 267, 50.2, 20, $110,313. 25. (41) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 267, 51.4, 19, $107,663. 26. (36) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 267, 52.7, 19, $112,277. 27. (33) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 267, 47.1, 18, $94,030. 28. (35) Timmy Hill, Ford, 267, 43.9, 16, $93,430. 29. (42) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 267, 40.9, 0, $90,230. 30. (2) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 266, 70.8, 14, $140,316. 31. (30) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 260, 32.8, 0, $93,280. 32. (11) Brian Vickers, Toyota, accident, 242, 76.4, 0, $97,580. 33. (43) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 235, 36.6, 0, $89,380. 34. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, accident, 199, 54.6, 11, $134,588. 35. (17) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 188, 57.3, 9, $123,103. 36. (32) David Ragan, Ford, accident, 168, 48.5, 9, $96,755. 37. (27) David Reutimann, Toyota, 157, 31, 7, $88,525. 38. (31) Michael McDowell, Ford, vibration, 144, 34.5, 6, $82,860. Top 10 in Points 1. M.Kenseth, 2,183; 2. J.Johnson, 2,180; 3. K.Harvick, 2,158; 4. J.Gordon, 2,151; 5. Ky.Busch, 2,148; 6. G.Biffle, 2,139; 7. Ku.Busch, 2,136; 8. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,129; 9. C.Bowyer, 2,128; 10. J.Logano, 2,124.

(Best-of-5) Minnesota 1, atlanta 0 sunday’s Games Minnesota 84, Atlanta 59 Tuesday, oct. 8 Atlanta at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Thursday, oct. 10 Minnesota at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. x-sunday, oct. 13 Minnesota at Atlanta, 6 p.m.

East W L T Pts Gf Ga x-New York 15 9 8 53 50 39 Kansas City 15 10 6 51 44 29 Houston 13 10 8 47 39 37 Montreal 13 10 7 46 48 45 Philadelphia 12 10 9 45 39 39 Chicago 12 12 7 43 41 45 New England 11 11 9 42 44 36 Columbus 12 15 5 41 40 42 Toronto 5 16 11 26 29 46 D.C. United 3 22 6 15 20 55 West W L T Pts Gf Ga Salt Lake 15 10 7 52 55 40 Seattle 15 9 6 51 40 34 Portland 12 5 14 50 48 33 Los Angeles 14 11 6 48 51 37 Colorado 13 9 9 48 42 32 San Jose 12 11 8 44 32 41 Vancouver 11 11 9 42 44 41 Dallas 10 10 11 41 43 47 Chivas USA 6 18 8 26 29 60 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. x- clinched playoff berth sunday’s Games Los Angeles 5, Chivas USA 0 Vancouver 2, Portland 2, tie friday’s Games Chicago 3, D.C. United 0 Houston 1, Montreal 0 saturday’s Games New York 2, New England 2, tie Kansas City 1, Columbus 0 Philadelphia 1, Toronto 0 Salt Lake 1, Dallas 1, tie Colorado 5, Seattle 1 Wednesday, oct. 9 Kansas City at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Vancouver at Seattle, 8 p.m. Colorado at San Jose, 8:30 p.m. saturday, oct. 12 New England at Montreal, 12:30 p.m. Philadelphia at D.C. United, 5 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 6:30 p.m.

NasCaR sPRINT CuP Hollywood Casino 400

Shootout: 4th highest-scoring game Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo makes an 80-yard pass to wide receiver Dez Bryant against the Broncos during the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game in Arlington, Texas. Romo had 502 yards in passing.

field goals. It was quite a debate over a measly yard in a game with 1,039 yards of total offense combined in the fourth-highest highest scoring game in NFL history and tied for the second-highest in regulation since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970, according to STATS. Romo was 25 of 36 for 506 yards and five touchdowns, breaking Don Meredith’s franchise record of 460 yards. He is the fifth quarterback in NFL history to pass for at least 500 yards and five touchdowns in a game. Romo’s 79-yard pass to Dez Bryant set up a 4-yard scoring toss to Cole Beasley for a 48-41 lead. Manning, who threw for 414 yards and moved past Dan Marino for second on the career passing list with 61,371 yards, answered by leading a nine-play, 73-yard drive to Moreno’s tying 1-yard score with 2:44 remaining. Romo’s interception came two plays later, when Trevathan dived in front of tight end Gavin Escobar. “I was baiting him,” said Trevathan, who scared his team-

NBa PREsEasoN

sunday’s Game Denver 97, L.A. Lakers 88 saturday’s Games Chicago 82, Indiana 76 New Orleans 116, Houston 115 L.A. Lakers 104, Golden State 95 Monday’s Games Toronto at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Memphis vs. Chicago at St. Louis, MO, 6 p.m. New Orleans at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Portland, 8 p.m. Sacramento at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Oklahoma City vs. Philadelphia at Manchester, England, 1 p.m. Brooklyn at Washington, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Atlanta vs. Charlotte at Asheville, NC, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at Utah, 7 p.m. Denver vs. L.A. Lakers at Ontario, CA, 8 p.m.

GolF GOLF

PGa TouR Presidents Cup

sunday at Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin, ohio uNITED sTaTEs 181/2, INTERNaTIoNaL 151/2 singles International 71/2, united states 41/2 Hunter Mahan, United States, def. Hideki Matsuyama, International, 3 and 2. Jason Day, International, def. Brandt Snedeker, United States, 6 and 4. Graham DeLaet, International, def. Jordan Spieth, United States, 1 up. Ernie Els, International, def. Steve Stricker, United States, 1 up. Jason Dufner, United States, def. Brendon de Jonge, International, 4 and 3. Adam Scott, International, def. Bill Haas, United States, 2 and 1. Zach Johnson, United States, def. Branden Grace, International, 4 and 2. Marc Leishman, International, def. Matt Kuchar, United States, 1 up. Tiger Woods, United States, def. Richard Sterne, International, 1 up. Charl Schwartzel, International, def. Keegan Bradley, United States, 2 and 1. Louis Oosthuizen, International, halved with Webb Simpson, United States. Angel Cabrera, International, def. Phil Mickelson, United States, 1 up. foursomes United States 31/2, International 11/2 Jason Dufner and Zach Johnson, United States, def. Richard Sterne and Marc Leishman, International, 4 and 3. Jason Day and Graham DeLaet, International, halved with Phil Mickelson and Keegan Bradley, United States. Webb Simpson and Brandt Snedeker, United States, def. Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel, International, 1 up. Bill Haas and Steve Stricker, United States, def. Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama, International, 4 and 3. Ernie Els and Brendon de Jonge, International, def. Tiger Woods and Matt Kuchar, United States, 1 up.

mates with a knee injury in practice last week that turned out not to be serious. “Romo threw it and I felt like, man, hopefully I don’t drop the ball when I get in the end zone this time. I fell to the ground and said, ‘Forget it!’ ” The Cowboys were on the verge of getting blown out early in the second half when they finally stopped Manning and forced a field goal. They later ended his streak of 227 passes without an interception when Morris Claiborne picked him off late in the third quarter. Dallas, which scored its most points ever in a loss, converted the turnover into a 41-38 lead on Romo’s 10-yard pass to Jason Witten, but the Broncos pulled even with a drive to Prater’s 50-yarder. The biggest momentum swing came on Romo’s 82-yard touchdown to rookie Terrance Williams that cut Denver’s lead to 35-27 in the third quarter. “So you leave this game, and obviously you are crushed and disappointed,” said Witten, who had 121 yards receiving and a touchdown. “Offensively, this needs to be

the standard by which we play.” The Cowboys jumped ahead 14-0 in the first quarter, but Dallas defenders just couldn’t stay with Denver’s receivers. Then Manning fooled them and the 92,758 watching his first game at the $1.2 billion home of the Cowboys with a bootleg for an easy 1-yard score and a 28-17 lead late in the first half. Denver lined up for what looked like a run on third down from the 1. But Manning had faked the handoff, and the roar from thousands of orange-clad Denver fans grew as they realized he was jogging toward the left corner of the end zone for his first touchdown rushing since 2008. “The key is you want to do it about every five years or so,” Manning said. “If you do it every game, they’re going to be playing it right. Naked bootlegs only work, the ones I’ve done, is when you don’t tell anybody.” Romo got Dallas in position for a 48-yard field goal by Dan Bailey just before halftime with a 38-yard completion to Williams, who had 151 yards receiving. Bryant had six catches for 141 yards and two touchdowns.

NoRTH aMERICa Major League soccer

COLLEGE colleGe

NCaa The aP Top 25 Poll

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 5, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Rec Pts Pv 1. Alabama (55) 5-0 1,495 1 2. Oregon (5) 5-0 1,424 2 3. Clemson 5-0 1,359 3 4. Ohio St. 6-0 1,305 4 5. Stanford 5-0 1,278 5 6. Florida St. 5-0 1,158 8 7. Georgia 4-1 1,138 6 8. Louisville 5-0 1,051 7 9. Texas A&M 4-1 1,003 9 10. LSU 5-1 993 10 11. UCLA 4-0 844 12 12. Oklahoma 5-0 819 11 13. Miami 5-0 780 14 14. South Carolina 4-1 764 13 15. Baylor 4-0 681 17 16. Washington 4-1 556 15 17. Florida 4-1 536 18 18. Michigan 5-0 514 19 19. Northwestern 4-1 418 16 20. Texas Tech 5-0 358 20 21. Fresno St. 5-0 258 23 22. Oklahoma St. 4-1 204 21 23. N. Illinois 5-0 138 NR 24. Virginia Tech 5-1 115 NR 25. Missouri 5-0 105 NR Others receiving votes: Auburn 61, Notre Dame 50, Nebraska 35, Wisconsin 29, Michigan St. 16, UCF 7, Arizona St. 3, Mississippi 3, Rutgers 2.

Lobos: Challenges will increase in coming weeks Continued from Page B-1

SHARON ELLMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Continued from Page B-1

WNBa PLayoffs fINaLs

Running back Kasey Carrier said the Lobos have taken on the mindset of treating every game like it’s the first of the season. That mental re-start may have helped the defense play as well as it did against New Mexico State. “We have a lot of playmakers on that side of the ball,” he said. “They came out and played and showed it.” The going for UNM gets considerably tougher in the coming weeks. The Lobos (2-3, 0-1 in the Mountain West) visit Wyoming (3-2, 1-0) on Saturday and then host Utah State (3-3, 2-0) on Oct. 19. Wyoming is one of only four MWC teams with an overall winning record, while Utah State leads the league’s Mountain Division. The Lobos are attempting to end a four-year stretch in which they have won just one game in conference play in each season. Dating to the final four games of the 2008 season, they are just 4-33 against MWC opponents. None of that seemed to matter following the win over New Mexico State. In averaging nearly 10 yards per rushing attempt, UNM demonstrated that it can at least produce the offensive fireworks to stay in most games. “They run the ball well on everybody,” said New Mexico State head coach Doug Martin. “The only way you beat a wishbone football team is you score points because they’re going to get their yards and you’ve got to keep your defense in the game by scoring.” The 541 rushing yards against the Aggies improved New Mexico’s pergame average to 367.8, No. 1 in the entire country. They have produced 1,839 yards and 21 touchdowns while averaging 6.9 yards per carry. Wyoming has its own playmaker on offense. Quarterback Brett Smith ranks third in the country in total offense, averaging 378 yards per game.

“Brett Smith is as good a quarterback, I think, as there is in the country when you mix running and throwing,” said UNM head coach Bob Davie. “We probably shouldn’t take them lightly just because we got a big win,” Bowers added. “We’ve still got to come out and play, but this shows we can definitely play better than we did [against UNLV] and maybe give Wyoming a game.”

Familiar face New Mexico State linebacker Clint Barnard had a team-high five solo tackles and eight total stops against the Lobos. Some Northern New Mexico fans may remember him more for his time with the New Mexico Highlands football team. Two years ago he was pressed into action as the Cowboys’ emergency quarterback when the team’s top two signalcallers went down to injury. An all-state player in 8-man football at Melrose High School, he transferred to NMSU following his freshman year and sat out last season.

Alumni inspiration Davie had six former Lobos meet with the current crop of players on Friday night. They were there to discuss the importance of the Lobos-Aggies rivalry. He did the same thing last year, and it helped UNM end a three-game skid to NMSU. Saturday’s win was the first against the Aggies in Albuquerque since 2007, meaning it was an entirely new experience for the entire UNM roster. “Me, personally, I didn’t understand the meaning of this rivalry until last year when coach had guys come and talk to us,” Carrier said.


SPORTS

Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Dodgers rout Braves to take NLDS lead By Beth Harris

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The bigname bats for the Los Angeles Dodgers did more than enough to overcome some tentaDodgers 13 tive rookie Braves 6 pitching. Carl Crawford hit a three-run homer, Juan Uribe added a two-run shot and Los Angeles routed the Atlanta Braves 13-6 on Sunday night for a 2-1 lead in their best-of-five NL division series. Hanley Ramirez and Yasiel Puig each had three hits and scored three times on a big night at the plate for the Dodgers, who matched a franchise record for runs in a postseason game. Brooklyn beat the New York Yankees 13-8 in Game 2 of the 1956 World Series. “It was a total team effort,” Crawford said. “Guys were swinging the bat well. That’s what it’s going to take: 25 guys to do the job and come together and play well.” Los Angeles can advance to the NL championship series with a victory at home in Game 4 on Monday night. Ricky Nolasco pitches for manager Don Mattingly’s Dodgers against veteran Freddy Garcia. Crawford made the play of the game when he tumbled head over heels and onto his head to catch an eighth-inning foul ball at the low retaining wall in left field. The speedy leadoff man also scored three times, including once in the eighth when the Dodgers made it 13-4. Chris Capuano won in relief of ineffective rookie Hyun-Jin Ryu in a game that took 4 hours, 1 minute. The 13 runs allowed by the Braves equaled the most in club history for a postseason game. “I don’t think the emotions

Dodgers pitcher Chris Capuano throws in Game 3 of the National League division series on Sunday against the Braves in Los Angeles. MArk J. TErrILL/THE ASSOCIATED PrESS

or the crowd or anything had anything to do with it. I think we just had some mistakes,” Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said. Los Angeles rallied in the third to regain the lead for good after Atlanta tied it in the top of the inning. After that, the Braves didn’t manage much besides Jason Heyward’s tworun homer in the ninth. By then, it was way too late. Atlanta starter Julio Teheran and Ryu both made inauspicious postseason debuts in the first matchup of rookie pitchers in the playoffs since 2007. Neither stayed around long. In addition to being shaky on the mound, Ryu made two major mistakes in the field before giving way to Capuano, who spent most of the season in the rotation before moving to the bullpen. With the Dodgers owning a six-run lead in their first home playoff game since 2009, fans waved their blue souvenir towels with one hand and made chopping motions with the other in mocking Atlanta’s trademark tomahawk chop.

Teheran took the loss, giving up six runs and eight hits in 2⅔ innings. The 22-year-old right-hander struck out five, walked one and threw a wild pitch. “I think he just left some balls out over the plate, you know, and made some mistakes,” Gonzalez said. “And with this club, if you do that, you’re going to look down at a gas tank with a lighted match.” Ryu allowed four runs and six hits in three innings, becoming the first South Korean-born pitcher to start a postseason game in the major leagues. Despite his rookie status, the left-hander brought a wealth of experience from his native country in becoming the first player to go from the Korean Baseball Organization to the majors. Besides his seven seasons in the KBO, he had pitched in the 2009 World Baseball Classic at Dodger Stadium as a reliever. Atlanta got to him with two runs in the first during another of Ryu’s typically slow starts. Capuano came on to strike out

three and walk three in three hitless innings. Braves reliever Alex Wood gave up four runs — none earned — and three hits in 2⅓ innings. Los Angeles extended its lead to 10-4 with four runs in the fourth. Ramirez had an RBI triple for his sixth extra-base hit in three postseason games, tying the club record set by Steve Garvey in four games of the 1978 NL championship series. “He’s in a real good groove right now. He’s in a zone. We’re just trying to get on base for him and he’s been driving us in,” Crawford said. “He’s pretty locked right now.” Puig added an RBI single and Uribe followed with a two-run homer on the first pitch he saw from Wood. The Dodgers regained the lead 6-4 in the third on RBI singles by Adrian Gonzalez and Skip Schumaker. Ryu was lifted for a pinch-hitter later in the inning. Atlanta tied it 4-all in the third, helped by Ryu’s major miscues. The left-hander loaded the bases on consecutive singles to Justin Upton, Freddie Freeman and Evan Gattis with no outs. Brian McCann grounded into a fielder’s choice to first base, and Ryu got there late. He missed the bag after taking the throw and desperately stuck his right foot back to tap the bag, but a sprinting McCann was already safe. Ryu’s second mistake followed on Chris Johnson’s dribbler up the first base line that allowed Freeman to score on the fielder’s choice groundout. Ryu took the ball and threw to the plate with no chance to get Freeman. Mattingly reacted in the dugout, saying, “No,” while removing his cap and scratching his head.

