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Overhauled Medicaid raises fears of overload Many praise state’s goal of ‘seamless’ system for physical, mental health
By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican
New Mexico’s behavioral health system, already fractured by the loss of more than a dozen mental health
Obama to tap first woman as Fed chief
providers following a state audit, is about to undergo another upheaval as the Martinez administration rolls out its retooled Medicaid program, known as “Centennial Care.” The program, which is set to begin Jan. 1, is aimed at reducing Medicaid costs while providing low-income New Mexicans better access to medical care and mental health services. Under the new program, physi-
cal and mental health services will no longer be walled off by separate management companies. Instead, all services will be provided under a seamless, coordinated system by one of four private companies — Molina Healthcare of New Mexico, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Presbyterian or UnitedHealth Care.
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Smashing triumph Fathers of the ‘God particle’ theory, the long elusive Higgs boson, share a Nobel. PAge A-3
Main break opens sinkhole River of water disrupts westside traffic and about 50 homes see service cut.
Navajos end horse roundups Tribe reverses its support for slaughter. LoCAL neWS, C-1
LoCAL, C-1
Los Alamos climate researcher discusses dire forecast for New Mexico forests
no fall color by 2050?
Women’s groups laud Yellen’s nomination By Kevin G. Hall
McClatchy Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will nominate Janet Yellen on Wednesday as the first woman to head the powerful Federal Reserve. If confirmed, she would become the world’s most influential banker. The vice chairman of the Federal Reserve since 2010, Yellen, 67, is a career economist who has served as the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, headed the White House Council of Economic Advisers under President Bill Clinton and taught at Janet Yellen University of California, Berkeley. Obama once was thought to have favored his confidante and former treasury secretary, Lawrence Summers, for the post. But Summers was controversial, opposed by liberal groups as too close to Wall Street and by women’s groups for remarks while president of Harvard University that questioned women’s intelligence. He withdrew from consideration. Women’s groups Tuesday evening lauded the Yellen nomination. “I’m in a fabulously amazing good mood,” Terry O’Neill, head of the National Organization for Women, told McClatchy in an interview. “Janet Yellen is the right person for the job, male or female. She has the temperament, the knowledge and she has the amazing ability to dig into the facts and come to her colleagues with actual facts.” At an April meeting of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers, Yellen hinted at the achievement her nomination now signals. “At the highest levels of central banking, there are very few women,
Vibrantly colored trees are shown from the Aspen Vista Trail in September 2012. Recent climate reports suggest that in fewer than four decades, New Mexico will lose the majority of its forests due to climate change. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
By Staci Matlock
Cathy Wilson, right, a LANL climate researcher, speaks Tuesday at Santa Fe Community College about local impacts of climate change.
The New Mexican
W
hile Congress dithers over budgets and battles over climate policy, scientists and others are urging state and local governments to take action as climate change affects water, agriculture, forests and businesses such as ski resorts that are dependent on dwindling snow. Rising temperatures are killing forests globally, and research by Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists finds it is highly likely that the Southwest, including
JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
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obituaries
Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Minds Interrupted: Stories of Lives Affected by Mental Illness The National Alliance on Mental Illness and the Compassionate Touch Network offer personal stories written and presented by residents of Santa Fe and surrounding areas, 7 p.m., the Lensic, general admission $15, reserved seats $50, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org. More events in Calendar, Page A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Felix Ronquillo Sr., 92, Oct. 5 Dr. Juan Jesus Tellez, 83, Santa Fe, Oct. 4 Hilda E. Wharton, 101, Santa Fe Margaret Bluck Gonzales, 81, Santa Fe, Oct. 5 Nancy Smith, 77, Santa Fe, Oct. 7 PAge C-2
Today Mostly sunny. High 72, low 45. PAge B-6
Index
Calendar A-2
Classifieds D-3
Comics B-8
Lotteries A-2
Opinion A-4
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Author’s talk to explore scientific evidence of ‘soul’ and immortality By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
Is it all over when we die? No, says medical internist and author Larry Dossey. He’s convinced, not by religious faith but by science, that some part of us lives on after our brains and bodies expire. Call it soul, consciousness or the like, he said, “there is some aspect of who we are that is infinite in space and in time.”
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Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com
New Mexico, will lose the vast majority of its forests by 2050. That means no golden aspens in the fall or pine trees in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. The Pacific Northwest would follow closely behind, with forests dying off a few decades later. That dire projection came from Cathy Wilson, a climate researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory, who was part of a panel of experts who talked to a packed room at the Santa Fe Community College on Tuesday about the local impacts of climate change and how communities
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Dossey has sifted through decades of research by scientists from Princeton, Stanford and dozens of other Larry Dossey universities. Dossey will explore the latest research into consciousness and questions of
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immortality at a free talk at 11:30 a.m. Thursday at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 107 W. Barcelona Road. His most recent book is One Mind: How Our Individual Mind is Part of a Greater Consciousness and Why It Matters, which was released Monday. Back in the 1980s, Dossey borrowed the term “non-local” from
Please see SoUL, Page A-4
Four sections, 28 pages 164th year, No. 282 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
NATION&WORLD
MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000
Justices wary of campaign donation limits By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared ready Tuesday to free big individual donors to give more money to political candidates in the court’s first major campaign finance case since the justices took the lid off of independent spending in 2010. The court’s conservative justices, who formed the majority in 2010’s Citizens United case, voiced varying degrees of skepticism about the limits on what individuals may give candidates, political parties and political action committees in a two-year federal election cycle. The argument in a packed courtroom that included members of Congress gave supporters of stringent campaign finance regulations little reason for optimism that the
court would sustain limits that were enacted 40 years ago in response to Watergate-era abuses. The caps were intended to reduce the potential for political corruption. Chief Justice John Roberts, possibly the pivotal vote in the case, said that telling an individual he can give the legal maximum of $2,600 per election to only a handful of candidates for Congress “seems to me a very direct restriction” on First Amendment rights. Roberts seemed less critical of the overall limits as they applied to the political parties, and he said nothing to suggest he would support an outcome that would call into question all contribution limits, including on what one contributor may give one candidate. The Supreme Court first upheld contribution limits in its 1976 Buckley v. Valeo decision, accept-
ing the anti-corruption rationale. In Citizens United, the court said spending that is independent of campaigns poses no risk of corruption, no matter how large. Tuesday’s case was in part about how to reconcile those holdings. President Barack Obama, who criticized the Citizens United ruling in his State of the Union speech in 2010, said Tuesday the current case has the potential to “go even further than Citizens United” if the court should undermine all contribution limits. “I mean, essentially, it would say anything goes; there are no rules in terms of how to finance campaigns,” Obama said at a news conference he called to address the stalemate over the federal budget. Republican activist Shaun McCutcheon of Hoover, Ala., the national Republican Party and
Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky want the court to overturn the overall limits for individuals’ spending — $123,200, including a separate $48,600 cap on contributions to candidates, for 2013 and 2014. McCutcheon and McConnell attended Tuesday’s argument, as did Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent who supports the limits. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, the Obama administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer, struggled to persuade conservative justices who are skeptical of campaign finance laws that the overall limits serve as a check on corruption. Absent limits, “less than 500 people can fund the whole shootin’ match,” Verrilli said. The court’s four liberal justices appeared inclined to uphold the limits at issue.
In brief No waterboarding during terror suspect questioning WASHINGTON — Aboard a Navy warship, U.S. investigators are likely playing good cop/ bad cop, shouting and banging their hands on a table to get suspected al-Qaida operative Abu Anas al-Libi to give up key intelligence. That’s what they’re allowed to do, anyway. What interrogators shouldn’t be doing is putting a hood over al-Libi’s head, waterboarding him or depriving him of food. The Obama administration would only say that al-Libi was being treated “humanely” as he is held on the USS San Antonio after he was captured in a raid in Libya over the weekend. A team of U.S. investigators from the military, intelligence agencies and the Justice Department has been sent to question him, two law-enforcement officials told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity. While the U.S. once held people in secret prisons, questioned them over long periods of time, put duct tape over their eyes or forced them to strip naked, the Obama administration has swapped the secret “black sites” for battleships, acknowledged the capture and detention of a wanted terrorist and promised to stick to approved interrogation tactics like making sure the detainee has four hours of continuous sleep in a 24-hour period. Al-Libi has long been sought for his role in the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa and has been under indictment since 2000.
Citing security, CIA calling back some employees WASHINGTON — The CIA says it’s bringing back some employees amid the partial government shutdown out of concern for national security. In a statement issued Tuesday, CIA Director John Brennan said those being recalled were necessary to the CIA’s core missions of foreign intelligence collection, analysis, covert action and counterintelligence. Brennan didn’t say just how many CIA workers were off the job, calling it a significant portion of the agency’s workforce.
HOUSE DEMS ARRESTED AT IMMIGRATION RALLY Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., is arrested Tuesday by Capitol Police during an immigration rally on Capitol Hill. At least eight Democratic members of the House were among about 200 people arrested after they blocked a main street near the Capitol, seeking to push Republicans to hold a vote on a stalled immigration reform bill. Among those arrested were Reps. John Lewis, D-Ga.; Luis Gutiérrez, D-Ill.; Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz.; Keith Ellison, D-Minn.; John Crowley and Charles Rangel, both D-N.Y.; Al Green, D-Texas; and Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill. JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Russian protester gets forced mental treatment
Most household heating bills to rise this winter
MOSCOW — A protester arrested after a mass anti-Kremlin demonstration last year was found guilty Tuesday of beating a policeman and sent for forced psychiatric treatment, a ruling human rights activists decried as a return to the Soviet practice of using punitive psychiatry against dissidents. Mikhail Kosenko was one of 28 people rounded up in May 2012 after clashes broke out between protesters and police on the eve of Vladimir Putin’s inauguration for a third term as Russia’s president. Kosenko was diagnosed in 2001 with mild schizophrenia, but his condition was controlled by medication, according to a statement from Human Rights Watch, which also questioned the charges brought against Kosenko.
The government forecast Tuesday that most households will pay more for heat this winter. Heating oil users will catch a slight break, but still pay near-record prices to keep warm. Prices for natural gas, electricity and propane should be higher, meaning 90 percent of U.S. homes will incur higher heating expenses. Natural gas users will see the biggest percentage increase after two years of historically low prices. Their heating bills should rise to an average of $679, the Energy Department said. That is about 13 percent higher than a year ago. Homes relying on electricity for heat, about 38 percent of the U.S., will likely pay about 2 percent more compared with last year.
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MINDS INTERRUPTED: STORIES OF LIVES AFFECTED BY MENTAL ILLNESS: National Alliance on Mental Illness and Compassionate Touch Network present personal stories written by residents of Santa Fe and surrounding areas, 7 p.m., general admission $15, reserved seats $50, ticketssantafe.org. 211 W. San Francisco St. DECLINE AND DISSOLUTION OF THE CHACOAN WORLD: Lecture by School for Advanced Research interim president David Stuart, 7 p.m., 954-7213, no charge. 1060 Cerrillos Road. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: Understanding the language of dreams is offered by Jungian scholar, Fabio Macchioni. 5:30 p.m. Reservations required. Call 982-3214. 145 Washington Ave. NATIONAL BOOK AWARD WINNER BOB SHACOCHIS: National Book Award Winner Bob Shacochis will read and sign copies of his newest novel The Woman Who Lost Her Soul. 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101, Sanbusco Center. PRESCHOOLER’S STORY HOUR: 10:45 a.m. weekly on Wednesdays and Thursdays. 202 Galisteo St. RETURNED: THE TEMPORAL-
ITIES AND GEOGRAPHIES OF DEPORTATION: Lecture by anthropologist Deborah Boehm, noon, 954-7203, no charge. School for Advanced Research, 660 Garcia St. SCULPTING IN FIBERGLASS: LUIS JIMENEZ: The weekly New Mexico Museum of Art docent talk series continues, 12:15 p.m., by museum admission, 476-5075. 107 W. Palace Ave. UNLEASH YOUR SOUL SELF: Writing workshop with Tom Bird, 6-8:30 p.m., $15. 333 Cordova Road.
NIGHTLIFE
Wednesday, Oct.9 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Flamenco guitarist Joaquin Gallegos, 7:30-9:30 p.m., no cover. 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Rock singer/ songwriter Tiffany Christopher, 8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: The Bill Hearne Trio, classic country, 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT & SPA: Omar Villanueva, Latin fusion, 7-9:30 p.m., no cover. 330 E. Palace Ave. RIO: BOSSA NOVA & JAZZ: Featuring wistful vocals and lyrical guitar work, Rio offers intimate interpretations of
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Global test: American adults don’t measure up Nation below international average in math, literacy By Kimberly Hefling The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It’s long been known that America’s school kids haven’t measured well compared with international peers. Now, there’s a new twist: Adults don’t either. In math, reading and problem-solving using technology — all skills considered critical for global competitiveness and economic strength — American adults scored below the international average on a global test, according to results released Tuesday. Adults in Japan, Canada, Australia, Finland and multiple other countries scored significantly higher than the United States in all three areas on the test. Beyond basic reading and math, respondents were tested on activities such as calculating mileage reimbursement due to a salesman, sorting email and comparing food expiration dates on grocery store tags. Not only did Americans score poorly compared to many international competitors, the findings reinforced just how large the gap is between the nation’s high- and low-skilled workers and how hard it is to move ahead when your parents haven’t. In both reading and math, for example, those with college-educated parents did better than those whose parents did not complete high school. The study, called the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies, found that it was easier on average to overcome this and other barriers to literacy overseas than in the United States. Researchers tested about 166,000 people ages 16 to 65 in more than 20 countries and subnational regions. The test was developed and released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which is made up of mostly industrialized member countries. The Education Department’s Center for Education Statistics participated. The findings were equally grim for many European countries — Italy and Spain, among the hardest hit by the recession and debt crisis, ranked at the bottom across generations. Unemployment is well over 25 percent in Spain and over 12 percent in Italy. Spain has drastically cut education spending, drawing student street protests. But in the northern European countries that have fared better, the picture was brighter — and the study credits continuing education. In Finland, Denmark and the Netherlands, more than 60 percent of adults took part in either job training or continuing education. In Italy, by contrast, the rate was half that. As the American economy sputters along and many people live paycheck to paycheck, economists say a highly skilled workforce is key to economic recovery. The median hourly wage of workers scoring on the highest level in literacy on the test is more than 60 percent higher than for workers scoring at the lowest level, and those with low literacy skills were more than twice as likely to be unemployed. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in a statement the nation needs to find ways to reach more adults to upgrade their skills. Otherwise, he said, “no matter how hard they work, these adults will be stuck, unable to support their families and contribute fully to our country.”
Lotteries
Corrections
Roadrunner
There were several errors in a story that ran on Page C-2 of the Sept. 13 edition about two brothers being sentenced for scamming an elderly Edgewood couple. The story incorrectly stated that the two men — Michael Maxwell and Steven Maxwell — were convicted of 11 felony counts, including forgery. The men were charged with forgery but not convicted on that charge. The story also misspelled the first name of Carole Duncan, one of the victims in the case, and transposed the ages of Duncan, who is 70, and her husband, Robert Duncan, who is 75.
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VOLUNTEER FIESTA FELA: Santa Fe’s Festival of African Art and Culture will be held from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday 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 and collect
uuu The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. donations. Call Judith Gabriele at 231-7143. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnew mexican.com.
NATION & WORLD
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Duo who aimed to prove ‘God particle’ share Nobel By Frank Jordans and Karl Ritter The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM — Nearly 50 years after they came up with the theory, but little more than a year since the world’s biggest atom smasher delivered the proof, Britain’s Peter Higgs and Belgian colleague Francois Englert won the Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for helping to explain how matter formed after the Big Bang. Working independently in the 1960s, they came up with a theory for how the fundamental building blocks of the universe clumped together, gained mass and formed everything we see around us today. The theory hinged on the existence of a subatomic particle that came to be called the Higgs boson — or the “God particle.” In one of the biggest breakthroughs in physics in decades, scientists at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, announced last year that they had finally found a Higgs boson using the $10 billion particle col-
Belgian physicist Francois Englert, left, and British physicist Peter Higgs, shown in July 2012, were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday. MARTIAL TREZZINI/KEYSTONE
lider built in a 17-mile tunnel under the Swiss-French border. In a statement issued by the University of Edinburgh, where he retired as a professor, the famously shy, 84-yearold Higgs said he hoped the prize would help people recognize “the value of blue-sky research.” Englert, 80, said the award pointed to the importance of scientific free-
dom and the need for scientists to be allowed to do fundamental research that doesn’t have immediate practical applications. “You don’t work thinking to get the Nobel Prize,” said Englert, a retired professor at the Free University of Brussels. Still, “we had the impression that we were doing something that was important, that would later on be used by other researchers.” The Nobel selection committees are notoriously cautious, often allowing decades to elapse before honoring a scientific breakthrough, and their choices are hard to predict. But this time, the prize went to people who were widely expected to get it. “In CERN here, most all of the physicists I know, about 95 percent, expected those two would win it. The question was if there would be a third and who it would be,” said Joe Incandela, a professor of physics at the University of California at Santa Barbara and leader of the CMS experiment, one of the two groups that discovered the Higgs particle.
Ulf Danielsson, a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which awards the physics prize, noted that the prize citation also honored the work done at CERN. “This is a giant discovery. It means the final building block in the so-called Standard Model for particle physics has been put in place, so it marks a milestone in the history of physics,” Danielsson said. The two winners will share a prize worth $1.2 million. CERN Director General Rolf Heuer said he was thrilled for Higgs and Englert, while many of the thousands of scientists who worked there broke into applause when the announcement was made after an unusual one-hour delay. Englert and Higgs were trying to provide an answer to a riddle: How did matter form soon after the Big Bang? They proposed the existence of an invisible field that sprawls through space like a net. The building blocks of matter, they suggested, acquired mass when this field trapped them. Much
Obama, Boehner trade jabs over standoff Hints of compromise emerge as debt limit deadline nears
the White House. “They don’t also get to say, you know, unless you give me what the voters rejected in the last election, I’m going to cause a recession.” Even the deaths of U.S. serBy David Espo vicemen over the weekend in The Associated Press Afghanistan were grist for the politicians. The Pentagon said WASHINGTON — Presithat because of the partial shutdent Barack Obama and House down it was unable to pay the Speaker John Boehner offered customary death benefits to the hints of possible compromise survivors. Boehner said Conbut also traded heated rhetoric gress had passed and Obama Tuesday, a frustratingly inconclusive combination that left the signed legislation last week permitting the payments, addeight-day partial government ing it was “disgraceful” for the shutdown firmly in place and administration to interpret the the threat of an unprecedented measure otherwise. He said the national default drawing closer. House would clarify the issue “There’s a crack there,” with a new bill Wednesday. Boehner said of the impasse In Congress, a plan by Sennear the end of a day of maneuate Democrats to raise the debt vering at the White House and the Capitol. Yet the Ohio Repub- limit by $1 trillion to stave off a possible default drew little evilican added that it was not dence of support from Republienough to warrant optimism. cans. And a proposal by RepubStocks fell significantly — the Dow Jones average by 159 points licans to create a working group of 20 lawmakers to tackle deficit — as political gridlock endured. issues, approved 224-197 by the And, in the latest in a string of House, drew a veto threat from dire warnings, the International the White House. Monetary Fund said failure to On a day in which both Obama raise America’s debt limit could lead to default and disrupt world- and Boehner appeared on live television, both men appeared wide financial markets, raise to be giving ground yet yielding interest rates and push the U.S little if anything of substance. economy back into recession. Treasury Secretary Jacob Republicans “don’t get to demand ransom in exchange for Lew has said the deadline for doing their jobs,” Obama said at Congress to act is Oct. 17, setting
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that as the day the government will exhaust its ability to borrow funds and will have to rely dayto-day on tax and other receipts to pay its bills. Some Republicans have downplayed the significance of the Oct. 17 deadline, saying that even then, the United States would be able to pay China and other holders of U.S. debt and avoid widespread economic dislocation. But Obama said they were badly misguided, warning that default would harm the economy, cause retirement accounts to shrivel and houses to lose value. Still other Republicans have made it clear in recent days they agree with the threat posed by default and are determined to prevent it. Inside a closed-door meeting of the Republican rank and file, Boehner had told his fellow Republicans they were in the midst of a tough battle and that Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid were trying to “annihilate us,” according to
one official in attendance. Boehner’s tone was different when he spoke to reporters. “There’s no boundaries here. There’s nothing on the table. There’s nothing off the table. I’m trying to do everything I can to bring people together and to have a conversation,” he said. In the back-and-forth, the threat of a default overshadowed the continuing partial government shutdown. The House approved legislation during the day to pay for a resumption of Head Start, the pre-school program for disadvantaged children. The bill was the latest in a string of measures to end the shutdown in one corner of government or another in hopes of forcing Democrats to abandon their own demands for a full reopening of the federal establishment. The House also voted 420-0 to make sure federal workers on the job don’t miss their next regularly scheduled paycheck on Oct. 15.
later, as the universe cooled, they formed atoms that eventually became stars and planets. To detect the field, the scientists suggested looking for the Higgs boson, because all fields are associated with a particle. Decades would pass before scientists were able to confirm the existence of this particle. Only about one collision per trillion will produce a Higgs boson in the giant atom collider, and it took CERN several months after the discovery of a new “Higgs-like” boson to conclude that the particle was, in fact, very much like the one expected in the original formulation. The phrase “God particle” was coined by Nobel-winning physicist Leon Lederman, but it’s disliked by most physicists because it connotes the supernatural. Lederman said later that the phrase — mostly used by laymen — was really meant to convey that he felt it was the “goddamn particle,” because it proved so hard to find.
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Fed: ‘Dovish’ views on inflation under scrutiny Continued from Page A-1 but I am pleased that the representation of women is increasing a lot at other levels, at lower levels of central banking and financial markets and institutions more broadly,” she said, adding, “I really think this is something that is going to increase over time, and it’s time for that to happen.” Yellen is closely associated with the Fed’s controversial bond-buying program known as quantitative easing. Since December, the Fed has been purchasing $85 billion worth of government and mortgage bonds in an effort to force investors out of the safe haven of bonds and into risk taking that supports the economy. Financial markets are fretting the end of that program, and the Fed is expected to begin tapering off its purchases later this year. After Bernanke’s term ends in January, it would fall on Yellen to communicate the Fed’s next steps to nervous investors and ensure that inflation doesn’t flare up as the Fed withdraws its unconventional support for the sluggish U.S. economy. “It think it’s going to be a tough slog,” said Dean Croushore, a former Fed economist who co-wrote a textbook with Bernanke and called Yellen’s nomination “the expected outcome and I think a very good choice.” In April, Yellen, a Brooklyn native who speaks with a New York accent, suggested communication would be the biggest challenge for the next Fed chief. “Better times and a transition away from unconventional policies may make monetary
“
I voted against Vice Chairman Yellen’s original nomination to the Fed in 2010 because of her dovish views on monetary policy.” Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn policy less reliant on communication,” she said. “But I hope and trust that the days of ‘never explain, never excuse’ are gone for good, and that the Federal Reserve continues to reap the benefits of clearly explaining its actions to the public.” Republicans were tempered on the selection of Yellen, some concerned about the perception that she might be a so-called inflation dove willing to tolerate inflation as a tradeoff for more economic growth and employment. “It’s worth watching. That’s been the reputation,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office and a former economic adviser to Republican presidential campaigns. He added that Obama “chose someone who is immensely qualified” to head the autonomous Fed. Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, called on her to pursue more transparency about the Fed’s decisions, and then criticized the current chairman, with whom Yellen has worked in lockstep.
“Rather than following a rules-based policy, the Fed has effectively conducted both monetary policy and fiscal policy with its unprecedented stimulus efforts. This has camouflaged the true cost of our deficit, encouraged more government spending, and endangered the central bank’s independence and credibility,” Hensarling said in a statement. “It has increased the risk of inflation in the future and in the present transferred wealth from middle income families who save and invest conservatively to the wealthy who can afford to make riskier, higher-yielding investments.” At least one key Republican immediately came out opposed. “I voted against Vice Chairman Yellen’s original nomination to the Fed in 2010 because of her dovish views on monetary policy,” Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., said in a statement. “We will closely examine her record since that time, but I am not aware of anything that demonstrates her views have changed.” Democrats were more supportive. “I commend President Obama on his selection of Dr. Yellen to be the first woman to serve as Federal Reserve Chairman,” said Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson, D-S.D., in a statement that promised to consider her nomination quickly. “She has a depth of experience that is second to none, and I have no doubt she will be an excellent Federal Reserve Chairman.” Added Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., “She’s an excellent choice and I believe she’ll be confirmed by a wide margin.”
Climate: Speaker discusses effort in Denmark Continued from Page A-1 can take action to mitigate and adapt to what is coming. Wilson, who presented work by colleagues Park Williams and Nate McDowell, appeared alongside a renewable energy director from Denmark. Tuesday’s discussion came in the wake of a recent report by an international team of climate scientists, called the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which declared that warming of the climate system (atmosphere, ocean and land surface) is an unequivocal fact. Other highlights of that report are included here in italics: In the northern hemisphere, 1983-2012 was likely the warmest 30-year period of the last 1,400 years. Each of the last three decades has been successively warmer at the Earth’s surface than any preceding decade since 1850. More trees are dying because climate change in the Southwest means higher temperatures and longer droughts. When there’s less moisture, trees die of thirst or beetle invasions, slowly but surely. “We are certainly on the business-as-usual trajectory,” Wilson said. “So things are most likely going to get much warmer.” The atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxides (greenhouse gas emissions) have increased to levels unprecedented in the last 800,000 years. Trees take in and hold carbon dioxide, one of the greenhouse gases climate scientists are highly certain helps cause climate change. As the trees die, we lose their sequestration services. Carbon dioxide levels rise even more. “The forests are performing a significant environmental service for us,” Wilson said. Human influence on the climate system is clear. It is extremely likely that human influence has
Søren Hermansen, director of a renewable energy project on Denmark’s Samsoe Island, speaks Tuesday at Santa Fe Community College about climate change. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
In Denmark, one little island took up the challenge to power itself completely with renewable energy. Samsoe succeeded in one decade, according to Søren Hermansen, an islander and head of the Samsoe renewable energy project. been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid20th century. In Denmark, one little island took up the challenge to power itself completely with renewable energy. Samsoe succeeded in one decade, according to Søren Hermansen, an islander and head of the Samsoe renewable energy project. Hermansen spoke at Tuesday’s climate forum about how the 4,000 pragmatic islanders pulled it off. For heat, the islanders rely on biomass-fueled and solar-heating “cooperatives.” Biomass and solar panels warm fluid-filled
tubes. The heat is delivered via pipes to homes and businesses. The cooperatives are made up of a few dozen families who own these “district” heating systems. Electricity is supplied 100 percent by wind turbines, both on shore and offshore. They produce enough energy for the islanders and the thousands of tourists who come each year. The islanders own shares in the wind turbines that serve them. Large companies own other wind turbines, and that electricity is exported, bringing revenue to the island’s small government. At $78 million, the transition to
renewable energy wasn’t cheap. But the benefits were many, Hermansen said. Continued emissions of greenhouse gases will cause further warming and changes in all components of the climate system. Reinventing infrastructure for the island created jobs for local craftsmen. Maintaining the systems employs others. The project’s success has gained international attention from other countries and coverage from the likes of CNN and Santa Fe-based Outside magazine. Denmark, learning from its little island, has decided to produce all of the country’s power from renewable power by 2050. The take-away lessons for other communities, Hermansen said, include that communities must be widely collaborative to pull off big projects. Get everyone involved, including people you might not like. Be pragmatic and look for solutions, he said. “We need more doers and less talking political heads.” Limiting climate change will require substantial and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions. Hermansen, named a Hero of the Environment by Time magazine in 2008, doesn’t think the old adage “think globally, act locally” is quite right. He thinks “think locally, act locally” expresses the personal responsibility all communities have to take in light of climate change. “That way you don’t worry about what China is doing,” he said. “Just focus on what you can do.” “We need a reliable policy, brave politicians, long-term planning frameworks and targets, reasonable budgets, bankable projects, local individual action plans,” he said, “and more local heroes.”