B-3

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS 11 a.m. on MLB — ALDS, Game 3, Oakland at Detroit 1 p.m. on TBS — NLDS, Game 4, St. Louis at Pittsburgh 4 p.m. on TBS — ALDS, Game 3, Boston at Tampa Bay 7:30 p.m. on TBS — NLDS, Game 4, Atlanta at Los Angeles NFL FOOTBALL 6:25 p.m. on ESPN — N.Y. Jets at Atlanta

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

Today Boys soccer — Taos at St. Michael’s, 3:30 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Moreno Valley, 4 p.m. Girls soccer — Pojoaque Valley at Moreno Valley, 5:30 p.m. Volleyball — Pecos at Monte del Sol (Genoveva Chavez), 5:30 p.m.

Tuesday Boys soccer — Capital at Santa Fe High, 6 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol (MrC), 4 p.m. Girls soccer — Capital at Santa Fe High, 6 p.m. Desert Academy at St. Michael’s, 4:30 p.m. Academy for Technology and the Classics at Santa Fe Indian School, 4:30 p.m. Volleyball — Mora at Santa Fe Preparatory, 6:30 p.m. Pecos at Peñasco, 6:30 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Walatowa, 5:30 p.m. Graceway Christian at New Mexico School for the Deaf, 5 p.m. West Las Vegas at Las Vegas robertson, 6:30 p.m. Los Alamos at Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory, 6:30 p.m.

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Pirates: Game a nail-biter for clubs that raced for NL Central title Continued from Page B-1 had endured a record 20 consecutive years of losing coming into this season. Six months later, the Pirates are on the cusp of knocking out baseball royalty. Mark Melancon (1-0) picked up the win despite allowing Carlos Beltran’s tying home run in the top of the eighth. Jason Grilli worked the ninth for a save. Charlie Morton is set to start for Pittsburgh in Game 4 on Monday against rookie Michael Wacha. Beltran finished 2 for 3 with three RBIs. His 16th playoff home run moved him past Babe Ruth for eighth place in postseason history. “It’s a must-win tomorrow for us,” Beltran said. “Hopefully we can come here tomorrow, take care of business, win and go play the last game at home.” Beltran’s shot temporarily silenced a rocking crowd at PNC Park. It also set the stage for another dramatic win by the Pirates. McCutchen led off the eighth with his second hit, a double to left. But the NL MVP candidate unwisely tried to advance on Justin Morneau’s grounder to shortstop and was an easy out at third. Harrison ran for Morneau and moved up when Marlon Byrd walked. St. Louis manager Mike Matheny

Pirates’ Marlon Byrd hits a single in Sunday’s Game 3 of the National League division series against the Cardinals in Pittsburgh. DON WrIGHT/THE ASSOCIATED PrESS

turned to a lefty in Siegrist to face the left-handed Alvarez. The Pittsburgh slugger tied for the NL lead with 36 homers during the regular season, but hit just .180 against lefties. “I just knew it was going to be a tough matchup,” Alvarez said. “I’ve seen him a couple of times before. I haven’t had much success. He’s a pitcher with good stuff — great stuff. He threw me a couple of fastballs out over the plate.”

One too many, as it turned out, and Alvarez singled between first and second. Martin then fouled off a squeeze bunt before lining a hit to left that gave Grilli more than enough cushion. The game was a rare nail-biter between two clubs that spent the summer shadowing each other in the race for the NL Central title. Coming into Sunday, only five of the previous 21 matchups between the two were decided by two runs or less.

After blowouts by each club in St. Louis, there wasn’t much room to breathe in front of a frenzied, blackclad crowd looking for a repeat of Pittsburgh’s giddy 6-2 romp over Cincinnati in the wild-card game last Tuesday. Martin’s sacrifice fly off reliever Seth Maness in the sixth gave the Pirates a 3-2 lead and turned the game over to Pittsburgh’s “Shark Tank” bullpen, one of the keys to the franchise’s first winning season and playoff berth in a generation. Tony Watson worked around a oneout single in the seventh before giving way to Melancon. The Cardinals must win two straight to advance to the NL championship series for the third straight year. “We’ve been in this situation,” Beltran said. “Last year, I think we were in this situation a lot. So I think we’re fine, man. We want to come here tomorrow, we want to win and hopefully take this series home.” Pirates starter Francisco Liriano dominated the Cardinals during the regular season, going 3-0 with an 0.75 ERA in three starts against the NL’s highest-scoring team. He was electric against the Reds last Tuesday, shaking off a sinus infection and baffling them with a series of changeups and sliders that ended Cincinnati’s season and

Americans: Looked like rout was on early Continued from Page B-1 two matches and turned them into a win and a halve, giving them a 14-8 lead going into the final round. The Americans needed only to win four of the 12 singles matches to keep the gold trophy. It was a little harder than they imagined, though it was a long shot for the Internationals. “It was a tall order, but they gave it their best shot. These guys played their tails off,” International captain Nick Price said. “We’re a real hodge-podge of a team that came together from four corners of the planet. And they gave the might of America a run for their money.” Even though the Americans clinched a tie with more than an hour left, it took until Woods in the ninth of 12 matches to secure the win. “There was no intensity.

We played and enjoyed the day and the people here in Columbus,” Phil Mickelson said after he made four bogeys in the last five holes and lost a match that ultimately didn’t matter to Angel Cabrera. “I thought it was going to be closed out early. On 12 or 13, they said, ‘Your match is going to count.’ What? We ended up winning. That’s all that matters.” It looked like the rout was on early. Hunter Mahan quickly dispatched of Hideki Matsuyama. Jason Dufner never trailed in beating Brendon de Jonge. Zach Johnson overwhelmed Branden Grace, keeping the South African winless for the week. That gave the Americans 17 points and assured them a tie. But it took more than an hour for them to clinch the cup thanks to a spirited effort by Price’s team.

Graham DeLaet, who earlier Sunday chipped in from in front of the 18th green to help earn a half-point, holed out from a bunker on the 18th for birdie to give him a 1-up win over 20-year-old Jordan Spieth. Ernie Els made a 30-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole and won his match when Steve Stricker missed birdie putts on the last two holes. Adam Scott and Jason Day won their matches, and Marc Leishman gave the Internationals yet another point when he made a 15-foot par from the back of the 18th green. It figured to come down to Woods, who won despite not making a single birdie on the back nine. He grabbed his back after trying to hit fairway metal into the par-5 15th green, though Sterne missed an 8-foot birdie putt to halve the

hole. The match turned on the par-3 16th, when Sterne’s tee shot cleared the water, the green and nearly the sky boxes. He made bogey as Woods went 1-up. Woods chipped to a foot for par on the 17th. On the final hole, Sterne left himself a 50-foot birdie putt on the 18th that never came close. Woods rolled his 30-foot attempt to tap-in range, and Sterne conceded. Webb Simpson conceded the 18th hole from the fairway — he was up against a tree — to halve his match with Louis Oosthuizen. Still, it was the fifth straight time the Americans have won by at least three points, dating to the famous tie in South Africa. The Internationals have only won this event once since it began in 1994, and that was 15 years ago in Australia.

manager Dusty Baker’s tenure. Liriano narrowly escaped damage in the third Sunday when Matt Holliday lined to right with the bases loaded. The left-hander wasn’t quite as fortunate in the fifth. Jon Jay led off with a single and Pete Kozma followed with a walk. After pitcher Joe Kelly struck out trying to bunt, a double steal set up Beltran’s two-run single. At 2-all, the Cardinals had matched their entire output against Liriano in their previous 28 innings. Liriano was matched nearly pitch for pitch by the unflappable Kelly. The 25-year-old right-hander has been rocksteady all season, even as he moved from middle reliever to starter in July. Kelly welcomed the hostile environment, calling the sea of black-clad fans that awaited him one of the things a kid dreams about. The reality proved a little more unnerving, at least when Byrd hit a two-run single in the first. The well-traveled outfielder — who played in 1,250 regular-season games before reaching the playoffs for the first time — has been a welcome jolt both in the lineup and in the clubhouse for the Pirates. “Just having a heck of a time,” Byrd said.

Harvick: Kenseth said race ‘treacherous’ Continued from Page B-1 Kenseth held onto his lead in the Chase with an 11th-place finish. Johnson narrowed the gap to three points, while Harvick closed to within 25 points heading to Charlotte. “We just got to keep doing what we did today to be a contender,” said his car owner, Richard Childress. “I don’t think top 10s will win a championship when you’re racing Jimmie Johnson and the group of guys that are up there.” Kyle Busch was the big loser after crashing out of his third straight Sprint Cup race at Kansas. He dropped from third in points to fifth, 35 out of first place. “All-in-all just a crazy day,” said Johnson, who shaved five points off of Kenseth’s lead.

“Wacky restarts, a lot of chaos there, and caution after caution for who knows what.” There were 15 cautions in the race, breaking the record of 14 set in last year’s race. The first came when the race wasn’t even a lap old and Danica Patrick slammed into the wall, and most of them occurred when cars got loose coming out of Turn 2. Kenseth both called the race “treacherous,” pointing to the combination of a repave last year and Goodyear’s new “multi-zone” tires that made it seem as if they were skating across a smooth, glasslike surface most of the afternoon. All of it was compounded by temperatures in the 50s at the start, more than 30 degrees cooler than practice earlier in the week.


B-4

FOOTBALL

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

NFL

Perfect Chiefs rally in win over Titans By Teresa M. Walker

Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles follows the block of tackle Branden Albert to score a touchdown against the Titans on a 1-yard run in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game in Nashville, Tenn.

The Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Being perfect is what matters most in the NFL, as Chiefs coach Andy Reid knows Chiefs 26 only too well. Titans 17 No matter how ugly some of those wins may be. Jamaal Charles scored a 1-yard touchdown with 6:23 left, and the Chiefs rallied to beat the Tennessee Titans 26-17 on Sunday. “We are 5-0, and we’re not ashamed of that,” Reid said. “We also know that we’ve got a ton of room to improve and it’s important that we continue to do that.” The Chiefs (5-0) are off to their best start since 2003, when they won their first nine games. This win came despite blowing a 13-0 halftime lead in this early AFC showdown between these surprising teams bouncing back after losing seasons, and Charles called this a special win. “I am speechless right now,” Charles said. “This team is very blessed to be 5-0 right now. Nobody expected us to be 5-0.” The Titans (3-2) couldn’t have been more out of sync in the first half with Ryan Fitzpatrick starting for Jake Locker sidelined with his sprained right hip. He missed his first five passes and went three-and-out on his first five series before guiding Tennessee to 17 straight points in the second half. Charles put the Chiefs ahead to stay 20-17. He finished with 50 of his 108 yards on 22 carries coming in the fourth quarter on 11 carries. The Chiefs also intercepted Fitzpatrick twice in the final 6:14. Ryan Succop kicked four field goals, including a 48-yarder. The Titans had one last chance needing to score twice and sent Rob Bironas out for a 32-yard field goal. But Bironas

MARK ZALESKI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

missed wide right, and time expired. “The bottom line is we found a way back into that game and had an opportunity to go up by more than four and we didn’t do that,” Titans coach Mike Munchak said. Now Kansas City heads home for a three-game stretch, though the Chiefs had plenty of support on the road in Nashville. “I thought the fans controlled that lower bowl there and we heard them and we appreciate all that support that they were able to give us, especially down the stretch there,” Reid said. The Chiefs and Titans came in tied atop the NFL with a plus-9 turnover margin, but it was Kansas City that forced three turnovers and turned those into 13 points. The Chiefs also had a goal-line stand at their own 1 late in the first half. The Titans forced two they managed to convert into a touchdown. Kansas City dominated early with a 132-10 edge in total offense in the first quarter and was up 13-0 at halftime on a rainy day in Nashville. The goalline stand also proved huge as the Chiefs not only stopped the Titans four times from their own 1 but drove for another field goal. Fitzpatrick looked rusty in his first start since being in Buffalo last season, and his new teammates weren’t much help. Chris Johnson finished with only 17 yards rushing on 10 carries. But Fitzpatrick outgained the

Chiefs all by himself in the third quarter in keying the Titans’ rally. He flipped the ball to Johnson for a 49-yard TD. He also scrambled 9 yards for a TD giving the Titans a 17-13 lead early in the fourth quarter. The Titans also settled for a 22-yard field goal by Bironas after having first-and-goal in the third. “We had to gear down and somebody had to make a play, stop the snowball from rolling downhill, and we did,” Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said. The Chiefs’ go-ahead drive was keyed by an unnecessary roughness flag on Titans linebacker Moises Fokou for hitting Alex Smith as the quarterback scrambled on third-and-5. Smith only picked up 2 yards and was hit at the sideline, and the flag gave the Chiefs first down. “If you’re not sliding, to me, you’re not giving yourself up,” Munchak said of Smith. “He wasn’t sliding.” Marcus Cooper wrestled the ball away from Nate Washington with 6:14 left, and Quintin Demps picked off a pass that bounced off Titans receiver Kendall Wright with 2:39 left. Succop kicked field goals of 33 and 48 yards after each to pad the lead. Cooper put the Chiefs up 7-0 when he recovered the ball in the end zone after the ball brushed up against Titans blocker Damian Williams before dribbling to the end zone — Tennessee’s first turnover this season.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Statement loss for Huskies and AP Top 25 poll gridlock By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press

This will provide little relief to coach Steve Sarkisian and Washington, which lost a heartbreaker to Stanford on Saturday night, but no team left a better impression this weekend than the Huskies. Washington lost 31-28 on the road and dropped only one spot to No. 16 in The Associated Press college football poll Sunday. The Huskies outgained the Cardinal offensively by 205 yards and looked every bit the equal of the No. 5 team in the country. A video review of a fourth-down pass by Washington, reversed to incomplete after being ruled a catch, essentially ended the Huskies’ upset bid. It was a close call. That result, along with Ohio State’s come-frombehind 40-30 victory at Northwestern, helped the top five teams in the Top 25 hold their places for a fourth straight week. Alabama is No. 1, followed by Oregon, Clemson, Ohio State and Stanford. The Tide received 55 first-place votes, and Oregon got the rest. What Washington got was to show anybody who decided to stay up late that this is not a team destined for a fourth straight 7-6 season under Sarkisian. The rebuilding, and there was plenty to do when Sarkisian took over in 2009, finally has produced a team that looks capable of being a legitimate threat to Stanford and Oregon in the Pac-12 North. Of course, Washington (4-1, 1-1) beat Stanford last season in Seattle. Why is this different? Last year’s Huskies had already gotten crushed at LSU when they upset the Cardinal. In that game, the Huskies got manhandled up front by Stanford’s defensive line, quarterback Keith Price took a beating and played tentatively. Stanford, however, was just dysfunctional enough offensively to allow UW to sneak away with a 17-13 win. It felt more like Stanford lost than the Huskies had won. The next week Washington was hammered 52-21 at Oregon. The Ducks come to Seattle on Saturday for another huge game and another chance for UW to make a statement with a victory. Oregon will be greeted by a confident Price, playing behind a much improved line and with an array of talented playmakers at his disposal. Defensively, the Huskies are fast and sure-tacklers, masterfully coached by coordinator Justin Wilcox. “I think the thing that we proved to ourselves is we can beat anybody in the country,” Sarkisian said Saturday night.

The Huskies haven’t reached eight wins in a season since 2001 and haven’t earned a BCS bid since 2000. It’s been more than 20 years since they were the perennial class of the conference, winning a share of the national title in 1991 under coach Don James. No matter what happens against Oregon, there are plenty of reasons for Washington fans to be optimistic right now.

Gridlock There have been few upsets to re-arrange the rankings so far this season. Only three teams ranked in the 15 have lost unranked team, and one of them was Florida’s loss to Miami. Of the teams ranked in the preseason top 12, five have lost, but all those losses came against teams that are currently ranked. All of this has created poll gridlock. The last time the top five teams went four weeks with no changes was late in the 2004 season, when Southern California was No. 1, followed by Oklahoma, Auburn, California and Utah. There was one catch in ‘04. One of those weeks Auburn tied Oklahoma for second.

Moving in Missouri (5-0), coming off a 51-28 victory against Vanderbilt, moved into the ranking for the first time since September 2011. The Tigers are 25th, heading into Saturday’s game at Georgia. Missouri will be the fourth ranked opponent Georgia has played in its first six games. Also moving into the rankings this week were No. 23 Northern Illinois (5-0) and No. 24 Virginia Tech (5-1).