On the Web u The latest IPCC report is available at www.ipcc.ch/
Soul: Author calls himself a ‘science junkie’ Continued from Page A-1 physics and applied it to the idea of a boundless consciousness that survives our physical selves. He wrote about it in Recovering the Soul, one of a dozen books he has written. Dossey doesn’t use religious language to describe this non-local soul, and he doesn’t much care what it looks like after we die. He’s just fascinated by experiments that increasingly are bringing scientific rigor to questions of mind and consciousness. The evidence of a soul that lingers after we die doesn’t come from someone who actually did. “Nobody has come back from the other side and staged a press conference on the White House lawn,” Dossey said in a phone interview. He describes four different types of experiments that show an unnerving ability of people to know things in a way we might call telepathy or precognition. In one, individuals sitting in front of a computer are shown a random series of pictures — some serene and some horrifying. Scientists are able to measure their physical response to stress, which increases when
the pictures are disturbing, Dossey said. The experiments found that often, stress levels went up a few seconds before the computer showed the disturbing pictures, but did not go up before the serene pictures were shown. It was as though the subjects could “sense” what was about to be shown by the computer. But Dossey believes this “sense” is part of our boundless consciousness that’s tapped into something we can’t see. Dossey has his detractors, other scientists and doctors who call him part of the “magic thinkers” who practice pseudo-science. Dossey said he isn’t bothered by those detractors. “I’m basically a science junkie. I would not put my name on a book about this unless it was backed by solid science,” he said. Dossey said he left behind his religious upbringing in Texas when he started studying science. Dossey earned his medical degree from the University of Texas and served as a battalion surgeon in Vietnam. He later helped launch the Dallas Diagnostic Association. As an internist, he had patients who miraculously were cured after all usual medical interventions seemed to have failed. He studied the phenomena of patients who
IF yOu gO What: Author Larry Dossey will explore the latest research into consciousness and questions of immortality at a free talk. When: 11:30 a.m. Thursday Where: Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 107 W. Barcelona Road
healed better after they had been prayed for by others, compared with patients who did not receive prayers. He began researching the connection between the mind and body. Since then, he has served as co-chairman of the Panel on Mind/Body Interventions at the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. In addition to having authored a dozen books on consciousness, he edits the peer-reviewed journal Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing. Contact Staci Matlock at smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com or 986-3055 or follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
Medicaid: Expansion may overwhelm state’s mental health system Continued from Page A-1 For the state’s half-million patients who use Medicaid to pay for mental health treatments, that could mean hunting for new counselors and therapists in a system that mental health advocates and at least one lawmaker contends is already overwhelmed. “The behavioral health system in the state has been decimated, and that is not a good thing,” said state Sen. William O’Neill, an Albuquerque Democrat who sits on an oversight committee for behavioral health. “There are so many things wrong with the current landscape, I would not be surprised if these problems continue or worsen.” There are some 570,000 residents already in the Medicaid government insurance program operated by New Mexico, and some 85,000 have been receiving some mental health care, known as behavioral health. But with the expansion of Medicaid to newly qualified adults under the Affordable Care Act, there will be more patients who have never before been eligible for stress, addiction, even smoking-cessation programs, which are supervised by medical doctors or licensed counselors. And the new patients — an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 in the first year — will be added to a fragile network that has already been scrutinized and reconfigured in the wake of an audit by OptumHealth, which manages the system. In response to whistleblower complaints of overbilling and abuse, Optum audited 15 providers of behavioral health throughout the state. In 12 of the cases, officials said, it uncovered credible allegations of fraud, and the results are now under review by the state attorney general, who along with Gov. Susana Martinez has refused to release details of the audit findings. But some services, such as treatment foster care, emergency trauma care and school behavior intervention, have been curtailed because there is now a shortage of providers. And some of the largest behavioral health nonprofits in Northern New Mexico, including Easter Seals el Mirador and TeamBuilders/ Zia Behavioral Health, Casa de Corazon, are no longer providing any care or seeing patients. The state Human Services Department maintains there has been some disruption of care, but the overall transition to a group of Arizona companies has gone well, and most doctors, counselors and other therapists are intact. Diane McWilliams, director of the Human Services Department’s Behavioral Health Division, told lawmakers recently that the transition had been smooth and that 88 percent of employees were still in place, according to the Carlsbad Current-Argus. Lawmaker O’Neill is not alone in his concerns. The patient advocacy group Disability Rights New Mexico has written a letter to Sidonie Squier, Human Services Department secretary, laying out concerns, not just about the interruption of services today, but confusion about what is coming. “The community care organizations that have gone out of business were supposed to be the backbone of the new system,” said Jim Jackson, executive director of the patient-rights group. The letter lays out several areas where services are not adequate, and says neither the state nor its contractors are “maintaining an adequate provider network nor providing services with reasonable promptness.” Even the managed-care companies that will inherit patients Jan. 1 — longtime health networks with a wide footprint in New Mexico — say the coming challenges are immense, but the promise of a more coordinated health care system is a positive. “New Mexico has big problems in terms of need. There are no sufficient community services networks,” said Dr. Marcello Maviglia, a board-certified addiction physician who manages the care for Molina Healthcare of New Mexico. “It’s certainly a big transition, but we need to go about it in a methodological way.” He said the coordination of physical and behavioral health services that Centennial Care promises will eventually yield better health for patients, but that may take some time. The goal, however, would be to have patients who show up for a physical exam be helped with a counselor or a therapist if necessary — that same day or soon thereafter. It will be a challenge in rural and underserved parts of the state, especially, but with telemedicine options and improved case management, it is possible. “Coordination of care can be highly preventive,” Maviglia said. “A a caseworker doing a good job and managing chronic disorders, you also end up having less acute episodes of mental illness. We need to establish a functional system based on proper coordination of care.” Dr. Eugene Sun, chief medical officer of Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico, said the integration promise of Centennial Care is the best way to all health services. “We are going to work as a team within Blue Cross to completely coordinate and manage their physical and behavioral health needs,” he said. “I think it’s gong to be a great thing for the people of New Mexico.” Like Dr. Maviglia, Sun said it all won’t all happen Jan. 1, and integrating providers and service contractors will take time. “It’s unfolding as we speak,” he said. “We’re fully committed to working with all of the providers, contracts are being put in place, we are focused on a seamless transition. The goal is 100 percent seamless, so patients don’t notice anything. It’s complex, but we’ll get there.” Contact Bruce Krasnow at 986-3034 or brucek@ sfnewmexican.com.
Dr. Marcello Maviglia says coordination of services will eventually yield better health for patients.
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Patience can be a brilliant strategy
I
find consistently that President Barack Obama’s critics are not as smart as he is. In fact, this is precisely why they criticize him; they just don’t understand what he is doing. About Syria, many have expressed the opinion that he is not a credible, strong leader. Obama drew a line in the sand, then he did everything he could not to take military action against Bashar Assad. He even went to the Congress to take time. The result? President Assad has now admitted, for the first time, he not only has gas bombs, he has now promised to release them to the United Nations. Imagine what would have happened if George W. Bush had gotten Saddam Hussein to admit he had weapons of mass destruction. Oh, excuse me, he didn’t have weapons of mass destruction! How many of our most courageous men and women have lost their lives in Iraq? Now Obama is standing firm watching Republicans making fools of themselves having caused the government to shut down. Brilliant! Simply brilliant. Fabio Macchioni
Santa Fe
Doesn’t add up The New Mexican ran an article on Sept. 25, by Barry Massey of The Associated Press, reporting that the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD) will seek less money in next year’s Medicaid budget. The article states, for the first time in a decade, the state isn’t seeking an increase. I am wondering how this fits with the HSD’s stated intention to eliminate its Sole Community Provider hospital program and replace it with an Uncompensated Care Pool,
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Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Mary Lou Cook: A kind soul
M the people were efficient and gracious as well. Thank you so much for helping our community and keeping us all healthy.
eliminating payments to the state’s four largest hospitals (Univiersity Hospital, Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center, San Juan Regional Medical Center and Memorial Medical Center in Las Cruces). To compensate, the state would raise Medicaid hospital payment rates — but the state can only pull it off if it takes the counties’ second oneeighth percent gross receipts tax. This money now pays for indigent care at the hospitals and for community providers. What’s going on here? These two stories do not fit together.
I would like to encourage fellow New Mexico sportsmen and women to support Sen. Martin Heinrich in his sponsorship of the HUNT Act (S.B. 1554). His efforts will make a positive impact on our families’ ability to access and use our state’s public lands.
Judy Williams
Curtis Thomson
Linda Sue King
Santa Fe
A positive act
Nambé
Santa Fe
Staying healthy
St. Mike’s apology
Recently, the public health department on Latrado Street gave free flu shots to the community. I can’t thank them enough for this service. Not only was the service free, but
Over the past couple of weeks, there has been some criticism directed at St. Michael’s High School over the actions of the Horsemen mascot at the St. Mike’s vs.
Santa Fe High football game. We believe the criticism is deserved and that we owe an apology to the Santa Fe community. While we value the healthy rivalry between the Horsemen and the Demons, our mascot should not have run onto the field to taunt the band and attempt to disrupt the performance. This behavior was not condoned and does not represent what St. Mike’s teaches students about sportsmanship, respect and Christian values. The student mascot was immediately reprimanded and asked to write a letter of apology, which she and I presented in person to the principal and the band director of Santa Fe High. On behalf of everyone at St. Mike’s, I apologize for the mascot’s behavior and any poor sportsmanship exhibited by our fans. Sam Govea
principal, St. Michael’s High School
COMMENTARY
There’s plenty to consider in a name WASHINGTON in Washington on Tuesday for their fall meeting should attempt a thought experiou know a guy is in trouble when ment and substitute some other common he hires Lanny Davis as his lawyer. racial epithets for Hispanics, African Davis has developed a specialty Americans, Asians and Jews and see how representing Third World dictators and it would sound. That should be questionable businesses since enough to send anybody to the his days as a spokesman for shotgun formation. Bill Clinton during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. So when “This word is an insult. It’s Davis’ name appeared on a mean, it’s rude, it’s impolite,” statement from the Washington said Kevin Gover, who is Native Redskins on Saturday afterAmerican and director of the noon declaring that President Smithsonian’s National Museum Barack Obama was wrong to of the American Indian, speakquestion the team’s name, it ing at a news conference on the Dana was a sure sign that Dan Snyeve of the NFL meeting. “We’ve der is worried. noticed that other racial insults Milbank are out of bounds. … We wonder Davis, brought in this sumThe Washington why it is that the word that is mer to help with the teamPost directed at us, that refers to us, name controversy, expressed is not similarly off-limits.” his disappointment “as a supporter of President Obama” that Obama Gover was part of a gathering arranged was not aware of a decade-old poll findby the Oneida Nation at the Ritz-Carlton, ing that only 1 in 10 Native Americans the site of the owners meeting. The tribe were offended by the name. “We love our has been running radio ads calling for a team and its name,” he wrote, and “we do name change, and the cause got a boost not intend to disparage or disrespect a when Obama said in an interview with racial or ethnic group.” The Associated Press on Saturday that he’d think about changing the name if I like Davis and admire his creativity, he were in Snyder’s shoes. Snyder is on but, to borrow a Clinton-era phrase, let’s record telling USA Today: “We’ll never parse this statement. Are the Redskins change the name. It’s that simple. Never really defending the name with an out-of— you can use caps.” date survey that allowed anybody — even somebody with less native blood than Actually, forget the Caps; let’s use the Elizabeth Warren — to identify as a Native Bullets, who became the Washington WizAmerican? And even if those results were ards to avoid using what was a less offenaccurate, are Davis and Snyder suggesting sive word than Redskins. Davis decries the that racism is OK if it polls well? “selective” outrage against the Redskins but not the Atlanta Braves or the Cleveland To see whether it’s right to use “Redskins” as a mascot, NFL owners gathering Indians or the Chicago Blackhawks. The
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MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
Braves’ Tomahawk Chop and Cleveland’s Chief Wahoo are indeed appalling, but the team names aren’t epithets. “We’re asking the NFL to stop using a racial slur,” said Ray Halbritter, representing the Oneida Nation. The best argument was made not by a Native American but by an African American, the District of Columbia’s delegate to Congress, Eleanor Holmes Norton. “My great-grandfather was a runaway slave,” she said. “I went to segregated schools, just like many Native Americans. … I don’t see how anyone who has gone through our historic experience can fail to identify with Native Americans who are raising this issue. Need I remind them of the terms that have been attached to us in history and how the moment we hear one of those terms, you’ve got an uprising?” That makes Davis’ defense sound all the more trivial. “The name ‘Washington Redskins’ is 80 years old — it’s our history and legacy and tradition,” his statement said — as though that trumps the Native Americans’ history and legacy and tradition. Norton predicted that the offensive name won’t last much longer. “The name is going to go in the dustbin of history,” she said. “My only regret is that Dan Snyder, the owner of the team, had to be pushed this far.” If Snyder feels otherwise, perhaps he can start making his way to history’s dustbin, and a new owner can change the name. Maybe then we’d win some football games. Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter @Milbank.
ary Lou Cook took her own advice seriously. “Be kind, be kind, be kind,” she said at the celebration of her 95th birthday earlier this year. That’s exactly how the elder lived her life, treating people with kindness, seeking peace both locally and globally and showing through actions big and small how one person can make a difference. She died Monday. A child during the Great Depression — she was born in 1918 — Cook saw her mother have to scrub floors to make a living during hard times. Her father, a banker, had died when she was 12 and the family, like so many during those lean years, struggled. Still, Cook went to college, studying fine art at the University of Kansas. There, she met her husband, Sam, whose job in management at an electric company meant the family moved frequently. A mother of three, Cook kept busy with a variety of activities in addition to raising her children. She did volunteer work, studied calligraphy, started arts programs for children and became a recruiter for the Peace Corps. She was active outside the home when women were still expected to stay home. Her daughter, Caren Cook, said, “she gave me the best life a kid could ever want,” surely the best tribute any mother could receive. In 1969, her husband retired and the family and their three children relocated to Santa Fe. As she had in Des Moines, Iowa, or El Paso or Milwaukee, Cook became involved in her community. She taught continuing education classes in calligraphy and art, founded the Dispensable Church and became a minister and bishop in the Eternal Life Church. She taught a course in miracles, bringing spiritual awareness down to a practical level in a manner that could heal lives. Always, she sought to bring people together to share experiences and knowledge, to learn from each other and to create a better, more peaceful world. She met life with joy despite her husband’s death in 1981, the loss of one daughter, a battle with leukemia and macular degeneration that dulled her vision in recent years. Her straw hat and big smile were familiar sights to people all over Santa Fe. One of her biggest contributions to Santa Fe was establishing the Living Treasures program, which every year honors community elders for their lives and contributions. It reminds us that Santa Fe possesses a rich pool of knowledge and talent, and encourages everyone to honor and respect that experience. She never did persuade either the state or federal government to establish departments of peace, but she also never stopped trying. That indefatigable energy was with her nearly to the end, along with a lightness of spirit that touched everyone she met. Mary Lou Cook, Santa Fe is fortunate to have counted you among her citizens. In her memory, be kind.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 9, 1913: Santa Fe’s school boys and girls saw and heard a real minister, soon-to-be ambassador, this morning. Don Juan Riano, Spain’s minister to the United States, was the speaker, and he used two languages, Spanish and English. The students were addressed at the De Vargas hotel. Oct. 9, 1963: The use of state owned cars for personnel use seems to be increasing although there was an order issued shortly after Gov. Jack Campbell took office stating that this practice was to stop at once. City residents have been reporting having seen state vehicles used for family outings, shopping and even hauling lumber. Those complaining believe that if the various departments of state government would crack down on their vehicle drivers to keep this practice from occurring, the state could make a substantial saving in the amount spent on gasoline and car repairs. Oct. 9, 1988: The boom times of the Reagan era have ended for the scientists who design and test nuclear arms. At America’s rival research centers — the 7,800-person Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and the 8,000-person Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Northern California — the atmosphere is of ferment and soul-searching. No longer are research budgets rising and orders for new warheads seemingly endless. Instead, there are layoffs, budget cuts and bad press about internal disputes. An agreement has been reached to eliminate a whole class of nuclear arms, including, for America, the Pershing II and the ground-launched cruise missile.
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS No mercy shown to the North
T
he Northern New Mexico football teams are being shown no mercy this season. According to the New Mexico Activities Association mercy rule bylaw, the game clock does not stop for incomplete passes, a player running out of bounds or first downs when a team is up by 35 points or more in the second half. It also states that a game ends at halftime or the Edmundo second half if a Carrillo team is down by 50 or more Commentary points. Of the 13 11-man football programs The New Mexican covers, 16 games have been decided by the one version of the mercy rule or the other. Out of those 13 teams, only Taos, Los Alamos and Pojoaque Valley have played a game that did not end early. Only five of those 16 games were victories for the North. Of the 10 teams that have had a mercy-rule ending this year, only St. Michael’s and (amazingly) Española Valley do not have a mercy-rule loss. St. Michael’s had two consecutive 50-0 drubbings over Las Vegas Robertson and Santa Fe High, respectively. Española Valley smoked Santa Fe Indian 50-0 on Sept. 20, which also doubles as the Sundevils’ only win. SFIS takes home the mercy crown by losing their past three games by 50 points or more. West Las Vegas comes in second with two mercyrule losses. So why are so many teams losing by so much? Well, some teams, like Capital,
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Transformation: Today’s tight ends honed their skills on the hardwood. Page B-5
MLB PLAYOFFS
Tigers rally past A’s to force Game 5 inside
By Noah Trister
The Associated Press
DETROIT — On a night of desperation, dispute and finally, delirium, Max Scherzer and the Detroit Tigers kept their season alive by the Tigers 8 slimmest of margins. Athletics 6 A tying home run, helped along by a couple of fans in right field. A full-count pitch with the bases loaded that was low and
u Cardinals, Pirates starters both coming off stingy efforts. Page B-4
inside but became strike three when the batter swung. A line drive down the line with the bases still full — foul by a few feet. During a relief outing to remember, Scherzer escaped a major jam one inning after two fans reached out to try to reel in Victor Martinez’s disputed home
run, and the Tigers rallied past the Oakland Athletics 8-6 on Tuesday to force a decisive fifth game in their AL division series. Playing catch-up most of the way, the Tigers tied it first with Jhonny Peralta’s three-run homer in the fifth inning and then on Martinez’s solo shot in the seventh. A couple of fans attempted to catch Martinez’s drive, and at least one of them bobbled the ball as he reached over the railing
Please see tigeRs, Page B-4
A’s right fielder Josh Reddick and center fielder Coco Crisp argue fan interference after a home run by Detroit on Tuesday. DUANE BURLESON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Santa Fe High freshman caught the triathlon bug from his parents — and has been excelling ever since
Three-sport threat
Please see meRcY, Page B-4
UNM BASKETBALL
Lobos picked to win MWC The New Mexican
The media has spoken, and the early word is good for The University of New Mexico men’s basketball team. The Lobos are a near-unanimous pick to win the Mountain West Conference, picking up 23 of the 24 firstplace votes in balloting conducted Tuesday during the league’s preseason media gathering in Colorado Springs, Colo. The only other first-place vote went to UNLV, which was tied for second with Boise State in the 11-team MWC. San Diego State was fourth, followed by Utah State and Colorado State. UNM also had two players voted onto the preseason all-conference team as senior guard Kendall Williams and junior center Alex Kirk joined Nevada’s Deonte Burton, UNLV’s Khem Birch and Boise State teammates Derrick Marks and Anthony Drmic. San Diego State transfer Josh Davis was voted top newcomer, while UNLV’s Kendall Smith was named top freshman. The reigning MWC player of the year, Williams was voted the top overall player. He was an Associated Press honorable mention All-American as a junior. He led the MWC in assists last year, bursting onto the scene late in the regular season when he poured in a career-high 46 points on 10 3-pointers at Colorado State. A Los Alamos High grad, Kirk is the top returning rebounder in the Mountain West (8.8 per game). He averaged 12.9 points per outing in conference games. This marks the second time in three years the Lobos have been picked to win the league title, having followed through on their promise to finish first in the 2011-12 season. They are attempting to become the first team in conference history to win the MWC title five times in a six-year stretch.
Santa Fe High School freshman cross-country runner Mateo Martinez runs a lap during practice Tuesday. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By James Barron The New Mexican
M
ateo Martinez fashions himself as a threesport athlete. The only difference between the Santa Fe High freshman and his other multisport cohorts is how they go about achieving the task. Where it takes most other multi-sport athletes an entire year to play their sports, Martinez can boast doing it in one event. To be fair, triathlons are not considered a sanctioned sport by the New Mexico Activities Association, but that won’t diminish what Martinez does. The 14-year-old freshman, who runs for the crosscountry team and has been competing in sprint triathlons, a truncated version of the swim/bike/run competition, since he was 7 years old. Just don’t ask him about his first triathlon. “I don’t remember my first race,” Martinez says. “Ever since then, it’s been one of the things that I’ve been good at and could excel in.”
I think it was the training and being familiar with it “ and seeing Mom and Dad try out on the sprint circuit that helped. That and just being involved with both parents in the house that are active.” Matt Martinez, Mateo’s father Good enough to compete with a team of five Santa Fe teens at the IronKids U.S. Championships in Des Moines, Iowa, in late August. In fact, he was the top finisher, taking 59th in the senior (12- to 15-year-olds) division and 22nd among 14-year-olds. The following week, he started his freshman year with the Demons by placing 60th at the Joe I. Vigil Open in Alamosa, Colo. He was the second-best finisher for Santa Fe High, which has been a theme for Martinez. He has been the second- or third-best runner for a young Demons squad that has only two seniors.
But then, exceeding expectations is just a norm for Martinez. He was a varsity member as an eighth grader and made his mark then. “He was our consistent No. 3 last year,” Santa Fe High head coach Peter Graham says. “He has been a very consistent three this year. He’s a very hard worker.” There should be no surprise in that. It’s a family trait. Mateo caught the triathlon bug thanks to his
Please see tHReat, Page B-3
PREP SOCCER
Free kick secures Jaguars win over Demons By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
As Luis Rios set up for a free kick just outside the penalty box in the 73rd minute of a District 2AAAA match at Santa Fe Jaguars 3 High, the Demons Demons 2 were ready to play the pass. But Capital head coach Eugene Doyle read Rios’ mind. “He’s going to shoot it every time,”
Doyle said. Sure enough, Rios kicked the ball right over the Demons wall and outside the reach of goalkeeper Pedro Mayorga to give the Jaguars a 3-2 lead that they held on to take firm control of first place in the district. Rios was well prepared for the occasion. He practices free kicks before practice just in case the Jaguars (9-5 overall, 3-0 2AAAA) need to call upon him. “I just put the ball in like I do in
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
practice,” Rios said. “I practice free kicks before we start training during the week. As soon as I started the run, I felt confident about the shot because I practice the whole week for these occasions, and practice paid off.” The Demons (8-8, 1-2) never let the Jaguars get too far ahead by answering every Jaguars salvo. They even went ahead midway through the second half on Armando Hernandez’s goal in the 55th minute to take a 2-1 lead. But Santa Fe High head coach A.J. Her-
rera knew all too well giving any team good chances to score — especially Capital — is a recipe for disaster. “The game of soccer is not forgiving when you give up opportunities,” Herrera said. “That shot by Luis was just outstanding.” Santa Fe High never showed any fear of the Jaguars by playing physically the entire match, and that got Capital out of its comfort zone early.
Please see KicK, Page B-4
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
FOOTBALL
NFL American Conference
East New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo South Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Baltimore Cleveland Cincinnati Pittsburgh West Denver Kansas City Oakland San Diego
W 4 3 3 2 W 4 3 2 0 W 3 3 3 0 W 5 5 2 2
L 1 2 2 3 L 1 2 3 5 L 2 2 2 4 L 0 0 3 3
BASEBALL BASEBALL
FOOTBALL
T Pct PF PA 0 .800 95 70 0 .600 98 116 0 .600 114 117 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 .400 98 108 0 .400 125 129
National Conference
East Philadelphia Dallas Washington N.Y. Giants South New Orleans Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay North Detroit Chicago Green Bay Minnesota West Seattle San Francisco Arizona St. Louis
W L T Pct PF PA 2 3 0 .400 135 159 2 3 0 .400 152 136 1 3 0 .250 91 112 0 5 0 .000 82 182 W L T Pct PF PA 5 0 0 1.000 134 73 1 3 0 .250 74 58 1 4 0 .200 122 134 0 4 0 .000 44 70 W L T Pct PF PA 3 2 0 .600 131 123 3 2 0 .600 145 140 2 2 0 .500 118 97 1 3 0 .250 115 123 W L T Pct PF PA 4 1 0 .800 137 81 3 2 0 .600 113 98 3 2 0 .600 91 95 2 3 0 .400 103 141 WEEK SIX 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.
AFC Leaders
Week 5 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD P. Manning, DEN 198 150 1884 20 P. Rivers, SND 191 141 1610 13 Locker, TEN 111 69 721 6 Pryor, OAK 104 71 845 4 Luck, IND 156 97 1144 7 Tannehill, MIA 182 114 1383 6 Roethlisberger, PIT162 103 1231 5 Ale. Smith, KAN 185 108 1202 7 Dalton, CIN 175 114 1215 5 Hoyer, CLE 96 57 615 5 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG J. Charles, KAN 92 397 4.32 24 A. Foster, HOU 97 390 4.02 17 Moreno, DEN 65 331 5.09 25t Powell, NYJ 78 330 4.23 27 F. Jackson, BUF 65 309 4.75 59 Spiller, BUF 74 296 4.00 54t Chr. Johnson, TEN 94 294 3.13 23 T. Richardson, IND 82 256 3.12 16 Be. Tate, HOU 41 256 6.24 60 Ry. Mathews, SND 67 234 3.49 20 Receivers No Yds Avg LG And. Johnson, HOU 37 407 11.0 27 Edelman, NWE 36 354 9.8 44 De. Thomas, DEN 34 450 13.2 78t Cameron, CLE 33 396 12.0 53 A. Gates, SND 32 438 13.7 56t An. Brown, PIT 32 412 12.9 45 Shorts, JAX 31 411 13.3 59 A.. Green, CIN 31 361 11.6 45t Welker, DEN 31 315 10.2 33 Woodhead, SND 31 220 7.1 26t Punters No Yds LG Fields, MIA 25 1265 66 M. King, OAK 25 1219 66 Lechler, HOU 25 1193 61 Anger, JAX 37 1735 61 McAfee, IND 16 746 60 Koch, BAL 31 1443 61 Malone, NYJ 16 740 84 Powell, BUF 35 1613 66 Quigley, NYJ 15 679 56 Huber, CIN 24 1080 61
Int 1 5 0 2 2 5 5 3 5 3 TD 3 1 4 1 4 1 0 2 0 0 TD 0 2 4 5 2 2 1 3 7 3 Avg 50.6 48.8 47.7 46.9 46.6 46.5 46.3 46.1 45.3 45.0
Week 5 Quarterbacks Romo, DAL Brees, NOR A. Rodgers, GBY M. Ryan, ATL M. Stafford, DET Cutler, CHI R. Wilson, SEA Vick, PHL S. Bradford, STL Griffin III, WAS Rushers L. McCoy, PHL A. Peterson, MIN Lynch, SEA D. Murray, DAL Gore, SNF Forte, CHI D. Martin, TAM De. Williams, CAR Vick, PHL Re. Bush, DET Receivers Ju. Jones, ATL J. Graham, NOR Gonzalez, ATL Cruz, NYG B. Marshall, CHI D. Bryant, DAL Garcon, WAS De. Jackson, PHL Jeffery, CHI Witten, DAL Punters S. Martin, DET Nortman, CAR A. Lee, SNF Morstead, NOR Weatherford, NYG Bosher, ATL Chr. Jones, DAL Locke, MIN Hekker, STL Masthay, GBY Punt Returners G. Tate, SEA Ginn Jr., CAR
Int 2 4 3 3 3 6 4 2 3 4 TD 3 5 3 2 3 3 1 0 2 1 TD 2 6 3 4 3 6 2 3 2 3 Avg 49.5 49.3 48.7 47.7 47.5 47.4 46.2 45.9 45.6 44.6 TD 0 0
NFC Leaders
Att Com Yds TD 188 135 1523 13 201 140 1722 12 152 101 1331 9 218 151 1649 10 196 125 1524 8 181 119 1368 10 127 74 997 8 132 71 1185 5 216 126 1315 10 170 106 1202 6 Att Yds Avg LG 98 514 5.24 41t 92 421 4.58 78t 96 410 4.27 43 84 399 4.75 41 78 376 4.82 34t 81 375 4.63 55 100 342 3.42 28 74 330 4.46 27 33 307 9.30 61 61 298 4.89 37t No Yds Avg LG 41 580 14.1 81t 37 593 16.0 56t 33 339 10.3 25 31 473 15.3 70t 31 378 12.2 41 29 423 14.6 79 29 339 11.7 44 28 525 18.8 61t 28 429 15.3 58 28 313 11.2 27 No Yds LG 24 1189 72 16 788 63 27 1315 62 18 858 61 29 1377 60 19 901 63 20 924 62 19 873 65 32 1459 63 15 669 60 No Yds Avg LG 15 186 12.4 33 5 48 9.6 12
Spurlock, DET 11 Sproles, NOR 12 Page, TAM 8 Dam. Johnson, PHL 7 Ky. Williams, SNF 7 R. Randle, NYG 12 Douglas, ATL 10 P. Peterson, ARI 9 Kickoff Returners No C. Patterson, MIN 12 Hester, CHI 16 Ginn Jr., CAR 5 Dw. Harris, DAL 7
105 104 69 59 50 76 57 51 Yds 406 502 143 199
9.5 57 0 8.7 28 0 8.6 28 0 8.4 21 0 7.1 22 0 6.3 14 0 5.7 15 0 5.7 10 0 Avg LG TD 33.8 105t 1 31.4 80 0 28.6 38 0 28.4 35 0
NCAA The AP Top 25
Thursday, Oct. 10 No. 8 Louisville vs. Rutgers, 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12 No. 1 Alabama at Kentucky, 5 p.m. No. 2 Oregon at No. 16 Washington, 2 p.m. No. 3 Clemson vs. Boston College, 1:30 p.m. No. 5 Stanford at Utah, 4 p.m. No. 7 Georgia vs. No. 25 Missouri, 10 a.m. No. 9 Texas A&M at Mississippi, 6:30 p.m. No. 10 LSU vs. No. 17 Florida, 1:30 p.m. No. 11 UCLA vs. California, 8:30 p.m. No. 12 Oklahoma vs. Texas at Dallas, 10 a.m. No. 14 South Carolina at Arkansas, 10:21 p.m. No. 15 Baylor at Kansas State, 1:30 p.m. No. 18 Michigan at Penn State, 3 p.m. No. 19 Northwestern at Wisconsin, 1:30 p.m. No. 20 Texas Tech vs. Iowa State, 10 a.m. No. 23 Northern Illinois vs. Akron, 3 p.m.
TENNIS TENNIS WTA TOUR Generali Ladies Linz
Tuesday At Intersport Arena Linz Linz, Austria Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Ana Ivanovic (3), Serbia, def. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, 6-2, 6-4. Carla Suarez Navarro (4), Spain, def. Kristyna Pliskova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-3. Kirsten Flipkens (5), Belgium, def. Donna Vekic, Croatia, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2. Dominika Cibulkova (7), Slovakia, def. Annika Beck, Germany, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. Camila Giorgi, Italy, def. Julia Goerges, Germany, 6-2, 6-3. Katarzyna Piter, Poland, def. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, def. Yvonne Meusburger, Austria, 6-3, 7-5. Maryna Zanevska, Ukraine, def. Aleksandra Krunic, Serbia, 7-5, 2-6, 6-2. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, def. Sorana Cirstea (6), Romania, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4. Sloane Stephens (2), United States, def. Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-3, 6-1. Doubles First Round Karolina and Kristyna Pliskova, Czech Republic, def. Monica Niculescu, Romania, and Klara Zakopalova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 3-6, 10-3. Samanatha Murray and Jade Windley, Britain, def. Nicola Slater and Melanie South, Britain, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (5), 10-4.