Moving out Mississippi dropped out of the rankings after a second straight loss in the state of Alabama. The Rebels lost 30-22 to Auburn on Saturday after being shut out by Alabama the week before. But with Missouri moving into the Top 25, the Southeastern Conference still has seven ranked teams, which matches a record for one league. The ACC and Big Ten have also done it, but no league has done it more than the SEC. Also out of the rankings this week are Arizona State and Maryland. The Terps’ one-week stay ended with a 63-0 loss to No. 6 Florida State. That matched the most-lopsided loss ever by a ranked team.

From the archive No. 15 Baylor moved up two spots after beating West Virginia 73-42. It’s the sixth time this season that a ranked team has scored 70 or more points. That matches the most (1944 and 1995) in a season.

Brees-Graham connection leads Saints past Bears By Jay Cohen

The Associated Press

CHICAGO — Drew Brees passed to Jimmy Graham along the sideline. He found the tight end over Saints 26 the middle. They Bears 18 hooked up for long plays and short ones, all over the field. That New Orleans connection was just too much for the Chicago Bears. Brees threw two touchdown passes, Graham tied an NFL record with another 100-yard game and the Saints beat the Bears 26-18 on Sunday to remain unbeaten. “We knew the formula coming into this game was to remain patient, to run the football effectively, to be very efficient in the passing game and to take care of the football, priority No. 1,” Brees said, “and we were able to do all those things.” Brees was 29-of-35 passing for 288 yards in his first victory in four career games at Soldier Field. Garrett Hartley matched a career high with four field goals as New Orleans (5-0) picked up its first win in Chicago since a 31-10 victory on Oct. 8, 2000. Graham continued his torrid start for the Saints, catching 10 balls for 135 yards in his fourth consecutive 100-yard game — matching an NFL record for a tight end. Tony Gonzalez was the first to accomplish the streak in 2000, and Graham matched the surge in 2011. Graham and Brees said they spent more time together during the offseason, and it looks as if all that work is paying off. “I’m just blessed to be with such a great quarterback and a guy who has so much trust in me,” Graham said. Graham helped the Saints hold onto the ball for 36 min-

utes, and Brees’ team had no turnovers. The ball control was crucial with Alshon Jeffery putting together a career day for the Bears (3-2). Jeffery had 10 receptions for a franchise-record 218 yards, breaking Harlon Hill’s mark of 214 at San Francisco on Oct. 31, 1954. He also had a 3-yard touchdown grab in the second quarter. “What I did out there, I’m more concerned about the ‘W,’ not about what I did,” he said. “It’s a team thing. It took 11 guys to get 200-plus yards or whatever I had.” Jeffery’s 58-yard catch set up Jay Cutler’s 2-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall, and Matt Forte ran in the 2-point conversion to trim New Orleans’ lead to 26-18 with 2:11 remaining. The Bears got the ball back with 21 seconds left and no timeouts. Cutler then passed to Jeffery in the middle of the field for 21 yards, but time expired before they could run another play. “It’s just a few plays here and there,” said Cutler, who was 24 of 33 for 358 yards and two touchdowns in Chicago’s second straight loss. “Against a team like that, the way they played offensively and ate up the clock, it’s hard to rebound if you miss three or four plays in the game.” It took a while for Brees to get started, but New Orleans’ defense made sure he had plenty of time to get warmed up. The Saints sacked Cutler twice while limiting the Bears to one first down in the first quarter. Chicago had just 51 yards when it got the ball back with 5:57 left in the first half. After two field goals by Hartley — including a 19-yard chip shot after Cutler fumbled on a sack by Malcolm Jenkins deep in Chicago territory — Brees

started to find his rhythm. He connected with Graham on pass plays of 29 and 38 yards to get New Orleans to the 7 with 7:23 left in the half. This time, the Saints got into the end zone. Brees rolled out on second down and flipped the ball to Pierre Thomas, who fought through D.J. Williams’ tackle attempt and extended his right arm over the goal line for the 2-yard touchdown that made it 13-0 with 6:02 remaining. “When my name is called to do the job, I go out there and do my best,” said Thomas, a Chicago native. “That’s all I can really ask for. When my name is called, just go out there and perform.” The Bears responded with a seven-play, 80-yard drive that ended with Jeffery’s TD. But they gave the ball back to Brees with 2:41 left in the half, plenty of time for the star QB to direct another scoring drive. Thomas had a big 2-yard run on fourth-and-1 from the Chicago 27 and then went 25 yards for the score on a screen play with 32 seconds remaining. Thomas’ second TD reception made it 20-7 and was the result of a perfect call by Payton, who still has a deft touch when it comes to play-calling after missing last season as a result of the bounty scandal. “It was a screen play away from the pressure,” Brees said. “So you had everybody going one direction, and here we are throwing a screen and getting linemen out. The key is your ability to get linemen out and down the field. “That was a big play. Big momentum gainer going into halftime.” NOTES u The Saints also won a road game against the Bears in 2002, but that victory came in Champaign because Soldier Field was being renovated.


FOOTBALL

FOOTBALL FOOTBALL

NFL American Conference

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

W 4 3 2 2 W 4 3 2 0 W 3 3 3 0 W 5 5 2 1

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

T Pct PF PA 0 .800 95 70 0 .600 114 117 0 .500 68 88 0 .400 112 130 T Pct PF PA 0 .800 139 79 0 .600 115 95 0 .400 93 139 0 .000 51 163 T Pct PF PA 0 .600 117 110 0 .600 101 94 0 .600 94 87 0 .000 69 110 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 230 139 0 1.000 128 58 0 .500 108 102 0 .250 71 91

National Conference

East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 2 3 0 .400 135 159 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 152 136 Washington 1 3 0 .250 91 112 N.Y. Giants 0 5 0 .000 82 182 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 5 0 0 1.000 134 73 Carolina 1 3 0 .250 74 58 Atlanta 1 3 0 .250 94 104 Tampa Bay 0 4 0 .000 44 70 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 3 2 0 .600 131 123 Chicago 3 2 0 .600 145 140 Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 118 97 Minnesota 1 3 0 .250 115 123 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 4 1 0 .800 137 81 San Francisco 3 2 0 .600 113 98 Arizona 3 2 0 .600 91 95 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 103 141 Sunday’s Games Green Bay 22, Detroit 9 New Orleans 26, Chicago 18 Kansas City 26, Tennessee 17 St. Louis 34, Jacksonville 20 Cincinnati 13, New England 6 Indianapolis 34, Seattle 28 Baltimore 26, Miami 23 Philadelphia 36, N.Y. Giants 21 Arizona 22, Carolina 6 Denver 51, Dallas 48 San Francisco 34, Houston 3 San Diego at Oakland Thursday’s Game Cleveland 37, Buffalo 24 Open: Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, Washington Monday’s Game N.Y. Jets at Atlanta, 6:40 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 10 N.Y. Giants at Chicago, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 13 Carolina at Minnesota, 11 a.m. Oakland at Kansas City, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Houston, 11 a.m. Green Bay at Baltimore, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Detroit at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Seattle, 2:05 p.m. Jacksonville at Denver, 2:05 p.m. Arizona at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m. New Orleans at New England, 2:25 p.m. Washington at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Miami Monday, Oct. 14 Indianapolis at San Diego, 6:40 p.m.

Chiefs 26, Titans 17

Kansas City 7 6 0 13—26 Tennessee 0 0 10 7—17 First Quarter KC—Cooper fumble recovery in end zone (Succop kick), 11:40. Second Quarter KC—FG Succop 29, 14:55. KC—FG Succop 24, :09. Third Quarter Ten—C.Johnson 49 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bironas kick), 12:09. Ten—FG Bironas 22, 6:37. Fourth Quarter Ten—Fitzpatrick 9 run (Bironas kick), 14:52. KC—Charles 1 run (Succop kick), 6:23. KC—FG Succop 33, 4:10. KC—FG Succop 48, 2:12. A—69,143. KC Ten First downs 20 19 Total Net Yards 353 339 Rushes-yards 26-120 22-105 Passing 233 234 Punt Returns 5-39 4-18 Kickoff Returns 1-36 2-48 Interceptions Ret. 2-35 1-4 Comp-Att-Int 20-39-1 21-41-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-12 3-13 Punts 6-37.5 6-45.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-1 Penalties-Yards 9-61 6-35 Time of Possession 31:17 28:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Kansas City, Charles 22-108, A.Smith 3-10, Davis 1-2. Tennessee, Fitzpatrick 6-50, Battle 6-38, C.Johnson 10-17. PASSING—Kansas City, A.Smith 20-39-1245. Tennessee, Fitzpatrick 21-41-2-247. RECEIVING—Kansas City, Charles 5-37, McGrath 4-54, Bowe 4-35, Avery 3-91, Sherman 2-13, Hall 1-9, Hemingway 1-6. Tennessee, Wright 6-74, C.Johnson 4-63, Walker 4-43, Washington 3-30, Battle 1-24, Britt 1-9, Williams 1-4, Fitzpatrick 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Tenn., Bironas 32 (WR).

Broncos 51, Cowboys 48

Denver 7 21 10 13—51 Dallas 14 6 13 15—48 First Quarter Dal—Bryant 2 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 8:06. Dal—Murray 4 run (Bailey kick), 3:18. Den—J.Thomas 4 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 2:28. Second Quarter Dal—FG Bailey 43, 12:14. Den—Decker 2 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 9:06. Den—J.Thomas 9 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 5:22. Den—Manning 1 run (Prater kick), :46. Dal—FG Bailey 48, :00. Third Quarter Den—Welker 2 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 8:03. Dal—Williams 82 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 7:08. Den—FG Prater 48, 3:23. Dal—Bryant 2 pass from Romo (run failed), :14. Fourth Quarter Dal—Witten 10 pass from Romo (Williams pass from Romo), 13:38. Den—FG Prater 50, 9:37. Dal—Beasley 4 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 7:19. Den—Moreno 1 run (Prater kick), 2:39. Den—FG Prater 28, :00. A—92,758. Den Dal First downs 34 24 Total Net Yards 517 522 Rushes-yards 31-103 14-52 Passing 414 470 Punt Returns 1-9 0-0 Kickoff Returns 4-93 5-123 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 33-42-1 25-36-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 4-36 Punts 0-0.0 1-51.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards 5-55 9-81 Time of Possession 32:34 27:26 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Denver, Moreno 19-93, Hillman 7-17, Ball 1-1, Manning 4-(minus 8). Dallas, Murray 12-43, Romo 1-7, Williams 1-2. PASSING—Denver, Manning 33-42-1-414. Dallas, Romo 25-36-1-506. RECEIVING—Denver, J.Thomas 9-122, Decker 5-87, Moreno 5-57, D.Thomas 5-57, Welker 5-49, Hillman 4-42. Dallas, Witten 7-121, Bryant 6-141, Williams 4-151, Beasley 4-47, Escobar 1-25, Harris 1-13, Murray 1-5, Hanna 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Colts 34, Seahawks 28

Seattle 12 7 9 0—28 Indianapolis 7 10 6 11—34 First Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 42, 11:40. Sea—Tate 10 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 6:14. Sea—Kearse safety, 4:53. Ind—Hilton 73 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 1:04. Second Quarter Ind—Howell 61 blocked field goal return (Vinatieri kick), 13:06. Sea—Kearse 28 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 5:57. Ind—FG Vinatieri 41, :58. Third Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 36, 11:18. Sea—FG Hauschka 41, 8:12. Ind—Hilton 29 pass from Luck (pass failed), 4:16. Sea—FG Hauschka 46, :35. Fourth Quarter Ind—D.Brown 3 run (Wayne pass from Luck), 8:55. Ind—FG Vinatieri 49, 1:55. A—66,608. Sea Ind First downs 21 20 Total Net Yards 423 317 Rushes-yards 34-218 29-109 Passing 205 208 Punt Returns 1-14 0-0 Kickoff Returns 2-39 4-107 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 15-31-1 16-29-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-5 2-21 Punts 2-38.5 3-31.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-2 Penalties-Yards 7-85 3-35 Time of Possession 31:22 28:38 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Lynch 17-102, Wilson 13-102, Turbin 4-14. Indianapolis, Richardson 18-56, D.Brown 6-37, Luck 4-9, Heyward-Bey 1-7. PASSING—Seattle, Wilson 15-31-1-210. Indianapolis, Luck 16-29-0-229. RECEIVING—Seattle, Baldwin 5-80, Tate 5-61, Willson 2-28, Kearse 1-28, Rice 1-8, Lynch 1-5. Indianapolis, Wayne 6-65, Hilton 5-140, Fleener 2-15, D.Brown 2-3, R.Hughes 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Seattle, Hauschka 48 (BK).

Calendar

Oct. 8 — NFL fall meetings, Washington Oct. 27 — International series game, San Francisco vs. Jacksonville at London Oct. 29 — Trade deadline Dec. 29 — Regular season ends Jan. 4-5 — Wild-card playoffs Jan. 11-12 — Division-round playoffs Jan. 19 — Conference championships Feb. 1 — NFL Honors awards show at New York Feb. 2 — Super Bowl at East Rutherford, N.J.

Cardinals 22, Panthers 6

Carolina 3 3 0 0—6 Arizona 0 3 9 10—22 First Quarter Car—FG Gano 22, 7:27. Second Quarter Ari—FG Feely 42, 8:29. Car—FG Gano 51, :00. Third Quarter Ari—Mendenhall 1 run (Feely kick), 5:48. Ari—Campbell safety, 5:28. Fourth Quarter Ari—FG Feely 50, 3:38. Ari—Dray 7 pass from Palmer (Fely kick), 2:23. A—60,426. Car Ari First downs 21 19 Total Net Yards 353 250 Rushes-yards 20-95 28-90 Passing 258 160 Punt Returns 1-6 2-20 Kickoff Returns 2-63 1-18 Interceptions Ret. 3-30 3-87 Comp-Att-Int 21-39-3 19-28-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 7-50 2-15 Punts 4-48.8 4-49.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-79 3-30 Time of Possession 31:04 28:56 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Carolina, D.Williams 12-39, Tolbert 4-31, Newton 4-25. Arizona, Ellington 7-52, Mendenhall 17-43, Smith 1-(minus 2). PASSING—Carolina, Newton 21-39-3-308. Arizona, Palmer 19-28-3-175. RECEIVING—Carolina, Olsen 5-79, Ginn Jr. 4-78, S.Smith 4-60, LaFell 4-47, D.Williams 2-30, Tolbert 1-9, Barner 1-5. Arizona, Floyd 5-61, Ellington 4-31, Fitzgerald 3-43, Smith 3-20, Dray 2-13, Mendenhall 2-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Ravens 26, Dolphins 23

Baltimore 3 3 10 10—26 Miami 3 10 0 10—23 First Quarter Bal—FG Tucker 42, 10:24. Mia—FG Sturgis 37, 2:16. Second Quarter Bal—FG Tucker 50, 11:52. Mia—FG Sturgis 25, 8:07. Mia—Clay 9 pass from Tannehill (Sturgis kick), :46. Third Quarter Bal—Rice 2 run (Tucker kick), 12:07. Bal—FG Tucker 25, 4:18. Fourth Quarter Bal—Rice 3 run (Tucker kick), 12:06. Mia—FG Sturgis 48, 9:38. Mia—R.Jones 25 interception return (Sturgis kick), 8:03. Bal—FG Tucker 44, 1:42. A—68,342. Bal Mia First downs 20 10 Total Net Yards 384 294 Rushes-yards 40-133 11-22 Passing 251 272 Punt Returns 4-50 1-11 Kickoff Returns 4-128 2-49 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-25 Comp-Att-Int 19-32-1 21-40-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-18 6-35 Punts 5-34.2 8-52.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 6-64 4-65 Time of Possession 36:16 23:44 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Baltimore, Rice 27-74, Pierce 11-46, Flacco 2-13. Miami, Miller 7-15, Tannehill 2-6, Dan.Thomas 2-1. PASSING—Baltimore, Flacco 19-32-1-269. Miami, Tannehill 21-40-0-307. RECEIVING—Baltimore, T.Smith 6-121, Rice 6-28, Doss 3-58, Dickson 2-51, Thompson 2-11. Miami, Wallace 7-105, Gibson 4-74, Hartline 4-60, Clay 3-52, Dan.Thomas 2-11. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Miami, Strgs 57 (WL).