HP Japan Open
Tuesday At Utsbo Tennis Center Osaka, Japan Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Shuai Zhang, China, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, 6-0, 6-3. Madison Keys (6), United States, def. Anna Schmiedlova, Slovakia, 6-3. 6-2. Luksika Kumkhum, Thailand, def. Ayumi Morita, Japan, 6-2, 6-1. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, def. Lauren Davis, United States, 6-3, 7-5. Sabine Lisicki (2), Germany, def. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa, 7-5, 7-6 (1). Vania King, United States, def. Flavia Pennetta (4), Italy, 3-6, 7-5, 6-0. Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, def. Laura Robson (7), Britain, 6-4, 6-4. Kristina Mladenovic (9), France, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Su-Wei Hsieh, Taiwan, 6-2, 6-2. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, def. Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, 6-4, 5-7, 6-1. Zheng Jie, China, def. Sharon Fichman, Canada, 6-2, 6-1. Doubles First Round Varvara Lepchenko, United States, and Saisai Zheng (3), China, def. Kurumi Nara and Risa Ozaki, Japan, 6-7 (2), 6-2, 10-5. Samantha Stosur, Australia, and Shuai Zhang, China, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues and Silvia Soler-Espinosa (4), Spain, 6-3, 6-1. Misaki Doi and Miki Miyamura, Japan, def. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, and Megan Moulton-Levy, United States, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Darija Jurak, Croatia, and Mandy Minella, Luxembourg, def. Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, and Caroline Garcia, France, 6-2, 7-6 (4). Polona Hercog, Slovenia, and Lisa Raymond, United States, def. Sharon Fichman, Canada, and Heather Watson, Britain, 6-2, 2-6, 11-9.
ATP WORLD TOUR Shanghai Rolex Masters
Tuesday At Qizhong Tennis Center Shanghai, China Purse: $3.85 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Vasek Pospisil, Canada, def. Richard Gasquet (9), France, 6-3, 6-4. Milos Raonic (10), Canada, def. Michal Przysiezny, Poland, 6-4, 6-4. Kei Nishikori (12), Japan, def. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, 6-3, 6-4. Benoit Paire, France, def. Gilles Simon (13), France, 6-4, 6-3. Nicolas Almagro (15), Spain, def. Go Soeda, Japan, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Tommy Robredo (16), Spain, def. Albert Montanes, Spain, 6-4, 6-1. Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Daniel Brands, Germany, def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 7-6 (3), 7-5. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, def. Michael Russell, United States, 6-1, 6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. Gong Maoxin, China, 7-5, 6-2. Andreas Seppi, Italy, def. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-4, 6-2. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Zhang Ze, China, 7-5, 6-2. Feliciano Lopez, Spain, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 7-6 (2), 4-6, 6-3. Kevin Anderson, South Africa, def. Victor Hanescu, Romania, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (4). Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Bernard Tomic, Australia, 7-5, 6-2. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.
BASKETBALL BASKETBALL
MLB PLAYOFFS Division Series
WNBA PLAYOFFS
(Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Boston 3, Tampa Bay 1 Friday, Oct. 4 Boston 12, Tampa Bay 2 Saturday, Oct. 5 Boston 7, Tampa Bay 4 Monday, Oct. 7 Tampa Bay 5, Boston 4 Tuesday, Oct. 8 Boston 3, Tampa Bay 1 Oakland 2, Detroit 2 Friday, Oct. 4 Detroit 3, Oakland 2 Saturday, Oct. 5 Oakland 1, Detroit 0 Monday, Oct. 7 Oakland 6, Detroit 3 Tuesday, Oct. 8 Detroit 8, Oakland 6 Thursday, Oct. 10 Detroit (Verlander 13-12) at Oakland (Colon 18-6), 6:07 p.m. (TBS) National League Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis 2 Thursday, Oct. 3 St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1 Friday, Oct. 4 Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1 Sunday, Oct. 6 Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 3 Monday, Oct. 7 St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1 Wednesday Oct. 9 Pittsburgh (Cole 10-7) at St. Louis (Wainwright 19-9), 6:07 p.m. (TBS) Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 1 Thursday, Oct. 3 Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 1 Friday, Oct. 4 Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3 Sunday, Oct. 6 Los Angeles 13, Atlanta 6 Monday, Oct. 7 Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 3
LEAGUE Championship Series
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by Fox Saturday, Oct. 12 Oakland-Detroit winner at Boston Sunday, Oct. 13 Oakland-Detroit winner at Boston Tuesday, Oct. 15 Boston at Oakland-Detroit winner Wednesday, Oct. 16 Boston at Oakland-Detroit winner National League All games televised by TBS Friday, Oct. 11 Los Angeles at St. Louis or Pittsburgh at Los Angeles Saturday, Oct. 12 Los Angeles at St. Louis or Pittsburgh at Los Angeles Monday, Oct. 14 St. Louis at Los Angeles or Los Angeles at Pittsburgh Tuesday, Oct. 15 St. Louis at Los Angeles or Los Angeles at Pittsburgh x-Wednesday, Oct. 16 St. Louis at Los Angeles or Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Red Sox 3, Rays 1
Boston
r 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
h bi 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
Tampa Bay ab DeJess lf 4 JMolin c 0 WMyrs rf 4 Loney 1b 4 Longori 3b 4 Zobrist 2b 3 DJnngs cf 3 KJhnsn dh 2 DYong ph-dh1 YEscor ss 3 Loaton c 2 SRdrgz ph 0 Joyce ph-lf 1
Ellsury cf Victorn rf Pedroia 2b D.Ortiz dh Napoli 1b Nava lf Sltlmch c JGoms ph D.Ross c Drew ss Bogarts ph Mdlrks 3b
ab 4 3 4 4 3 2 2 1 1 2 0 3
Totals
29 3 6 2 Totals
r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
h bi 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
31 1 6 1
Boston 000 000 201—3 Tampa Bay 000 001 000—1 DP—Boston 2, Tampa Bay 2. LOB—Boston 10, Tampa Bay 3. 2B—Y.Escobar (2). SB— Ellsbury (4). CS—Nava (1). SF—Pedroia. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Peavy 5 2-3 5 1 1 0 3 Breslow W,1-0 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 4 Tazawa H,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Uehara S,2-2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Tampa Bay Hellickson 1 1 0 0 2 0 J.Wright 1 0 0 0 1 1 M.Moore 2 1 0 0 1 3 Al.Torres 2 1 0 0 0 1 McGee L,0-1 H,1 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 Jo.Peralta BS,1-1 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 3 Rodney 1-3 0 1 1 2 1 Archer 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 W.Wright 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hellickson pitched to 3 batters in the 2nd. J.Wright pitched to 1 batter in the 3rd. HBP—by Rodney (Victorino), by Al.Torres (Victorino). WP—Jo.Peralta, Rodney. Umpires—Home, Paul Emmel; First, Mike Winters; Second, Larry Vanover; Third, Chris Guccione; Right, Dana DeMuth; Left, Eric Cooper. T—3:49. A—32,807 (34,078). Oakland
Athletics 6, Tigers 3
ab Crisp cf 4 Dnldsn 3b 4 Lowrie ss 5 Moss 1b 4 Barton 1b 0 Cespds lf 5 S.Smith dh 4 Reddck rf 4 Vogt c 2 DNorrs ph-c 1 Sogard 2b 4 Totals
r 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0
h bi 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit
AJcksn cf TrHntr rf MiCarr 3b Fielder 1b VMrtnz dh JhPerlt lf Avila c Infante 2b Iglesias ss
37 6 10 5 Totals
HOCKEY
ab 3 3 4 4 4 4 3 4 3
r 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
h bi 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0
32 3 7 3
Oakland 001 230 000—6 Detroit 000 300 000—3 E—Mi.Cabrera (1). DP—Oakland 2. LOB—Oakland 8, Detroit 5. 2B—Crisp 2 (2), V.Martinez (2). 3B—Vogt (1). HR—Moss (1), S.Smith (1), Reddick (1). SB—Crisp (1). SF—Crisp. IP H R ER BB SO Oakland J.Parker W,1-0 5 5 3 3 1 1 Otero H,1 2 2 0 0 0 1 Doolittle H,1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Balfour S,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Detroit Ani.Sanchez L,0-1 4 1-3 8 6 5 2 6 J.Alvarez 3 0 0 0 1 3 Veras 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 3 Umpires—Home, Gary Darling; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, Tom Hallion; Third, Mike DiMuro; Right, CB Bucknor; Left, Mark Wegner. T—3:32. A—43,973 (41,255).
NHL Eastern Conference
(x-if necessary) FINALS (Best-of-5) Minnesota 2, Atlanta 0 Sunday, Oct. 6 Minnesota 84, Atlanta 59 Tuesday, Oct. 8 Minnesota 88, Atlanta 63 Thursday, Oct. 10 Minnesota at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. x-Sunday, Oct. 13 Minnesota at Atlanta, 6 p.m. x-Wenesday, Oct. 16 Atlanta at Minnesota, 6 p.m.
NBA PRESEASON Eastern Conference
Atlantic Toronto Brooklyn New York Philadelphia Boston Southeast Miami Atlanta Orlando Washington Charlotte Central Chicago Cleveland Detroit Indiana Milwaukee
W 1 1 0 0 0 W 1 1 0 0 0 W 2 1 0 0 0
L 0 0 0 1 1 L 0 1 0 1 1 L 0 0 0 1 1
Pct 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 Pct 1.000 .500 .000 .000 .000 Pct 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000
Western Conference
GB — — 1/2 1 1 GB — 1/2 1/2 1 1 GB — 1/2 1 11/2 11/2
Southwest W L Pct GB New Orleans 2 0 1.000 — San Antonio 0 0 .000 1 Memphis 0 1 .000 11/2 Dallas 0 1 .000 11/2 Houston 0 1 .000 11/2 Northwest W L Pct GB Utah 1 0 1.000 — Oklahoma City 1 0 1.000 — Denver 1 1 .500 1/2 Minnesota 0 0 .000 1/2 Portland 0 1 .000 1 Pacific W L Pct GB L.A. Clippers 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Lakers 2 1 .667 — Golden State 1 2 .333 1 Phoenix 0 0 .000 1/2 Sacramento 0 1 .000 1 Monday’s Games Toronto 97, Boston 89 Miami 92, Atlanta 87 Chicago 106, Memphis 87 New Orleans 94, Dallas 92 L.A. Clippers 89, Portland 81 Golden State 94, Sacramento 81 Tuesday’s Games Oklahoma City 103, Philadelphia 99 Brooklyn 111, Washington 106, OT Cleveland 99, Milwaukee 87 Atlanta 87, Charlotte 85 Utah 101, Golden State 78 L.A. Lakers 90, Denver 88 Wednesday’s Games New Orleans vs. Orlando at Jacksonville, FL, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Toronto, 5 p.m. New York vs. Boston at Providence, RI, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at Memphis, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Portland, 8 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League
LOA ANGELES ANGELS — Announced RHP Robert Coello, LHP Brandon Sisk and LHP Andrew Taylor have cleared waivers and were sent outright to Salt Lake (PCL). Announced hitting coach Jim Eppard and bench coach Rob Picciolo will not return next season. SEATTLE MARINERS — Claimed OF Travis Witherspoon off waivers from the Los Angeles Angels. Designated C Henry Blanco for assignment.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Announced coaches Charles Nagy and Steve Sax will not return in 2014. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Named Larry Bowa and Pete Mackanin to the coaching staff. Announced assistant hitting coach Wally Joyner will not return in 2014.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS — Waived G-F Dahntay Jones. MIAMI HEAT — Exercised their 2014-15 option on G Norris Cole.
FOOTBALL National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS — Signed WR Brittan Golden from the practice squad. Released WR Kerry Taylor. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed LB Ty Powell off the N.Y. Giants practice squad. Signed CB Brandon Smith from the practice squad. Signed QB Dennis Dixon to the practice squad. Released LB Marcus Dowtin and CB Johnny Adams. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Waived WR Armanti Edwards. Signed WR Toney Clemons to the practice squad. Terminated the practice squad contract of WR Cordell Roberson. CHICAGO BEARS — Signed DT Christian Tupou to the practice squad. Terminated the practice squad contract of DE Aston Whiteside. DALLAS COWBOYS — Released S Will Allen. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Signed CB Jumal Rolle to the practice squad. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Placed S Dwight Lowery, OT Luke Joeckel and TE Allen Reisner on injured reserve. Claimed OT Sam Young off waivers from Buffalo. Promoted OT DeMarcus Love from the practice squad. Signed G Jacques McClendon. Signed WR Jeremy Ebert to the practice squad. Waived WR Tobais Palmer from the practice squad. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed QB Josh Freeman. Waived QB McLeod BethelThompson. NEW YORK GIANTS — Re-signed RB Da’Rel Scott. Waived DE Justin Trattou. Signed CB Junior Mertile and LB Darin Drakeford to the practice squad. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Placed C/G Jared Smith on practice squad/injured reserve. Signed WR Josh Lenz. TENNESSEE TITANS — Signed RB Kendall Gaskins and LB Brandon Copeland to the practice squad. Waived OT Al Netter from the practice squad.
Arena Football League
ORLANDO PREDATORS — Announced DB Gary Wilburn and DE Daryell Walker were assigned to the team.
HOCKEY National Hockey League
MINNESOTA WILD — Recalled F Carson McMillan from Iowa (AHL).
HOCKEY
Atlantic Toronto Boston Detroit Tampa Bay Ottawa Montreal Florida Buffalo Metro Pittsburgh N.Y. Islanders Carolina New Jersey Columbus N.Y. Rangers Washington Philadelphia
GP 4 2 3 3 2 2 3 4 GP 3 3 3 4 2 3 3 4
W 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 W 3 2 1 0 1 1 1 1
L 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 3 L 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 3
OL 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 OL 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 0
Pts 6 4 4 4 3 2 2 1 Pts 6 5 3 3 2 2 2 2
Lightning 3, Sabres 2
GF GA 13 10 7 2 6 7 7 7 5 5 7 5 5 11 4 10 GF GA 12 3 12 7 6 9 9 15 6 6 6 14 10 12 5 10
Western Conference
Central GP W L OL Pts GF GA Colorado 3 3 0 0 6 11 3 St. Louis 2 2 0 0 4 11 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 Nashville 3 1 2 0 2 6 9 Minnesota 3 0 1 2 2 7 10 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GF GA San Jose 3 3 0 0 6 17 4 Vancouver 4 3 1 0 6 15 12 Anaheim 3 2 1 0 4 8 11 Calgary 3 1 0 2 4 12 13 Phoenix 3 1 2 0 2 6 11 Los Angeles 3 1 2 0 2 7 10 Edmonton 3 1 2 0 2 11 15 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Monday’s Games Edmonton 5, New Jersey 4, SO N.Y. Rangers 3, Los Angeles 1 Tuesday’s Games Colorado 2, Toronto 1 N.Y. Islanders 6, Phoenix 1 Philadelphia 2, Florida 1 Pittsburgh 5, Carolina 2 Tampa Bay 3, Buffalo 2, OT Nashville 3, Minnesota 2 Vancouver 3, New Jersey 2, OT San Jose 9, N.Y. Rangers 2 Wednesday’s Games Chicago at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Montreal at Calgary, 6 p.m. Ottawa at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.
Sharks 9, Rangers 2
N.Y. Rangers 1 0 1—2 San Jose 2 4 3—9 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, Richards 3 (Brassard, Stepan), 3:27 (pp). 2, San Jose, Vlasic 1 (Pavelski), 4:23 (sh). 3, San Jose, D.Boyle 1 (Nieto, Pavelski), 7:56. Penalties—Stuart, SJ (elbowing), 2:32; San Jose bench, served by Nieto (too many men), 3:03; Pavelski, SJ (high-sticking), 19:11. Second Period—4, San Jose, Nieto 1 (Wingels, Pavelski), 8:16. 5, San Jose, Hertl 3 (Desjardins, Demers), 9:19. 6, San Jose, Couture 2 (Marleau, Irwin), 9:39. 7, San Jose, Hertl 4 (Thornton), 12:32. Penalties— None. Third Period—8, N.Y. Rangers, Dorsett 1 (B.Boyle, Stralman), 8:22. 9, San Jose, Hertl 5 (Demers, Kennedy), 9:02 (pp). 10, San Jose, Hertl 6 (Demers, Niemi), 12:05. 11, San Jose, Braun 2 (Nieto, Wingels), 15:53 (pp). Penalties—B.Boyle, NYR (unsportsmanlike conduct, roughing), 8:42; Asham, NYR (slashing), 15:22. Shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 7-8-5—20. San Jose 15-23-9—47. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 1 of 3; San Jose 2 of 3. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 1-2-0 (26 shots-22 saves), Biron (9:19 second, 21-16). San Jose, Niemi 3-0-0 (20-18). A—17,562 (17,562). T—2:28. Referees—Dave Jackson, Francois St. Laurent. Linesmen—John Grandt, Mark Wheler.
Canucks 3, Devils 2, OT
New Jersey 1 1 0 0—2 Vancouver 0 2 0 1—3 First Period—1, New Jersey, Jagr 2 (Elias, Zidlicky), 18:52. Penalties—Zidlicky, NJ (slashing), 10:26. Second Period—2, New Jersey, Elias 2 (Volchenkov, Jagr), 7:23. 3, Vancouver, D.Sedin 2 (Tanev, Stanton), 8:51. 4, Vancouver, Edler 1 (D.Sedin, H.Sedin), 13:47. Penalties—None. Third Period—None. Penalties—H.Sedin, Van (hooking), 6:25; Elias, NJ (hooking), 9:12. Overtime—5, Vancouver, Garrison 3 (Booth), 2:18. Penalties—None. Shots on Goal—New Jersey 8-7-8-0—23. Vancouver 9-14-6-3—32. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 0 of 1; Vancouver 0 of 2. Goalies—New Jersey, Schneider 0-1-1 (32 shots-29 saves). Vancouver, Luongo 2-1-0 (23-21). A—18,910 (18,910). T—2:31. Referees—Greg Kimmerly, Dan O’Halloran. Linesmen—Shane Heyer, Kiel Murchison.
Predators 3, Wild 2
Minnesota 1 1 0—2 Nashville 3 0 0—3 First Period—1, Minnesota, Parise 3 (Koivu, Suter), 4:05 (pp). 2, Nashville, Forsberg 1 (Hornqvist, Jones), 5:07 (pp). 3, Nashville, Wilson 1 (Cullen, Fisher), 5:46 (pp). 4, Nashville, Nystrom 1 (penalty shot), 11:14. Penalties—Konopka, Min, major (fighting), 2:59; Clune, Nas, major (fighting), 2:59; Jones, Nas (high-sticking), 3:13; Brodziak, Min (interference), 4:15; Koivu, Min (tripping), 4:36. Second Period—5, Minnesota, Spurgeon 1 (Niederreiter, Granlund), 7:26 (pp). Penalties—Forsberg, Nas (hooking), 5:27; Weber, Nas (roughing), 9:16; Stoner, Min (roughing), 14:45; Clune, Nas (goaltender interference, roughing), 14:45; Parise, Min (slashing), 19:59. Third Period—None. Penalties—Parise, Min (holding), 6:07; Hornqvist, Nas (diving), 6:07; Koivu, Min (hooking), 15:07. Shots on Goal—Minnesota 13-12-9—34. Nashville 10-4-11—25. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 2 of 5; Nashville 2 of 4. Goalies—Minnesota, Backstrom (5 shots-3 saves), Harding 0-1-0 (11:13 first, 20-19). Nashville, Rinne 1-2-0 (34-32). A—17,196 (17,113). T—2:43. Referees—Dan O’Rourke, Mark Lemelin. Linesmen—Derek Amell, Brian Murphy.
Tampa Bay 0 1 1 1—3 Buffalo 0 2 0 0—2 First Period—None. Penalties—Gudas, TB, major (fighting), 3:22; Foligno, Buf, major (fighting), 3:22; Myers, Buf (interference), 5:27; Hedman, TB, major (fighting), 12:58; Ott, Buf, major (fighting), 12:58; Ennis, Buf (holding), 19:00. Second Period—1, Buffalo, Hodgson 1 (Vanek, McBain), 11:09 (pp). 2, Tampa Bay, Johnson 1 (Hedman, Palat), 13:35. 3, Buffalo, McBain 1 (Hodgson, Vanek), 18:34 (pp). Penalties—Labrie, TB (hooking), 10:19; Malone, TB, major (fighting), 11:23; Weber, Buf, major (fighting), 11:23; Gudas, TB (roughing), 14:47; Brewer, TB (hooking), 17:11. Third Period—4, Tampa Bay, Purcell 2 (Malone, St. Louis), 5:43 (pp). Penalties— Gudas, TB (interference), 3:10; Vanek, Buf (high-sticking), 5:21. Overtime—5, Tampa Bay, Killorn 1 (Brewer, Filppula), 1:50. Penalties—None. Shots on Goal—Tampa Bay 10-10-122—34. Buffalo 3-7-13-0—23. Power-play opportunities—Tampa Bay 1 of 3; Buffalo 2 of 4. Goalies—Tampa Bay, Bishop 2-0-0 (23 shots-21 saves). Buffalo, Enroth 0-1-1 (34-31). A—18,243 (19,070). T—2:32. Referees—Paul Devorski, Ian Croft. Linesmen—Greg Devorski, Brad Kovachik.
Penguins 5, Hurricanes 2
Carolina 0 1 1—2 Pittsburgh 1 1 3—5 First Period—1, Pittsburgh, Jokinen 1 (Crosby, Kunitz), 14:17 (pp). Penalties— Dvorak, Car (interference), 8:40; Harrison, Car (tripping), 13:52; Harrison, Car, major (fighting), 16:55; Glass, Pit, major (fighting), 16:55. Second Period—2, Pittsburgh, Martin 1 (Orpik, Crosby), 1:04. 3, Carolina, E.Staal 1 (Faulk, Sekera), 13:24. Penalties—Gerbe, Car (diving), :22; Niskanen, Pit (interference), :22; Niskanen, Pit (holding), 8:22. Third Period—4, Carolina, Gerbe 2 (Dwyer, Sekera), 3:13. 5, Pittsburgh, Jokinen 2 (Malkin, Maatta), 5:03. 6, Pittsburgh, Glass 1 (Vitale), 8:24. 7, Pittsburgh, Jokinen 3 (Maatta, Bra.Sutter), 13:03 (pp). Penalties—Harrison, Car (roughing), 11:42; Bowman, Car (slashing), 15:10; Martin, Pit (roughing), 15:10; Bortuzzo, Pit (tripping), 17:23. Shots on Goal—Carolina 8-12-14—34. Pittsburgh 12-11-14—37. Power-play opportunities—Carolina 0 of 2; Pittsburgh 2 of 3. Goalies—Carolina, Ward 0-1-1 (37 shots32 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 3-0-0 (34-32). A—18,451 (18,387). T—2:32. Referees—Francis Charron, Wes McCauley. Linesmen—Scott Driscoll, Steve Barton.
Islanders 6, Coyotes 1
Phoenix 0 1 0—1 N.Y. Islanders 2 3 1—6 First Period—1, N.Y. Islanders, Regin 1 (Nelson), 1:49. 2, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares 1 (Nielsen, Okposo), 15:07 (pp). Penalties— Schlemko, Pho (high-sticking), 13:36; Vermette, Pho (freezing the puck), 13:37; Tavares, NYI (hooking), 17:09. Second Period—3, N.Y. Islanders, Donovan 1 (Regin, Bailey), 11:47 (pp). 4, Phoenix, Hanzal 1 (Boedker, Vrbata), 12:30. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares 2 (Grabner, Bailey), 14:49. 6, N.Y. Islanders, McDonald 1 (Nielsen, Grabner), 17:24. Penalties—Ribeiro, Pho (hooking), 11:15. Third Period—7, N.Y. Islanders, Bailey 1 (Nielsen, Grabner), 12:19. Penalties— Donovan, NYI (roughing), 1:33; Hanzal, Pho (roughing), 7:11; Doan, Pho (roughing), 13:11; McDonald, NYI (roughing, slashing), 13:11; Boedker, Pho (roughing), 13:42; Nielsen, NYI (slashing), 13:42; Ribeiro, Pho (slashing), 17:36; Doan, Pho (delay of game), 19:35. Shots on Goal—Phoenix 7-17-10—34. N.Y. Islanders 6-14-8—28. Power-play opportunities—Phoenix 0 of 3; N.Y. Islanders 2 of 6. Goalies—Phoenix, Smith 1-2-0 (20 shots15 saves), Greiss (0:00 third, 8-7). N.Y. Islanders, Nabokov 2-0-1 (34-33). A—10,288 (16,234). T—2:31. Referees—Brian Pochmara, Chris Rooney. Linesmen—Derek Nansen, Tim Nowak.
Flyers 2, Panthers 1
Florida 0 1 0—1 Philadelphia 2 0 0—2 First Period—1, Philadelphia, B.Schenn 2 (Voracek, Lecavalier), 4:49. 2, Philadelphia, Coburn 1 (Couturier), 7:31. Penalties— Gomez, Fla (closing hand on puck), 4:51; Timonen, Phi (holding), 7:58. Second Period—3, Florida, Boyes 1 (Campbell, Barkov), 19:53. Penalties— Kulikov, Fla (interference), 2:56; Coburn, Phi (interference), 10:25; Meszaros, Phi (cross-checking), 13:33; Campbell, Fla (hooking), 16:00. Third Period—None. Penalties—Kopecky, Fla (roughing), 2:48; Rosehill, Phi, double minor-misconduct (roughing), 2:48; Rinaldo, Phi (roughing), 2:48; Gudbranson, Fla, major-game misconduct (boarding), 10:01; Huberdeau, Fla (roughing), 10:01; Simmonds, Phi (roughing), 10:01; Whitney, Fla (high-sticking), 17:23. Shots on Goal—Florida 12-13-9—34. Philadelphia 8-9-13—30. Power-play opportunities—Florida 0 of 5; Philadelphia 0 of 5. Goalies—Florida, Thomas 1-2-0 (5 shots-3 saves), Markstrom (7:31 first, 25-25). Philadelphia, Mason 1-2-0 (34-33). A—19,589 (19,538). T—2:28. Referees—Darcy Burchell, Kelly Sutherland. Linesmen—Bryan Pancich, Anthony Sericolo.
Avalanche 2, Maple Leafs 1
Colorado 0 1 1—2 Toronto 0 1 0—1 First Period—None. Penalties—Stastny, Col (hooking), 7:26; Gardiner, Tor (holding), 11:22; Gunnarsson, Tor (holding), 19:53. Second Period—1, Toronto, Lupul 2 (Ashton), 13:12. 2, Colorado, Sarich 1 (Downie, Duchene), 16:39. Penalties—McLeod, Col, major (fighting), 15:32; Bodie, Tor, major (fighting), 15:32. Third Period—3, Colorado, Parenteau 3 (McGinn, MacKinnon), 2:30. Penalties— Sarich, Col (tripping), 10:08; Gunnarsson, Tor (tripping), 12:25. Shots on Goal—Colorado 10-15-8—33. Toronto 12-7-9—28. Power-play opportunities—Colorado 0 of 3; Toronto 0 of 2. Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 3-0-0 (28 shots-27 saves). Toronto, Bernier 2-1-0 (33-31). A—19,388 (18,819). T—2:30. Referees—Rob Martell, Brad Meier. Linesmen—Matt MacPherson, Scott Cherrey.
SPORTS
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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. GOLF 10:30 p.m. on TGC — LPGA Malaysia, first round, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS 3 p.m. on TBS — NLDS, Game 5, Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Santa Fe High School’s Mateo Martinez stretches after Tuesday’s crosscountry practice. LuIS SáNCHEZ SATuRNO THE NEW MEXICAN
Threat: First triathlon event was in 2007 which started his interest in the sport. “I think it was the training and being parents, Matt and Cindy Martinez. Matt, the familiar with it and seeing Mom and Dad try out on the sprint cicuit that helped,” Matt athletic director at Santa Fe Indian School, says. “That and just being involved with was the first to dip his toe into the pool, both parents in the house that are active.” when Cindy gave him a triathlon training Mateo already participated in soccer, book several years ago. baseball and swimming, but the idea of “He was turning 40, and it was before a excelling at three sports all at once had a high school reunion, and he’d been talking pull on him. about it,” Cindy says. “So for Christmas “I liked that you had to compete at a race time, I gave him a triathlon training manual pace for all three,” Mateo says. and said, ‘Now is the time to put up or shut If anything, Cindy said triathlon helped up.’ That’s how I am.” Mateo stay involved in swimming, which It was the push Matt needed, and he he had done since he was a kid with the started training in earnest in 2006, startSanta Fe Seals. He said he will swim for the ing with sprint triathlons (usually a swim Demons this winter. of several hundred meters, a 20-kilometer “He was kinda burned out with it,” Cindy bike ride and a 5K run) before advancing says, “so the triathlon part kept him going.” his way to his first full Ironman Triathlon in Of the three events, clearly his best is Arizona in 2009. running. He had the fourth-best time of all Cindy followed suit and has competed runners in the senior division at the U.S. regularly in duathlons and triathlons for the Championships, which helped offset a past four years. 24-minute bike ride. It’s the one part that he Mateo was usually in tow for their events, has the least training on, but he is working
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on that. What helped Mateo was spending the summer with Matt Desmond, fellow triathlete who started a triathlon club. “He’d go to Cochiti on Saturdays and do those brick workouts,” Matt says. “They’d workout a little bit, then go for a swim and then get out and work on the bike. That was great to get them ready for Boulder, Colo. [for the IronKids qualifying event], and to qualify for the national championships was just icing on the cake.” And this is just the start for Mateo. There’s hope that triathlons will become a sanctioned NCAA sport by the time Mateo graduates at Santa Fe High and he can continue at the collegiate level. He’s planning on competing in an IronMan Triathlon once he turns 18, with a companion in tow. “My dad and I have talked about doing that, going to do an Ironman together,” Mateo says. If it wasn’t for dad, his Mateo Martinez would be taking the three-sport track the hard way — once season at a time.
CROSS-COUNTRY NOTEBOOK
‘Challenge’ meet could be next big thing By James Barron The New Mexican
Tim Host wants the Northern New Mexico Challenge to be the next “big thing” on the cross country schedule. It was the vision he had for the newly minted meet, which gets underway Saturday at the Municipal Recreation Complex. The meet butt heads with the APS Metro Championships in Albuquerque, but Host wants the Challenge to be Northern New Mexico’s version of that meet. “They have a great tradition in Albuquerque, and we are hoping to start one for the northern part of the state,” said Host, the head coach at Academy for Technology and the Classics. The meet gained more credibility when he approached Santa Fe High head coach Peter Graham to have his program be a co-host for the event. Then add 12 schools, including St. Michael’s, Pojoaque Valley, Taos, West Las Vegas and Pecos to give it a
strong lineup of programs and runners. That it potentially could be a nice lead-in to the Rio Rancho Jamboree, where most of the state will be next week is another added bonus, giving runners a test on how to manage a large field. “The more races you have with a big group, just lends itself better for being ready for competition at state,” Graham said. “Especially at Rio Rancho. we’ll be in there with 4-A and 5-A runners, so it will be a mob.” uuu
One team that won’t grace the field will be Los Alamos, a program Host hopes will take part in the meet. It’s perhaps the only way to legitimize a true Northern New Mexico Challenge. Host knows that co-head coaches Rob and Kathy Hipwood have developed one of the top cross country programs in the nation, much less the state. “They just have an unbelievably infectious love for the sport,” Host said. “Every
guy or girl who has a meet hopes that Los Alamos is going to come.” Speaking of which, the Hilltoppers went to the Twilight Desert Challenge in Arizona and took fourth (the girls) and eighth (the boys) in the Milesplit Sweepstakes division of the race. uuu
Another team that won’t make it the the meet will be Santa Fe Preparatory. The Blue Griffins will head to a traditional stomping ground on the season — the Patason Amesoli Invitational in Zuni. Even Host understood why. “Having had the blessing of running in Zuni during my lifetime, I can’t hate on anybody who goes there,” Host said. “It’s a beautiful place with a wonderful tradition of running.” It doesn’t that Prep will test itself against one of the top AA programs in the state in the Thunderbirds.
MEN’S COLLEGE SOCCER 5 p.m. on FSN — Old Dominion at Charlotte NHL HOCKEY 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Chicago at St. Louis
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 — Las Vegas Robertson at Pojoaque Valley, 6 p.m. Girls soccer — Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol (MRC), 4 p.m. Bernalillo at Santa Fe Indian School, 4 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Pojoaque Valley, 4 p.m. Taos at Bosque School, 4 p.m. Desert Academy at Portales, 3 p.m Volleyball — Bernalillo at Capital, 6:30 p.m. Los Alamos at Española Valley, 6 p.m.
Thursday Boys soccer — Santa Fe High at Grants, 6 p.m. St. Michael’s at Desert Academy, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer — Santa Fe High at Grants, 6 p.m. East Mountain at St. Michael’s, 4 p.m. Desert Academy at Santa Fe Indian School, 4 p.m. Volleyball — Santa Fe Indian School at St. Michael’s, 7 p.m. Monte del Sol at Mora, 6 p.m. Desert Academy at Albuquerque Menaul, 5:30 p.m. Taos at Pojoaque Valley, 6:30 p.m. Raton at West Las Vegas, 6:30 p.m.
Friday Boys soccer — Albuquerque St. Pius X at St. Michael’s, 4 p.m. Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory at Taos, 6 p.m. Football — Santa Fe High at Española Valley, 7 p.m. Kirtland Central at Capital, 6 p.m. New Mexico School for the Deaf at Vaughn, 1 p.m. Taos at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. Bernalillo at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. McCurdy at Dulce, 7 p.m. Fort Sumner at Escalante, 7 p.m. Raton at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Girls soccer — Albuquerque Sandia Preparatory at Taos, 4 p.m. Desert Academy at Portales, 3 p.m. Volleyball — Santa Fe Preparatory at Peñasco, 6:30 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Victory Christian, 5 p.m. Peñasco at Santa Fe Preparatory, 6:30 p.m. Cimarron at Questa, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday Boys soccer — Capital at Las Vegas Robertson, 6 p.m. Albuquerque Hope Christian at Santa Fe Preparatory, 11 a.m. Monte del Sol at East Mountain, 1 p.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 11 a.m. Desert Academy at Portales, 3 p.m. Cross country — Santa Fe High, Capital, St. Michael’s, Santa Fe Indian School, Desert Academy, Pojoaque Valley, Mesa Vista, Taos, West Las Vegas, Las Vegas Robertson at Northern New Mexico Challenge, 9 a.m. Española Valley at Los Lunas Invitational, 9 a.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Patason Amesoli Invitational at Zuni, 9 a.m. Football — Las Cruces Centennial at St. Michael’s, 2 p.m. Mescalero Apache at Santa Fe Indian School, 2 p.m. Girls soccer — Monte del Sol at East Mountain, 11 a.m. Desert Academy at Portales, 1 p.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 1 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Volleyball — Bernalillo at Santa Fe High, 6:30 p.m. Capital at Los Alamos, 6:30 p.m. Magdalena at Desert Academy, 2 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Raton, 4 p.m. McCurdy at Mesa Vista, 7 p.m. Escalante at Dulce, 11 a.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Taos, 6:30 p.m. Questa at Springer, 6:30 p.m.
HIGH SCHOOL SCORES
Volleyball Middle school Eighth grade Ortiz def. Española, 25-16, 25-7. Service points — Ortiz: Annakarel Portillo 14, Ashley Zapata
PREP ROUNDUP
S.F. Prep edges Mora in ‘Dig Pink’ match The New Mexican
The Blue Griffins of Santa Fe Preparatory were thinking “Dig Pink,” and it might have been the best thing for them on Tuesday night. The preparations into Prep’s “Dig Pink” volleyball match, which serves as a fundraiser for breast cancer awareness, kept the team relaxed and focused for the District 2AA match against Mora. The results were in a 25-13, 25-11, 25-11 win over the Rangerettes in Prep Gymnasium. The “Dig Pink” match usually corresponds with its matchup with Pecos, but with Louis G. Sanchez Memorial Gymnasium still undergoing a facelift, that home date moved up to last week. So, the program quickly opted for its tilt with Mora, and the demands of preparing for the event, which is coordinated in conjunction with the New Mexico Activities Association, were a needed distraction. “I think that helped them be mellow and loose,” Prep head coach Kiran Bhatka said. “Then, they come out on fire and build on three leads.” Prep (11-3 overall, 2-0 2AA) continued its season-long
theme of strong serving. Desiray Anderson had a teamhigh five aces, while Joy Maran and Alex Archuleta added two apiece. Anderson also had six kills and tied Maran for the team-high in blocks with three. PECOS 3, PEñASCO 0 The Lady Panthers of Pecos swept the Lady Panthers of Peñasco 25-9, 25-15, 25-23 to pick up their second straight 2AA win. With a 10-3 lead in the final game, Pecos (4-11, 2-1) head coach Leonard Velasquez put in his bench. “It gives them a little bit of experience going further into districts,” he said. Junior Jeanine Montoya led Pecos with nine service points and four kills, while Bianca Soliz anchored the defense with six blocks to go with seven kills. SANTA FE WALdORF 3, WALATOWA 0 With every match, Josie Adams finds it harder to contain her enthusiasm. The Waldorf head coach heaped her highest praise yet of the Lady Wolves in a 25-7, 25-12, 25-16 win in a 5B match at Jemez. “I think it was one of our best flow games, as far as court movement and communication
and it really showed,” Adams said. The hitters took center stage this time, as Waldorf (8-3, 3-0) had 33 kills overall. Cecelia Barnard had 19 of them, while Brooke Reiche and Keifer Nace each had six. Nace also handed out 20 assists, while Sophie Linett added 11. NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE dEAF 3, GRACEWAY CHRISTIAN 0 The Lady Roadrunners served the Lady Lions out of Larson Gymnasium in a 25-10, 25-8, 25-9 5B win. Amberley Luna led the ace parade with 22 aces in 25 service points. She also had 8 kills and seven assists. Margaret Appa added five aces, while Janell Miller had a pair of aces to go with seven kills. NMSD improved to 4-6, 3-1. GIRLS SOCCER ST. MICHAEL’S 10, dESERT ACAdEMY 0 The share plan for the Lady Horsemen is about as perfect as a team can get. Six players handed out assists, led by Cristiana Gabaldon’s four, as St. Micahel’s (11-3, 6-0) breezed past the Lady Wildcats in 2A-AAA action at Christian Brothers Athletic Complex.
“I love it,” said Robyn Serge, St. Michael’s head coach. “We are really utilizing the entire field, and everyone is involved in every way. It’s not just sent it to one person and go.” Gabaldon also had a pair of goals, as did Isabel Chavez. Nique Enloe led all scorers with four goals. Adriana and Monce Camarena each had one goal and one assist. SFIS 2, ACAdEMY FOR TECHNOLOGY ANd THE CLASSICS 1 The Lady Braves (2-10) exacted a measure of revenge against ATC, which beat them by the same score earlier in the season. Leia Mermejo-Varga scored her first goal of the season off a rebound from Kristin Troncosa’s direct kick. Troncosa added a goal off a corner kick to make it 2-0 late in the match. SANTA FE HIGH 6, CAPITAL 0 Elena Lemus scored four goals to help the Demonettes beat city and 2AAAA rival Capital (7-7, 1-2) at home. Bryanna Garcia and Michelle Parry added one goal each to help the Demonettes (9-5, 2-1) move to second place in the district behind Los Alamos. “We put together our best [match] of the season,” said Keith Richards, Santa Fe High head coach, via text message.
12; Española: not reported. Records — Ortiz 9-1, Española not reported. Seventh grade Ortiz def. Española, 25-9, 25-10. Service points — Ortiz: Melina Del Rio 13, Jennifer Pearce 12, Giselle Chavez 7; Española not reported. Records — Ortiz 9-1, Española not reported.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
Maxpreps. com volleyball rankings Here are the Top 10 volleyball teams, according to MaxPreps.com, as of Monday. The website uses a computerbased ratings system based on wins, quality of those wins over other highly ranked opponents and strength of schedule to determine its rankings. For more information about the system, go to MaxPreps.com. Northern teams are in bold.
Class AAAA Team (Record) Rating 1. Artesia (13-0) 21.98 2. Piedra Vista (11-1) 21.65 3. Farmington (10-2) 16.79 4.Roswell Goddard (12-4) 15.24 5. Santa Fe High (11-3) 13.45 6. Española Valley (8-5) 11.39 7. Centennial (9-4) 11.31 8. St. Pius X (7-5) 11.06 9. Aztec (8-3) 7.90 10. Los Alamos (7-5) 6.87 Also: 25. Capital (1-12), -19.07.
Class AAA
Class A
Team (Record) Rating 1. Hope Christian (11-2) 18.95 2. Portales (9-3) 15.79 3. Pojoaque Valley (7-4) 11.87 4. Silver (11-4) 7.83 5. West Las Vegas (8-3) 7.42 6.Sandia Prep (6-6) 7.14 7. Raton (5-4) 6.15 8. Ruidoso (5-7) 2.42 9. Wingate (7-5) 0.83 10. L.V. Robertson (5-6) -0.49 Also: 15. Taos (3-7), -6.82 16. St. Michael’s (3-10) -7.26 17. S.F. Indian School (1-10), -10.47
Team (Record) Rating 1. Fort Sumner (10-4) 13.72 2. Hagerman (9-3) 11.00 3. Springer (11-3) 10.71 4. Logan (10-4) 10.49 5. Questa (10-2) 9.61 6. Magdalena (12-1) 9.23 7. Mountainair (9-3) 5.09 8. Tatum (5-4) 4.12 9. McCurdy (9-4) 2.18 10. Cloudcroft (7-5) 1.17 Also: 11. Desert Academy (7-4) 0.14 13. Coronado (6-4) -1.67 22. Escalante (2-9), -12.35
Class AA Team (Record) Rating 1. Santa Rosa (13-0) 20.66 2. Bosque School (9-4) 10.93 3. Eunice (7-3) 9.74 4. Santa Fe Prep (9-3) 9.48 5.Cuba (13-2) 8.83 6. Texico (7-4) 8.78 7. Hatch Valley (9-3) 8.75 8. Newcomb (8-3) 4.16 9. Tularosa (8-5) 3.38 10. Dulce (6-4) 2.60 Also: 11. Mesa Vista (6-3) 2.59 13. Mora (3-4) 2.36 25. Pecos (2-11), -7.34 28. Monte del Sol (3-6), -10.48 33. Peñasco (0-9) -17.43
Class B Team (Record) Rating 1. Elida (10-1) 14.77 2. Carrizozo (13-1) 11.19 3. Corona (12-1) 7.58 4. San Jon (5-3) 2.93 5. Santa Fe Waldorf (7-3) -0.33 6. Evangel Christian (9-1) -0.94 7. Mosquero (4-5) -2.26 8. Maxwell (3-2) -3.84 9. Gateway Christian (5-8) -4.38 10. Valley Christian (5-4) -5.03 Also: 15. NMSD (3-3) -10.07
B-4
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Tigers: Umpires uphold home run after seeming fan-interference 21-game winner on the mound. Scherzer struck out Reddick and Steabove the wall. phen Vogt before getting pinch-hitter That prevented right fielder Josh Red- Alberto Callaspo to line out to center. dick from having any chance at a leaping “It was surreal,” Scherzer said. grab. Reddick and center fielder Coco “Maybe it’s not the ninth inning, but Crisp immediately protested, pointing that’s the stuff you dream about pitchup at the stands in the hope of a faning — bases loaded, eighth inning, no interference call. But umpires upheld outs and I was able to do it.” the home run after a replay review. Detroit, hitless through the first four Scherzer, making his first relief innings in a game of twists and turns, appearance since the 2011 postseason, added three runs in the eighth on a gave up a run in the seventh and got in wild pitch and a two-run double by trouble again in the eighth. With the Omar Infante that made it 8-4. Tigers ahead 5-4, he allowed a walk Yoenis Cespedes hit a two-run single and a double to start the inning, but in the ninth, bringing the potential after an intentional walk to load the tying run to the plate, but Joaquin Benoit struck out Seth Smith to end it. bases, manager Jim Leyland left his
Continued from Page B-1
After avoiding elimination, the Tigers can now send Justin Verlander to the mound for Game 5 on Thursday night in Oakland. Verlander shut out the A’s at the Coliseum in the decisive fifth game of the division series last year. Scherzer was in line to start Game 5 before being pressed into service Tuesday. “We took our best shot and we had to because we were behind the 8-ball a little bit,” Detroit manager Jim Leyland said. “We took that shot and, hey, both teams are going to have a good pitcher going two days from now.” Oakland hasn’t announced a starter for Game 5. It is Bartolo Colon’s turn in the postseason rotation, but rookie
Sonny Gray could also come back on normal rest after a brilliant performance in Game 2. Crisp had four hits and three runs for the A’s, who led 3-0 and 4-3 but couldn’t close out the defending American League champions. The Oakland bullpen hadn’t allowed a run all series until Tuesday. After Crisp put the A’s ahead 4-3 with an RBI single off Scherzer in the seventh, Martinez lifted a fly to right against reliever Sean Doolittle. It would have been an extremely difficult catch for Reddick, and it looked as though the ball might have cleared the wall even without the fans’ involvement. “I have no doubt I was going to catch
that ball. When I looked at the replay, that’s what I thought,” Reddick said. “It’s totally frustrating that a fan can influence the game.” Gary Darling, the crew chief, was umpiring in right field. He disagreed, even after watching the replay. “It was clear he was not going to catch the ball, so it was clearly going to be a home run,” Darling said. “There wasn’t any other evidence on replay to turn it another way.” It was certainly an anxious wait for fans while umpires reviewed the play, which brought back memories of Derek Jeter’s fan-aided homer against Baltimore in the 1996 AL championship series at Yankee Stadium.
ALDS
NLDS
Boston to open Saturday against Athletics or Tigers
starters both come off stingy efforts
Red Sox beat Rays, reach ALCS Cardinals, Pirates By Fred Goodall
The Associated Press
By R.B. Fallstrom
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Shane Victorino’s infield single snapped a seventhinning tie, and journeyman Craig Breslow gave Boston a huge boost out of the bullpen, sending the Red Sox 3 Red Sox into the AL championship series Rays 1 with a 3-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday night. Koji Uehara got the final four outs — one night after giving up a game-winning homer — and the Red Sox rebounded to take the best-of-five playoff 3-1. Back in the ALCS for the first time in five years, they’ll open at home Saturday against the Athletics or Tigers. Oakland hosts Detroit in a decisive Game 5 on Thursday. Both managers mixed and matched all night in a tense game that felt more like a chess match. Desperately trying to avoid elimination, Rays skipper Joe Maddon used nine pitchers and had ace David Price warming up for a possible 10th inning. Breslow relieved Boston starter Jake Peavy in the sixth and struck out his first four batters — all of them in the middle of Tampa Bay’s lineup. The 33-year-old lefty from Yale has pitched for six teams in eight big league seasons, including two stints with Boston. The highest-scoring team in the majors this season, Boston scratched out three runs on six singles in a game that featured only one extra-base hit. Xander Bogaerts scored the tying run on Joel Peralta’s wild pitch in the seventh and Victorino followed with an RBI infield single. Dustin Pedroia drove in Bogaerts with a sacrifice fly in the ninth to make it 3-1, and Uehara struck out Evan Longoria to end it. The resilient Rays won four win-or-
too well. It’ll be the 24th meeting of the season, with strong stretches on both sides and the ST. LOUIS — Heading into Pirates holding a 12-11 edge. Game 5 of their NL division “You’ve got to meet the series against Pittsburgh, the demands of the game,” manCardinals can take comfort in ager Clint Hurdle said. “I don’t this: They’re 7-1 the past three think I’ve been in a game where years when facing postseason somebody just didn’t show up.” elimination. Runs figure to be at a preManager Mike Matheny said mium. Michael Wacha flirted poise comes from a mindset of with a no-hitter for the second sticking to routine that is estab- straight game on Monday, lished during spring training. holding Pittsburgh hitless until “We saw it in Pittsburgh, and Pedro Alvarez’s eighth-inning I anticipate seeing it tomorhomer, and St. Louis held on for row,” Matheny said Tuesday a 2-1 win that brought the series after most players attended back to Busch Stadium. an optional workout. “They Wainwright allowed a run in show up like it’s another — it’s seven innings in the opener and another great day.” is 5-0 in his last six starts. The Starter Adam Wainwright was 19-game winner became the third loose and playful on the podium, pitcher in franchise history to joking that he got knocked out twice lead the league in victories, early on purpose in last year’s joining Dizzy Dean and Mort division series finale at WashCooper. Wainwright embraces ington to “get the mojo flowing.” the role of ace he inherited from He tore a page from the Tony injured Chris Carpenter. La Russa quote book, declining Last season was Wainwright’s to discuss possible wrinkles for first year back from reconGame 5, turning to Matheny structive elbow surgery, and and asking, “Is that a scouting he described his stuff as “hit or report? That’s a scouting report.” miss.” He allowed six runs in Although this is the Pitts2⅓ innings in Game 5 of the burgh Pirates’ first playoff division series against the appearance since 1992, they’ve Nationals, then rebounded to looked seasoned, too. beat San Francisco in Game 4 of “This is obviously an exciting the NL championship series. time, a high-pressure situation, “This year I have all the confiand you know, this is what you dence in the world in my stuff,” prepare for all year,” rookie Wainwright said. “It’s a comstarter Gerrit Cole said. “Yeah, pletely different situation.” it’s extremely exciting, and I Wainwright leans on advice injured closer Jason Isringhaucan’t wait.” sen gave him in 2006 — just The Pirates will be facing breathe. an opponent they all know The Associated Press
Boston Red Sox’s Will Middlebrooks slides under Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Yunel Escobar after he was tagged out on a double play in the third inning of Game 4 of the ALDS on Tuesday. MIKE CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
go-home games over the previous nine days and led 1-0 this time before Boston rallied. David DeJesus snapped a scoreless tie with an RBI single in the sixth and Boston squandered several opportunities before finally breaking through in the seventh. Bogaerts, pinch-hitting, drew a oneout walk and raced to third on Jacoby Ellsbury’s two-out single off Jake McGee. The Rays brought on their sixth pitcher, Peralta, and the game shifted suddenly on his first pitch, which skipped in the dirt past catcher Jose Lobaton — allowing the tying run to score. Ellsbury was stealing second on the pitch and continued to third when the ball rolled toward the backstop. Victorino beat out a slow chopper to shortstop, putting the Red Sox ahead 2-1. Breslow pitched 1⅔ scoreless innings for the win. Uehara earned a save, bouncing back from Lobaton’s ninth-inning homer in Game 3.
Tampa Bay won three win-or-gohome games just to get into the division series last week. Coming from behind in another elimination game Monday gave them hope of taking the series back to Fenway Park, where the Rays were outscored 19-6 in the first two games. The trip to the ALCS will be Boston’s first since 2008, when the Red Sox lost in seven games to Tampa Bay. When the Red Sox acquired Peavy from the Chicago White Sox at the trade deadline, they had nights like this in mind. The 32-year-old right-hander made his third career postseason start 2,562 days — a span of seven years, five days — after starting Game 1 of the NL division series for San Diego in 2006. Both he and Rays starter Jeremy Hellickson were working with plenty of rest. Although he pitched two innings in a simulated game last week while the Red Sox were waiting to learn who they would face, Peavy hadn’t appeared in a major league game in 13 days.
Mercy: Major losses affect team’s morale, student interest in sport Continued from Page B-1 are playing programs they have no business playing. Although it should be noted, the Jaguars’ only mercy rule loss came to Albuquerque Valley, who is 5-0 and has beaten top tier Class AAAAA programs like La Cueva, Eldorado and Manzano.
Other schools have a lot of inexperience. The Braves have a freshman starting quarterback, Royce Nez, who is listed at 5-foot-5 and 140 pounds. Not exactly the ideal size for a field general. It could also be that a lot of programs in Northern New Mexico are not that good. Only three teams — St. Michael’s, Taos and Escalante —
Kick: Three yellow cards for Demons Continued from Page B-1 “I thought they came out and played more physical in the first half,” Doyle said. “At times we were trying to be too fancy, and they proved that being tougher sometimes helps out.” The physical played in the Demons’ favor as they went into the intermission tied at 1-all. It would be their downfall in the second half, however, as three Demons received yellow cards for unsportsmanlike play in the final 20 minutes. “They tried to get in our heads, but I guess they couldn’t,” Rios said. “They got frustrated even more and started fouling us more often.” With this being a crosstown rivalry as well as a district one, Herrera expected the intensity level to pick up.
“We knew we were in for a tough fight,” he said. “I knew that it was going to get physical and I knew that emotions were going to be flying.” The Demons held off the Jaguars until the 19th minute when they allowed Alexis Zapata to score to break a scoreless tie. Santa Fe High’s Josue de Luna tied it in the 33rd minute, leading the way to Hernandez’s go-ahead score. That lead was short-lived, as Capital’s Diego Pichardo tied it in the 59th minute. While Santa Fe High saw this as a chance to one-up their city rival, the Jaguars have bigger plans in mind. Beating the Demons was just another step in that direction. “For me, it’s more important to win a match for a championship than just for a rivalry,” Rios said.
have winning records. Six teams have one win or less. Being harassed by 50 points does more than just add another loss to the record. When a team is consistently losing by a lot, it affects student interest in the program. Football is a grueling sport, and no one is going to go out for a team that that can’t win games.
The losses greatly affect the morale of the players who are already on the team. The preparation that goes into football games — watching film, scouting reports, changing schematics — all become meaningless when the team knows they are going to lose. A loss in football stings a lot more than it does in other sports because
you spent an entire week preparing for a game. A loss by fifty points just takes the life out of a team. Losing is bad, but having a game end early because you’re losing by too much is worse. Maybe it’s time for northern schools to not just focus on not losing, but focus on not being shown any mercy.
SOCCER
FIFA details probe of World Cup bids By Graham Dunbar The Associated Press
GENEVA — FIFA ethics prosecutor Michael Garcia expects investigations of the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids to last into next year. Garcia’s U.S.-based law firm on Tuesday stressed the limited mandate of his work, which some FIFA critics hope could lead to re-running the controversial process which gave the 2018 World Cup to Russia and the 2022 event to Qatar. “It is not our role to determine the venue or timing of the World Cup,” Kirkland & Ellis LLP said, adding that the probe is “likely to extend at least several months into 2014.” FIFA asked for a lengthy consultation period last week to consider moving the 2022 World Cup dates after President Sepp Blatter suggested it was not possible to play in the searing Qatari heat in June and July. Qatar’s big-spending bid and campaign tactics have been scrutinized since the December 2010 vote, and FIFA critics question why some members of Blatter’s scandal-hit executive committee ignored warnings about the effect of 104-degree-
plus desert heat on players and fans. Garcia will file a final report to the judging division of FIFA’s ethics court to decide on possible sanctions. He is expected in England this week to speak Michael with members of its Garcia 2018 bid team, in the first of a series of visits to the 11 countries involved in nine separate bids. “Members of the investigatory chamber intend to speak with and request information from representatives of every bid team that vied to host the 2018 or 2022 FIFA World Cup,” Kirkland & Ellis said. “The fact that we request a meeting with members of a particular bid team does not mean that any specific allegation has been made by or against that team or anyone associated with it.” Leaders of the Qatar and Russia bids said last week in Zurich they have not yet been contacted by Garcia’s team. Garcia’s Swiss deputy, Cornel Borbely, will lead the American and Russian questioning “to avoid the appearance of any
conflict of interest.” Qatar defeated the United States 14-8 in a final round of voting. Garcia was the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan from 2005-08. In April, Russia barred him in retaliation for his previous work prosecuting a Russian arms dealer, Viktor Bout, who is serving a 25-year prison sentence. Garcia’s statement on Tuesday reminded potential witnesses still serving in official soccer duty that they are obliged by the FIFA ethics code to cooperate with his requests. Anonymity can be offered to some witnesses “in appropriate circumstances,” Garcia’s statement said. Garcia’s office has been receiving information since February from a whistleblower hotline created by FIFA for officials and fans to allege ethics violations. Russia’s bid, strongly supported by President Vladimir Putin, also beat joint candidacies from Spain-Portugal and BelgiumNetherlands in the 2018 contest. Australia, Japan and South Korea were the other 2022 bidders.
SPORTS
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
NFL
Today’s tight ends honed skills on the hardwood Players’ size, jumping ability shaking up sport By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press
DENVER — Tight ends are no longer big plodders who might be mistaken for jelly-belly linemen. They’re athletic, fast, powerful and shifty, traits many of them honed on the hardwood. Guys like Jimmy Graham, Julius Thomas and Jordan Cameron. With size and jumping ability, they’re part of a new breed of tight ends changing pro football. “The big thing is we’re starting to inherit a different type of athlete from the college ranks,” Denver tight ends coach Clancy Barone said. “It isn’t like the old days when those guys were big, thick, square-body blockers or guys that maybe played linebacker in high school and college. “Now, we’re getting guys that were maybe bigger receivers and they got moved inside to tight end. Maybe a backup quarterback who wants to see the field in college. So, we’re getting more athletic guys who now come to our league.” Increasingly, the place to find them is in the gymnasium. “It seems like if you’re a 6-foot-6 power forward in college, you end up going to our league to play tight end,” said Barone, who coached the alpha hoopster-turned-gridiron great, Antonio Gates, in San Diego in 2007-08.
“That’s the new generation.” Cameron, who played hoops at BYU and walked on USC’s team before concentrating on his football career, has quickly developed into one of Cleveland’s top offensive players and is a big reason the first-place Browns have won three straight games since trading running back Trent Richardson. Graham and Thomas played just one year of college football after helping lead their schools into the NCAA basketball tournament, Graham at Miami and Thomas at Portland State. Yet they’ve quickly joined the list of elite tight ends with the likes of Jason Witten, Rob Gronkowski and Tony Gonzalez, another former college basketball player. From March Madness to NFL stardom, they are the vanguards of this towering tight end trend that’s a big headache for defenses in today’s passheavy game. With six TDs in September, unprecedented for his position, Graham was the first tight end ever selected the league’s offensive player of the month, and on Sunday he matched the NFL record for tight ends with his fourth straight 100-yard game. He leads the league with 593 yards receiving. Peyton Manning’s favorite target in Denver’s shootout win at Dallas wasn’t Wes Welker but Thomas, who caught nine passes for 122 yards and two TDs. That gave him six touchdowns, most by a Broncos tight end since Hall of Famer Shannon Sharpe had eight a decade ago. Thomas, whose 27 catches this
Head of school renews support for resting Kill Gophers coach suffers fifth game-day seizure in three seasons with team By Dave Campbell The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Without a game this week, Minnesota coach Jerry Kill has been at home following a seizure that kept him from traveling with the team for last Saturday’s loss at Michigan. This was the fifth game-day episode Kill endured in three seasons with the Gophers, and the fourth that caused him to miss at least a portion of a game. But University President Eric Kaler reiterated Tuesday his support for Kill and the coach’s ability to handle the high-profile, high-pressure job while dealing with epilepsy. Kaler, in a phone interview with The Jerry Kill Associated Press, said he and athletic director Norwood Teague have not been considering another coach in light of Kill’s latest absence. “Where we are right now is hoping for and planning on Jerry getting better and being able to fulfill all of his duties,” Kaler said. “We’re not looking at a Plan B. We’re looking at Jerry Kill being our head football coach. He’s got a great, great staff. It’s really just an unbelievable team, and when he’s not able to be there because of a seizure, they have a terrific plan and they execute on that. So that’s where we are.” Defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys filled in for Kill on the Big Ten coaches’ call with reporters Tuesday. Claeys said there’s no rush for Kill to return to work; the Gophers don’t play again until Oct. 19 at Northwestern. “He’s doing good. He’s continuing to get the rest he needs and work with the doctors to do the best they can to get the situation under control with his medicine,” Claeys said. “They still believe they can do that.” Kill’s latest seizure stemmed from a medication adjustment. Claeys said he’s spoken daily with Kill on the phone but hasn’t discussed a timetable for Kill coming back. The Gophers will practice Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, but Claeys didn’t indicate whether Kill would be ready by then. “Since we don’t play this week, there’s no hurrying that,” Claeys said. Claeys takes over as the acting head coach whenever Kill has to leave, and the rest of the assistants assume extra duties as well. As important as Kill’s job is, nobody around the program or at the university has expressed any concern, publicly at least, about his absence. “We all know the routine. This happened before. Just going through that process of same old, same old,” Claeys said. The Gophers fell to 4-2 overall and 0-2 in the conference with their 42-13 loss Saturday. “At the end of the day, Jerry works for me and I’m supportive of him. I admire him. I think he has a great personal story. I think he has a great professional career,” Kaler said, adding: “He is just relentless. He likes to use that word in describing what he wants his football team to be, and he’s driven. When he puts his mind to something, he just doesn’t let it go. That I think is reflecting in what he’s done for our team and really is his modus operandi throughout his whole career.” Kaler said his concern is with Kill’s health, not with the coach’s status. Kill has said previously he would quit if he didn’t think his condition would allow him to handle the job. “There are many, many dimensions to being the Gopher head football coach, and Jerry is excellent in what he does. As you work your way around the community it’s very difficult to find somebody who doesn’t like Jerry Kill,” Kaler said, adding: “I think he’s brought belief in our program back. I think he’s got it pointed in exactly the right direction. I don’t know everything you need to do to win in football, but I do know that if you don’t want to win, you change your coaches frequently. And my hope is that Jerry’s going to be our head football coach for a long, long time.”
forward in their DNA are a matchup nightmare. “Because they’re so big, they’re faster than the linebackers but they’re bigger than the safeties,” he said. “It’s kind of that hybrid position that everybody covets right now.” Tight ends have combined for 765 catches, 8,992 yards and 76 touchdowns, the most in all three categories through the first five weeks of any season in NFL history. The NFL is a master at countering the trend de jour, but finding a retort for the transformer tight end is proving difficult, suggested former Patriots linebacker Tedy Bruschi. “That special athlete you’re looking for is the guy has the cover skills who can also come down in the box and play the run but also be very athletic in coverage,” he said. A super safety, if you will. “Right,” Bruschi said, “the hybrid safety that can be a linebacker and Denver Broncos tight end Julius Thomas celebrates his touchdown against also play the deep third. How many of the Dallas Cowboys during the first quarter of Sunday’s game in Arlingthose are out there?” ton, Texas. Eric Decker joins in. TONY GUTIERREZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Not many. “Yeah, you’d have to look down season are 26 more than he had in his an opening, he said, is just like posting some depth charts because those guys first two years combined, when he was up a player under the basket to give the are rare,” Bruschi said. “LaRon Landry comes to mind. But you need that bogged down by leg injuries, said his point guard a clear passing lane. hybrid safety/linebacker because of basketball background helped him navEven those who aren’t gym rats are the development of that tight end posiigate the crash course of NFL football. prepping for the pros in college foottion that is now Jimmy Graham, Rob He makes split-second decisions, ball’s spread offenses, Barone said: “It’s Gronkowski. Everybody wants one of deciphers defenses, anticipates the hard to find a tight end in a three-point those guys.” action, adjusts on the fly, just like he stance anymore. Everyone’s spread And scouts scoping out the talent did on the basketball floor, where he out.” on college football fields are also askwas a bully on the blocks. Shielding a Browns defensive coordinator Ray ing about that big guy rattling the rims defensive back to give the quarterback Horton said the tight ends with power over in the gym.