Packers 22, Lions 9

Detroit 0 3 0 6—9 Green Bay 3 3 10 6—22 First Quarter GB—FG Crosby 26, 1:24. Second Quarter GB—FG Crosby 52, 11:19. Det—FG Akers 53, :15. Third Quarter GB—FG Crosby 31, 5:04. GB—Jnes 83 pss frm Rdgrs (Crsby kick), 3:12. Fourth Quarter GB—FG Crosby 42, 10:16. GB—FG Crosby 45, 3:50. Det—Durham 13 pass from Stafford (pass failed), 2:06. A—78,200. Det GB First downs 19 16 Total Net Yards 286 449 Rushes-yards 19-64 33-180 Passing 222 269 Punt Returns 0-0 4-14 Kickoff Returns 2-40 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-40-0 20-30-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-40 1-5 Punts 6-51.8 3-47.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 7-50 10-72 Time of Possession 27:41 32:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Detroit, Bush 13-44, Bell 5-21, Stafford 1-(minus 1). Green Bay, Lacy 2399, Cobb 2-72, Rodgers 5-8, Franklin 3-1. PASSING—Detroit, Stafford 25-40-0-262. Green Bay, Rodgers 20-30-0-274. RECEIVING—Detroit, Pettigrew 4-59, Scheffler 4-55, Bell 4-30, Bush 4-25, Durham 3-30, Broyles 2-27, Ogletree 2-20, Edwards 2-16. Green Bay, Finley 6-32, Nelson 5-82, J.Jones 4-127, Cobb 4-35, Lacy 1-(minus 2). MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Rams 34, Jaguars 20

Jacksonville 10 0 3 7—20 St. Louis 7 17 0 10—34 First Quarter Jax—J.Blackmon 67 pass from Gabbert (Scobee kick), 10:31. StL—Giordano 82 interception return (Zuerlein kick), 3:08. Jax—FG Scobee 48, :13. Second Quarter StL—FG Zuerlein 32, 12:03. StL—Kndrk 16 pas frm Brdfd (Zrln kck), 11:34. StL—Ptis 4 pss frm Brdfrd (Zrlein kick), :27. Third Quarter Jax—FG Scobee 34, 3:22. Fourth Quarter StL—FG Zuerlein 37, 14:47. Jax—Shrts 4 pss frm Hene (Scbe kick), 10:22. StL—Ptis 31 pss frm Brdfrd (Zrlin kick), 5:45. A—54,266. Jax StL First downs 16 22 Total Net Yards 363 351 Rushes-yards 25-96 36-143 Passing 267 208 Punt Returns 4-5 4-15 Kickoff Returns 2-64 2-52 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-82 Comp-Att-Int 16-32-2 19-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-3 2-14 Punts 5-48.2 7-40.9 Fumbles-Lost 3-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 4-45 6-53 Time of Possession 24:41 35:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Jones-Drew 17-70, Todman 3-16, Gabbert 3-6, Forsett 1-2, Henne 1-2. St. Louis, Stacy 14-78, Richardson 13-48, Cunningham 4-13. PASSING—Jacksonville, Gabbert 9-19-2181, Henne 7-13-0-89. St. Louis, Bradford 19-34-0-222. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, J.Blackmon 5-136, Shorts 5-74, Harbor 3-39, JonesDrew 2-16, Ta’ufo’ou 1-5. St. Louis, Pettis 4-49, Kendricks 4-37, Austin 3-32, Cook 3-26, Quick 2-45, Givens 2-16,. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Saints 26, Bears 18

New Orleans 6 14 3 3—26 Chicago 0 7 3 8—18 First Quarter NO—FG Hartley 47, 7:38. NO—FG Hartley 19, 6:00. Second Quarter NO—Thomas 2 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 5:57. Chi—Jeffery 3 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 2:41. NO—Thms 25 pss frm Brees (Hrtly kick), :23. Third Quarter NO—FG Hartley 36, 8:03. Chi—FG Gould 27, 4:56. Fourth Quarter NO—FG Hartley 48, 3:01. Chi—Mrshl 2 pss frm Ctler (Forte run), 2:11. A—62,361. NO Chi First downs 17 20 Total Net Yards 347 434 Rushes-yards 28-66 18-94 Passing 281 340 Punt Returns 1-2 1-17 Kickoff Returns 2-38 2-49 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 29-35-0 24-33-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-7 3-18 Punts 4-48.8 4-45.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 2-10 6-43 Time of Possession 36:00 24:00 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, Thomas 19-36, Collins 3-11, Sproles 3-10, K.Robinson 3-9. Chicago, Forte 12-55, Cutler 4-27. PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 29-35-0288. Chicago, Cutler 24-33-0-358. RECEIVING—New Orleans, Graham 10-135, Thomas 9-55, Collins 4-17, Sproles 3-31, Colston 2-15, Toon 1-35. Chicago, Jeffery 10-218, M.Bennett 5-56, Forte 4-40, Marshall 4-30. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Bengals 13, Patriots 6

New England 0 3 0 3—6 Cincinnati 0 3 3 7—13 Second Quarter Cin—FG Nugent 39, 3:12. NE—FG Gostkowski 42, :08. Third Quarter Cin—FG Nugent 50, 5:43. Fourth Quarter Cin—Green-Ellis 1 run (Nugent kick), 9:21. NE—FG Gostkowski 19, 6:28. A—64,259. NE Cin First downs 15 21 Total Net Yards 248 341 Rushes-yards 18-82 39-162 Passing 166 179 Punt Returns 4-43 3-17 Kickoff Returns 4-93 1-29 Interceptions Ret. 1-3 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-38-1 20-27-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-31 4-33 Punts 8-44.1 6-45.8 Fumbles-Lost 4-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards 0-0 7-59 Time of Possession 25:44 34:16 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New England, Blount 12-51, Bolden 5-24, Edelman 1-7. Cincinnati, GreenEllis 19-67, Bernard 13-62, Dalton 6-25. PASSING—New England, Brady 18-38-1197. Cincinnati, Dalton 20-27-1-212. RECEIVING—New England, Bolden 6-40, Amendola 4-55, Thompkins 3-16, Dobson 2-49, Edelman 2-35, Hoomanawanui 1-2. Cincinnati, Green 5-61, Eifert 5-53, Gresham 4-24, M.Jones 2-39, Sanu 2-28. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Eagles 36, Giants 21

Punters

Philadelphia 3 16 3 14—36 N.Y. Giants 7 0 14 0—21 First Quarter NYG—Wilson 5 run (J.Brown kick), 11:37. Phi—FG Henery 40, 6:49. Second Quarter Phi—FG Henery 27, 10:40. Phi—McCoy 1 run (Henery kick), 8:11. Phi—FG Henery 29, 2:38. Phi—FG Henery 36, :00. Third Quarter NYG—Randle 26 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), 6:58. NYG—Randle 6 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), 3:46. Phi—FG Henery 41, 1:04. Fourth Quarter Phi—Celek 25 pass from Foles (Henery kick), 10:26. Phi—Jackson 5 pass from Foles (Henery kick), 8:24. A—80,738. Phi NYG First downs 28 21 Total Net Yards 439 383 Rushes-yards 37-140 17-53 Passing 299 330 Punt Returns 3-24 1-8 Kickoff Returns 0-0 3-57 Interceptions Ret. 3-18 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-39-0 24-52-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-3 1-4 Punts 6-47.8 7-48.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 8-88 12-136 Time of Possession 32:07 27:53 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Philadelphia, Vick 7-79, McCoy 20-46, Brown 5-11, Polk 2-3, Foles 3-1. N.Y. Giants, Jacobs 11-37, Wilson 6-16. PASSING—Philadelphia, Foles 16-25-0197, Vick 6-14-0-105. N.Y. Giants, Manning 24-52-3-334. RECEIVING—Philadelphia, Jackson 7-132, McCoy 6-46, Celek 3-47, Avant 3-33, Ertz 2-38, Brown 1-6. N.Y. Giants, Nicks 9-142, Randle 6-96, Cruz 5-48, Myers 2-35, Jernigan 2-13. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

49ers 34, Texans 3

Houston 0 0 3 0—3 San Francisco 14 7 3 10—34 First Quarter SF—Brock 18 interception return (Dawson kick), 13:30. SF—Gore 1 run (Dawson kick), 1:37. Second Quarter SF—Dixon 2 run (Dawson kick), 5:03. Third Quarter Hou—FG Bullock 41, 12:01. SF—FG Dawson 38, 5:15. Fourth Quarter SF—V.Davis 64 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 14:16. SF—FG Dawson 24, 10:46. A—69,732. Hou SF First downs 17 17 Total Net Yards 313 284 Rushes-yards 30-131 36-177 Passing 182 107 Punt Returns 3-20 2-28 Kickoff Returns 6-140 1-29 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 3-37 Comp-Att-Int 22-40-3 6-15-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-6 1-6 Punts 3-50.3 4-48.8 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 7-52 3-17 Time of Possession 33:52 26:08 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Houston, Foster 21-98, Tate 7-28, Wood 1-5, Yates 1-0. San Francisco, Gore 17-81, James 4-31, Hunter 5-29, Kaepernick 1-14, K.Williams 1-13, Dixon 5-12, McCoy 3-(minus 3). PASSING—Houston, Schaub 19-35-3-173, Yates 3-5-0-15. San Francisco, Kaepernick 6-15-0-113. RECEIVING—Houston, Daniels 6-60, Foster 4-20, Johnson 3-39, Graham 3-15, Hopkins 2-23, Tate 2-12, Martin 1-14, Posey 1-5. San Francisco, V.Davis 3-88, Boldin 2-21. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Houston, Bullock 45 (WL).

AFC Leaders

Week 5 - Not including Sunday’s games Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD Int P. Manning, DEN 156 117 1470 16 0 P. Rivers, SND 142 105 1199 11 2 Locker, TEN 111 69 721 6 0 Luck, IND 127 81 915 5 2 Ale. Smith, KAN 146 88 957 7 2 Brady, NWE 158 93 1014 7 2 Pryor, OAK 81 53 624 2 2 Schaub, HOU 177 116 1193 8 6 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TD F. Jackson, BUF 65 309 4.75 59 4 Spiller, BUF 74 296 4.00 54 1 A. Foster, HOU 76 292 3.84 16 1 B. Powell, NYJ 66 292 4.42 27 1 J. Charles, KAN 70 289 4.13 24 2 Chr. Johnson, TEN 84 277 3.30 23 0 Moreno, DEN 46 238 5.17 25 3 Be. Tate, HOU 34 228 6.71 60 0 Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD A. Johnson, HOU 34 368 10.8 27 0 Edelman, NWE 34 319 9.4 44 2 Cameron, CLE 33 396 12.0 53 5 An. Brown, PIT 32 412 12.9 45 2 De. Thomas, DEN 29 393 13.6 78 4 Shorts, JAX 26 337 13.0 59 0 A.. Green, CIN 26 300 11.5 45 3 Welker, DEN 26 266 10.2 33 6 A. Gates, SND 25 364 14.6 56 2 Decker, DEN 24 340 14.2 61 1

Fields, MIA Koch, BAL M. King, OAK Lechler, HOU Anger, JAX McAfee, IND Malone, NYJ S. Powell, BUF Ry. Allen, NWE Quigley, NYJ Punt Returners

No 17 26 19 22 32 14 16 35 22 12

Yds 845 1272 922 1042 1494 653 740 1613 988 539

No Yds Avg Doss, BAL 9 167 18.6 McCluster, KAN 16 246 15.4 Benjamin, CLE 17 256 15.1 Holliday, DEN 13 191 14.7 Edelman, NWE 11 133 12.1 P. Adams, OAK 5 47 9.4 Reynaud, TEN 13 118 9.1 Leonhard, BUF 7 63 9.0 An. Brown, PIT 6 45 7.5 Hilton, IND 9 65 7.2 Kickoff Returners No Yds Avg K. Martin, HOU 12 327 27.3 Thigpen, MIA 8 213 26.6 Whittaker, SND 6 156 26.0 F. Jones, PIT 8 194 24.3 J. Ford, OAK 6 143 23.8 Br. Tate, CIN 8 188 23.5 Reynaud, TEN 5 113 22.6 C. Gates, NYJ 5 99 19.8 Scoring Touchdowns TD RushRec Welker, DEN 6 0 6 Cameron, CLE 5 0 5 Royal, SND 5 0 5 J. Charles, KAN 4 2 2 F. Jackson, BUF 4 4 0 De. Thomas, DEN 4 0 4 Ju. Thomas, DEN 4 0 4

NFC Leaders

LG 66 61 66 61 61 60 84 66 65 56

B-5 Avg 49.7 48.9 48.5 47.4 46.7 46.6 46.3 46.1 44.9 44.9

LG 82 89 79 81 17 30 35 25 40 23

TD 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

LG 46 38 42 34 28 32 32 28

TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Ret Pts 0 36 0 30 0 30 0 24 0 24 0 24 0 24

Week 5 - Not including Sunday’s games Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD Int A. Rodgers, GBY 122 81 1057 8 3 Romo, DAL 152 110 1017 8 1 Brees, NOR 166 111 1434 10 4 M. Ryan, ATL 173 115 1330 8 3 M. Stafford, DET 156 100 1262 7 3 R. Wilson, SEA 96 59 787 6 3 Vick, PHL 118 65 1080 5 2 C. Newton, CAR 88 52 577 6 2 Griffin III, WAS 170 106 1202 6 4 Cutler, CHI 148 95 1010 8 6 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TD L. McCoy, PHL 78 468 6.00 41 2 A. Peterson, MIN 92 421 4.58 78 5 D. Murray, DAL 72 356 4.94 41 1 D. Martin, TAM 100 342 3.42 28 1 Forte, CHI 69 320 4.64 55 3 Lynch, SEA 79 308 3.90 43 3 A. Morris, WAS 56 296 5.29 32 2 Gore, SNF 61 295 4.84 34 2 De. Williams, CAR 62 291 4.69 27 0 Re. Bush, DET 48 254 5.29 37 1 Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD Ju. Jones, ATL 33 481 14.6 81 2 Garcon, WAS 29 339 11.7 44 2 J. Graham, NOR 27 458 17.0 56 6 B. Marshall, CHI 27 348 12.9 41 2 Cruz, NYG 26 425 16.3 70 4 Boldin, SNF 24 372 15.5 43 2 D. Bryant, DAL 23 282 12.3 53 4 Sproles, NOR 23 277 12.0 48 1 Gonzalez, ATL 23 242 10.5 25 3 Forte, CHI 23 160 7.0 24 0 Punters No Yds LG Avg Nortman, CAR 12 593 62 49.4 S. Martin, DET 18 878 72 48.8 A. Lee, SNF 23 1120 62 48.7 Morstead, NOR 14 663 61 47.4 Bosher, ATL 17 802 63 47.2 Weatherford, NYG 22 1039 60 47.2 Hekker, STL 25 1173 63 46.9 Chr. Jones, DAL 19 873 62 45.9 Locke, MIN 19 873 65 45.9 Masthay, GBY 12 528 55 44.0 Punt Returners No Yds Avg LG TD Dw. Harris, DAL 6 80 13.3 38 0 G. Tate, SEA 14 172 12.3 33 0 Ginn Jr., CAR 4 42 10.5 12 0 Spurlock, DET 11 105 9.5 57 0 Sproles, NOR 11 102 9.3 28 0 Page, TAM 8 69 8.6 28 0 R. Randle, NYG 11 68 6.2 14 0 C. Thompson, WAS 7 36 5.1 11 0 P. Peterson, ARI 7 31 4.4 8 0 Ky. Williams, SNF 5 22 4.4 14 0 Kickoff Returners No Yds Avg LG TD C. Patterson, MIN 12 406 33.8 105 1 Hester, CHI 14 453 32.4 80 0 D. Johnson, PHL 12 317 26.4 33 0 D. Wilson, NYG 8 206 25.8 31 0 B. Cuningham, STL 8 191 23.9 32 0 Spurlock, DET 5 100 20.0 23 0 C. Thompson, WAS 8 160 20.0 28 0 J. Ross, GBY 6 75 12.5 21 0 Scoring Touchdowns TD Rush Rec Ret Pts J. Graham, NOR 6 0 6 0 36 A. Peterson, MIN 6 5 1 0 36 D. Bryant, DAL 4 0 4 0 24 Cruz, NYG 4 0 4 0 24 Cal. Johnson, DET 4 0 4 0 24 Lynch, SEA 4 3 1 0 24 J. Bell, DET 3 3 0 0 18 Ma. Bennett, CHI 3 0 3 0 18 Ve. Davis, SNF 3 0 3 0 18 Fitzgerald, ARI 3 0 3 0 18

Indianapolis rallies for late win, Seahawks now 4-1 gals ended Tom Brady’s long streak of touchdown passes in defeating the preINDIANAPOLIS — Andrew Luck viously unbeaten New England. threw two touchdown passes, and Cincinnati (3-2) sacked Brady four Donald Brown scored the go-ahead TD times and kept the Patriots (4-1) out of the end zone on a first-and-goal from with 8:55 to go. Colts 34 the 1-yard line late in the fourth quarter. The Seahawks Seahawks 28 (4-1) lost their first RAVENS 26, DOLPHINS 23 regular-season In Miami Gardens, Fla., Justin Tucker game since last Nov. 25. kicked a 44-yard field goal to put BalDelano Howell scored on a 61-yard timore ahead with 1:42 left, and they withstood a frantic comeback bid. return of a blocked field goal for Indy Ryan Tannehill completed a 46-yard (4-1). pass to Brandon Gibson on fourth down BENGALS 13, PATRIOTS 6 to keep Miami’s hopes alive, but Caleb In Cincinnati, BenJarvus Green-Ellis Sturgis then missed a 57-yard field goal ran 1 yard in the fourth quarter for the attempt wide left with 33 seconds to game’s only touchdown, and the Bengo. The Associated Press

PACKERS 22, LIONS 9 In Green Bay, Wis., James Jones caught a long touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers, and the Packers defense contained the undermanned Detroit. Mason Crosby kicked five field goals. The Packers’ offense struggled to get into the end zone until Rodgers found Jones on an 83-yard completion down the left sideline for a 16-3 lead late in the third quarter. EAGLES 36, GIANTS 21 In East Rutherford, N.J., Nick Foles threw for two touchdowns and led four scoring drives after taking over for an injured Michael Vick late in the second quarter, and Philadelphia kept the

Giants winless. Foles threw fourth-quarter touchdown passes of 25 yards to Brent Celek and 5 yards to DeSean Jackson as the Eagles (2-3) snapped a three-game losing streak by forcing three interceptions by Eli Manning in the fourth quarter. CARDINALS 22, PANTHERS 6 In Glendale, Ariz., the Cardinals sacked Cam Newton seven times, once for a safety, and intercepted him on three occasions to overcome a sluggish offensive performance. Daryl Washington, back after serving a four-game suspension for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy, had two sacks and an interception for Arizona (3-2).