TENNIS
Nadal says he’s done with politics career-threatening injuries like the kind with his knees he’s struggled with in recent years. SHANGHAI — Rafael Nadal “I say because it’s something says his belief that too many that I think is going to be fair tournaments are played on hard for the next generations if they courts hasn’t changed with his are able to play [on] an easier success on the surface this year surface for the body, to try to — he’s simply given up trying to have a longer career, to try to be change the system. more healthy when they finish The Spaniard, who retook [their] careers,” he said. “Somethe No. 1 ranking from Novak thing that probably I will not Djokovic this week, has com[be lucky enough to have].” piled a 27-1 record on hard Djokovic said later he shares courts this year, including capNadal’s frustrations with the turing his second U.S. Open slow pace of change at the top crown and three Masters titles. of the sport. His success on the surface has “It’s been over five years that been the most surprising part we all have been trying in differof his comeback from a sevenent ways to effect some things month layoff due to a left knee regarding the schedule, tournainjury, which many believed ments, different formats,” he would limit his action on hard said. “But the system is rooted courts. inside. It’s very difficult to Nadal said Tuesday before change. the Shanghai Masters tourna“I understand why Rafa is ment he still believes too many saying that he has had enough tournaments are played on the of it because at the end of the surface, but he’s done trying to day you can’t do everything influence ATP policymakers. alone. It’s much deeper than “I am really out of politics, that.” and I don’t want to be involved Nadal and Andy Murray have in politics of the tennis anybeen the most outspoken critmore. I know even if you have ics of tour conditions in recent strong ideas and even if you years, with Murray even floatbelieve the changes are possible, ing the idea of a player strike I know there is always a wall two years ago if tour organizers there that is impossible to go didn’t take their complaints over,” he said. seriously. The 13-time Grand Slam Nadal then criticized Roger winner has long advocated a Federer on the eve of last year’s shorter tournament schedule Australian Open for allowing and more tournaments on clay other players to lead the charge courts to lessen the wear on to make changes to the tour players’ bodies and prevent while he stayed above the fray By Justin Bergman The Associated Press
Rafael Nadal of Spain returns a shot to Novak Djokovic of Serbia during the final of the China Open on Sunday. ANDY WONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
to maintain his good reputation. Now it appears Nadal is done with the fight, as well. “What I am saying I am saying because it’s something that I feel,” he said. “If somebody from the ATP asks me, I will say the same things. But as always happened, nothing gonna change.” Nadal said he’s focusing instead on keeping up his momentum through the end of the season and the ATP World
Tour Finals in London — a time of year the Spaniard has traditionally struggled with fatigue and injuries. He’s never won the Shanghai Masters. In the last seven years, Nadal has won only one tournament following the U.S. Open — in Tokyo in 2010. “I know in the past this part of the season was hard for me, but I am confident that I can keep playing well. I am doing the right things to be ready.”
NHL
Penguins still unbeaten, defeat Carolina PITTSBURGH — Jussi Jokinen collected his first hat trick in nearly six years, and the Pittsburgh Penguins pulled away from the Carolina Hurricanes for a 5-2 win Tuesday night. Jokinen helped the Penguins improve to 3-0, opening the scoring in the first period and adding two goals in the third after Carolina drew even at 2-2. Paul Martin and Tanner Glass also scored for Pittsburgh, while Sidney Crosby picked up his first two assists of the season. MarcAndre Fleury stopped 32 shots for the Penguins, who have not trailed through three games. PREDATORS 3, WILD 2 In Nashville, Tenn., Filip Forsberg and Colin Wilson scored power-play goals 39 seconds apart in the first period to lead Nashville to victory over Minnesota in its home opener. Eric Nystrom added his first career penalty shot goal all in the first period for Nashville, matching the goals the Predators had totaled in losing their first two games. Pekka Rinne made 32 saves. Zach Parise scored a power-play goal, and
Jared Spurgeon also scored for the Wild. AVALANCHE 2, MAPLE LEAFS 1 In Toronto, P.A. Parenteau scored early in the third period to help Colorado edge Toronto. Tied 1-1 going into the third, Colorado went ahead at 2:30 on a two-on-one with Jamie McGinn setting up Parenteau. The goal stood up to video review. “According to Rule 78.4 ‘if an attacking player has the puck deflect into the net, off his skate or body, in any manner, the goal shall be allowed.’ ISLANDERS 6, COYOTES 1 In Uniondale, N.Y., John Tavares scored his first two goals of the season, and defenseman Matt Donovan added the first of his NHL career to lift New York over Phoenix. Peter Regin and Tavares scored in the first period, and Donovan, Tavares and Colin McDonald connected in the second against beleaguered goalie Mike Smith to turn it into a rout. Frans Nielsen earned the second of his three assists on the night when McDonald made it 5-1 with 2:36 left in the second.
FLYERS 2, PANTHERS 1 In Philadelphia, Brayden Schenn and Braydon Coburn scored to lead Philadelphia past Florida, making Craig Berube a winner in his coaching debut. Berube was on the bench a day after Peter Laviolette was fired after a 0-3 start. LIGHTNING 3, SABRES 2, OT In Buffalo, N.Y., — Alex Killorn scored 1:50 into overtime to lift Tampa Bay to a come-from-behind victory over winless Buffalo. Teddy Purcell had the tying goal 5:43 into the third period and Tyler Johnson also scored for the Lightning (2-1), who have two wins after regulation. CANUCKS 3, DEVILS 2 In Vancouver, British Columbia, Jason Garrison scored at 2:18 of overtime, and the Vancouver Canucks defeated the New Jersey Devils. Garrison’s shot from the point through traffic beat Cory Schneider in the goaltender’s first game against his former team. Daniel Sedin, with a goal and an assist, and Alexander Edler scored for Vancouver.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 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
Sunny and delightful
Tonight
Thursday
Mainly clear
72
Friday
Partly sunny, windy and cooler
45
Saturday
Mostly sunny
61/34
Bright sunshine
61/34
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Sunday
Plenty of sunshine
63/38
Humidity (Noon)
Monday
Humidity (Noon)
Tuesday
Bright sunshine and pleasant
68/39
Humidity (Noon)
Bright sunshine
71/38
70/33
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
27%
43%
36%
34%
22%
22%
21%
32%
wind: SSW 8-16 mph
wind: SSE 8-16 mph
wind: SW 15-25 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
wind: W 4-8 mph
wind: W 6-12 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Tuesday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 73°/38° Normal high/low ............................ 71°/41° Record high ............................... 80° in 1910 Record low ................................. 26° in 1970 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 ... 0.43”/11.13” 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
666
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 72/45 Pecos 69/41
25
Albuquerque 75/51
25
87
56
412
Clayton 80/46
AccuWeather Flu Index
25
Las Vegas 72/45
Today.........................................1, Low Thursday...................................1, Low Friday ........................................1, Low Saturday ...................................1, Low Sunday ......................................1, Low Monday.....................................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 81/49
54
60 60
Tuesday’s rating .......................... Moderate Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 67/41
Española 74/50 Los Alamos 66/44 Gallup 69/40
Raton 76/43
64 84
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
Roswell 89/53
Ruidoso 70/50
25
70
Truth or Consequences 79/53 70
Las Cruces 78/53
54
70
70
380
380
Hobbs 87/55
285
Alamogordo 81/57
180 10
Water statistics
285
64
Farmington 71/47
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 92/55
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes
Tue. High: 88 ................................. Carlsbad Tue. Low 18 ................................ Eagle Nest
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Hi/Lo W 81/46 pc 78/50 pc 64/20 s 86/45 pc 88/41 s 64/35 pc 75/35 pc 79/47 pc 67/35 pc 81/37 pc 73/39 s 85/43 s 77/49 pc 76/42 s 83/50 pc 73/35 s 74/32 s 82/46 pc 84/44 s
Hi/Lo W 81/57 s 75/51 s 63/37 s 89/57 s 92/55 s 63/39 pc 74/41 s 80/46 s 63/43 s 81/49 s 70/45 s 82/51 s 74/50 s 71/47 pc 84/50 s 69/40 s 70/45 s 87/55 s 78/53 s
Hi/Lo W 78/49 s 66/41 pc 54/24 pc 92/55 s 93/57 s 49/28 sh 67/33 pc 78/41 s 62/28 s 81/45 s 56/28 pc 75/42 s 65/40 pc 56/34 sh 85/46 s 52/27 pc 57/30 pc 88/50 s 75/49 s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni
Hi/Lo 75/41 84/55 70/48 80/46 82/45 80/35 69/28 78/49 85/43 72/48 85/53 77/43 83/47 70/30 82/49 84/53 84/49 72/45 74/39
W pc s s pc pc pc pc pc s pc pc s s s s pc s s s
Hi/Lo W 72/45 s 83/54 s 66/44 s 78/50 s 83/50 s 76/43 s 60/39 s 75/48 s 89/53 s 70/50 s 82/50 s 75/49 s 79/51 s 67/41 s 79/53 s 84/53 s 82/56 s 69/44 s 69/41 s
Hi/Lo W 65/36 pc 75/44 s 57/33 pc 71/40 pc 84/46 s 69/34 pc 51/24 pc 67/35 pc 90/49 s 66/44 s 78/42 s 68/41 s 75/43 pc 57/28 pc 75/45 s 85/44 s 80/51 s 60/34 pc 53/27 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 9
Sunrise today ............................... 7:06 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 6:37 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 11:56 a.m. Moonset today ........................... 10:21 p.m. Sunrise Thursday ......................... 7:07 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 6:35 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ..................... 12:53 p.m. Moonset Thursday ...................... 11:22 p.m. Sunrise Friday ............................... 7:07 a.m. Sunset Friday ................................ 6:34 p.m. Moonrise Friday ............................ 1:45 p.m. Moonset Friday .................................... none First
Full
Last
New
Oct 11
Oct 18
Oct 26
Nov 3
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 49/42 72/56 68/47 60/46 71/41 57/39 68/56 68/67 70/59 75/43 68/44 68/46 82/55 79/51 65/43 50/29 64/35 86/72 81/53 70/46 74/46 84/58 75/59
W r c c pc pc pc pc r c s s s s pc s c s pc s s s s pc
Hi/Lo 48/36 74/55 68/52 52/40 66/45 62/42 63/51 70/59 70/53 70/50 74/48 70/45 84/61 70/44 69/46 40/25 57/37 87/71 83/60 74/49 78/53 72/53 66/55
W r pc sh c pc c pc sh sh s s s s pc s sf pc pc s s s t r
Hi/Lo 46/39 77/58 59/52 55/40 69/53 62/39 62/54 74/59 70/52 74/59 75/51 69/47 86/67 70/40 70/47 40/29 47/24 86/70 87/66 77/56 78/58 66/53 70/56
W r pc r pc pc pc pc c c s s s s pc s pc sh c s s s pc pc
Set 7:33 p.m. 8:40 p.m. 4:31 p.m. 2:24 p.m. 7:52 p.m. 6:44 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
Rise 9:15 a.m. 10:57 a.m. 3:04 a.m. 12:03 a.m. 9:03 a.m. 6:18 p.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
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 69/44 74/52 89/77 72/43 77/50 77/63 67/54 78/47 89/73 67/52 94/67 67/42 58/50 65/55 76/50 69/56 86/54 69/64 72/52 57/48 78/51 67/48 69/54
W s s t s pc s pc s pc pc s s t c s pc s pc pc t pc pc c
Hi/Lo 74/52 78/63 87/75 68/51 78/56 82/66 67/55 82/55 86/70 65/54 88/62 72/44 61/46 61/56 76/58 67/45 86/64 66/59 68/52 58/48 78/52 65/52 67/56
W s pc pc s s pc pc s pc pc s s pc r s pc s r pc pc s pc sh
Hi/Lo 80/55 81/64 87/75 70/56 75/56 84/69 60/56 82/60 86/69 58/52 75/58 70/46 60/46 60/54 78/62 58/41 87/69 67/59 67/52 59/47 78/54 58/52 58/55
W s pc pc s s pc r s pc r pc s pc r s sh pc pc pc c s r r
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) Tue. High: 94 ........................... Phoenix, AZ Tue. Low: 18 ............................. Alturas, CA
Weather trivia™
A warm spell after autumn’s first Q: freeze or frost is called what?
A: Indian summer.
Weather history
On Oct. 9, 1804, a hurricane in New England caused massive damage. Tropical moisture and cold air combined in central New England; 2-3 feet of snow fell in the Green Mountains.
Newsmakers NEW YORK — Bryan Cranston will surprise Broadway audiences when he portrays President Lyndon B. Johnson after being so closely associated with his Breaking Bad antihero, says the producer who is luring the actor to a New York stage. “It’s truly a transformative performance, I think. I don’t use that word lightly,” says Jeffrey Richards, who is producing the Cranstonled All the Way, which just concluded its run near Boston. “It’s especially thrilling to see an actor embody a role the way that he does.”
Kasem children seek control of his health care
Casey Kasem
Hi/Lo 64/48 77/61 79/57 90/77 73/62 72/54 59/54 64/48 77/57 81/61 90/72 86/52 59/48 61/57 63/55 77/61 88/72 84/74 74/54 65/57
W c pc s c pc s pc sh s s pc pc pc r c t pc pc s pc
Hi/Lo 58/42 76/62 87/61 89/75 70/60 76/59 61/50 69/49 73/57 87/64 87/71 83/60 59/49 55/39 62/47 74/61 89/72 85/76 81/61 68/56
W c pc s pc pc s c t t s pc s c c c t t sh s s
Hi/Lo 52/43 79/66 91/63 90/75 72/55 73/47 54/47 68/49 75/48 88/64 86/70 81/53 53/48 52/41 52/36 74/60 87/71 86/73 83/60 69/55
W sh s s r s s r c t s pc pc c pc sh t t pc s s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow 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
Hi/Lo 82/63 68/57 79/48 71/52 57/45 54/48 95/78 66/52 59/37 75/62 73/61 68/46 70/65 91/79 63/54 64/59 82/72 55/50 64/41 59/54
W s pc s pc pc sh pc c pc pc r pc r t c sh c pc s c
Hi/Lo 81/65 61/43 76/51 76/55 64/43 57/48 93/77 62/43 58/47 76/63 70/54 77/43 77/57 88/77 59/45 84/61 82/74 56/45 60/50 60/44
W s c s t s c pc pc c pc pc s s t c s pc c c r
Hi/Lo 79/59 52/45 78/48 74/54 68/47 57/45 93/76 51/42 57/44 78/63 71/59 79/46 77/64 88/75 51/38 95/63 82/72 56/43 62/50 52/32
W s pc s t s c s c r s sh s s t c s pc pc pc r
Today’s talk shows
Cranston to play LBJ in Broadway-bound play
Bryan Cranston
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
LOS ANGELES — The three adult children of radio host Casey Kasem have filed a legal petition to gain control of his health care. The filing says Kasem is suffering from advanced Parkinson’s disease and is being isolated from his children, friends and family members by his wife. The court petition says he may have early onset Parkinson’s dementia. The Associated Press
3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Actor Jack Black; Lorde 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 TBS Conan 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Whitney Cummings; Ann Romney; Lissie performs. 10:35 p.m.KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Lucy Liu; Mark Jacobson; The Weeknd performs. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose
KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS Conan 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actor Sean Hayes. 12:00 a.m. E! Chelsea Lately Actress Sofia Vergara. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m.KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Alan Rickman; Chloe Grace Moretz; Jeff Musial; Ylvis performs; Cassadee Pope performs. 12:30 a.m.E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show FNC Red Eye
Actor Brady White portrays Santa Claus on Tuesday as he holds a falcon included in the Bespoke Global Falconry Companion experience offered in the Neiman Marcus Christmas Book in Dallas. The gift is listed at $150,000. L.M. OTERO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
$1.9M diamond deal on Neiman Marcus Christmas list mond experience” is this year’s most expensive fantasy gift. For that sum, the buyer gets a DALLAS — Need that one25-carat rough diamond from of-a-kind stocking stuffer and which to make a personalized have $1.9 million burning a ring with the help of jewelry hole in your pocket? Design designer Maria Canale. The your own diamond ring and package includes a trip to De travel to Africa to see where Beers’ headquarters in Lonthe stone came from. don and to Africa to trace the Love the outdoors but think stone’s origins. you’d love it even more while For the falconry enthusiwatching the Outdoor Chanast in your life, consider a nel? How about an outdoor $150,000-package that includes entertainment system replete everything he or she would with a 201-inch television that need for a leisurely afternoon rises out of the ground? It can hunting with hawks. Also be yours for $1.5 million (plus included are a gold-plated shipping and handling). perch, custom-made bird hoods These are among the unique and a handmade backgammon offerings for sale in the 87th board (for downtime). edition of the Neiman Marcus Design enthusiasts, drool Christmas Book, which was at the thought of spending unveiled Tuesday in Dallas, the night at architect Philip where the retailer is based. Johnson’s Glass House, in ConAlmost 40 percent of the necticut. An overnight stay — more than 500 items for sale the first ever for sale — runs in the book cost less than $30,000. “It’s really a unique, $250 (cheapest: $12 mug), but once-in-a-lifetime opportunity it’s the “fantasy gifts” that get to live in a masterpiece,” said everyone’s attention, such as Henry Urbach, director of the the airplanes and camels the Glass House. company has offered in the Car collectors, wow friends past. Eight such items are for and enemies alike by rolling up sale this year. to your next company picnic in “The world has become so one of 10 special-edition 2014 much smaller than it used to Aston Martin Vanquish Volanbe that the challenge of finding tes. The sports cars, which things that are new and intercost $344,500, are handmade in esting becomes harder and England and come in an excluharder every year,” Neiman sive shade of blue. Marcus spokeswoman Ginger “The cars sell out every year, Reeder said. and always sell out in a record amount time,” Reeder said. At $1.85 million, the “diaBy Jamie Stengle
The Associated Press
Nielsen TV ratings, Sept. 30-Oct. 6 Prime-time viewership numbers compiled by Nielsen for Sept. 30-Oct. 6. Listings include the week’s ranking and viewership. 1. NCIS, CBS, 19.98 million. 2. The Big Bang Theory, CBS, 18.22 million. 3. 60 Minutes, CBS, 17.94 million. 4. NFL football: Houston at San Francisco, NBC, 17.69 million. 5. NCIS: Los Angeles, CBS, 15.09 million. 6. The Voice (Tuesday), NBC, 14.54 million. 7. The Voice (Monday), NBC, 14.12 million. 8. NFL football: Miami at New Orleans, ESPN, 13.72 million. 9. Sunday Night NFL Pre-Kick, NBC, 13.29 million. 10. Dancing With the Stars, ABC, 13.1 million. 11. The Millers, CBS, 13.09 mil-
TV
top picks Wednesday
lion. 12. Person of Interest, CBS, 12.35 million. 13. The Crazy Ones, CBS, 11.71 million. 14. Blue Bloods, CBS, 11.37 million. 15. Blacklist, NBC, 11.35 million. 16. Modern Family, ABC, 11.124 million. 17. Criminal Minds, CBS, 11.121 million. 18. Castle, ABC, 10.88 million. 19. Scandal, ABC, 10.52 million. 20. Football Night in America, NBC, 10.4 million. ABC and ESPN are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; CBS is a division of CBS Corp.; Fox is owned by 21st Century Fox; NBC is owned by NBC Universal. The Associated Press F. Kennedy’s assassination. Eva LaRue (CSI: Miami) guest stars as Tanya Mays, an FBI agent who helps the team with the investigation, in the new episode “Final Shot.”
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7 p.m. on ABC The Middle The church forces Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) to return its van after discovering their car is working again. When Sue (Eden Sher) laments having to go back to riding the bus, her folks suggest she get a job and buy her own car — so she takes a job at the mall. Principal Barker (Rachel Dratch) informs Frankie and Mike that Brick (Atticus Shaffer) hasn’t been going to classes in the new episode “The Potato.” 8 p.m. on NBC Law & Order: Special Victims Unit After accusing his squad of cooking the books and making rape allegations disappear, an officer (Marc Menchaca) lands in a psychiatric ward. Internal affairs asks the SVU to help investigate, using Brian Cassidy (Dean Winters) as an undercover plant. When one of the corrupt cops (David Conrad) takes drastic steps to keep things as they are, Cassidy finds himself in grave danger in the new episode “Internal Affairs.” Ice-T and Dann Florek also star. 8 p.m. on CBS Criminal Minds Rossi (Joe Mantegna) and his colleagues try to determine if a sniper on the loose in Dallas is motivated by the 50th anniversary of John
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3
4
8 p.m. on CW The Tomorrow People This reimagining of a British series from the 1970s is set in modern-day New York and stars Robbie Amell (1600 Penn, Revenge) as Stephen Jameson, a high-school student who learns he’s a highly evolved form of human with special powers — and he’s not alone. Luke Mitchell and Peyton List play fellow Tomorrow People, and Mark Pellegrino plays a scientist who sees them as a threat, despite having at least two in his own family. 9 p.m. on NBC Ironside After witnessing a slashing, a teenage girl and her companion (Skyler Day, Brad Beyer) lie to police about what they saw and who they are. As Virgil and Teddy (Pablo Schreiber, Neal Bledsoe) try to track down the killer, Ironside and Holly (Blair Underwood, Spencer Grammer) learn that the female witness went missing as a child. Kenneth Choi also stars in the new episode “Sleeping Dogs.”
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Crossword
Horoscope The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2013: This year a partner or close loved one can be very unpredictable. At first you might be annoyed, but later you could find these unexpected episodes to be exciting and even instrumental in preventing boredom. Sagittarius ignites your imagination. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Make it a point to draw from nontraditional sources when brainstorming with others or when launching a new project. Tonight: Go along with someone’s offbeat plans. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Deal with others on an individual level, even if you are uncomfortable with the end results. Tonight: Share news with a favorite person. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You’ll want to move on and head in a new direction, but you could be slammed by incoming calls, questions and people showing up at your door. Tonight: Where the action is. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You might wonder what it’s best to do under the present circumstances. Keep your feelings to yourself. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You could be unusually energized and delighted by a suggestion that triggers your mind to come up with even more ideas. Tonight: Time for midweek fun. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Others often expect a lot from you, regardless of whether you are willing to give them what they want. Loved ones will support you in a venture. Tonight: Don’t worry so much about your finances.
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: “TWO” IN THE BIBLE (e.g., Name the first two children of Adam and Eve. Answer: Cain and Abel.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Name the two main sections of the Bible. Answer________ 2. Name the first two books of the Old Testament. Answer________ 3. Name the two twin sons of Isaac and Rebekah. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Name the first two of the Ten Commandments. Answer________
5. Name Abraham’s two famous sons. Answer________ 6. Name the two Marys who told of Jesus’ resurrection. Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Name the two books of the Old Testament named after women. Answer________ 8. Name the two books of the Apocrypha named after women. Answer________ 9. What did God create on Day 1 and Day 2 of Creation? Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. The Old Testament and the New Testament. 2. Genesis and Exodus. 3. Jacob and Esau. 4. You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself a carved image. 5. Isaac and Ishmael. 6. Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James. 7. Ruth and Esther. 8. Judith and Susanna. 9. Day 1: light, Day 2: the firmament (sky/heavens). 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.
B-7
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Realize what is happening between you and a relative or neighbor, as a new sense of compatibility seems to emerge. Tonight: Get out and about, and take an overdue break from the workweek.
Woman should run from bully Dear Annie: Recently, I was introduced to an older gentleman. He has never been married, but he did have a son through artificial insemination. His son passed away, and he talks all the time about how special he was. He has a very strong and commanding personality to the point of sometimes being a bit of a bully. It seems like he is always demanding that things be done his way or else. What bothers me most is that he has a low opinion of women. He’s often said that women should do what they are told and stay home and take care of the house and family. And worse, he’s even said how “dirty” women are in regard to their menstrual cycles, and that is why he has never talked about sex. He does seem like a good person — he’s very intelligent and many people like him. He says he loves me, but he says that to everyone. I’m not sure about his intentions and wonder whether I should pursue this relationship or not. — California Gal Dear California: Run, don’t walk. This man is not partner material. He may seem intelligent and nice, but he will expect you to be at his beck and call, and he will have little respect for you. And intimacy? Forget it. The most you can expect is a bossy kind of one-sided friendship, and we don’t need a crystal ball to know that he won’t make you happy. Sorry. Dear Annie: When my neighbors take their annual two-week vacation, I water their extensive flowers every day and take in their mail. I’ve been doing this for 10 years, and all I ever received was a thank-you and a few daylily transplants. Recently, I had a severe bout with diverticulitis and was in a lot of pain. I could hardly pick up my own mail, much less theirs. This didn’t make the wife happy. I also need surgery and asked whether she would take my terrier, and she refused. She’s
Sheinwold’s bridge
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Being concerned about your funds makes sense, especially since you have little control over a work situation. Tonight: Fun does not need to break the bank. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH A surprise from a child or new friend will encourage you to put on your thinking cap in order to make the right decisions. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Remain sensitive to what is taking place in the moment, and you will understand what needs to happen. Tonight: Get some extra zzz’s AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You might want to take off ASAP. If you can, make arrangements to do that — you need a break! Ask a friend or loved one to join you. Tonight: Only where you want to be. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH You could be pushing yourself too hard. Understand what needs to happen with a boss, but know that it might be impossible to change his or her mind. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. Jacqueline Bigar
Chess quiz
WHITE GAINS A PIECE Hint: Set up a multiple fork. Solution: 1. Rxc8ch! Kxc8 2. Nxd6ch! Kd7 3. Nxe4.
Today in history Today is Wednesday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of 2013. There are 83 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Oct. 9, 1813, Giuseppe Verdi, the composer of such classic operas as Aida, La Traviata, Rigoletto and Il Trovatore, was born in the Italian village of Le Roncole. (There is some dispute over Verdi’s date of birth, with numerous sources saying he was actually born on Oct. 10.)
Hocus Focus
taken care of other people’s dogs, so I don’t understand this. I know she will want me to water all of her plants next year, but I don’t think I will, considering she won’t help me in my time of need. I feel used. My dog is 16 years old and healthy, but I worry he won’t survive in a kennel for five days. My handyman is willing to take care of my dog, but he wants $90 per day to come and let him out three times a day. What would you do? — Hurt and Worried Dear Hurt: We assume your dog is as easy to care for as you claim. If so, your handyman is overcharging you. Most dog-sitters charge between $15 and $30 per day. If someone has to come multiple times, they may charge $15 per visit, but it still doesn’t add up to $90 a day. Make sure he didn’t mean $90 for all five days, which would be more than reasonable. You can find reliable pet-sitters online or get a referral from your veterinarian’s office. And if you are not able or willing to take care of your neighbors’ mail and flowers, so be it. It is a kindness, not an obligation. Dear Annie: This is for “Leave Us Alone,” who is getting pressure from their families about having children. My wife and I were married at 26 and had our children when we were in our 30s. We spent the first six years of our marriage establishing our careers, beginning our savings, buying our home and taking some great vacations that involved lots of camping and low-cost motels. Reflecting back, I think those years provided a solid foundation for our now 38-year marriage by giving us the experience of working together as a team, providing mutual support to each other as we tackled the challenges of building our careers and sharing our lives. — Still Going Strong
Jumble
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 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. 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. Please email us your thoughts by Sunday, Oct. 13, to comics@sfnewmexican.com
PEANUTS
LA CUCARACHA WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
LUANN
TUNDRA
RETAIL
ZITS
BALDO
STONE SOUP
GET FUZZY
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
ROSE IS ROSE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PARDON MY PLANET
BABY BLUES
NON SEQUITUR
Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-2 Travel C-6
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
LOCAL NEWS
C
Neglect: Denver parents accused of keeping four boys in filth. Page C-4
City considers increasing gross-receipts tax Councilors concerned about revenue losses to state By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican
Santa Fe city officials are discussing whether to phase in or immediately impose a higher grossreceipts tax rate to make up for revenue losses to state government.