RAMS 34, JAGUARS 20 In St. Louis, Sam Bradford threw three touchdown passes and Matt Giordano’s 82-yard interception return was one of several big plays from the Rams’ defense against winless Jacksonville. 49ERS 34, TEXANS 3 In San Francisco, Tramaine Brock intercepted Matt Schaub’s first pass of the night and returned it 18 yards for a touchdown, Schaub threw three interceptions in all before the embattled quarterback got replaced in the fourth, and the 49ers pounded Houston. Colin Kaepernick threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to Vernon Davis and Frank Gore ran for 81 yards and a score in his second straight prime-time game.


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

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LIGHTNING

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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

OPEN HOUSE $315,000. 3+BEDROOMS, 2+ b a th , private guest quarters. Deck. Paved road. 1,800 sq.ft. 73 Encantado Loop. Open House Saturday, Sunday, 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 575-421-0100.

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out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in

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BEAUTIFUL MANUFACTURED Karsten. Numerous upgrades, 68’x31’. Ideal for moving to land, or retiring in secure community (must pass background check). MUST SELL. Take $92,500. Paid $143,506. Santa Fe. 505471-0556

FOR SALE

1994 16X60 2 BEEDROOM NEEDS SOME WORK $6,000 HACIENDA MHP SPACE #40 CALL TIM FOR APPT 505-699-2955

FOR SALE

1995 16X80 3/2 NEWLY REMODELED OWNER FINANCING WITH DOWN PAYMENT HACIENDA MHP SPACE #67 $25,000 CALL TIM FOR APPT 505-699-2955

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. NEW 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, in gated community in Bernalillo. Close to river, not on floodplain. $295,000 REC, with 10% down, amortized 30 years, 6% interest, 5 year balloon. Ray, 505-9823706.

service«directory CALL 986-3000

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

CLEANING

HANDYMAN

LANDSCAPING

MOVERS

GREEN HEALTHY CLEAN. Chemical & Fragrance Free Products, or yours. Licensed & Insured. Meticulous. Excellent local references. Free estimates. 505-577-6069

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

JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.

Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881.

Tree removal, yard Cleaning, haul trash, Help around your house. Call Daniel, 505-690-0580.

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!

CLASSES FLUTE LESSONS Fifteen years experience teaching all levels. Free trial lesson. All elementary grade levels welcome! Studio in north Santa Fe. 505-281-7915 PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $35 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684

LANDSCAPE ARTIST From exceptional stonework, pruning, planting, to clean-up, hauling, water wise beauty (drip). Yard Ninja 505-501-1331

CONCRETE Cesar’s Concrete.

Concrete work, Color, Stamp, and Acid Wash. Masonry work. Licensed, bonded, insured. License# 378917. Call Cesar at 505-629-8418.

FIREWOOD Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 150.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

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

LANDSCAPING

HANDYMAN

CLEANING CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT

Windows, carpets and offices. Own equipment. $17 an hour. BNS 505-920-4138.

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

DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and office with TLC. Excellent references. Nancy, 505-986-1338.

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493 I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.

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

PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPES • Fall Preparations • Pruning/Planting • Retaining walls • Irrigation Installation & Renovations • Design • Flagstone, Brick, Rock, Block • Portals

“Be smart, have a woman do it.” 505-995-0318 505-310-0045

ROOFING

PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.

Have a product or service to offer?

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded. Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119. HOMECRAFT PAINTING Small jobs ok & Drywall repairs. Licensed. Jim. 505-350-7887

PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853. A.C.E. PLASTERING INC. Stucco, Interior, Exterior. Will fix it the way you want. Quality service, fair price, estimate. Alejandro, 505-795-1102 STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Faux Plaster, paint to match, synthetic systems. Locally owned. Bonded, Insured, Licensed. 505-316-3702

ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call, Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760. ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster and stucco. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.

FREE ADS Sell your stuff from last year to someone who didn’t get that stuff..

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Make money and buy this year’s stuff! Even a stick kid gets it. (If your item is priced $100 or less the ad is free.)

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Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds OUT OF TOWN

RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000

to place your ad, call

COMMERCIAL SPACE

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

1200 SQ.FT INDUSTRIAL BUILDING WITH SMALL OFFICE. Tall ceilings, 12’ overhead door, fenced yard, ample parking. Year lease. $1200 monthly. 505-690-4232, 505-692-4800.

2 BEDROOM 2 bath townhouse in great location. End unit. All appliances included. $1100 monthly. Nonsmoking. 505-699-7472

27202 East Frontage Road. 2,000 squ.ft. with two ten foot doors, over 2 acres of parking with easy I25 on and off at exit 271. (La Cienega) Building has paint spray booth. $1,200 per month plus utilities. 505-490-1472.

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, family-room, fireplace, fenced yard. Quiet neighborhood, Southside near Chavez Center. Washer & dryer. Lease $1150. Nov 1, 505-984-1285 or 505-9205347.

CONDOSTOWNHOMES PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000 . OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395

RANCHO SANTOS, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pretty unit, 2nd story, 1 car garage. $1000. Western Equities, 505-982-4201. RARELY AVAILABLE North Hill compound 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2000 square feet. Minutes to Plaza. Mountain & city light views. 2 Kiva Fireplaces, fabulous patio, Air, washer & dryer, freezer, brick floors, garage. $1975 monthly, includes water. Available 11/1/13. 214-491-8732

WE HAVE RENTALS! MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com

»rentals«

GO TO: www.MeridianPMG.com

Lisa Bybee, Assoc. Broker 505-577-6287 GUESTHOUSES CHARMING, 500 SQUARE FEET SOUTHEAST HILLS. Washer, dryer, fenced yard with small patio. Pet negotiable. $800 monthly, includes utilities. 505-6995708

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

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

HOUSES FURNISHED

Beautifully furnished 1 bedroom guesthouse. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Close to town. Pets on approval. $1,450 month. 505-699-6161.

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Ra n c h o Siringo Rd. Fenced yard, laundry facility on-site, separate dining room Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane, washer & dryer hook-ups, near Wal-mart, single story complex. Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

4304 CALLE ANDREW , 2 bedroom, 2 full bath, full kitchen, Saltillo tile, radiant heat, small back yard, storage shed, washer, dryer and dishwasher. $895 PLUS utilities. 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY , Live-In Studio. Full Kitchen and bath, plenty of closet space, $680 with gas and water 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.

LARGE 2 BEDROOM in small compound, Juanita Street. Close to plaza, courtyard, laundry room. No Pets. $825, INCLUDES water. 505-3101516.

LAS PALOMAS APARTMENTS

Hopewell Street is now offering SPOOKTACULAR savings on our already affordable Studios! Call (888) 482-8216 to speak with our new management team today and ask about how you can rake in the fall savings. We’re conveniently located and we’re sure you’ll love the BOO-tiful changes we’ve made both inside and out. Se habla español, llame ahora!

REDUCED! 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath

1,000 sq.ft apartment. Nice neighborhood, overlooking arroyo, trails. Private yard, storage shed. Large master bedroom with walk-in closet. Washer, dryer. $875 monthly, all utilities free! 505-603-4262

LA CEINEGA Charming 2 bedroom, 2 bath, private and secluded, large balcony off master, great natural light $1200 plus utilities 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 PRIME LOCATION OFF GONZALES ROAD 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, 2 car garage, full basement, stainless steel appliances, two kiva fireplaces, large fenced in backyard $2000 plus utilities TURQUOISE TRAIL 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 1 car garage, fenced in backyard, Washer, dryer hook-up’s $1100 plus utilities ATTRACTIVE, COMPLETELY REM O D E L E D home, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $1195 monthly. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057

COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603

1002 1/2 Canyon Road , 1 bedroom, Large kitchen with washer, dryer. Possible studio. $900 monthly. 505231-8302

1 bedroom quiet off Rancho Siringo Road, vigas, tile, fireplace, walkin closet, small yard, No Pets. $720 includes water. 505-310-1516

COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $925 plus utilities

CHARMING ADOBE, WALK TO PLAZ A . 2 bedroom, 2 bath, plus den, 3 fireplaces, washer, dryer. $1700 plus deposit. 505-690-4791

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. R u f i n a Lane. laundry facility on-site, balcony & patio, near Wal-mart. $625 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities

CASITA FOR RENT. Nice, clean, and quiet place. Private driveway. All utilities paid. No pets, no smoking. $700 monthly, $350 deposit. 505-4715749.

CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 FURNISHED, South Side : 1 room efficiency, $400 plus utilities; 2 room efficiency, $440 plus utilities. $600 deposit. Clean, NON-SMOKER. 505-204-3262

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA WITH SUNSET VIEWS 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-6996161. New 2 Bedroom Casita plus office 1 mile to plaza. Courtyards, street parking, furnished. No pets, No smoking. Negotiable lease. Call, 505500-0499.

HOUSES PART FURNISHED ELEGANT SANTA FE SUMMIT

4 miles to downtown on Hyde Park Road. All masonry, luxe home. Woodland setting. On-site manager. Guarded Gate. 2 Bedroom, 2 baths, study. $2250 monthly. 505-983-7097.

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 $1095 3 BEDROOM R E M O D E L E D ADOBE. 1 Large bath off Hickox Street. Utility room. Fireplace, patio. Tile. Plus utilities. Pet. Section 8. 505992-1014

$1525 MONTHLY. BEAUTIFUL Rancho Viejo 3 bedroom, 2 bath hom e with gas rock fireplace, granite counter-tops, evaporative cooler, enclosed spacious walled yard. N/S. 505-450-4721. www.ranchoviejo.shutterfly.com/pict ures/16

1 BEDROOM DELIGHT!

High ceilings, great light. Huge bathroom, walk-in closet, laundry, radiant heat. New kitchen. Fenced yard, deck. Dog door, secure shed, off-street parking. Lease. $1150 includes water and refuse, $500 deposit. 505-795-5245 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Clean, ready to move in. Approximately 800 squ.ft. $900 month plus utilities, $650 deposit. Forced air heat, washer, dryer, saltillo tile, private parking, yard, storage shed. No Smoking or pets. 1 year lease. 505-231-0010 2 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATHS TOWNHOME IN RANCHO VIEJO. 1150 sq.ft. 2 car garage. Across from park. $1300 monthly plus utilities. 505-471-7050 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH 2 car garage, washer, dryer. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golf course. Near Cochiti Lake. $900 505-359-4778, 505-980-2400.

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

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. LOVELY 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME in ELDORADO. $1700 monthly. 2350 sq.ft. Solar, fenced yard, sunroom, 2 car garage. 805-368-1257 NEW 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, gated community in Bernalillo close to river. No Pets. $1,500 per month plus utilities. Ray, 505982-3706.

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.

986-3000

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

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

www.santafecountryhome.com NICE 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 2 CAR garage. Jaguar Drive. $1,250 monthly, First and Last, plus $1,000 security deposit. 505-231-3257 POJOAQUE: PRIVATE, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 1,200 squ.ft. Washer, dryer hookups. Baseboard heat, 2 air conditioners, storage. $800 plus utilities, deposit. No Pets. 505-455-3158. RARELY AVAILABLE Ideal Northside Private TOWNHOME Near Post Office. Light, Bright, Very Clean, Skylights, Fireplace, Sun Room, Sun Porch, Patios. 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom, 2 Car Attached Garage, Washer, Dryer, Great Storage. $2,400 plus Utilities, Deposit. ONE YEAR LEASE. No pets, No Smoking. 505-316-1468, 812-241-5511.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICES

1000 sq.ft. Great parking, Views, 3 large offices + reception. 2074 Galisteo St. B3. Serena Plaza. Available October 1. First & last, $995. 505-920-4529 Professional Offices in Railyard beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $700 & $450 monthly. 505-988-5960.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

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

TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE 505-989-9133

1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH

Single & Double Wide Spaces

MANUFACTURED HOMES Mobile Home: 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Remodeled. With storage, washer,dryer. Amenities. No smoking. No pets. 505-455-3287 PEACE & Quiet: 3 bedroom, 2 bath Partial utilities paid. Plaster, stucco. Lease, deposit. Highway 14 area. $850 month. References required. 505-473-7155, 505-699-0120.

FOR LEASE OFFICE - RETAIL 509 Camino de los Marquez Convenient central location with abundant parking. Ten-minute walk to South Capitol Rail Runner station. Suites ranging from 2,075 to 3,150 square feet. Call 505-235-2790 for information.

NEW SHARED OFFICE

$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

Private desk, and now offering separate private offices sharing all facilities. Conference room, kitchen, parking, lounge, meeting space, internet, copier, scanner, printer. Month-To-Month. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

Make money and buy this year’s stuff! Even a stick kid gets it. (If your item is priced $100 or less the ad is free.)

sfnm«classifieds

986-3000

classad@sfnewmexican.com

»announcements«

Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.

ROOMMATE WANTED

FOUND FOUND DOG- Female Black Lab Mix, 10/1. 30-40 pounds. Unique white marking. Well cared for. Airport Road & Constellation area. 505-955-1690

$450 INCLUDES UTILITIES, 200 SQ.FT ROOM. Shared bath & kitchen. Upstairs, fireplace, wet bar. No dogs. Month-to-month. $450 deposit. 505470-5877 PRIVATE BEDROOM, BATH LARGE TOWNHOUSE OFF SAWMILL. Nicely furnished,. Near grocery store. Good closet space. $500, utilities seasonally adjusted. 505-660-9376.

STORAGE SPACE 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

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

upgrade

SENA PLAZA Office Space Available

"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"

VACANCY

Sell your stuff from last year to someone who didn’t get that stuff..

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

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

LOT FOR RENT

FREE ADS

RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.

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

WORK STUDIOS ARTIST WORKSPACE. 1,470 Squ.ft., two 8 foot overhead doors, easy access to I-25. (110-120) volt outlets. $1,325 monthly with 1 year lease plus utilities, or divided into two separate rentals. South Santa Fe. 505-474-9188.

NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME ON 4 ACRES 4 BEDROOM, 5 BATHS, 2 OFFICES, FAMILY, DINING, MEDIA ROOMS, TWO STORY 4800 square feet, SUNNY KITCHEN. This gorgeous unfurnished home in Nambe with tall trees, mountain views, the tranquility of the country, yet is 20 minutes to Santa Fe and Los Alamos. The house has large windows, portals, four bedrooms, five bathrooms, two offices, living, dining, family- TV rooms, a large, modern kitchen. Two fireplaces, wood stove, outdoor gas barbecue, two car garage, alarm. Extremely energy efficient with clean deep well water. Large grass backyard, treehouse, garden beds, fruit trees, chicken coop. Grounds maintained by caretaker. Perfect for a family with children. Dogs and most pets welcome. Available Immediately for one or more years. $2900 monthly. Call: 972-385-1646

B-7

EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL

Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330

WANTED TO RENT DUE TO RELOCATION, NEED GARAGE FOR BMW MOTORCYCLE. Secured, in & out access, and electrical outlet. 1 year lease. Call 206-4988811 or mauraan@gmail.com

WAREHOUSES 1,000 or 1,500 squ.ft., on Comercio. Insulated, dock, roll ups, parking no auto, $8 - $9 per square foot. 505-660-9966

FOUND OUTSIDE PACHECO POST OFFICE, 1 month ago. Silver mezuzah on chain with small Japanese prayer piece. 505-988-9147

LOST Lost super friendly cat "Sinjin" on 9/19 in the 700 block of Columbia Street. *SPECIAL DIETARY NEEDS* 8 p ound, longish haired, white neutered male with black on his head and ears, black nose, black lined eyes, large black spot on left side and part of his back. Front paws declawed. He is sorely missed. Please call, 505-501-1072 or if ill please take to the Smith Animal Hospital.

PUBLIC NOTICES Bando Oficial de la Villa Real de Santa Fe de San Francisco de Asis Nuevo Mexico W h e r e a s , Mary Lou Cook was born ninety five years ago in Chicago on April 29, 1918. W h e r e a s , Mary Lou has been an inspiration and a blessing to countless citizens of Santa Fe and throughout the world. W h e r e a s , Mary Lou has been a teacher, a mediator, a counselor, a mentor, a reverend, the author of twelve books, a calligrapher, a basket maker, tree planter and a strong advocate for peace and justice. W h e re a s, Mary Lou has been the first woman to sit on the Board of Directors in Santa Fe for the United Southwest Bank; a Santa Fe Living Treasure. W h e r e a s , Mary Lou has participated in countless organizations and activities focused upon bringing joy, peace and harmony to our world. Whereas, Mary Lou reminds us that our job is to be happy and that we all have a choice between living in peace or in fear. NOW THEREFORE, I DAVID COSS, MAYOR, of the city of Santa Fe , do hereby proclaim October 1st as:

Mary Lou Cook Day

Promulgada en el ayuntamiento, el dia uno de Octubre, del ano 2013. Done at the City Hall, this 1st day of October, 2013. Certificado por: Witness my hand David Coss, Alcalde/Mayor Official Proclamation of the City of Santa Fe, New Mexico


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

sfnm«classifieds PUBLIC NOTICES THE NEW MEXICO ENVIRONMENT DEPARTMENT, PETROLEUM STORAGE TANK BUREAU will hold a Storage Tank Committee meeting on Wednesday, October 9, 2013 at 10:00 AM. The meeting will take place at the Toney Anaya Building, Rio Grande Room Second Floor. 2550 Cerillos Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87504. The meeting agenda is available on the Web at http://www.nmenv.state.nm.u s/ust/ustcom.html or from the Petroleum Storage Tank Committee Administrator: Trina Page, Petroleum Storage Tank Bureau, NM Environment Department, 2905 Rodeo Park Bldg. 1, Santa Fe, NM 87507, (505)476-4397. Persons having a disability and requiring assistance of any auxiliary aid, e.g., Sign Language Interpreter, etc. in being a part of this meeting process should contact the Human Resource Bureau as soon as possible at the New Mexico Environment Department, Personnel Services Bureau, P.O. Box 26110, 1190 St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM, 87502, telephone (505) 827-9872. TDY users please access her number via the New Mexico Relay Network at 1-800-659-8331

»jobs«

ADMINISTRATIVE

Town Administrator

Part-time Administrative Position in the Town of Cochiti Lake. $18-$20, hour, 25 hours, week. Position oversees all departments. Must have prior local government management experience in the following areas: budgets, adhering to government guidelines and regulations. Accounting background preferred, not required. Position is directly subordinate to Mayor. Send Resumes to clerk@cochitilake.org by 10/21/13 at 8 a.m.

UNITED WORLD COLLEGE-USA seeks a For more information and to download an application visit our website at: www.uwc-usa.org/jobs Please submit a Resume and cover letter to: UWC-USA Human Resources, PO Box 248, Montezuma, NM 87731. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. EOE

DRIVERS CDL DRIVER YARD PERSON NEEDED

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

SITE COORDINATORS

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE POSITION 30 hours a week, must have accounting experience. Includes other duties. Call Claudia for appointment, 505-473-5333.

GET NOTICED!

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

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

CALL 986-3000

ADMINISTRATIVE

MEDICAL DENTAL RADIOGRAPHIC CERTIFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT

Position available in a oral surgery based practice. Qualifications include but not limited to: New Mexico Board of Dental Healthcare radiographic certified, dental assisting experience, high level of computer skills, able to focus and follow directions, exceptional communication skills and team oriented. Submit resume: Attention Cheryl, Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Center of Santa Fe, 1645 Galisteo Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Fax: 505-983-3270.

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

Plans, develops and ensures the execution of all environmental regulatory obligations for the Buckman Direct Diversion (BDD) facility in compliance with all Federal, State and local laws, regulations and permits related to the production high quality, compliant drinking water. 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 11/1/13.

HOSPITALITY

DOMINO’S PIZZA Santa Fe North is NOW HIRING! Our drivers earn up to $15- $20 per hour! We’re also Assistant Managers. No experience necessary, we’ll train you! Apply in person at 604 North Guadalupe or online at careers.dominos.com

MANAGEMENT BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is hiring managers for its Taos stores. Send résumé to jlawless@lotaburger.com or apply in person at a Taos location. THE SANTA FE WATERSHED ASSOCIATION IS SEEKING AN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. Full job description and application instructions at: santafewatershed.org/jobopenings/.

MEDICAL DENTAL

Part Time Some strength, some computer skills, total attention to detail. Receiving and shipping department for local tile, lighting and hardware showroom. Please call, 505-986-1715 for appointment or email resume to: allbrightlock@aol.com

BDD MAINTENANCE MECHANIC

Responsible for performing highly skilled maintenance, troubleshooting, installation and repair of the BDD facility and advanced and conventional water treatment plant equipment and systems. 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 about the education, experience required, please visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. The closing date for this recruitment is 10/31/13. EEO/ADA

FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER WORK AND LIVE ON SANTA FE ESTATE Call, 505-660-6440. RETAIL NAMBE, a 50+ Year tabletop giftware company is hiring for a

CUSTOMER SERVICE REP DEPARTMENT STORE CORRESPONDENT

in Santa Fe, NM. Requirements include excellent communication skills, verbal and written, strong problem solving and people skills. Self-motivated, efficient and attentive to detail. Positive attitude a must. Familiarity with excel and databases preferred. Salary DOE, Fulltime, Temporary position, October thru January. Contract- no benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com

GROWING GRAPHIC DESIGN FIRM looking for entry to Mid-level Account Executive Account Manager. Degree in Marketing or related field of study required. Resume to: info@cisnerosdesign.com

TRADES FT - PT on call weekends. Controls & plumbing exp. necessary. Email resume to: hawkmech@laplaza.org or fax to: 575-758-3366

JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN

needed for Santa Fe project. Fax your resume to 505-323-2883, or call 505991-2059. DT, POE, EOE

SHAWN’S CHIMNEY SWEEP Accepting applications for Chimney cleaning and installers.Clean driving record, Experience a plus. 505-474-5857. SOUTHWEST METAL PRODUCTS has an opening in the HVAC DEPARTMENT. Willing to train. 3142 Rufina St, Santa Fe. (505)473-4575

SANTA FE RETAILER of home goods looking for a

PURCHASING, LOGISTICS COORDINATOR.

Basic functions include heavy MS Excel work, placement and maintenance of purchase orders, tracking of suppliers ship dates, and item set up. Only degreed and detailoriented candidates with strong computer and organizational skills need apply. Salary is DOE. Benefits include Medical, Dental, 401k. Fax resume to 505-819-0146. SEEKING INTELLIGENT, accurate, self-motivated person with exceptional customer service skills to handle all day-to-day business for specialty contractor. Full-time, ~45k DOE. See http://crockerltd.net/officemgr.htm. No phone calls.

Seeking compassionate caregivers experienced in personal care willing to work in the Santa Fe and Los Alamos area. Please call 505-988-8851 to leave your name and phone number.

EXPERIENCED OPTICIAN Needed in busy Optometry practice. Benefits include 4, 10 hour workdays per week, paid holidays after 90 days, 1 week paid vacation after first year of service, supplemental insurance available after 90 days, Safe Harbor 401k after 1 year. Positive work environment with growth opportunities such as continuing education. Please email resumes to: purplebean4250@hotmail.com

Opportunities for Motivated Heath Care Professionals

The Santa Fe Indian Health Service is now or will soon accept applications for health care professionals, including: Nurse Executive, Staff Nurse, Nursing Assistant in/outpatient, Family Nurse Practitioner, Medical Technologist, Dentist, Facilities Engineer, Biomedical technician. Competitive salary, federal benefits and retirement, offered. For more information, contact Bonnie at 505-946-9210 or at Bonnie.Bowekaty@ihs.gov. The IHS is an EOE employer with preferential hiring for AI/ANs.

TOP PAY FOR EXPERIENCED ROOFERS National Roofing Santa Fe Please Call 505-238-9790 for interview times

»merchandise«

FURNITURE

FURNITURE MCGUIRE LOUNGE CHAIR (29"Wx35"Dx34"H) & OTTAMON (29"Wx20"Dx16"H). Pale red, custom upholstery with woven bamboo frame. $700, cost $3500. SOFA BED, Custom beige upholstery. Subtle pattern. 75"Wx41"D. Opens to full-size bed. Sell $600, cost $2500. 505-988-1138

1953 40 inch O’Keefe - Merritt gas stove. Rebuilt, excellent condition. $3500 OBO. Ruidoso 575-808-2383. CUISINART PROGRAMMABLE grinding and brewing coffee system. $20. 505467-8218.

HAGUE WATERMAX WATER SOFTENER. 3 pieces. Model# 63BAQ. $200. Will need SUV or truck. Located eastside Santa Fe. 505-988-1728.

QUEEN SIZE Waterbed, good condition. Nice, pine headboard and footboard. Complete set. $80, 505-6903555

ART ART SUPPLY SALE! Paintings, paper, paints and miscellaneous equipment. 505-455-9203

EARLY CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? JAN BARBOGLIO COLLECTORS. Beautiful, rustic, handcrafted Tray. Never used. $225, 505-920-4420.

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES

WICKER TABLE. Beautiful. Coffee table or end table. 25x17x22H with shelf. $35. 505-474-9020.

8’ HIGH 48" wide , awesome condition . $5,300.00, paid $ 11,000 from American country collects. Call 505470-4231

FREE HOT TUB COVER Like new! 72" X 72" Call 505-989-3916. Antique Wrought Iron Chandelier From Mexico. Asking $375. Call Hope at (505)913-1410.

ANTIQUES 1867 MASONIC Lithograph of George Washington and symbols. $95, 505982-6288

PCA, Caregiver $11 hourly, LPN $25 hourly, RN $32 hourly.

ANTIQUE PENNSYLVANIA D U T C H COMMUNION TABLE, circa 1900. Hand-carved oak. 50"Wx29"Dx32"H. $1600. Perfect condition. 505-9881138

PRINT OF YALE UNIVERSITY, Circa 1830, hand colored. $65, 505-982-6288.

KIDS STUFF BABY CRIB. Converts to youth bed. Good condition. $100. 505-984-3215.

CRAFT TABLE, or DESK UNIT. Metal adjustable legs. $25. 505-231-9133. FRAMES, ALL SIZES. Whole Collection, Reasonable. $4 - $25. 505-4749020. GOLD GILDED Frame. Frame is 3" wide. Inside measures 36"x48". $100. 505-989-4114

AUCTIONS Stephens A Consignment Gallery

Unreserved Liquidation Auction, Sat October 12th Viewing 9 am, Auction 10 am Watch next weeks Class for details. Like us on Face Book for images 505-471-0802

BARGUENO FROM Santa Fe Country Furniture. 63" x 42" x 24", dropdown front storage drawers. $700 new, asking $550. 505-660-6658.

BUILDING MATERIALS

OUTDOOR KIDS PLAY SET. Splinterfree, chemical-free, maintenancefree Northern White Cedar wood! Three Swinging stations, Slide, Trapeze Bar and Rings, Climbing Rope, Fort. Hanging Ladder and Climbing Ramp. Made by Cedarworks of Maine $1,000. 505-690-5556

2 DOUBLE Pane window with frame, 47 1/2 x 59 1/2, 29 1/4 x 48 1/4. $100 each. 505-795-9081

LAWN & GARDEN

5 THERMOPANE metal clad- wood W I N D O W S , $65 each. 3 HANDCRAFTED DOORS, various sizes, $65-100; 2 boxes SALTILLO TILES, lovely reddish color, $50. 505-7572528

BRIGGS STRATION LAWNMOWER. 4.0 HP. $75 OBO. 505-920-8636.

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 Visa, MC, Discovery, American Express accepted.

BEAUTIFUL BRUNSWICK 8’ Oak Pool Table, 1" Slate, with Harley Cover & accessories. Excellent Condition. $2,000.00 OBO. Serious inquiries only. 505-474-7438 Leave message

LAMB’S EARS, Indigo Salvia, Mexican Feather Grass. All mature plants. $5 - $10 each. 505-989-4114

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT LUGIE POWER SCOOTER. Folds up. 53 pounds. Hardly used. Burgundy.

CEILING FAN with light $25, 505-9888022 CLOSET LIGHT, pull chain $10, 505988-8022 PRO PANEL. Brand new, white. 1 16’, 6 4’, available. 26 guage. $45 OBO. 505753-3164.

STEEL BUILDINGS BIG or Small Save up to 50% For best deal with contract construction to complete Source#18X www.sunwardsteel.com 505-349-0493

Beautiful Pottery Barn wrought iron bed with lovely detail. Full size and comes with box-spring, call Hope at (505)913-1410. All paperwork & instruction included. $2,000. 308-530-0338

MISCELLANEOUS BOOK COLLECTION: First editions, Fiction to non-fiction. $3 and up. 505474-9020

CLOTHING CONCHA BELT, silver, fits all. $150. Long Brownish Wig, new. $150. 505-471-8950, leave message.

OVER 20 back Issues of Mother Earth News. $10. 505-231-9133.

GREY TRADITIONAL Western Boots. Size 5 1/2 Medium. $40, 505-954-1144 MBT BLACK LEATHER WALKING S H O E S . Womens 10, mens 8. Like new! $15, retail over $100. 505-4749020.

BEAUTIFUL WOOL PERSIAN 3’6’x9’7". $299. 808-346-3635

RUG,

VOICEOVER PERFORMERS & STUD E N T S : two teaching tapes with book. New $15 . 505-474-9020.

OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT

MEN’S DOCKERS, Khaki, brand new. 30x30, $10, 505-954-1144

4-DRAWER LOCKING FILE CABINET. Beige. $55. 505-757-2528

SUEDE JACKET Camel, Medium. $60, 505-471-8950, leave message.

IBM SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER with type ball, ribbons, etc. MINT condition. Parts and supplies still available. $100. 505-757-2528

PHOTO, POSTER of Hank Wiliams JR., signed. $45, 505-982-6288.

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

COMPUTERS

28" WOK. VERY DEEP. BRAND NEW. $60. CALL 505-469-3355

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

FIREWOOD-FUEL

ELABORATE WOOL PERSIAN TRIBAL RUG. 5’3"x13’10". $899 OBO. 808-3463635 BLACK COAT Hooks, on wood. 3 hooks on one and 2 singles. Brand new. $15, 505-954-1144

BOOKSHELVES, VARIOUS sizes, nicely finished. Each $75. 505-757-2528

A-1 FIREWOOD INC. Seasoned Cedar, Pinon, Juniper; 2 cords, $240 delivered, 3 cords $235 delivered, 4 or more $230 delivered. Cedar, Pinon, Oak; $325 delivered, Oak and Hickory; $425 delivered. 505-242-8181 Visa, MC, Discovery, American Express accepted.

SEASONED PINE FIREWOOD- cut last November. Hundreds of truckloads. It is piled in random lengths and diameters in our forest after thinning. Sold by truckload, depending on bed size. $60 for 8 foot bed. Five miles east of Peñasco. Call for haul times, days and location. 575-587-0143 or 505-660-0675

FURNITURE

COOKING DISCOS (DISCATAS) 16" TO 24" STARTING AT $30. Call 505469-3355

SPORTS EQUIPMENT FLY FISHING Rod and Reel, signed and numbered. $85 505-982-6288 FRENCH FENCING FOIL and wire mesh head guard. $95 505-982-6288 GAZELL FREE STYLE GLIDER. $50 OBO. 505-920-8636. HAND push Golf Cart, $30. 505-954-1144

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

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

Call 866-902-7187 Ext. 350 or apply at: procasemanagement.com EOE

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

COLLECTIBLES

COMFORT KEEPERS

BILLING MANAGERADMINISTRATION DEPARTMENT Exempt salary min. bi-weekly $1,460$1,860 DOE. Oversees and manages the billing department ensuring accurate and timely preparation and submission of billing to all payer sources. Ensures and verifies CPT and ICD-9 coding. Required experienced: High school diploma or GED plus AA degree or equivalent education and experience. Minimum of 3 years primarily in health billing and 1 year in supervisory or management role. Skills, Knowledge and Abilities: Knowledge and understanding of Medicaid and Medicare, and third party billing requirements and health care management, understanding of CPT and ICD 9 coding. Maintain valid driver’s license and clearance for unrestricted automobile insurance coverage pursuant to NM State law. EOE/M/F/D/V/ Drug-Free Workplace Please submit an employment application to El Centro Family Health Box 158 Espanola, NM 87532 or via email to hr@ecfh.org. Deadline: Open until filled.