In 2004, the Legislature eliminated the grossreceipts tax on food and medicine. The state initially reimbursed local governments under a “hold harmless” provision. But state lawmakers decided this year to phase out those payments through 2030. When the state’s phase out is complete, the city of Santa Fe will lose about $10 million annually. However, local governments can make up the losses by imposing a higher gross-receipts tax on other goods and services.
“The staged implementation certainly seems to address the ever-increasing nature of the reduction from the state,” City Councilor Peter Ives said during a Public Works/CIP & Land Use Committee meeting this week. “At least for the moment, I’m certainly in favor of that.” Councilor Chris Rivera said the city needs to consider all options, including imposing a small increase before the Legislature meets in January. “I know nobody wants to look at tax increases. I surely don’t,” he said. “However, I believe we’re
between a rock and a hard place. Maybe instead of doing a full amount, maybe a smaller amount, in hopes that maybe the Legislature does something to try to relieve or remediate this position they’ve put us in.” A document presented to councilors Monday showed how much revenue the city would collect by imposing an increase of one-eighth of a cent per dollar spent on taxable transactions every
sinkhole slows water, traffic
Please see tax, Page C-4
Navajos agree to end horse roundups By Jeri Clausing
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — The Navajo Nation says it will end its wild horse roundups and reverse its public support for a return to domestic horse slaughter following talks with former Gov. Bill Richardson. Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly said Tuesday that he met with Richardson over the weekend and they agreed to work together to find more long-term and humane solutions to the horse overpopulation problem. Richardson and actor Robert Redford created the Foundation to Protect New Mexico Wildlife this summer to fight efforts by a Roswell company and others to slaughter horses. Shortly after the foundation was announced, the Navajo Nation came out in support of the company, saying it has 75,000 feral horses drinking wells dry and causing ecological damage to the drought-stricken range. It has also been rounding up
Please see HoRse, Page C-3
ABOVE: A water main break Tuesday on the corner of Camino Sierra Vista and Oñate Place. The sinkhole is about 20 feet in diameter. BELOW: ‘I hate seeing all this water go to waste,’ said Vicenta Trujillo of Santa Fe on Tuesday while she collected water for her plants after the water main broke. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Water main break leaves 50 homes without water
The New Mexican
By Anne Constable The New Mexican
a
water main break early Tuesday opened up a 20-foot-long, oval-shaped sinkhole at Camino Sierra Vista and Oñate Place, released a river of water, disrupted traffic in the west-side neighborhood and left 50 homes without water while crews worked into the night to repair the problem. Jennifer Trujillo said water began gushing through the break in the asphalt, filling the hole and running down the street starting at about 12:45 p.m. She said she was worried about her home’s foundation, although when she checked the basement in the afternoon it was not wet. She was trying to figure out how to get out to collect her children, 14 and 16, from school — and how she was going to cook dinner without water. She said her father, who lives next door, had anticipated such a situation and filled some plastic bottles with drinking water. Vicenta Trujillo, 84, used the opportunity to collect runaway water with a 10-gallon bucket and water her trees. The water pulsed through the break under high pressure for about three and a half hours. The city’s emergency manager, Andrew Phelps, didn’t have an estimate of how much water was lost, but, “It was a lot.” He said crews were able to shut the water off at about 4:10 p.m. The homes left without water Tuesday evening were along Camino Sierra Vista between Salazar and Alarid streets. Phelps said it would take about another 12 hours to replace the section of water main that ruptured. He blamed the break on aging infrastructure. Staff from the City Water Division, Public Utilities Department, Public Works Department, police, firefighters, New Mexico Gas and Public Service Company of New Mexico all responded to the emergency. PNM was worried that the high volume of water might threaten a utility poll in the area and the company shut off power to about 140 homes in case it fell down. Phelps said power should be restored Tuesday night.
Paseo road crews to finish by Friday
It’s the biggest mess you have ever seen. It’s like being “ in a sci-fi movie. It was unimaginable.” Dolores Martinez
The high pressure and turbidity of the water pushed dirt and rocks around, loosening the base of the pavement, “creating a bridge where there should be no bridge,” Phelps said. The substructure of the road was washed away and water gushed through the cracks, Phelps said. The sinkhole measures about 20 feet long and 12 to 14 feet across. The storm drains did their job, he added. Some water flowed past the first drains in the road, but at about the fourth or fifth drain, Phelps said, the road was fairly dry. He said there were no reports of flooding. Phelps said there was a delay in shutting off water pressure because crews had a hard time finding the correct valve. When they did find the right one (near Alarid Street), it was hard to turn off because of the high pressure. Phelps said city utility crews will assess where further work is needed on the water main. By Tues-
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com
day evening they had pumped the water from the sinkhole. It typically takes 24 hours to restore water to residential pipes. Meanwhile traffic was being diverted. There also is some ongoing roadwork on St. Francis Drive between Mercer Street and Camino Sierra Vista. Dolores Martinez, who lives right across from the sinkhole, said she and her husband, Ben, had both power and water because their house is not connected to the main that broke. She said the crawl space under their home was OK. Standing outside surveying the scene, she said, “It’s the biggest mess you have ever seen. It’s like being in a sci-fi movie. It was unimaginable.” Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@ sfnewmexican.com.
The detour at East Palace Avenue and Paseo de Peralta adjacent to the Drury Hotel construction site will likely be lifted by Friday. A southbound lane of Paseo de Peralta has been closed since last week and traffic rerouted down Palace Avenue. The three-part road project is on schedule and should be completed in the seven or eight days initially allotted. Street crews are extending the curb on the south side to make it safer for motorists traveling east on Palace to make a right on a red light at the intersection with Paseo de Peralta. Currently, visibility at that corner is significantly reduced. The second part of the project involves creating a deceleration lane that will allow people turning right into the Drury Hotel to avoid causing a traffic backup. The third part involves a new median that will segregate motorists traveling north on Paseo de Peralta who want to turn left into the new hotel. It will allow them to queue up without blocking cars continuing around Paseo. The hotel is on track to open next spring, possibly as early as April, according to Brian Nenninger, project development manager for Drury Hotels. He said workers have already begun tiling and plastering inside the 182-room (phase 1) hotel located in the former hospital. There will be some short-term lane closures on East Palace when the sidewalk is being replaced and trucks are delivering concrete, he said. But those closures will likely be for an afternoon, or at the most a day. The exterior painting, stucco and brickwork should be finished by the end of October, Nenninger said.
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
C-2
LOCAL NEWS
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Police notes Funeral services and memorials The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Victoria A. Lopez, 21, 2491 Sawmill Road, was arrested late Monday on charges of aggravated battery against a household member, resisting or obstructing an officer, possession of drug paraphernalia and indecent exposure. u Officers responding to a report of a fight at Kmart, 1712 St. Michael’s Drive, arrived to find that the store security officer had detained a male juvenile who was allegedly attempting to shoplift a $22 memory card. The young man was released to his mother. u An iPad was stolen from a residence in the 2800 block of Cerrillos Road early Friday. u A sleeping bag and a ring were stolen from an unlocked vehicle parked in the 2300 block of Camino del Prado late Tuesday or early Wednesday. u A Texas woman reported that someone stole her purse from outside the Loretto Chapel while she was shopping Monday. u A Santa Fe woman reported that someone stole her purse while she was sitting at the bar at the Inn and Spa at Loretto. u A Santa Fe woman reported that, as of about 7 p.m. Monday, her 14-yearold daughter had not returned home from school. u A Santa Fe woman reported that, as of about 9:45 p.m. Monday, her 13-year-old son had not returned home from school. u A man and his two children allegedly shoplifted from Hobby Lobby at 2020 Cerrillos Road on Friday morning, according to a police report. u Someone stole a woman’s purse from a vehicle parked in the 3400 block of Zafarano Avenue on Friday morning. The unknown suspects smashed the rear passenger side window of the vehicle. u Someone stole a tractor rake from a city of Santa Fe maintenance yard in the 1100 block of Siler Road sometime between Monday and Wednesday. u A laptop, flat-screen television, Olympus camera and a checkbook were stolen from a residence in the 700 block of Columbia Street sometime between 10 a.m. and noon Monday. u Someone stole about $12 in change from a residence in the 600 block of Alicia Street sometime Tuesday. The victim told police the unknown suspect caused $500 worth of damage to a window to gain entry into the home. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A wood-burning stove valued at $650 was stolen from the front yard of a residence on Povi Pin Poe in Nambé sometime Sunday or Monday. u A bronze sculpture, a copper pot and a brass fixture with a combined value of about $10,000 were stolen from the front yard of a home on Yerba Buena sometime between Sept. 30 and Monday. u Noel Martinez, 42, of Santa Fe was arrested on a charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon Monday after he allegedly pointed a double barrel shotgun at a man in another vehicle while both men were stopped for a red light at the intersection of U.S. 84/285 and County Road 109. u A firearm was stolen from a residence on Thompson Road in Edgewood sometime over the weekend.
Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speed-enforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at E.J. Martinez Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Galisteo Street at West Alicante Road at other times; SUV No. 2 at Nava Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Siringo Road at Calle de Sueños at other times; SUV No. 3 at Rodeo Road between Richards Avenue and Paseo de los Pueblos.
FELIX RONQUILLO SR. 92, Passed away October 5, 2013. He was called home to be with our Lord and his loving wife, son, and family. He was preceded in death by his wife, Candelaria and son, Felix Jr., as well as his parents, brothers, sister and numerous other relatives. He leaves behind his loving daughter, Rosaline and son, John and other relatives. Felix served in World War II for his country an d returned home to marry and start his life with his new family. Felix was loved and inspired by most he met along the road of life and his children are constantly reminded of this gift he had from those he knew. He worked hard all his life and was a perfectionist in every task he undertook. He will be greatly missed by all who were fortunate to meet and know him but our consolation is that he is with the Lord and reunited with his loved
ones. A Rosary will be recited on Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 9:00 a.m. followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 10:00 a.m. at Our Lady of Guadalupe Santuario Catholic Church in Santa Fe. Interment will be held 11:15 a.m. at Santa Fe National Cemetery. The family wishes to express its heartfelt gratitude for all the wonderful help and support Felix received in the last chapter of his life including the exceptional staff of Del Corazon Hospice especially David Nichols, and Charity Romero (nurses), Hampton Mabry, Sandra Lopez, the thoughtful and compassionate personal care of Santa Fe Cares, exceptional home aids of Valeria Gonzales and Virginia Quintana, spiritual support of Father Tri of Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, and Father Nathan of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church , Home Instead, and special neighbors and friends who were always there for support with loving kindness during this very stressful time.
Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com
DR. JUAN JESUS TELLEZ DR. JUAN JESUS TELLEZ, 83 of Santa Fe, New Mexico, beloved husband of Marilyn for 45 years and devoted father of Anita Xochitl and Daniel Carlos, died October 4, 2013. Loving son of the late Mateo Tellez-Perez and Adolfa Tellez-Rodriguez, he is preceded in death by his wife Marilyn, his brothers, Joaquin Tellez, Jose Tellez, Daniel Tellez and Maximilliano Tellez and his sisters, Maria Tellez and Adela Tellez. Born October 1929 he was a graduate of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Medical school. He served as chief resident for three New York City hospitals where he met his wife Marilyn Lou Frantz of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Formerly of Bismarck, North Dakota, Las Vegas, New Mexico and Silver City, New Mexico, during much of his career he worked as a staff physician at the State Hospital and Fort Bayard Medical Center. He had a passion for southwest cultural traditions and after relocating to Santa Fe, New Mexico he enjoyed volunteering and participating in festivities at El Rancho De Las Golondrinas. He also enjoyed taking swimming and astronomy classes at the Santa Fe Community College and painting with oils at home, including a beautiful portrait of his beloved late wife. He looked forward every year to attending the annual Whitehawk Antique Ethnographic Art show and dining out at favorite Santa Fe’s restaurants. We already miss his sense of humor, zest for life and great companionship. Heartfelt appreciation to Dr. Thron and Ambercare Hospice and Home Instead. A funeral mass in celebration of his life will be held on Friday, October 11, 2013 at Noon at St. Francis Cathedral with burial at Rosario Cemetary Mausoleum following.
Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com Happy 1st Birthday! Anthony Lujan-Ortega 10/9/12 - 05/04/13
HILDA E. WHARTON AGE 101 Hilda was born Hilda E. Raby in Michigan to James and Belinda (Rominger) Raby on November 8, 1911. She moved with her parents to the San Luis Valley in 1913 and was raised in Saguache Colorado. She graduated from Saguache High School , attended Barnes Business School in Denver. On returning home to Saguache, she married Walter W. Wharton and the two of them raised 3 out of 4 children born to them. Hilda and Walter lived in Saguache and Alamosa Colorado before moving to Farmington New Mexico in 1955, where she resided until moving to Santa Fe in 2009. Her hobbies included fishing, needle work, and playing Bingo. She was a lifetime members of Eastern Star and Elks lodge. She is survived by two children, Neola (Rod) Lewis, Pueblo Colorado, George (Pat) Wharton Santa Fe, NM. Son in law Robert Holtgren, 14 grandchildren, 18 Great grandchildren, and 10 Great-Great Grandchildren. Hilda was preceded in death by her husband, Walter W. Wharton of 44 years in 1975, Parents, Brothers and Sisters, son William, daughter Myrna (Bob) Holtgren , grandsons Darrell Holtgren and Jerry Wharton There will be a graveside service at Greenlawn Cemetery Farmington at 1:00 P.M. on Thursday Oct. 10, 2013 followed by a get together of family and friends at Farmington United Methodist Church. Please no flowers, you can make donations to your favorite charity.
The infant days are past, and baby boys must grow. They learn to sit, and then to stand, too soon they all let go. But do they grow in Heaven Lord? If only I could see past the sun... For if they do my little boy today is turning one. In my heart I see him there, playing on a cloud. With his little Angel friends, together they are proud! Angel cake & white ice-cream is served for all around... As he sits upon Jesus’ lap, with all his love abound. They laugh and run, dance and play amongst a billowy field. Together there they hurt no more... their little hearts are healed. The tubes and wires, tapes & blisters, they’re no longer there. No more poking, no more prodding, winds of love blow through his hair. From infant to this little boy, how fast the time went by. Some days it seemed the world stood still, at times it seemed to fly. Today as one year has passed, alone we’ll spend in thought. We’ll celebrate a life that was, and share what all he’s taught. The bond that links us with this child, too strong to ever sway. In our hearts & in our dreams, he’s never far away...
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Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhom e.com
MARGARET BLUCK GONZALES Margaret Bluck Gonzales, 81, died on Saturday, October 5th at her home in Santa Fe. A native of Santa Fe, and a graduate of Santa Fe High School, she was born in 1932, the daughter of the late Harry and Margaret Cecilia Bluck. She lived her entire life in the same house following her first six months living in a tent on the property while her father built the family home. She is survived by a sister, Rosie Franko of Naples, Florida, a niece, Joann Jacobs, of Bend OR, Loretta Kondas, Patricia Fischer of Naples and many relatives in New Jersey. Mrs. Gonzales was predeceased by her husband, John Gonzales, an army veteran who died in 1986. Her brothers, Robert Bluck, Henry Bluck and sisters Elsie Gomez and Josephine Swanson. A retired state employee who worked at the State Capitol Library. Mrs. Gonzales became involved in helping others, first through the Ladies Auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) in Santa Fe. She then helped feed the hungry in the soup kitchen of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Santa Fe. This was followed by a life-time devotion to Food for Santa Fe, an all volunteer organization whose mission is to provide supplemental food on a regular basis to families needing assistance. As a board member of more than twenty years, her responsibilities were many, especially with the Healthy Snacks for Children Program, whereby children in the vehicles of the drive-thru operation are given two cartons of milk and snacks of applesauce cups, cheese sticks, or boxes of raisins or cereal. A familiar sight at the warehouse, she reigned supreme with compassion and caring, even as her health began to fail and walking became increasingly more difficult. Nevertheless, she commanded great respect from all who knew her because she considered her longstanding service to be an integral part of her life. Mrs. Gonzales represented Food for Santa Fe in the City of Santa Fe’s Retired Seniors Volunteer Program (RSVP), keeping logs for all FFSF volunteers who are also members of the RSVP. In 2004, the President’s Council for Service and Civic Participation presented her with the President’s Volunteer Service Award in recognition and appreciation for her commitment to strengthening the nation and for making a difference through volunteer service. She credited her humble beginnings living in a tent with bringing her closer to those in need. Recitation of the Rosary will be at 7:00 pm, Wednesday, October 9, 2013 at Rivera Family Chapel, 417 E. Rodeo Road, Santa Fe, NM. A funeral mass to celebrate her life will be held on Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 9:00am at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 1301 Osage Avenue. Burial will follow at the Santa Fe National Cemetery, 501 North Guadalupe Street, where she will be interred next to her husband. In lieu of flowers, the family has requested that donations in her name be made to Food for Santa Fe, P.O. Box 31086 Santa Fe, NM 87594.
Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com
NANCY SMITH Nancy Anne Noble Smith, 77 died peacefully Sunday October 7, 2013 due to complications of ovarian cancer. Nancy was born in Raleigh, NC to the late Richard and Mayona Noble. Nancy leaves the arms of her loving family, wonderful friends and neighbors into the arms of her savior Jesus Christ. Nancy graduated from Garner High School, Class of 1954 and UNC Chapel Hill School of Nursing Class of 1958 BSRN. Nancy was a County Health Nurse in Durham and Wake County Health Department until 1962 to repay her School of Nursing loan by the State of North Carolina. She and Charles were married June 14, 1958 after which she made 14 houses into 14 homes in five states. The final transfer was to Santa Fe, NM in 1973. Nancy was active in community and neighbor activities in Smithfield and Badin, NC, Massena, NY, Waverly, Ohio, Pittsburgh twice and Lancaster, PA. And in Santa Fe for 40 years she would be considered a native Santa Fean -New Comers, Dig & Hope Garden Club, Santa Fe Woman’s Club, Rainbow Makers and Sunshine Girls. She was an accomplished recycle artist, especially from tin cans and with pine cone wreaths. Nancy was preceded in death by her two brothers, Richard and JC Noble. She is survived by her husband of 55 years Charles, sons Charles H. Jr., Los Alamos and Richard Carter Smith, Auburn, AL; Grandchildren: Olivia, Andrea and Scott, Auburn, AL and Dustin, Clayton and Reese, Texas. The family is especially thankful for the care provided by the present wonderful doctors, nurses and aids at Christus Saint Vincent Hospital, Cancer enter and Wound Center and private practice doctors Deborah Werenko, MD and Richard Honsinger, MD. In lieu of flowers the family is requesting that donations be made to the local Cancer Centers in her name. Visitation will be on Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 7:30 a.m. at the Berardinelli Family Funeral Service Chapel. Services will be held on Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 8:30 a.m. at the Berardinelli Family Funeral Service Chapel. Burial will follow at Santa Fe National Cemetery at 9:45 a.m.
Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com
Obituaries can be purchased through a funeral home or by calling our classifieds department at 986-3000, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you need to place a death notice after business hours, please call The New Mexican newsroom at 986-3035.
LOCAL & REGION
In brief
The federal government partial shutdown apparently has begun to affect Los Alamos National Laboratory. The Los Alamos Monitor reported Tuesday that LANL suspended its operations for processing and shipping transuranic waste to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in Carlsbad. KOAT-TV said a halt in cleanup work at the lab put a total of 275 people out of work. Four shipments already loaded will be completed, the newspaper reported, but other nuclear material has been secured and facilities put into a “safety standby” condition. While the stand down order reportedly mostly affected EnergySolutions subcontractors, certain other environmental monitoring operations, including those supporting the Santa Fe water system, continue. A lab spokesman told KOAT that the halt in cleanup work doesn’t threaten residents because only nonessential work has been suspended.
Light turnout at superintendent’s forum Santa Fe Public Schools Superintendent Joel Boyd had planned to brief and receive feedback from students, teachers and parents at a public forum Tuesday evening on the school district’s annual progress. But only a couple of teachers and a few parents showed up at the Amy Biehl Community School. It was the first of five public forums scheduled by Boyd. Since becoming superintendent a year ago, Boyd has proposed changes to the district’s high schools. Some of his proposals have brought a mixed reaction from teachers, students and parents who say that some of Boyd’s proposed changes can limit educational options. Boyd said he doesn’t expect his ideas to be popular across the board, which is why he has planned public events to hear community concerns. He explained that the small turnout could mean that perhaps parents and students have voiced their opinions through other channels or other public events the district has hosted. “Or perhaps the discontent is not as widespread as you might assume,” he said. Remaining forums, all at 6 p.m., are scheduled for Oct. 9 at Ramirez Thomas Elementary School, Oct. 16 at Atalaya Elementary, Oct. 29 at Piñon Elementary and Nov. 7 at Agua Fría Elementary.
Los Alamos police chief applicant accepts job offer Los Alamos County Administrator Harry Burgess announced Tuesday evening that Dino Sgambellone, currently police chief in Mansfield, Ohio, has accepted an offer to become the next police chief of Los Alamos County. The hiring for the department director posi-
One of world’s leading childhood leukemia experts dies in Calif. Santa Fe Public Schools Superintendent Joel Boyd meets Tuesday at the Amy Biehl Community School with a small group of people during the first of a series of community forums. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
tion is subject to approval by the Los Alamos County Council at its Oct. 29 meeting. If approved, Sgambellone’s first day in the office would be Nov. 12. He would succeed Wayne Torpy who in June announced his retirement as chief after he suffered a stroke.
Santa Fe Children’s Fishing Derby returns Saturday After a two-year hiatus caused by the drought, the city of Santa Fe’s annual Children’s Fishing Derby will return Saturday. City Councilor Ron Trujillo, a backer of the event, said Monday that water flows in the Santa Fe River from recent rains and the draining of Nichols Reservoir have allowed the city to restart the derby. “Even though it is a little late, because usually when we have the fishing derby it’s in July, but you know what? Better late than never,” he said. “Every year that we’ve had it, it’s been a success.” The free fishing derby will be from 7 a.m. to noon along the river between Don Gaspar and Old Santa Fe Trail in front of the state Land Office Building, he said. While anyone with a fishing license can fish on the river, Trujillo said the event is aimed at children 11 and under.
Nominations sought for ‘10 Who Made a Difference’ Each year The New Mexican honors volunteers in the community with a special section on Thanksgiving Day, “10 Who Made a Difference.” The newspaper is now soliciting nominations for the honor. If you know someone who has made a difference with his or her volunteer work and lives in Northern New Mexico, please send us a short letter. Nominations should include the person’s name and contact information and a short description of their accomplishment. Nominators should also include a way they can be reached — by both email and telephone. Send nominations by email to Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com or call 986-3034 with questions. The deadline is Oct. 18.
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ALBUQUERQUE — Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry has won a second term as returns late Tuesday showed him claiming nearly 68 percent of the vote to lead the state’s largest city. Berry’s huge lead with more than 50 percent of the vote over two Democratic challengers means he will avoid a runoff election. Berry, a Republican, is the first mayor to be elected with more than half the vote since the current form of government was adopted in the early 1970s. And with all votes counted, Berry exceeded that mark by a
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issued a permit this summer, but litigation by animal protection groups has delayed its planned August opening. The return to domestic slaughter has divided horse rescue and animal welfare groups, ranchers, politicians and Indian tribes about what is the most humane way to deal with the country’s horse overpopulation. Much of the debate also focuses on whether they are companion animals or livestock. Supporters of a return to domestic horse slaughter argue that it is a more humane solution than shipping unhealthy and starving animals south of the border to facilities with unregulated and often cruel circumstances.
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unaddressed putting us in the situation we are today where chapters are facing real problems with uncared for animals damaging local land and domestic livestock. I am thankful we can partner with agencies that have resources to help us find real long-term solutions.” Richardson said that persuading Shelly to change his position on horse roundups and slaughter “is exactly the outcome horse advocates, such as myself, had hoped for.” Congress effectively banned horse slaughter by cutting funding for plant inspectors in 2006. The ban was lifted in 2011, and Valley Meat Co. has been battling ever since for permission to open its converted cattle slaughterhouse. The USDA
hood Leukemia and the Environment, funded in 2010 by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and U.S. Environmental Protection
the first person in her family to go to college by attended CathoInternationally known childlic University of America in hood-cancer expert Patricia Washington, D.C. After receivBuffler, who with her husband ing a bachelor’s degree in nurshad a second home in Santa Fe, ing and biology, she moved to died Sept. 26 of a stroke at her New York City where she was a office at the University of Calipublic health nurse in Harlem. fornia, Berkeley. Patricia In New York, she met her Buffler, 75, was a former dean Buffler future husband on a blind date. at Berkeley’s School of Public Richard Buffler was then a U.S. Health. At the time of her death, Agency. Navy communications officer she held the Kenneth and MarOver the years, her studies stationed in Rhode Island. jorie Kaiser Chair in Cancer found that attending daycare Epidemiology and was leading They married in 1962 and soon had a protective effect and that several large research programs diagnostic X-rays increased the moved to California where related to childhood leukemia risk of acute lymphoblastic leu- Richard obtained a doctorate and other childhood cancers. kemia, the most common child- degree in geology at UC BerkeAccording to a news release hood cancer. ley, while Patricia worked as a from UC Berkeley, Buffler “No question she was one of public health nurse in Alameda launched the California Childthe world’s leading researchers County. She then earned a mashood Leukemia Study in 1995 in childhood leukemia, but also ter’s in public health in 1965 and to investigate the relationship in cancer epidemiology,” said a doctorate in epidemiology in between diet, genes, infections Arthur Reingold, UC Berkeley 1973, both from UC Berkeley. and environmental exposures professor and head of epideFrom 1974 to 1991, Buffler held and the development of the miology. “It is standard now to several faculty positions at the often-fatal blood cancer. look at the interaction of genetic University of Texas, ending as “With over 1,300 cases of determinants and environmenfull professor of epidemiology childhood leukemia included to tal factors in disease, but Pat at the School of Public Health in date, the study is one of the larg- was one of the first people to est in the world, with an unpar- apply it to leukemia. Because of Houston. She began her 22-year allelled breadth of exposure and her work, we now have a better tenure at UC Berkeley in 1991 genetic data,” the release says. understanding of a rare disease. when she joined the faculty as professor of epidemiology and Buffler also was the principal Her loss is enormous.” dean of the School of Public investigator of the Center for Born Aug. 1, 1938, in Integrative Research on ChildDoylestown, Pa., she became Health. The New Mexican
Horse: Debate on companion animal vs. livestock question and selling horses, knowing some would likely make their way to horse slaughter plants south of the border. But in a statement issued Tuesday, Shelly said the tribe will pull back its support for the plant and suspend horse round ups while it works with the foundation and other groups to develop and implement alternative policies to manage feral horse populations. Possible solutions include equine birth control, adoption, land management and public education. “Our land is precious to the Navajo people as are all the horses on the Navajo Nation. Horses are sacred animals to us. Both the land and the animals must be responsibly managed,” Shelly said in a statement. “For too long this issue has gone
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PATRICIA BUFFLER: 1938-2013
Shutdown blamed for halt in LANL cleanup work
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Denver parents accused Intoxicated mom’s child of keeping 4 boys in filth abuse conviction reversed Court: Prosecutors failed to show she endangered child
By Colleen Slevin
The Associated Press
DENVER — A Denver couple accused of keeping four malnourished young children in a filthy apartment pleaded guilty to neglecting three other children under strikingly similar conditions in 2006, court records show. The parents, Wayne Sperling and Lorinda Bailey, appeared in court Tuesday on felony childabuse charges. Authorities say their four boys, ages 2 to 6, lived in a rank-smelling apartment littered with cat feces, flies and urine. The boys could not speak and only grunted, authorities said. Police found similar conditions at the couple’s apartment in 2006, when they had three other children, records released Tuesday show. All seven kids were placed with a child services agency. No other details were available on their current status or whereabouts. Bailey, 35, is free on bond. She declined to comment after leaving court Tuesday. Sperling, 66, is still in custody and appeared in court with his long white hair in a ponytail and wearing a long, flowing beard. His attorney made no public statement. Neighbors said they repeatedly complained to authorities about the boys’ care but nothing happened. The state Department of Human Services is reviewing the handling of the case because it meets “egregious” criteria, agency spokeswoman Liz McDonough said. McDonough said she could not comment on specifics of the review but said it would include case notes and whether procedures were followed. Police said the children found in 2006 were dirty, wore unwashed clothing and had not been fed for several hours. The oldest, age 4 at the time, spoke few words and mostly grunted and pointed to communicate, the records show. Passers-by called police in the 2006 case to say a 2-yearold and a 4-year-old were play-
By Barry Massey
The Associated Press
A man walks past the Denver residence of Wayne Sperling on Tuesday, the day of the first hearing in his felony child abuse case. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
caseworker. Bruising behind the child’s right ear appeared consistent with pinching, the doctor said. Denver police officer N. Rocco-McKeel accompanied the caseworker to the apartment in a brick building near downtown, where they found Lorinda Wayne the other three boys. Bailey Sperling The officer noted that flies covered every surface in one ing in the street. Officers said room and that he couldn’t they found rotten food, trash determine any age or develand insects in the apartment. opmental differences between Shortly after the officers responded, Sperling and Bailey the three children at home. He saw a single mattress and a arrived at the home with their bunk bed set, but none had any third child, then 3 months old, sheets or pillows. He said he the records show. couldn’t find the source of the The parents pleaded guilty decaying smell but believed it to misdemeanor child-abuse came from a room at the back charges in that case and were of the apartment. ordered to serve probation and The children were placed take parenting classes. in protective custody. HospiThe three children in that tal exams showed they were case had different dates of birth malnourished and not toiletthan the four boys in the curtrained. They also determined rent case, the records show. the boys were “nonverbal.” The records identify Sperling The mother said she thought and Bailey as the parents of all the apartment was safe, and she seven. denied that the boys had any The latest charges came after developmental delays. She said an investigation that began she had been living alone in a Sept. 29, when Bailey took her separate unit of the building youngest son to St. Joseph’s for the past two months, but Children’s Hospital for a cut on still saw the children every day his forehead that she said hapexcept Saturday and Sunday, pened after a fall. when she worked. Officials An emergency room doctor confirmed that she worked informed authorities that the as a parking lot attendant at a 2-year-old was unwashed and nearby event hall. smelled like cigarette smoke, Sperling told investigators he prompting a welfare check was unemployed and has been by a Denver Human Services the boys’ primary guardian.