APPLIANCES

ARE YOU RETIRED, BUT DON’T WANT TO BE?

SALES MARKETING

BDD Regulatory Compliance Officer

986-3000

Controller

Good hours. Apply in person at Empire Builders 1802 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM

ACCOUNTING

to place your ad, call

POOL TABLE TOP- 4x7. Good condition. $100. 505-795-9081

TOOLS MACHINERY Handcrafted Artisan Trustero, beautiful detail. Asking only $650. Call Hope at (505)913-1410. HAND PAINTED GIRLS Bedroom Furniture. Bed, desk, armoir, dresser, chair, dolls. $1,500. Call Helen, 505989-3277.

12" THICK COTTON FUTON, single, Used for guests only. Good condition. $50. 505-757-2528

LARGE OAK entertainment center. Space for tv, stereo, and storage. $100. 505-231-9133.

(2) FOLDING TABLES, white, "Lifetime" heavy duty, 6 ft. $40 each. (1) folding chair, white, $15. Like new condition. 505-474-0988

MUST SELL! SANTA FE STYLE DINNING TABLE WITH 6 CHAIRS. TABLE IS 6’ X 3’4". $1,145 OBO. HARVEY, 505-920-9227.

CRAFTSMAN CHAINSAW, 10" bar, gas, needs carb. repair. $50. 505-7572528

TV RADIO STEREO 27" TV with digital box, mint cond. $85. 505-757-2528 SONY SPEAKERS, Model SS-82600U. Black. $40. Great condition. Call 505231-9133.


Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds »animals«

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

PETS SUPPLIES

CLEAN BERMUDA 3 twine 90 pound bales at $16 per bale by truckload of 512 only call Pete at 623-251-8018.

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 ADS FOR SALE: 11 year old Kentucky Mountain gelding. Gaited. Sound. Easy to catch and load. Trailwise. Crosses water. Easy keeper. 505-454-9540. $1900.

PETS SUPPLIES

SOLD

986-3000 4X4s

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

BENGALS SILVER KITTENS from Supreme Grand Champion, $950 to $1,600. 720-434-6344, chateauxchampagne@gmail.com

ALFALFA GRASS Mix bales. $11 each Bale, for 50-100 bales. Over 100 bales, price reduction. Barn stored Ribera, NM. 505-473-5300.

HORSES

to place your ad, call

B-9

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

IMPORTS

2002 CAMRY SOLARA XLE V6, leather, CD, power top, new wheels and tires in excellent condition. Clean CarFax, Sweet savings. Grand Opening Sale Price $6995.00. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

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.

Texas is a 10 month old Pyrenees mix puppy who loves to romp and play. He is a goofy guy who would be good with teenagers or grownups. He is doing well with learning basics like how to walk on a leash and sit on command. He will probably be about 90 pounds when full grown.

For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at: www.evalleyshelter.org

»garage sale«

1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $18,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862

1997 FORD ECONOLINE-E150 CONVERTED VAN Carfax, Books, Records, X-Keys, New Michelin’s, Pandora Stereo, Alarm System, Custom Blinds, Hitch, Custom Paint, Pristine. $6,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR F OR YOUR VEHICLE!

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.

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Advertise what you want to sell, $100 or less. The New Mexican will give you the ad for free. It sells, you make money. Even a stick kid gets it.

LIVESTOCK

sfnm«classifieds 986-3000

ESTATE SALES

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.

classad@sfnewmexican.com

Stephens A Consignment Gallery

Unreserved Liquidation Auction See Auction Classified for more Info. Like us on Face Book for images 505-471-0802

HEALTHY BEAUTIFUL New Hampshire piglet. $60. 505-455-7429 or 505-4702035.

PETS SUPPLIES

»cars & trucks«

2010 HONDA Insight Hybrid Excellent condition, 50+mpg, 63,xxx miles. Just needs a new driver! $15,500 OBO. 505-699-0439.

2004 LAND Rover Range Rover HSE SUV Westminster Limited Edition, Low Mileage. 51,851 miles. One owner. Well maintained. $20,995. Please call 505-474-0888.

2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.

Little Bear is an Australian Shepherd mix puppy who likes to ham it up. IMPORTS 2004 Honda CR-V LX - AWD. 1 owner! Clean CarFax, perfectly maintained, new tires. $6,931. Call 505216-3800.

CLASSIC CARS 2 COCKER SPANIEL PUPPIES. 6 weeks old, buff females. $250. First shots, tails docked. 505-927-7864 AIREDALES AKC R E G I S T E R E D 10 weeks old. Ready to go! $700. See us on facebook Bar C Airedales. 505944-5323 Belen, NM.

Peaches is a calico kitten who was raised in foster care and loves to be held. Both pets and more will be at Marty’s Meals at 1107 Pen Rd in Santa Fe on Saturday 10/5 from 10am-1pm looking for homes. For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at: www.evalleyshelter.org MINIATURE AUSTRALIAN Shepherds, Born 7-3-2013. Black tri, Parents Registered, Champion Sired, 1st shots. 2M, $350 each, discount with alteration. 505-220-3310.

CAR STORAGE FACILITY

Here’s our schedule: Friday: 2-5 p.m. PetSmart, Zarafano Drive Saturday: 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Harry’s Roadhouse; 10 a.m.- 3 p.m. Look What the Cat Dragged In 2; 11 a.m.4 p.m. PetSmart Sunday: 11 a.m.-4 p.m. PetSmart Or visit the Santa Fe Animal Shelter, 100 Caja del Rio Road for your dream dog. 505-983-4309 ext. 610, wwwsfhumanesociety.org

Pomeranian Puppies, 1 teacup $800, 1 toy $500, registered, first shots, quality. Poodle Puppies, $400. ShihPoo Puppy, male, $350. 505-901-2094 PURE BRED Miniature Schnauzer P u p p ie s. 8 weeks old. 2 males, 1 female, white. Pedigree Certificate. 505-670-8267.

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

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

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

DOMESTIC

BARNEY AND MEREDITH are just two of the show-stopping dogs available at the Santa Fe Animal Shelter. We have dozens of great dogs looking for great homes and we’re coming into the community to help you meet them.

2006 LEXUS GS300 Sleek black beauty, grey leather, navigation, back up camera, Levinson/JBL sound system, 4 new tires, alloys, tint, no accidents, clean CarFax. Grand Opening Sale Price $14995.00. 505-9541054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

Toy Box Too Full?

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

2008 BMW 135I Convertible. 55,000 miles. Charcoal exterior, black top. Automatic, 6 cylinder 300 twin turbo engine with paddle shifters. One owner and all scheduled maintenance. Well maintained, garage kept, very clean interior, non-smoker. Wind deflector allows driving in cold weather with top down. Leather heated seats, Side Airbags, Sunroof, Tilt-Telescope Steering Wheel, CD player, cruise control. $23,300. Please call (505) 577-8660.

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2002 LEXUS LS 430 LUXURY SEDAN Local Owner, Carfax, Every Service Record, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-keys, New Tires, Loaded, Afford-ably Luxurious, $13,750, Must See! WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2006 BMW-X5 AWD AUTOMATIC Local Owner, Clean Carfax, All Service Records, Non-Smoker, Garaged, Manuals, Xkeys, New Tires, Panoramic Roof, Leather, Loaded, Soooo Afford-ably Luxurious, Pristine $14,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2012 Land Rover LR2 SUV Certified Pre-Owned. Climate Comfort Package, Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, 13,182 miles. All services have just been completed! $30,995. Call 505-474-0888.

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

BEAUTIFUL, INTELLIGENT, A F F E C TIONATE LAB SHEPHERD MIX ready to love you and your family. 18+ months old, 48 pounds, amber eyes; knows basic commands, answers to Sparks. A bit stranger shy but relaxes quickly; a dedicated watch dog. Original family adopted a fuzzy puppy, not realizing she would become an actual dog. Now in Taos shelter under name Candy. Call me for details: 505-984-0275 ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPPIE S. Very cute and playful, fully AKC regist e r e d . They are family raised and well socalized! Vet checked. Email: moore111jose@hotmail.com

Sugar is aptly named yet she has spent a long time in foster care. She can be aggressive with some dogs, primarily females, yet would probably be lonely as an only dog if her human family was not home most of the time. She does not like cold weather or hot weather, but loves to sun bathe. She is a huge snuggler so she needs to be with a human family that allows couch and or bed snuggling. She is about 45 pounds max and eats 2 cups of kibble a day, but is VERY food motivated. For details visit our Petfinder listing or email adopt@gentlesoulssanctuary. org. www.petfinder.com/petsearch?shelterid=NM170

FARM EQUIPMENT

2005 HYUNDAI ELANTRAGLS 4-door, beige, automatic, AC, well maintained, perfect, 10K. Elderly mother stopped driving. Below NADA $7,500 OBO. 505-982-7013.

TRAILER AUGER, 2 bits: 8" and 12". Asking $1,600. Paid $5,000 Lukas, 505-988-7534

SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!

CALL 986-3000

2007 Porsche Carrera S Cabriolet. Rare X51 performance package, full natural leather, Navigation, Bose, S P E C T A C U L A R ! $55,721. Call 505-216-3800.

2005 MERCEDES-BENZ E320 CDI Sweet diesel! Only 75k miles! Showroom fresh leather interior, in excellent condition, clean CarFax. Grand Opening Sale, only $17,995.00! 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

SUVs

2000 Mercedes Benz SLK230. Only 74k miles! Enjoy the fall air! Clean CarFax, obviously garage-kept, don’t miss this pristine cnvt. $9,271. Call 505-216-3800.

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

2010 Toyota Prius II. Only 24k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, 50 mpg and pristine! $18,971. Call 505-216-3800 .

2011 VOLKSWAGEN-TDI JETTA WAGON MANUAL One Owner, CarFax, Garaged, NonSmoker, 54,506 Miles, Service Records, Loaded, Goodbye Gas Stations, Pristine $20,995. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2007 HONDA-CR-V AWD AUTOMATIC One Owner, Carfax, 81,000 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Every Service Record, X-Keys, Manuals, Pristine. $13,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Have a product or service to offer? CALL 986-3000

2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C HYBRID FWD One Owner, Carfax, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, X-Keys, 14,710 Miles, City 53, Highway 46, Navigation, Remaining Factory Warranty. $20,650. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! 2012 Nissan Juke SV AWD. Only 20k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, moonroof, turbo, awesome! $21,591. Call 505-216-3800.

Sell your stuff from last year to someone who didn’t get that stuff..

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

986-3000

Even a stick kid gets it.

CAMPERS & RVs PICKUP TRUCKS TOYOTA TACOMA 2002 TRD SR5 Prerunner, clean title, $2,900, 166k miles, 937-985-0104.

(If your item is priced $100 or less the ad is free.)

sfnm«classifieds

SUVs

classad@sfnewmexican.com

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.

986-3000

2006 NISSAN FRONTIER SE 4X4 109k miles, automatic. Great looking pickup!

1988 AIREX 28ft. Ford 460 engine. 75,000 miles. Solar panels plus inverter instead of generator. $2,000. Abiquiu. 505-685-4744

Sam’s Used Cars St Michaels Dr at Cerrillos Rd 505-820-6595 TOYOTA LAND Cruiser 2001 Exc. cond., 167,000 miles, 2nd owner, new brks, timing belt, water pump, good tires, $13,500. 505-263-4067

2006 Toyota Prius. Package 7, fully loaded! 1 owner, well maintained and only 90k miles. $10,671. Call 505-216-3800 .

2006 SCION xA. Only 59k miles! Excellent condition, clean CarFax $9,991. Call 505-216-3800 2012 Toyota RAV4 4WD. Only 27k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax $20,731 Call 505-216-3800.

2013 SUBARU XV Crosstrek. 4k miles, like new, clean CarFax $24,981. Call 505-216-3800.

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

Sell Your Stuff!

upgrade

Make money and buy this year’s stuff!

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

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.

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

FREE ADS

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

BOATS & MOTORS

2012 42FT FIBERGLASS FIFTHWHEEL. 4 SLIDES, 2 BEDROOM, 2 AIRS, WASHER, DRYER, DISHWASHER, ANWING, 4 SEASONS. LIKE NEW, USED ONCE. 38,900 505-385-3944.

2003 YUKON SLT 4X4. $8,000 OBO. 133,000 miles. 5.3 V-8 Engine. 1 owner. Excellent condition. Service & maintenance records. (505)474-9010 HONDA PASSPORT EX $2500; 4-Wheel Drive; 5-Speed Manual-Rebuilt Transmission; New Clutch; 285,000 miles (160,000 on rebuilt engine); Call 505757-2727.

»recreational« 26’ 1997 Mobile Scout. One owner, one slide out, great condition! $8,500 OBO. 505-690-4849 Mike. 2012 42’ Monte Carlo . 2 bedroom, 3 slide-ins, 2 ACs, washer and dryer, large hot water heater, many extras! Very clean, no pets or smoking. $26,000. Please call 940-389-9839.

MOTORCYCLES 2012 VOLKSWAGEN Passat SE TDI. DIESEL!!! leather, moonroof, awesome mpgs! $25,871. Call 505-2163800

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

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

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2000 KAWASAKI 220 Bayou. $1,000, firm. "Hunter’s Toy" in great condition. 505-471-2763 1976 Chevy Holiday Motorhome, new tires, carpet, floormats, upholstery. Motor is in good condition. $5,00 0, OBO. 505-471-2763

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Monday, October 7, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS BEFORE THE NEW MEXICO TRIBAL INFRASTRUCTURE BOARD NOTICE OF OPEN MEETING TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2013

LEGALS

City Clerk

g

Should you have any questions, please call Legal #95802 our office at (505) Published in The San843-6880. ta Fe New Mexican on September 30 and OcJay Czar tober 7, 2013 Executive Director

The New Mexico Trib- /sm al Infrastructure Board will hold a Reg- Legal#95831 ular Open Meeting at Published in the SanPorter Hall located on ta Fe New Mexican the first floor of the October 7, 2013 Wendell Chino Building located at 1220 S. CITY OF SANTA FE St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM 87505, on NOTICE OF PUBLIC Tuesday, October 15, HEARING 2013, at 9:00 a.m., for the purpose of con- Notice is hereby givducting its regular en that the Governing business. A specific Body of the City of agenda will be post- Santa Fe will hold a ed at least 72 hours public hearing on before the meeting at Wednesday, October the New Mexico Indi- 9, 2013 at its regular an Affairs Depart- City Council Meeting, ment Offices, located 7:00 p.m. session, at on the second floor of City Hall Council the Wendell Chino Chambers, 200 LinBuilding. The Board coln Avenue. may revise the order of the agenda items The purpose of this considered at this hearing is to discuss open meeting. If you a request from are an individual with Trigild, Inc. for the a disability who is in following: need of accommodation pursuant to the a) Pursuant to §60Americans with Disa- SB-10 NMSA 1978, a bilities Act ("ADA"), request for a waiver please contact the of the 300 foot New Mexico Indian location restriction to Affairs Department allow the sale of alcoas soon as possible holic beverages at at 505-476-1600, so Cost Plus accommodation ef- World Market, 550-560 forts can be made. Montezuma Avenue which is within 300 Legal#95755 feet of Our Published in the San- Lady of Guadalupe ta Fe New Mexican Church, 417 Agua on: October 3, 4, 7, Fria; 2013 b) If the waiver of the 300 foot restriction is BOARD MEETING granted, a request NOTICE from Trigild, Inc. for a Transfer of October 4, 2013 Ownership of DisLicense Please be advised penser #1362, with that the Board of Dipackage sales, from rectors (the "Board") Corporaof the New Mexico Sanbusco Mortgage Finance tion, dba Cost Plus Authority (MFA) will World Market, Montezuma be holding a Board 550-560 Meeting at 9:30 a.m. Avenue, Santa Fe, to on Wednesday, Octo- Trigild, Inc. This liber 16, 2013. The cense will remain at meeting will be held Cost Plus World Marat the offices of the ket, 550-560 MontezuMFA, 344 4th St. SW, ma Avenue, Santa Fe. Albuquerque, NM. A final agenda will be All interested citizens available to the pub- are invited to attend lic at least seventy- this public hearing. two hours prior to the meeting and may be Yolanda Y. Vigil obtained from the of- City Clerk fice of the MFA, by calling the MFA offi- Legal #95803 ces during regular Published in The Sanbusiness hours or on ta Fe New Mexican on the MFA website at September 30 and Ocwww.housingnm.org. tober 7, 2013 _ MFA’s Board is composed of Chair, DenCITY OF SANTA FE nis R. Burt, Lt. Governor John Sanchez, AtNOTICE OF PUBLIC torney General Gary HEARING King, State Treasurer James Lewis, Angel Notice is hereby givReyes, Sharron Welsh en that the Governing and Randy McMillan. Body of the City of Santa Fe will hold a The MFA’s Board public hearing on meetings are open to Wednesday, October the public and your 9, 2013 at its regular attendance is wel- City Council Meeting, come. If you are an 7:00 p.m. session, at individual with a dis- City Hall Council ability who is in need Chambers, 200 Linof a reader, amplifier, coln Avenue. qualified sign language interpreter, or The purpose of this any other form of hearing is to discuss auxiliary aid or serv- a request from II ice to attend or par- Vicino Santa Fe, Inc. ticipate in the meet- for a Restaurant Liqing, please contact uor License (Beer and the MFA at least one Wine On-Premise week prior to the Consumption Only) meeting or as soon to be located at II as possible. Public Vicino Santa Fe, 321 documents, including West San Francisco the agenda and mi- Street, Suite A, nutes, can be provid- Santa Fe. ed in various accessible formats. Please All interested citizens contact the MFA if a are invited to attend summary or other this public hearing. type of accessible format is needed. Yolanda Y. Vigil