Tax: County hasn’t decided Continued from Page C-1 five years or a three-eighths of a cent hike right away. Rivera said the city may also decide just to wait. “We’re in a tough position,” he said. “If we are too aggressive, we potentially put a tax on the people that may not be necessary. If we’re not aggressive enough, we potentially
lose out.” The city should also take Santa Fe County’s plans into consideration, Isaac “Ike” Pino, the city’s public works director, told the committee. “There’s still a question up in the air as to what happens when the county — if the county — chooses to implement part of the hold harmless, whether that cuts into our abil-
The state Court of Appeals has overturned the felony child abuse conviction of a Curry County woman whose 3-yearold son was found wandering outside her apartment at 2 a.m. wearing only a dirty diaper. The court said in a split decision on Monday that there wasn’t enough evidence to support Samantha Garcia’s conviction of negligent child abuse by endangerment. Garcia had been sentenced to three years in prison, but a district court judge suspended the jail time and placed her on supervised probation. The attorney general’s office hasn’t decided whether to ask the state Supreme Court to review the decision, according to a spokesman. A neighbor found the crying boy in May 2010 in an apartment parking lot. The neighbor returned the child to the apartment and the door was ajar. The mother was asleep inside her apartment, where Clovis police discovered a marijuana pipe,
a partially burned marijuana cigarette along with empty beer cans, vodka bottles, vomit on the floor and a knife in the bedroom. A man, who was not the child’s father, was lying on the bedroom floor, face down in a dirty diaper, according to the court ruling. The neighbor had called police and tried to awaken Garcia, who opened and closed her eyes and said, “It’s OK.” The court’s majority said prosecutors failed to show that Garcia’s intoxication put the child in a situation that endangered the boy and that she should have known of the danger but disregarded the risk. “It is both imprudent and generally negligent to use drugs and alcohol while being responsible for a child,” wrote Judge Timothy Garcia. “But we refuse to hold that a defendant who gets intoxicated and falls asleep in the same apartment as her child, with nothing more, is criminally negligent.” Judge Jonathan Sutin said in a concurring opinion, “Even were one to assume defendant THE GIFT SHOP DIFFERENT…
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fell asleep without first locking the door in a failsafe manner to prevent child from leaving, to uphold defendant’s conviction in this case is to set a very worrisome, if not dangerous precedent — one paramount to saying that any parent of a child who becomes intoxicated in his or her own home, or even one who takes sleep-inducing drugs such as sleeping pills, muscle relaxants, or cold medication and then falls into a heavy or deep sleep forgetting to first secure all doors outside, is chargeable for a third degree felony should his or her child go outside with exposure to possible harm.” Judge Michael Vigil said in a dissenting opinion that there was enough evidence to support Garcia’s conviction, but he would have reversed it and ordered a new trial because the judge was wrong in not allowing the jury to consider whether Garcia committed felony child abuse or a misdemeanor of abandonment of a child.
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ity to get the full three-eighths or not,” Pino said. “In my way of thinking, getting ahead of that certainly makes sense.” A county spokeswoman said Tuesday that county officials haven’t yet decided what to do about the revenue losses. At the city, council members requested a study of the pros and cons of each option.
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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What medium is used more than Google? The answer is …. wait for it, wait for it …. NEWSPAPERS! Unbelievable? Not if you’re one of the 131 million Americans who have read a newspaper in the past week. In print and online, newspapers deliver more customers in seven days than Google does in a month (126 million), according to Scarborough Research, 2013 R1.
If you’re not reading newspapers yet, remember it’s never too late to get in on a great thing. And if you’re in business and want to reach the masses, there’s no better way to reach a large fan base than through America’s daily and weekly newspapers.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Top ghost towns
TRAVEL
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
H
alloween is synonymous with costumes, an abundance of bite-sized candy and adorable photos of children dressed as cartoon characters, super heroes and creatures. However, the spirit of Halloween can also influence your travels. Rather than focusing on haunted destinations, the members and editors of VirtualTourist.com have compiled a list of those places that have been abruptly abandoned, their emptiness and the signs of people up and disappearing making them spooky and eerie. Here are VirtualTourist’s Top 5 ghost towns:
Stunning views, hands-on attractions and affordable travel system make Switzerland a great getaway for Americans with children
1. Hashima island, Japan Hashima Island once had the highest population density in history, with more than 5,000 full-time residents, despite the island being only 1,575 feet long and 492 feet wide. The island served as a coal mine and was built with housing to accommodate workers, making it resemble a battleship and earning the location the nickname “Gunkanjima,” or “battleship island” in Japanese. When the mine was closed in 1974, residents had to vacate, and the island remained closed to the public for many years. In April 2009, a new boat dock made it possible for tour boats to land at Gunkanjima, and the 45-minute tours of the island are becoming popular. In addition to visiting the ruins, the 50-minute boat ride from Nagasaki to Gunkanjima provides great views.
2. Prypiat, Ukraine
A train ride offers incredible views in Switzerland. MCT PHOTOS
Swiss family fun By Samantha Feuss
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
S
witzerland is a wonderful place to take the family. With majestic mountains, lovely lakes and train rides that are visually stunning as you cruise through the country en route to your destination, you and yours are in for a treat as soon as you set foot in this friendly and hospitable country. It’s also an affordable option for Americans wanting to travel in Europe, with family friendly options such as the Swiss Pass to make saving money easier as you traverse. It offers unlimited travel on the Swiss Travel System, which includes trains, boats, buses, local urban transportation systems, and free entry to more than 450 museums. You also get free Wi-Fi, and access to the Fast Baggage service, which provides same-day luggage delivery between 46 cities in Switzerland, according to the Switzerland Tourism Department. One must-see spot in the country is Mount Pilatus, a 7,000-foot mountaintop that is accessible via train, aerial cable way, gondola and the world’s steepest cogwheel rail. If you decide to take the “Golden Round Trip,” you can view some of the best scenery in Switzerland in one day. From the boat tour beginning in Lake Lucerne, you ride in comfort either in the inside or outside of the boat on crystalclear waters surrounded by mountains. Some passengers may choose to get off at one of several stops, such as restaurants or the Swiss Museum of Transport. Take the boat to Aspnachstad (the aforementioned steepest cog in the world) and then to Pilatus Klum’s peak, at nearly 7,000 feet above sea level, viewing amazing sights and scenery all along the way. The cog up to the top is both exhilarating and a little frightening — it is very steep, and those lovely views will make some hold onto their seats a little
tighter. From the top, one can view more than 70 peaks and five lakes. You can also visit several restaurants, spend some time at one of Mount Pilatus’ adventure parks, go tobogganing or head over to the rope park. These are in operation from May to November, weather permitting. If you head back to Lucerne, stop by Chapel Bridge, the most photographed place in Switzerland. This old bridge and tower, with paintings dating back to the 1300s, spans the river and has become a symbol of Lucerne that you don’t want to miss. If you want to indulge in a traditional Swiss meal, the Fondue House is just a few blocks away. Diners can enjoy traditional cheese fondue with a variety of foods to dip in it, as well as a chocolate fondue with fruit for dessert. After coming down from the mountain, an interesting and fun way to spend the day with the kids is at the Agrovision, where you can see how farmers raise animals and foodstuff. Children not only can pet the animals, but there are hands-on experiences to be had. In addition to animals, there is a playground, meeting space for large groups, and an award-winning restaurant on site that serves only local and organic food (most of which is made on the premises). It is amazing to see how they make bread in a giant, old-fashioned oven. A very passionate farmer explained to us that it is not only better living for the animals and people to grow and eat organic, but it ends up costing less money and is better for the environment. He had a lot to say about farming practices and farm-to-table living. I learned a lot, as did my 5-year-old son, who loved the bee exhibit and working hive, learning about the bees and what they do. He also enjoyed petting the animals, of course, and the playground was a huge hit and wonderful way to burn off any excess energy.
No trip to Switzerland would be complete without a visit to the Top Of Europe, otherwise known as Jungfrau. It boasts the highest railway station in Europe, the Jungfraujoch, as well as ski lifts, adventure activities, hiking, snow adventures and an “Ice Palace.” Riding to the top of the Jungfrau, you will be wowed by astonishing views, flora and fauna, and maybe even the gentle falling of snow (even in the summer). There are a variety of hiking trails that offer amazing views of not just the three mountains (Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau) but also Lake Thun and Lake Brienz below. The mountains were named after a legend of a young maiden (Jungfrau) being protected by the monk (or Mönch) from the cruel ogre (or Eiger) who wished to ravish her. As you make your way around the top, there is much to see and do inside as well. There is the Alpine Sensation, where you can “experience” life as it happened in the mountains over the years. Step outside (carefully, it’s slippery!) to the Sphinx, which has the best views in Europe: On a clear day, you can see as far as parts of France, Germany and Italy. Make sure to spend time in the Ice Palace — which is more like a winding cavern of ice sculptures, walls, floors, and ceiling also made of ice. If you just can’t get enough of the views, check out the Sigriswil suspension bridge in Thun. After spending the day touring the castles of Thun (make sure you ask for the kit that allows your child to become a knight — visit three castles, complete the assigned tasks like “jousting” from your wooden horse and some fancy shield work, and by Merlin’s beard you have yourself a little knight!), head over for a unique walk. Suspended high above the air, you feel each step you take move the bridge, the wind causing it to sway. Not for the faint of heart, but if you can stomach it, the views are intense and quite literally breathtaking.
While the name Prypiat isn’t well-known to many travelers, the catalyst for it being abandoned is a name few citizens will soon forget: Chernobyl. The city, which was founded to house workers of the power plant, was evacuated on April 26, 1986, due to an explosion and subsequent radiation leak at Chernobyl. Today, visiting Pripyat, Chernobyl and the surrounding villages requires an easily obtainable day pass issued by the Ukrainian government, and tours are growing in popularity.
3. Kayaköy, anatolia, turkey The village of Kayaköy was once inhabited by 2,000-plus Greek Orthodox citizens, who referred to the town as Levissi or Karmylissos, despite its location in Turkey. In 1923, Greece and Turkey agreed to a compulsory population exchange based on religious ideology, forcing Greek Orthodox citizens of Turkey and the Muslim citizens of Greece to move. The citizens of Kayaköy were forced to leave and were repatriated to Greece. When they left, the village was abandoned. Today, it serves as a museum and historical monument, illustrating the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
4. Jerome, ariz. Once a booming copper camp, Jerome was the fourth-largest city in Arizona in the late 1920s. When the mines closed in the mid-1950s, the population plummeted to 42 residents, and the town became well-known for paranormal activity. Now, the destination is widely regarded for its great photographic setting and quaint artist studios and galleries.
5. Royal Gardens Subdivision in Kilauea, Hawaii In the early 1980s, few seemed to worry that this development was just 3.72 miles from the Kilauea Volcano’s vent. By March 1983, the first house in the subdivision was destroyed by a lava flow, but a few inhabitants remained until the final house was destroyed almost 30 years later in 2012. Under favorable conditions, visitors can see lava flows at the end of the Chain of Craters Road within Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park or from the County Viewing Area at Kalapana, which is free and accessible from Route 130.
In art world, it may pay to travel abroad By Joshua Keating Slate
Share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed twice a week as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.
WASHINGTON — From Gaugin’s voyages to the South Pacific, to Paul Klee’s career-changing trip to Tunisia, travel has often played a significant role in the development of artists’ work. But can you actually demonstrate the impact travel has on an artistic career? University of Hamburg economist Christiane Hellmanzik attempts to measure the effect in a recent paper for the journal Empirical Economics and finds that whether or not travel makes artists better, it at least seems to make them more financially successful. Looking at a dataset of auction prices for “214 most prominent modern visual artists born between 1850 and 1945” — those with prominent entries in the Oxford Dictionary of Visual Art — she found that “artworks produced in the year of a journey are 7 percent more valuable than paintings produced in periods with no travel.” (Journeys are defined as foreign trips lasting less than 12 months.) As you might expect, certain countries, during certain periods, were more valuable to the traveling artist. Overall, trips to France had a significant positive effect on art prices — 6.8 percent — though the effect was far stronger before 1913. In the post-World War II era, “a visit to France was even a drain on productivity.” Travel to Germany was extremely beneficial — 21 percent — although this was driven mainly by “two sequential strong sub-periods from 1914 to 1938,” coinciding with the Bauhaus era. And so much for finding inspiration in Florence or Venice. Hellmanzik writes that “Italy never offers positive returns to travel despite being frequently visited.” Trips undertaken for political reasons had the greatest effect, perhaps indicating that artists’ work improves when they’re freed from government repression or that collectors have a taste for the work of foreign dissidents. Recreational trips were second, and work-related trips had a surprisingly small effect. Overall, the benefit of travel seems to have faded over time. “When decomposing the travel effect over time, we find significant, positive effects for the first two periods: 1870-1913 and the period of the First World War,” she writes. “There is no travel effect for artworks produced after 1918.” Perhaps as foreign travel became easier and more commonplace, it also became less of a comparative advantage for the artists who had done it.
Travel page information: Brian Barker, 986-3058, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
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LASTING IMAGES TOURING TURKEY Gary Iverson took this photo in Turkey’s Cappadocia region, which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. COURTESY GARY IVERSON
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Healthy alternative: Barley with clams has all the flavor of a pasta dish but is better for you. Page D-2
A hearty stew in a fraction of the time Substitute seafood to speed preparation By J.M. Hirsch
The Associated Press
ABOVE: Todd Yocham checks on the brewing process at Duel Brewery on Tuesday. Yocham says that variety and experimentation are what make home brewing so rewarding. BELOW: A glass of Duel Brewery’s Dark Ryder beer. Dark beers are easier for many homebrewers to make because they better disguise off flavors. ‘If you don’t do everything perfectly, you can still have a drinkable beer,’ says Yocham. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
B.I.Y.
(Brew It Yourself) October’s a great time to take up, master the art of beer making BY TANTRI WIJA FOR THE NEW MEXICAN
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t is always a good time for beer. It gets you through the holiday season, cools your summers and revitalizes your springs. But beer gets its very own holiday in autumn — Oktoberfest — that venerated German festival during which busty wenches don lace-up corsets and pass around frothy steins to merry imbibers.
If you live on planet Earth, you can probably find an Oktoberfest celebration near you. (Nothing says vergnügen like lederhosen in Phnom Penh.) And if that isn’t enough fröhlichkeit for you, you can celebrate Oktoberfest all month long with the ultimate do-it-yourself medieval German peasant activity: brewing your own beer. Home brewing is a surprisingly simple process, though executing it really well takes a lot of practice and an almost alchemical touch. Experienced brewers start from scratch by making a mash, or grain heated to extract the sugars, but beginning home brewers can start with an extraction kit that contains premade malt, the brewing equiva-
lent of instant coffee. This extract is essentially a grain tea and is amusingly referred to as wort (and even more amusingly pronounced “wert”). Jami Nordby, owner and operator of Santa Fe Homebrew Supply, explains that for beginners, “an extract-based kit is the easiest way to do it, with malt extract … a fermentable sugar that comes from barley. The kits that we carry contain everything you need to make five gallons of beer.” To begin, Nordby said, beginner brewers must boil the malt in water to make wort. Hops is then added in stages, according to whatever recipe is being used. The variation in the hops process helps create the
flavor signature of the beer. Once that step is completed, the wort must be cooled down as fast as possible, for example by plunging it into a sink of cold water or pouring it through a copper coil. After the wort is diluted with more water, yeast is then added. “Brewing beer,” Nordby explained, “is essentially the process of farming yeast, which digests the sugars and gives off alcohol and CO2.” The resulting mixture is then poured into a fermenter, generally a fivegallon plastic bucket or glass bottle (also known as a carboy.) The fermenter gets
Please see BREW, Page D-2
When fall weather has us hankering for a bowl of warmth, we tend to think of chili and beef stew. The trouble with both of those delicious options is time. The best versions of each tend to require long simmers to really develop the great and comforting flavors we’re looking for. That’s fine for a weekend spent in the apple orchard, but hard to squeeze in during the week when kids and errands are competing for our time at the stove. And that was the inspiration for this delicious seafood stew. It is every bit as rich and flavorful as a good chili or meat-based stew, but cooks up in no time. Unlike beef, which needs a long, low simmer to become tender, seafood prefers to be cooked quickly (otherwise it can toughen up). There aren’t a whole lot of rules for a recipe such as this. Add or subtract ingredients as you see fit. But do cook the seasonings with the oil and onion first, as described in the recipe. This helps them quickly develop the sort of deep flavors you’d normally get from a much longer cooking time. And don’t be put off by the “spicy” in the recipe title. The heat is mild and is there mostly to highlight the other flavors in the dish. SPICY SHRIMP AND HADDOCK STEW Total time: 50 minutes (15 minutes active) makes eight servings 2 tablespoons olive oil 2 russet potatoes, diced 1 large yellow onion, diced 4 cloves garlic, minced 1 teaspoon dried thyme ½ teaspoon smoked paprika ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes ¼ teaspoon fennel seeds, lightly crushed (use the back of a spoon) 2 stalks celery, chopped 15-ounce can diced tomatoes 8-ounce bottle clam juice 2 cups water 1 pound raw, shelled extra-large shrimp 1 pound haddock (or other mild white fish, such as cod or whiting), cut into small chunks ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley 1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill 1 tablespoon lemon juice Salt and ground black pepper Preparation: In a large saucepan over medium-high heat, warm the olive oil. Add the potatoes, onion, garlic, thyme, paprika, red pepper flakes and fennel seeds. Cook, stirring often, until the onion is softened, about 5 minutes. Add the celery, tomatoes (and any juice in the can), clam juice and water. Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to low and cook for 30 minutes, or until the potatoes are tender. Add the shrimp and haddock and increase the heat slightly to maintain a simmer. Cook for 4 to 5 minutes, or just until the shrimp are pink and the haddock flakes easily. Stir in the parsley, dill and lemon juice, then season with salt and pepper.
Is cauliflower the new Brussels sprouts? By David Hagedorn
Special to The Washington Post
If you dine out frequently, you might find that a chef’s influence on what you eat extends beyond the restaurant. As evidence, I pose this question: Have mussels, charcuterie or flatbreads found their way onto your dining room table over the past year or two? The truth is, chefs get bored easily and are always looking for an ingredient, whether never-heard-of or resurrected, that will become the next big thing that diners will revere and their peers will emulate. Even the side-dish section of the menu, is part of a trending phenomenon. If indications on restaurant menus all over the country are accurate, cauliflower may well be the new Brussels sprouts.
Roasted cauliflower gratin. DEB LINDSEY/THE WASHINGTON POST
I admit to a bit of bias. I adore Brussels sprouts, but I find cauliflower to be a much more visibly alluring vegetable, with its bold
globes of cream-white curds and nests of vibrant greenery. Those stocky outer leaves protect the head from sunlight, impeding chlorophyll development and accounting for the vegetable’s color. Its nutritional characteristics are appealing — low in fats and carbs, high in vitamin C and a source of potassium, folate, vitamin B6, fiber and protein — and you can do just about anything to cauliflower in addition to eating it raw, including grating it for “risotto,” as some chefs do. Roasting cauliflower is a preferred method among food pros, for good reason. It rids the vegetable of much of its water, concentrates its flavor and adds the extra dimension of caramelization. Moreover, cauliflower has not escaped the chef’s penchant for deep-frying.
Section editor: Carlos A. López, 986-3099, clopez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com
Inspired by those chefs, I embarked on my own cauliflower experimentation, soon malodorously evident throughout the house. I started off making the risotto, adjusting ingredients, such as using the Manchego cheese and folding in unsweetened whipped cream at the end. Then, I devised an easy way to oven-roast florets and get a nice, even color on them by finishing them under the broiler. The browned pieces, mixed with garlic, a pinch of nutmeg, heavy cream and Gruyère and Parmesan cheeses, baked into a bubbly brown
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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
A healthy alternative to white pasta with clams By Sara Moulton
Fennel and tomatoes take this barley with clam sauce recipe in a Mediterranean direction. The dish is a healthy alternative to white pasta with clams.
The Associated Press
Spaghetti with clams — or spaghetti alle vongole to the Italians — is one of my favorite dishes: simple, flavorful and satisfying. That’s because it’s hard to lose with clams, which spontaneously generate their own wonderful sauce as they are cooked. All you have to do is steam them with a little liquid. When the shells part, the clam liqueur streams out, absolutely succulent and ready to glorify whatever it is added to. In this case, I went in search of an alternative to white-flour spaghetti — something equally satisfying, but more nutritious. My first thought was wholewheat pasta. My second was barley, which is even more healthful. A terrific source of fiber, barley is a well-known substitute for rice. I was pretty sure it’d be a fine stand-in for spaghetti, too, not least because its nutty flavor offers a pleasing contrast to the blandness of spaghetti. The only trouble with barley (and it’s true of many of my favorite whole grains, including wheat berries and
MATTHEW MEAD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
brown rice) is that it can take more than 40 minutes to cook. Who has that kind of time on a weeknight? Well, problem solved. I long ago dispensed with worrying about a precise ratio of liquid to grain. Instead, I cook the barley the way I cook pasta — in an abundance of boiling, lightly salted water. This is much less stressful than measuring, and quicker, too. Also, I cook much more than I need for one meal, then pack up the extra for future
meals, wrap it well and freeze it. The next time I want barley as the base for a dish, it’s really fast to make. The fresh fennel and cherry tomatoes here take this recipe in a Mediterranean direction. If you can’t find, or just don’t like, fresh fennel (with its slightly licorice aroma), you can just leave it out or replace it with some celery or leeks. Cherry tomatoes are my go-to tomatoes when the summer tomato season has passed and the only full-sized tomatoes
Brew: Process takes patience Continued from Page D-1 stoppered with an air lock, a one-way valve that lets the air escape while not allowing air back in. This allows the beer to “burp” while keeping it sterile. The mixture sits in the fermenter for one to two weeks while the yeast consumes the sugars and creates the all-important alcohol as a byproduct. At that point, you add a little more sugar, siphon the result into your bottles, seal the bottles and wait for anywhere from two to six weeks while impatiently tapping your fingers for the beer to age, allowing the yeast to consume that extra sugar and to make those lovely bubbles that you dream about all day at work. Certain beers are more forgiving to home brewers than others, according to Nordby. “Any of the ales are kind of easy,” he said. “Lagers take a lot longer time, and generally you have to keep them cool, maybe at 50 degrees for three to six weeks. And ale can ferment at room temperature. This includes anything from a pale ale to an IPA, amber ale, porter or stout. For people that like stouts, the darker beers are a nice place to start, because the roasted malt tends to cover up any off flavors.” Todd Yocham, the brewmaster and head of brewing operations at the newly established Duel Brewing, agrees: “Brown ales are very forgiving. If you don’t do everything perfectly, you can still have a drinkable beer. Porters … too there’s so much flavor going on with them … for the first time around it works.” And from there, almost anything goes. “When you’re doing a brew, you can reduce some of the bitterness, which is where you get the hop flavor and aroma,” Nordby explains. “Also, the length of the boil affects taste. Anything from the choice of grains to the temperature to the strain of yeast you use can affect the flavor. There are considerably more than 100 hop varieties available. It’s possible to brew every day of your life and never make the same beer twice.” According to Nordby, a small contingent of people make more old-fashioned heirloom recipes using ingredients like wormwood, juniper berries, yarrow, dandelion and ginger. “We’ve seen a lot more flavor beers, people doing pumpkin beers and pumpkin-spice beers to get in the mood for fall. They add spices into the beer, and some actually use pumpkin as well.” Yocham says that variety and experimentation are what make home brewing so rewarding. “I like to make some traditional porters, some English pale ales. But really it was about finding a beer style and thinking about what might taste good. Sometimes it worked out great. Sometimes the flavors didn’t taste so good. I made a sweet potato porter that was pretty interesting. I wouldn’t call it bad; it just wasn’t earth-shattering.” Beginning brewers will want to watch for a few key pitfalls to avoid spending a month brewing skunky-tasting vinegar water. Nordby warns that beer is only as good as the water you use to make it. Avoid chlorinated water, which can cause “off flavors.” He suggests using spring, filtered or well water. Temperature also is important. Ideally, home brewers want it to be relatively stable, because a lot of heat fluctuations will cause off flavors in the yeast. Protect your carboy from UV lights, like fluorescent lights or sunlight, and let your beer ferment in dark, unmolested peace.
For morE inFormATion on homE BrEwing u Santa Fe Homebrew Supply, 6820 Cerrillos Road, 473-2268 u Duel Brewery, 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 u Sangre de Cristo Craft Brewers Association, https://sites.google.com/ site/nmsdccb/
Upcoming okToBErFESTS u Red River Oktoberfest, Brandenburg Park in central Red River, Friday through Sunday u Ruidoso Oktoberfest, Ruidoso Convention Center in Ruidoso, Oct. 18 and 19
Both Yocham and Nordby insist that cleanliness and sanitizing are paramount. “You’re treating a sugar base, so it’s a place where bacteria will want to grow,” Nordby said. “Sanitizing is the biggest thing brewers should pay attention to. It doesn’t have to be hospital-room clean, but some people use a very light chlorine mixture; some people use hydrogen peroxide. Just make sure you take the time to clean your fermenters and sanitize them before you add the wort and add the yeast.” You won’t poison yourself, he added, as “generally pathogens aren’t going to survive the fermentation process and the alcohol that’s produced, but you’ll end up with skunk beer, sour beer or vinegar.” Yocham agrees. “You have to sanitize everything in your workspace. You’re constantly washing your hands and everything you touch and everything that touches beer. That was something as a beginning home brewer I didn’t understand completely. And the quality of the water is a massive thing as well. If your water tastes bad, your beer tastes bad.” It’s hard to argue with that logic. But even if your first batch isn’t vollkommen, don’t give up. Yocham insists that his first efforts were far from stellar. “Home brewing was something I attempted several times over the years and wasn’t very successful at. But it was an itch that I had to scratch. I had to force myself to learn it.” He suggests that newbie brewers “relax and don’t worry about it too much. Like anything else, you’re going to make mistakes. Just stick with it. I talk to lots of people, and they say it didn’t work out and they quit, but if you stick with it, it’s very rewarding.” Home brewing also is highly costeffective. Basic equipment kits cost $50 to $120. Beyond that, extract kits average about $40, so that’s about 75 cents a bottle if you brew five gallons. “And you can make stuff better than you can buy,” Nordby adds. “And you can make stuff that isn’t sold anywhere.” Legally, an adult can brew 100 gallons per year, and a household of two adults can brew 200 gallons per year. If you want to go professional, you need to get a small-brewers license. If you’re looking for support, tips or a particularly fun group of people to drink beer with, check out the Sangre de Cristo Craft Brewers Association, which has annual meetings and is full of helpful and supportive home brewing enthusiasts. And even if you never brew a drop, you’ll probably make a friend who does.
on the shelf are cardboard-y impostors unworthy of the name. Then again, if you don’t like the cherry tomatoes at your supermarket, use canned tomatoes instead. Finally, I have added one of my favorite little garnishes to finish off this dish: sauteed breadcrumbs. Sounds mundane, but they are anything but. After you make this recipe the first time, you might find yourself wildly topping every dish with sautéed breadcrumbs. BARLEY WITH CLAM SAUCE Total time: 35 minutes, makes four servings 3 tablespoons dry breadcrumbs, preferably Italian-style 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon extra-virgin olive oil, divided 1 cup finely chopped yellow onion 1½ cups medium chopped fresh fennel 1 tablespoon minced garlic 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes ½ cup dry white wine 1½ cups cherry tomatoes 3 dozen littleneck clams, scrubbed well 3 cups cooked pearl barley
⅓ cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley Preparation: In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine the breadcrumbs and 1 teaspoon of the oil. Cook, stirring constantly, until golden brown, about 2 to 3 minutes. Set aside to cool. Meanwhile, in a large saucepan or Dutch oven over medium, heat the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil. Add the onion and fennel, reduce the heat to medium-low and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and red pepper flakes and cook, stirring, for 1 minute. Add the wine, tomatoes and clams, cover tightly and increase heat to high. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes, checking now and again and transferring the clams as they open to a bowl. Discard any clams that don’t open. Add the barley to the clam liquid left in the saucepan and heat over medium, stirring, for 3 minutes. Return the clams to the pan and cook, stirring, until they are heated through. Ladle the mixture into 4 pasta or soup bowls and top each portion with a quarter of the sauteed breadcrumbs and parsley.
new: Roasting preferred by pros Continued from Page D-1 gratin. Aside from not watering down the cream, roasting the cauliflower made the dish more intense and therefore interesting. I could have eaten it as a main course with a lightly dressed salad. For another side dish, I paired roasted florets with brown butter, cured black olives, lemon zest and golden raisins. That would also have made a perfect relish topping for, say, grilled swordfish. I also found that sautéing the florets in a few tablespoons of oil and stirring them frequently over medium heat for 15 minutes creates a pan-roasted affect. Adding loads of sliced garlic and freshly ground black pepper, minced ginger, curry powder, peas and sliced serrano pepper transforms the florets into a zesty interpretation of the Indian dish gobi (cauliflower) matar (peas). My last cauliflower idea was improvised. When friends stopped by unannounced one evening for cocktails, I cobbled together a nibble board of trapezoids of random leftover cheeses; slices from a, shall we say, mature piece of chorizo; and raw cauliflower florets with an anchovy-rich Caesar salad dressing dip. That went over well: All of the cauliflower was eaten, rather than returned to the refrigerator in zip-top bags for reinvention later on. CRISPED CAULIFLOWER WITH LEMON TAHINI SAUCE Makes four servings For the sauce: 1 cup tahini ½ cup fresh lemon juice ½ cup water 3 cloves garlic, crushed 2 teaspoons kosher salt Dash of hot sauce, such as Tabasco For the cauliflower: 4 cups canola oil, for frying ½ head cauliflower, cut into 1½-inch florets (4 cups) Kosher salt Leaves from ½ small bunch mint, minced
Preparation: For the sauce, combine the tahini, lemon juice, water, garlic, salt and hot sauce in a food processor or blender; purée until smooth. For the cauliflower, line a baking sheet with paper towels, then place a wire cooling rack over it. Heat the oil in a medium pot over medium-high heat to 350 degrees. Working in batches as needed, carefully add the florets and fry for 3 to 5 minutes, until golden brown. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the florets to a baking sheet lined with paper towels. Season them with salt while still hot. Transfer to a serving bowl; garnish with the mint. Serve with tahini sauce on the side. ROASTED CAULIFLOWER GRATIN Makes six servings 1 large head (2 pounds) cauliflower (outer leaves removed), broken into 1½-inch florets 3 tablespoons canola oil ½ teaspoon kosher salt ½ cup heavy cream 1 small clove garlic, minced ½ cup grated Gruyère cheese ½ cup grated ParmigianoReggiano cheese ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper Pinch freshly grated nutmeg Preparation: Position oven racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven; preheat to 375 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Toss the cauliflower florets, oil and salt in a mixing bowl to coat. Spread the florets on the baking sheet, flat edges down. (Wipe out the bowl; you’ll use it again.) Bake on the lower rack for 20 minutes, then turn the oven on broil. Once it’s preheated, transfer the cauliflower to the top rack and broil for 7 to 10 minutes, until nicely browned and tender. Keep the broiler on. Transfer the florets to the same bowl you first used. Add the cream, garlic, Gruyère cheese, half of the ParmigianoReggiano and all the pepper and nutmeg. Stir to incorporate, then
spoon the cauliflower into a large gratin dish. Sprinkle with the remaining ParmigianoReggiano and return to the broiler for 5 minutes, until golden brown and bubbly. Serve hot. CAULIFLOWER RISOTTO Makes six servings 1 head (2 pounds) cauliflower (outer leaves removed), cored and halved 2 tablespoons canola oil ½ small yellow onion, finely chopped (½ cup) ½ teaspoon kosher salt ¾ cup dry white wine 1 cup no-salt-added vegetable broth, warmed ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper Pinch freshly grated nutmeg 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature ½ cup grated Manchego cheese ½ cup heavy cream, whipped to soft peaks, then brought to room temperature Preparation: Use the large-hole side of box grater to grate each cauliflower half into rice-size pieces, stopping once you get to the stalk. The yield should be about 4 cups. (Cut the stalks into 1/2-inch pieces and reserve for another use, such as a puree or soup.) Heat the oil in a large sauté pan over medium-high heat. Once the oil shimmers, add the onion and cook for about 2 minutes, until softened but not browned, stirring constantly. Add the cauliflower and salt; cook for 2 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the white wine and cook for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the wine has evaporated. Add the broth in three equal additions, stirring for about 3 minutes, until each addition has been absorbed. Add the pepper, nutmeg, butter and cheese, stirring until incorporated, then stir in the cream. Serve immediately.