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LEGALS

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COUNTRY CLUB GARDENS MANUFACTURED HOME COMMUNITY An auction will be held on Monday, October 21, 2013 at 9 a.m. at Country Club Gardens Manufactured Home Community, Space #43, 6151 Airport Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87507 in attempt to recover space rents due in the amount of $14, 692.87. The Unit for auction is a 1979 (make) Windsor, (Model) WIN 14x75, VIN #ZWK75145581. Legal#95761 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: October 7, 14, 2013 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO NO. D-101-CV-201301714 COUNTY OF SANTA FE, ex rel. SANTA FE COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT, Plaintiff, vs. ONE 1993 GOLD ISUZU PICKUP VIN N O . 4S1CR11E7P4201201 DISPLYAING NEW MEXICO LICENSE NO. MDH253 Defendant. NOTICE OF SUIT TO: NANCY CARMONA The above-captioned action has been filed to seek forfeiture of the above-described motor vehicle. If no response is filed, default judgment may be entered in favor of the Plaintiff. The name and address of Plaintiff’s attorney: Timothy J. Vigil, Counsel for Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department, P.O. Box 276, or 102 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504, (505) 986-6279. WITNESS the HONORABLE SARAH SINGLETON, District Judge of the First Judicial District Court of the State of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe County, this date of September 5, 2013. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of the District Court By: Rachel Vannoy Deputy Legal#95659 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: September 23, 30, & October 7, 2013 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE CASE NO. D-0101-PB2013-000018 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MARIA ROYBAL, Deceased. NOTICE TO

Continued...

to place legals, call LEGALS

986-3000

LEGALS

LEGALS

j THE ESTATE OF LAW- PO Box 23574 RENCE T. VALDEZ, De- Santa Fe, NM 87502 Contents: cabinet, NOTICE IS HEREBY ceased. washer, bed, boxes GIVEN that the undersigned has been apNOTICE TO Unit #D16 pointed personal repCREDITORS Hillier, Katherine B. resentatives of this estate. All persons NOTICE IS HEREBY 3881 Old Santa Fe having claims against GIVEN that the under- Trail this estate are re- signed has been ap- Santa Fe, NM 87505 quired to present pointed personal rep- Contents: TV, chairs, their claims within resentatives of this ent. center two months after the estate. All persons date of the first publi- having claims against Unit#D15 cation of this Notice this estate are re- Cunningham, Michael Ave Las or the claims will be quired to present 990 forever barred. their claims within Campanas Claims must be pre- two months after the Santa Fe, NM 87505 sented either to the date of the first publi- Boxes, bins, micro undersigned personal cation of this Notice oven, ent. Center representative at 909 or the claims will be Calle Armanda, forever barred. Unit #D40 Espanola, NM 87532 Claims must be pre- H o l l e y , or filed with the FIRST sented either to the DannylDiamond De JUDICIAL DISTRICT undersigned personal 1925 Aspen Dr. Suite COURT. representative at 909 #801A Calle Armanda, Santa Fe, NM 87505 cabinets, GUSTAVO ROYBAL, Espanola, NM 87532 Contents: Personal Representa- or filed with the FIRST drafting table, chair, tives of the Estate of JUDICIAL DISTRICT computer PEDRO ROYBAL COURT. Legal#95752 c/o Kathleen Kentish Lucero Personal Representa- Published in the San909 Calle Armada tive of the Estate of ta Fe New Mexican Espanola, NM 87532 LAWRENCE T. VALDEZ on: October 7, 14, c/o Kathleen Kentish 2013 Carol Esquibel, Per- Lucero sonal Representitives Maureen Siobhan NOTICE OF PUBLIC of the Estate of PE- Moore SALE DRO ROYBAL 909 Calle Armada c/o Kathleen Kentish Espanola, NM 87532 NOTICE IS HEREBY Lucero GIVEN THAT THE FOL909 Calle Armada Legal#95828 PROPERTY Espanola, NM 87532 Published in the San- LOWING ta Fe New Mexican SHALL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION ON Legal#95826 October 7, 14, 2013 THE 23RD DAY OF OCPublished in the SanTOBER, 2013 AT 12 ta Fe New Mexican NOON AT AZTEC SELF LEGAL NOTICE October 7, 14, 2013 STORAGE, 7521 OLD RESULTS OF SPECIAL AIRPORT RD, SANTA IN FIRST JUDICIAL SCHOOL BOND ELEC- FE, NM 87507 STAISFACTION OF DISTRICT COURT TION HELD SEPTEMLEIN IN ACCORDANCE STATE OF NEW BER 24, 2013 WITH THE NEW MEXIMEXICO IN THE POJOAQUE CO SELF STORAGE COUNTY OF VALLEY PUBLIC SANTA FE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. ACT. 1 NAME: WANDA CASE NO. D-0101-PBCHAVEZ 2013-000019 TOTAL VOTES ADDRESS: 3853 RIVERRECEIVED SIDE DR, SANTA FE, IN THE MATTER OF NM 87507 THE ESTATE OF PEQUESTION 1 DRO ROYBAL, De- GENERAL OBLIGATION UNIT: F6 CONTENTS: HUTCH, ceased. BONDS IN AN 20 BOXES, AMOUNT NOT TO EX- ABOUT QUEEN BOX SPRING NOTICE TO CEED $6,000,000 AND MATTRESS, VACCREDITORS UUM, MIRRORS, FOR: 126 ROOM HEATER AND NOTICE IS HEREBY OTHER GIVEN that the underAGAINST: 84 NUMEROUS ITEMS. signed has been appointed personal repTOTAL VOTES Legal# 95830 resentatives of this RECEIVED 210 Published in the Sanestate. All persons ta Fe New Mexican having claims against This publication this estate are re- made in accordance October 7, 14, 2013 quired to present with Section 1-22-15, their claims within NMSA 1978. NOTICE two months after the OF PUBLIC SALE date of the first publi- /s/ Geraldine Salazar cation of this Notice Santa Fe County Clerk Notice is hereby givor the claims will be Legal #95785 en that the following forever barred. Published in The San- property Claims must be pre- ta Fe New Mexican on Shall be sold at public sented either to the October 7, 2013 auction on Wednesundersigned personal day the 23rd day of representative at 909 October 2013 after Calle Armanda, NOTICE OF PUBLIC 12:00 PM at Santa Fe Espanola, NM 87532 SALE NOTICE IS HERE- Self Storage,1501 or filed with the FIRST BY GIVEN THAT THE Third Street, Santa Fe JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOLLOWING PROPER- NM 87505 ,505-783COURT. TY SHALL BE SOLD AT 6600. In satisfaction PUBLIC AUCTION AT of the lien in accordGUSTAVO ROYBAL, 12:00 PM OR AFTER ance with The New Personal Representa- ON THE 23RD DAY OF Mexico Self Storage tives of the Estate of OCTOBER, 2013 AT ST. Act. PEDRO ROYBAL MICHAELS SELF c/o Kathleen Kentish STORAGE" 1935 AS- Frank Mason Lucero PEN DR, SANTA FE, 804 Alaird Street 909 Calle Armada Santa Fe NM 87505 NM 87505 Espanola, NM 87532 IN SATISFACTION OF Unit # 671 LIEN IN ACCORDANCE Contents: Boxes, SuitCarol Esquibel, Per- WITH THE NEW MEXI- cases, Clothes, Back sonal Representitives CO SELF STORAGE Pack, Misc. of the Estate of PE- ACT. DRO ROYBAL Shanto De Montaigu c/o Kathleen Kentish Unit#A3 2800 Arrillos Road Lucero #36 Probst, Steve 909 Calle Armada Santa Fe NM 87505 P o Box 8211 Espanola, NM 87532 or PO Box 5701 Santa Fe, NM 87507 Santa Fe NM 87502 Legal#95827 Unit # 355 Unit#D5 Published in the San- Byrd, Steven Contents: Microwave, ta Fe New Mexican 1896 Lorca Dr., Apt. 87 ,Furniture, Wicker October 7, 14, 2013 Standing Shelf, Santa Fe, NM 87505 Contents: daybed Lamps, Boxes, Misc, Houshold. frame, clothes, sofa, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Robert Deleon Unit #E14 STATE OF NEW 901 W San Mateo Rd Martinez, Blaine MEXICO Santa Fe NM 87505 2093 Calle Navidad COUNTY OF Unit # 803 Santa Fe, NM 87505 SANTA FE Contents: Dresser, Contents: Art Eisel and Art Supplies, CASE NO. D-0101-PB- sofa, cabinet, stereo Clothes, Mini Fridge, 2013-000028 Household, Table, Unit #J7 Coat Rack, Book IN THE MATTER OF Jojola, Nadine CREDITORS

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B-11

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

LEGALS

Case, File Cabinets. Legal #95777 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 7, 14 2013

Open Space to be utilized in the development of a master plan for the 1,904 acre site located in the Galisteo Basin. All proposals submitted shall be valid for ninety (90) days subject to action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all proposals in part or in whole. A completed proposal shall be submitted in a sealed container indicating the proposal title and number along with the offeror’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All proposals must be received by 10:00 AM (MDT) on Thursday October 31, 2013 at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501. By submitting a proposal for the requested services each offeror is certifying that its proposal complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Request for Proposals.

Notice of Santa Fe County Meeting Santa Fe County Development Review Committee Thursday, October 17, 2013 at 4 p.m. County Commission Chambers, located at 102 Grant Ave. For more information, copies of the agenda, or auxiliary aids or services, contact (505) 9866225. Legal#95821 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican October 7, 2013 RFP-2014-02 Notice is hereby given that the County of Taos, New Mexico calls for sealed proposals for: County Lobbyist Services Interested parties may Request for Proposal (RFP) Packages from the Purchasing Officer at: Taos County Purchasing Office 105 Albright Street, Suite I Taos, NM 87571

LEGALS q g proposals from qualified and licensed firms to provide landscape architectural services for the Thornton Ranch Open Space located in the Galisteo Basin. Professional services will include the development of a landscape architectural program and master plan to allow public access to the open space for recreational and educational activities. All proposals submitted shall be valid for ninety (90) days subject to action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all proposals in part or in whole. A completed proposal shall be submitted in a sealed container indicating the proposal title and number along with the offeror’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All proposals must be received by 10:00 AM (MDT) on Friday, November 1, 2013 at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501. By submitting a proposal for the requested services each offeror is certifying that its proposal complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Request for Proposals.

A Pre-Proposal Conf e r e n c e will be held on Tuesday, October 15, 2013 at 10:00 AM (MDT) at the Santa Fe County Projects, Facilities & Open Space Division OR located at 901 West Phone: 575-737-6319 Alameda, Suite 20-C, Fax: 575-737-6326 Santa Fe, New Mexico E - m a i l : elsa.vigil@taoscounty 87501. Attendance at the Pre-Proposal Con- A Pre-Proposal Con.org ference is M A N D A - f e r e n c e will be held on Tuesday, OctoTORY. OR ber 15, 2013 at 2:00 Via the internet at the PM (MDT) at the EQUAL OPPORTUNITY following address: EMPLOYMENT: All Santa Fe County Projwww.taoscounty.org Facilities & The proposal/s must offerors will receive ects, of Open Space Division be mailed or deliv- consideration without located at 901 West ered to the above ad- contract(s) dress by 3:00 p.m. regard to race, color, Alameda, Suite 20-C, Tuesday, October 15, religion, sex, national Santa Fe, New Mexico 2013. Timely submis- origin, ancestry, age, 87501. Attendance at sion by mail means physical and mental the Pre-Proposal Conserious ference is M A N D A that the proposal handicap, must actually be de- mental condition, dis- TORY. livered to Taos Coun- ability, spousal affility by 3:00 p.m., Tues- ation, sexual orienta- EQUAL OPPORTUNITY All day, October 15, 2013. tion or gender identi- EMPLOYMENT: offerors will receive Proposals received ty. consideration of after 3:00 p.m. will be without considered unrespon- Request for propos- contract(s) sive. Proposals will als will be available regard to race, color, be received by the by contacting Pamela religion, sex, national Procure- origin, ancestry, age, Purchasing Officer at Lindstam, the Taos County Ad- ment Specialist, 142 physical and mental serious Avenue handicap, ministration Office on W. Palace the above date and (Second Floor), Santa mental condition, disFe, New Mexico ability, spousal affilitime. Taos County reserves 87501, by telephone ation, sexual orientathe right to reject any at (505) 992-6759 or tion or gender identiemail at ty. or all proposals, and by plindsta@santafecou waive all formalities. By Order of the Gov- ntynm.gov or on our Request for proposwebsite at als will be available erning Body Taos County Commis- http://www.santafec by contacting Pamela Procureountynm.gov/service Lindstam, sion ment Specialist, 142 s / c u r r e n t W. Palace Avenue Elsa Vigil, Purchasing solicitations (Second Floor), Santa Officer New Mexico PROPOSALS RE- Fe, CEIVED AFTER THE 87501, by telephone Legal#95829 AND TIME at (505) 992-6759 or Published in the San- DATE email at ABOVE by ta Fe New Mexican SPECIFIED WILL NOT BE CONSID- plindsta@santafecou October 7, 2013 ERED AND WILL BE ntynm.gov or on our at REJECTED BY SANTA website SANTA FE COUNTY http://www.santafec FE COUNTY. ountynm.gov/service CULTURAL RE- Santa Fe County s / c u r r e n t SOURCE INVESTIGA- Purchasing Division solicitations TIONS & HISTORICAL RESEARCH Legal#95760 PROPOSALS REFOR THORNTON Published in the San- CEIVED AFTER THE RANCH OPEN SPACE ta Fe New Mexican DATE AND TIME on: October 7, 2013 SPECIFIED ABOVE RFP# 2014-0096WILL NOT BE CONSIDOS/PL ERED AND WILL BE SANTA FE COUNTY REJECTED BY SANTA The Santa Fe County FE COUNTY. Public Works Depart- LANDSCAPE ARCHIment is requesting TECTURAL SERVICES Santa Fe County proposals from quali- FOR THE THORNTON Purchasing Division fied and licensed RANCH OPEN SPACE 2014-0095consultants or con- RFP# Legal#95759 sulting firms to pro- OS/PL Published in the Sanvide cultural resource ta Fe New Mexican investigations & his- The Santa Fe County on: October 7, 2013 torical research for Public Works Departthe Thornton Ranch ment is requesting

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B-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, October 7, 2013

Dear readers, In the coming months, we'll be adding to our selection of Sunday Comics and trimming away some from our daily selection, and we want your help. Throughout the month of October, we want to know your favorite comics and the ones you'd rather see disappear. Maybe you'd like some comics we don't currently offer. We'd like to know that too. Let us know your thoughts at comics@sfnewmexican.com WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

THE ARGYLE SWEATER

PEANUTS

LA CUCARACHA

LUANN

TUNDRA

RETAIL

STONE SOUP

ZITS

BALDO

GET FUZZY

DILBERT

MUTTS

PICKLES

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PARDON MY PLANET

BABY BLUES

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