Native Plant Society offers cactus cooking demo Cactus will be the catch of day when the Santa Fe Chapter of the Native Plant Society of New Mexico holds its next meeting. On Oct. 16,, the group will host a cooking demonstration that will focus on using cactus in various dishes, from soups to desserts. Jim Hastings of El Paso will lead the program and will demonstrate several cooking
techniques involving prickly pears and other cactus plants, according to a news release. The free demonstration will be at 6:30 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 1701 Arroyo Chamiso. For more information, email tom@thomasantonio.org or call 920-5105. The New Mexican
Crisped cauliflower with lemon tahini sauce. DEB LINDSEY/THE WASHINGTON POST
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
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to place your ad, call HOUSES UNFURNISHED
CHARMING, 500 SQUARE FEET SOUTHEAST HILLS. Washer, dryer, fenced yard with small patio. Pet negotiable. $800 monthly, includes utilities. 505-6995708 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
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
HOUSES FURNISHED
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
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1002 1/2 Canyon Road , 1 bedroom, Large kitchen with washer, dryer. Possible studio. $900 monthly. 505231-8302 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
1 bedroom quiet off Rancho Siringo Road, vigas, tile, fireplace, walkin closet, small yard, No Pets. $720 includes water. 505-310-1516 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.
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!
Available Now!
1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. $620-1bdrms $680-2bdrms $720-3bdrms Includes: Washer/Dryer and Gas Stove $0 Security Deposit (OAC ) 15 minute application process
SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS 2029 CALLE LORCA Call for appointment
505-471-8325 COMMERCIAL SPACE
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.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 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! GO TO: www.MeridianPMG.com
Lisa Bybee, Assoc. Broker 505-577-6287
"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"
505-989-9133
VACANCY
1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH
Single & Double Wide Spaces 505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities
LA CEINEGA Charming 2 bedroom, 2 bath, private and secluded, large balcony off master, great natural light $1200 plus utilities Beautifully furnished 1 bedroom guesthouse. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Close to town. Pets on approval. $1,450 month. 505-699-6161.
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.
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
CHARMING ADOBE, WALK TO PLAZ A . 2 bedroom, 2 bath, plus den, 3 fireplaces, washer, dryer. $1700 plus deposit. 505-690-4791 COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
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.
$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
LOVELY 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME in ELDORADO. $1700 monthly. 2350 sq.ft. Solar, fenced yard, sunroom, 2 car garage. 805-368-1257
$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
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.
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.
2 BEDROOM 2 bath townhouse in great location. End unit. All appliances included. $1000 monthly. Nonsmoking. 505-699-7472 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.
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 www.santafecountryhome.com 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.
MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 BEDROOM, DOUBLE BATH, mobile home. Private front, back yard. Washer, dryer included. $800 monthly, plus deposit, utilities. 505-9300090, 505-930-0180. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS Usual appliances plus dishwasher. Garbage collection, water and septic included. Pojoaque, $780 monthly. 505-455-2301, 505-670-7659.
Mobile Home: 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Remodeled. With storage, washer,dryer. Amenities. No smoking. No pets. 505-455-3287
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. 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.
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.
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.
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.
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
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
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
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
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
»jobs«
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.
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS?
TV book »announcements«
ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTS PAYABLE POSITION 30 hours a week, must have accounting experience. Includes other duties. Call Claudia for appointment, 505-473-5333.
SEEKING FULL-TIME BO O KKEEPER for professional, Santa Fe business. Qualified person will have a baccalaureate degree and a minimum of 5 years professional experience. Please submit cover letter, resume, and list of references to quinoarose@gmail.com.
ADMINISTRATIVE
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.
RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
ROOMMATE WANTED 1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.
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
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
Check out the coupons in this weeks
ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603 HISTORIC 2 bedroom. adobe with studio, covered parking, Washer, Dryer, private patios, no smoking, $1,275 month. call 575-740-7591. Rent or Buy.
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.
LOT FOR RENT
TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE
COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $925 plus utilities
CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
986-3000
$450 INCLUDES UTILITIES, 200 SQ.FT ROOM. Shared bath & kitchen. Upstairs, fireplace, wet bar. No dogs. Month-to-month. $450 deposit. 505470-5877
BDD Regulatory Compliance Officer
FOUND 2 YEAR old Yorkie - Silky, Found on St. Michael’s Drive on 10/3/13. Has collar please call to identify. 303-2292563 FOUND DOG- Female Black Lab Mix, 10/1. 30-40 pounds. Unique white marking. Well cared for. Airport Road & Constellation area. 505-955-1690 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.
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. 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. FULL-TIME MONDAY - FRIDAY 8-5:30 RECEPTIONIST. OFFICE ASSISTANT.. Data entry, taking phone orders, customer service, light cashier duties. Apply: 2902 Rufina Street
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds ADMINISTRATIVE
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.
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
Controller
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
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 CONSTRUCTION EXPERIENCED PIPELAYERS, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS AND CDL DRIVERS. Apply at 27A Paseo de River, Santa Fe, NM 87507
DRIVERS CDL DRIVER YARD PERSON NEEDED
Good hours. Apply in person at Empire Builders 1802 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM
EDUCATION COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS o f New Mexico (CISNM) is seeking full-time
SITE COORDINATORS
to help redress student dropout in Santa Fe Public Schools through the nationally-recognized Communities In Schools integrated student services framework. Working in partnership with a school principal, the CISNM Site Coordinator is responsible for the overall planning and management of CISNM operations at their assigned CISNM school site. Bilingual Spanish/English Required. Experience working with children and or youth in an educational setting, strong interpersonal and organization skills are essential. Education requirements: Bachelor’s degree and demonstrated relevant equivalent experience in education, social work or related field. Please submit cover letter, resume and 3 references to johnsona@cisnewmexico.org by Friday, October 18, 2013 PRIVATE HOME SCHOOL TEACHER wanted for 7 year old student ASAP. Must be Energetic, fun, and motivated. Teaching experience, certification, and references required. Fax resume: 505-819-5849.
HOSPITALITY
MEDICAL DENTAL 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.
ARE YOU RETIRED, BUT DON’T WANT TO BE?
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 CURRENTLY SEEKING Level 3 Security Guards with current guard card. Candidates must meet certain requirements. Contact 505-255-0170 for more information.
FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER WORK AND LIVE ON SANTA FE ESTATE Call, 505-660-6440. PART TIME RECEPTIONIST Medical teminology helpful. Monday, Tuesday, Thurday, & Friday. 8:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. Bring resume to 1424 Luisa St, Suite 1, Santa Fe 87505.
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
SOUTHWEST METAL PRODUCTS has an opening in the HVAC DEPARTMENT. Willing to train. 3142 Rufina St, Santa Fe. (505)473-4575
HAGUE WATERMAX 60 Series . Model # 63BAQ - As is $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
HAGUE WATERMAX WATER SOFTENER. 3 pieces. Model# 63BAQ. $200. Will need SUV or truck. Located eastside Santa Fe. 505-988-1728.
ART ART SUPPLY SALE! Paintings, paper, paints and miscellaneous equipment. 505-455-9203
Beautiful Abstract Impressionistic Painting by the Renowned Artist Barbara Gagel. The height is 48" and 68" across. Asking $1,500. Call Hope at (505)913-1410.
ANTIQUES 1867 MASONIC Lithograph of George Washington and symbols. $95, 505982-6288 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.
TWO COMPUTER tables, 70" x 29 1/2" $25, 47 1/2" x 29 1/2", $18 505-474-1449 8’ HIGH 48" wide , awesome condition . $5,300.00, paid $ 11,000 from American country collects. Call 505470-4231
BEAUTIFUL WOOL PERSIAN 3’6’x9’7". $299. 808-346-3635
RUG,
WICKER TABLE. Beautiful. Coffee table or end table. 25x17x22H with shelf. $35. 505-474-9020.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
Antique Wrought Iron Chandelier From Mexico. Asking $375. Call Hope at (505)913-1410. 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 from Hobby Lobby. $15, 505-9541144
EARLY CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? JAN BARBOGLIO COLLECTORS. Beautiful, rustic, handcrafted Tray. Never used. $225, 505-920-4420.
FORREST MOSES Monoprint, 12.5" x 14.5". Nicely framed. $3,500. 505-9881715.
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES FRAMES, ALL SIZES. Whole Collection, Reasonable. $4 - $25. 505-4749020.
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
BUILDING MATERIALS 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.
Artisan Handcrafted Desk or Table with beautiful detail and hardware. Asking $265. Call (505)913-1410.
BROCADE WINGCHAIR, attractive dark sage green, reclines. Like new condition. $100. 505-231-9133
FREE HOT TUB COVER Like new! 72" X 72" Call 505-989-3916.
KIDS STUFF
BABY CRIB, white. Converts to youth bed as child grows. Good until 5 to 6 years of age. Very good condition. $100. 505-984-3215.
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 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
Charming Antique Hutch and Cabinet. Moving and must sell. Asking $785. Call, 505-913-1410. CONTEMPORARY T.V. Stand. Light wood from Canada. Silver drawer pulls and legs. 60"L x 23"D x 24"H. $75. 505-989-4114 FlexSteel Queen
Sofa Bed. $300.
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
LAWN & GARDEN
Chaise Lounge $200 Both in excellent condition. Like New! Please call, 505-995-1334.
LARGE BOTSON fern house plant in clay pot. $25. 505-231-9133.
Get your headlines on the go!
BUILDING M A T E R I A L S Gre en House, Flea Market kits, Landscaping, Fencing, Vehicles, Trailer. Contact Michael at 505-920-4411 or Jackalope 505-471-8539. CEILING FAN with light $25, 505-9888022 CLOSET LIGHT, pull chain $10, 505988-8022
CONCHA BELT, silver, fits all. $150. Long Brownish Wig, new. $150. 505-471-8950, leave message. GREY TRADITIONAL Justin Western Boots. Size 5 1/2 Medium. $40, 505954-1144
MBT BLACK LEATHER WALKING S H O E S . Womens 10, mens 8. Like new! $15, retail over $100. 505-4749020. SUEDE JACKET Camel, Medium. $60, 505-471-8950, leave message.
COLLECTIBLES PHOTO, POSTER of Hank Wiliams JR., signed. $45, 505-982-6288.
COMPUTERS AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $90. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.
FIREWOOD-FUEL
MANAGEMENT
FURNITURE
MUST SELL! Santa Fe style dinning table with 6 chairs. Table is 6’ x 3’4" $1140 OBO.
BRIGHTON CONCHO 36" black belt. (8) 3" Conchos. $70. 505-474-9020
SHAWN’S CHIMNEY SWEEP Accepting applications for Chimney cleaning and installers.Clean driving record, Experience a plus. 505-474-5857.
FURNITURE
APPLIANCES
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
FT - PT on call weekends. Controls & plumbing exp. necessary. Email resume to: hawkmech@laplaza.org or fax to: 575-758-3366
FURNITURE
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
HAND PAINTED GIRLS Bedroom Furniture. Bed, desk, armoir, dresser, chair, dolls. $1,500. Call Helen, 505989-3277.
CLOTHING
TRADES
986-3000
WANTED! Old Joseph Murphy horse drawn wagon or buggy. Please call Tom at, 800-959-5782.
SALES MARKETING
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
THE SANTA FE WATERSHED ASSOCIATION IS SEEKING AN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. Full job description and application instructions at: santafewatershed.org/jobopenings/.
ANTIQUES
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
»merchandise«
BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is hiring managers for its Taos stores. Send résumé to jlawless@lotaburger.com or apply in person at a Taos location.
to place your ad, call
D-5
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. Classy Black PELLET BUCKET for pellet stove. Great for other uses as well. $20, 505-954-1144.
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
Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/
D-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
PETS SUPPLIES
to place your ad, call PETS SUPPLIES
986-3000 4X4s
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.
LUGIE POWER SCOOTER. Folds up. 53 pounds. Hardly used. Burgundy.
Pomeranian Puppies, 1 teacup $800, 1 toy $500, registered, first shots, quality. Poodle Puppies, $400. ShihPoo Puppy, male, $350. 505-901-2094
All paperwork & instruction included. $2,000. 308-530-0338
MISCELLANEOUS
2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.
4 METAL UTILITY Shelves plus bookcase, various sizes. $17 each, 505474-1449 BOOK COLLECTION: First editions, Fiction to non-fiction. $3 and up. 505474-9020 CUTE DAYBED. White metal with brass accents. Decent Sealy matress. $100. 505-231-9133. Good quality 8 white hand towels, and 4 white bath mats, all cotton. All for $20, 505-954-1144. STONE AGE ROCK IS GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. LARGE INVENTORY. 7521 CERRILLOS ROAD.
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT 28" WOK. VERY DEEP. BRAND NEW. $60. CALL 505-469-3355 COOKING DISCOS (DISCATAS) 16" TO 24" STARTING AT $30. Call 505469-3355
SPORTS EQUIPMENT EUREKA CAMPING pup tent for two, plus two sleeping bags, plus a Therm-A-Rest blow up mattress. All for $90. 505-989-4114
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. 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
Have a product or service to offer?
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
CALL 986-3000
FLY FISHING Rod and Reel, signed and numbered. $85 505-982-6288
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
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«
FRENCH FENCING FOIL and wire mesh head guard. $95 505-982-6288
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 FOR 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
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.
HAND push Golf Cart, $30. 505-954-1144 ORVIS RIFLE carrying case. Hunter green canvas and leather. Fleece interior. $40. 505-231-9133. WOODEN GUN rack. Holds 4 rifles and has storage drawer. $25. 505-2319133.
TOOLS MACHINERY CRAFTSMAN CHAINSAW, 10" bar, gas, needs carb. repair. $50. 505-7572528
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
27" TV with digital box, mint cond. $85. 505-757-2528
2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.
IMPORTS BENGALS SILVER KITTENS from Supreme Grand Champion, $950 to $1,600. 720-434-6344, chateauxchampagne@gmail.com
Cody and Corey are twin brothers who would love a home together.
1000 GRANDVIEW SE, Albuquerque *SHARON’S SALES* Albuquerque Incredibly amazing and important estate sale Thursday - Sunday 10/10 - 10/13, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 1000 Grandview SE in Ridgecrest. Original Western art, bronzes, sterling hollowware, Steuben glass, Wegner chairs, etc. http://www.sharonsales.com/ upcoming.html
»cars & trucks«
2004 Honda CR-V LX - AWD. 1 owner! Clean CarFax, perfectly maintained, new tires. $6,931. Call 505216-3800.
2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800. 1997 HONDA PRELUDE. Nice clean car, needs some work. Must see! 110,000 miles. $3,500 OBO. Please call, 505-660-9714.
CLEAN BERMUDA 3 twine 90 pound bales at $16 per bale by truckload of 512 only call Pete at 623-251-8018.
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
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
HORSES
CLASSIC CARS
Toy Box Too Full?
FOR SALE: 11 year old Kentucky Mountain gelding. Gaited. Sound. Easy to catch and load. Trailwise. Crosses water. Easy keeper. 505-454-9540. $1900.
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.
ESTATE SALES
»animals«
ALFALFA GRASS Mix bales. $11 each Bale. Barn stored Ribera, NM. 505-473-5300.
GARAGE SALE ELDORADO 4 CERRADO CT. SAT. 9 A.M.- 2 P.M. MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE Furniture, books, clothes, tow bar & lights, stereo equipment, rug, tires, cameras, refrigerator, more...
TV RADIO STEREO
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES
2010 HONDA Insight Hybrid Excellent condition, 50+mpg, 63,xxx miles. Just needs a new driver! $15,500 OBO. 505-699-0439.
Flower is a playful pointer puppy who wants to point you in the direction of the dog treats. All three pets are available at the Espanola Valley Humane Society, open 7 days a week from 10:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at: www.evalleyshelter.org
CAR STORAGE FACILITY
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.
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 DOMESTIC
LIVESTOCK
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
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
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! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
HEALTHY BEAUTIFUL New Hampshire piglet. $60. 505-455-7429 or 505-4702035.
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
PETS SUPPLIES
MINIATURE AUSTRALIAN Shepherds, Born 7-3-2013. Black tri, Parents Registered, Champion Sired, 1st shots. 2M, $350 each, discount with alteration. 505-220-3310.
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.
PURE BRED Miniature Schnauzer P u p p ie s. 8 weeks old. 2 males, 1 female, white. Pedigree Certificate. 505-670-8267.
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 2005 HYUNDAI ELANTRAGLS 4-door, beige, automatic, AC, well maintained, perfect, 10K. Elderly mother stopped driving. Below NADA $7,500 OBO. 505-982-7013. 1997 Subaru Legacy Outback. MUST SELL! New engine 90,000 miles, automatic, runs well, interior clean. Good condition, fresh tune-up. Call 575829-3640.
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.
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
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
986-3000
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
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.
2013 SUBARU XV Crosstrek. 4k miles, like new, clean CarFax $24,981. Call 505-216-3800.
2012 Toyota RAV4 4WD. Only 27k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax $20,731 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!
»recreational«
2006 NISSAN FRONTIER SE 4X4 109k miles, automatic. Great looking pickup!
BOATS & MOTORS
Sam’s Used Cars St Michaels Dr at Cerrillos Rd 505-820-6595
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
2012 Toyota Camry LE. Only 3k miles! just like new, 1 owner clean CarFax $19,641. Call 505-216-3800. 2012 Nissan Juke SV AWD. Only 20k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, moonroof, turbo, awesome! $21,591. Call 505-216-3800.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! SUVs
IMPORTS
2010 Toyota Prius II. Only 24k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, 50 mpg and pristine! $18,971. Call 505-216-3800 .
PICKUP TRUCKS ’89 FORD RANGER with camper shell, new tires, excellent condition, $2,100. 505-577-2899 TOYOTA TACOMA 2002 TRD SR5 Prerunner, clean title, $2,900, 166k miles, 937-985-0104.
Sell Your Stuff! 986-3000
2006 Toyota Prius. Package 7, fully loaded! 1 owner, well maintained and only 90k miles. $10,671. Call 505-216-3800 .
2010 SUBARU FORESTER LIMITED AWD Another One Owner, 12,746 Miles, Records, Carfax, X-Keys, Manuals, Non-Smoker, Garaged Factory Warranty, Loaded, Pristine $22,750. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
SUVs
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
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.
CAMPERS & RVs 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.
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.
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.
26’ 1997 Mobile Scout. One owner, one slide out, great condition! $8,500 OBO. 505-690-4849 Mike.
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! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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.
2012 VOLKSWAGEN Passat SE TDI. DIESEL!!! leather, moonroof, awesome mpgs! $25,871. Call 505-2163800
2004 TOYOTA Landcruiser, 59k miles, black, tan leather, loaded, $23,000 firm. Very good condition, no accidents, and loaded with options incl. nav. Contact, barry@frenchesabroad.com. 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 SCION xA. Only 59k miles! Excellent condition, clean CarFax $9,991. Call 505-216-3800 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
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
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000 MOTORCYCLES
VANS & BUSES HONDA ODYSSEY 2000. 146,300 miles. Asking $2,500. Business no longer has use for van. If interested please e m a i l admin@movingpeopledance.org.
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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D-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 9, 2013
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS
LEGALS
FEDERAL EMERGENCY FOOD AND SHELTER PROGRAM FUNDS AVAILABLE TO ELIGIBLE ORGANIZATIONS The Federal Emergency Food and Shelter National Board Program has awarded $43,070.00 through the Department of Homeland Security to the Santa Fe County Emergency Food and Shelter Local Board for distribution to local agencies. These funds are intended to supplement existing local emergency food and shelter programs serving Santa Fe County. The Local Board will accept applications for funding from any nonprofit organization or local government agency currently providing emergency shelter, housing, rent/mortgage assistance, meals, or utility bill assistance in Santa Fe County. Applications must be received by the United Way of Santa Fe County office at 440 Cerrillos Rd., Suite A, Santa Fe, NM 87501, no later than 5:00 PM on Friday, October 18, 2013. Organizations interested in applying should contact United Way of Santa Fe County at 505-2162985 immediately for an application. Applications are also available at www.uwsfc.org under “Resources.” Legal #95788 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 9 2013
LEGALS
y City of Santa Fe 200 Lincoln Avenue P.O. Box 909 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-0909 Telephone: (505) 9556967 Facsimile: (505) 9556748 Email: awalker@ci.santafe.nm.us Legal #95780 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 2, 9, 16 2013
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 Petitioner. The name, address and telephone number of Petitioner’s attorney are: R. Alfred Walker Assistant City Attorney
Notice is hereby given that on April 9, 2013, Eldorado Area Water and Sanitation District (EAWSD) c/o David Chakroff, General Manager, 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87508, filed with the State Engineer Application Number RG-18529, for permit to Change Point of Diversion of Ground Water Under State Engineer Partial License No. RG-18529 and RG-18556, on land owned by the EAWSD within Santa Fe County. The applicant seeks to discontinue the diversion of 305.9 acre-feet per annum from of RG-18529 located at a point w h e r e X=1,730,509.193 feet and Y=1,657,197.583 feet NMCS NAD 83, within the Canada de Los Alamos Land Grant, the old point of diversion well RG18529 will be used as monitoring well only. Applicant proposes to commence the diversion of 305.9 acrefeet per annum and drill a new well at a new point of diversion which was drilled as an exploratory well under permit no. RG-94087 and commence the diversion of 305.9 acre-feet per annum. This well will be identified with the same file No. RG18529, located at a point where X=1,730,509 feet and Y=1,657,198 feet NMCS, NAD 83 within the Canada de Los Alamos Grant. The new well RG-18529 will be used to continue service for the Eldorado Area Water and Sanitation District. Place of use for the service area of the Eldorado Area Water and Sanitation District, as shown on "plat of acreage reparcelization" at Eldorado at Santa Fe, comprising portions of Canada de Los Alamos and Bishop Lamy Grants, Recorded October 15, 1981, under the reception No. 486,453, Book 107, Plat Page 6-6C, Records of Santa Fe County, New Mexico. The new Point of Diversion will be approximately 100 meters north of Alcalde Road, West of Avenida de Los Compadres at the Northern terminus of the road. The depth of the well will be 600 feet with a casing size of 12 inches. The total diversion from
Continued...
Continued...
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE CITY OF SANTA FE ex rel. SANTA FE POLICE DEPARTMENT, Petitioner, v s . No. CV-2012-02863
D-101-
ONE (1) 1991 SILVER BUICK SEDAN V.I.N. 1G4HP54C4MH471779 NEW MEXICO LICENSE NO. LXA 382, Respondent, and IAN THORP, Claimant. NOTICE TO IAN THORP:
well RG-18529 will be 305.9 acre-feet consumptive use and no additional water will be used. Purpose of use will be for community water, construction and recreational purposes all located within the service area of Eldorado Area Water and Sanitation District. Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed, and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) P u b l i c welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with Scott A. Verhines, P.E., State Engineer, Bataan Memorial Building, Room 102, P.O. Box 25102, Santa Fe, NM 87504, within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (fax) will accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to Office of the State Engineer 505827-6682. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3. Legal #95806 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 2, 9and 16, 2013 Notice is hereby given that the meeting of the Board of Directors of the New Mexico Water Trust Board will convene at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, October 30, 2013. The meeting will be held in Conference Room 322 at the State Capitol, 407 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM. The agenda will be available at the New Mexico Finance Authority’s office at 207 Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico and the website at www.nmfa.net and the Office of the State Engineer website (www.ose.state.nm.u s). The Board may go into closed session to discuss matters in accordance with NMSA 1978, Section 10-15-1 (H) (2). Anyone who has questions regarding the meeting or needs special accommodations should contact
LEGALS
pets
make it better.
Santa Fe Animal Shelter.Adopt. Volunteer. Love. 983-4309 ext. 610
LEGALS
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Yolanda Valenzuela NOTICE at (505) 992-9632. OF REGULAR MEETING If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a Notice is hereby givreader, amplifier, en that the regular qualified sign lan- meeting of the Joint guage interpreter, or Powers Board of the any other form of Santa Fe Solid Waste auxiliary aid or serv- Management Agency ice to attend or par- will convene on ticipate in the hear- Thursday, October 17, ing or meeting, 2013, at 12:00 p.m. please contact The meeting will be Yolanda Valenzuela held at the Santa Fe at the NMFA at 992- County Administra9632 as soon as pos- tion Building, Legal sible. Public docu- Conference Room, ments, including the 102 Grant Avenue, agenda and minutes, Santa Fe, NM. can be provided in Agendas will be availvarious accessible able at least 72 hours formats. Please con- before the meeting in tact the NMFA at 992- the County Manag9632 if a summary or er’s Office, the City other type of accessi- Clerk’s Office, and on ble format is needed. the Agency’s website at www.sfswma.org. Legal#95876 The meeting may Published in the San- constitute a quorum ta Fe New Mexican of the Board of Counon: October 9, 2013 ty Commissioners; however, no County business will be disNOTICE cussed. Anyone who has questions regardNOTICE IS HEREBY ing the meeting or reGIVEN that the Regu- quiring special aclar Board Meeting of c o m m o d a t i o n s the Board of Educa- should contact Sally tion for the Pecos In- Padilla at (505) 424dependent School 1850, extension 150. District will take place on Tuesday, Oc- Legal #95811 tober 15, 2013. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on The meeting will be- October 9, 2013 gin at 6:00 pm in the Pecos Schools Board RIESTER V. DAY, ET AL Room. - Navajo County Superior Court Case Agendas are availa- CV2013-00078 ble at the Administration Office on the day THE STATE OF ARIZOprior to the Board NA TO: Meeting. William A. Quelle The meeting may in- P.O. Box 13155 clude Budget Adjust- Show Low, AZ 85901 ment Requests. YOU ARE HEREBY An Executive Session SUMMONED and remay take place dur- quired to appear and ing the agenda to dis- defend, within the cuss limited person- time applicable, in nel matters and/or this action in this pending litigation as Court. If served withper NM Statutes Arti- in Arizona, you shall cle 15 Open Meetings appear and defend 10-15-1 Subparagraph within twenty (20) H (2 & 8). Action item days after the service as a result of execu- of the Summons and tive session if neces- Complaint upon you, sary. exclusive of the day of service. If served out of the State of FRED TRUJILLO, Arizona - whether by SUPERINTENDENT direct service, by registered or certified mail, or by publicaTHE PECOS INDE- tion - you shall apPENDENT SCHOOL pear and defend DISTRICT IS AN EQUAL within thirty (30) OPPORTUNITY EM- days after the service PLOYER AND DOES of the Summons and NOT DISCRIMINATE Complaint upon you ON THE BASIS OF is complete, excluRACE, NATIONAL ORI- sive of the day of GIN, RELIGION, AGE, service. Where procSEX, MARITAL STA- ess is served upon TUS, HOMELESSNESS the Arizona Director OR DISABILITY IN of Insurance as an inCOMPLIANCE WITH surer’s attorney to FEDERAL AND STATE receive service of leLAWS. gal process against it in this state, the insurer shall not be reLegal #95714 quired to appear, anPublished in The San- swer or plead until ta Fe New Mexican on expiration of forty October 9 and 10, (40) days after date 2013 of such service upon the Director. Service by publication is complete thirty (30) days after the date of publication. DiYou can view your first rect service is complete when made. legal ad online Service upon the Ariat zona Motor Vehicle Superintendent is
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LEGALS p complete thirty (30) days after filing the Affidavit of Compliance and return receipt or Officer’s Return. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that in case of your failure to appear and defend within the time applicable, judgment by default may be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint.
toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com LEGALS
LEGALS
State of New Mexico County of Santa Fe First Judicial District DONNA REAGAN, Individually and as parent and next friend of ANGELIQUE REGAN (A Minor), Plaintiffs, v. HECTOR PEREZ HERNANDEZ and GAINSCO AUTO INSURANCE, Defendants. Case No: D 101 CV 2012 00168 located at 225 Montezuma Ave.Santa Fe, NM 87501 mailing address First Judicial District Court P.O. Box 2268 Santa Fe, New Mexico 875042268 Phone: (505) 4558250 Fax: (505) 4558280 Judge Sarah Singleton
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
REQUESTS for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the Court by parties at least three (3) working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding. To Hector PerezHernandez who once YOU ARE CAUTIONED lived at 2001 that in order to ap- Hopewell apt. G364 pear and defend, you Santa Fe New Mexico must file an Answer 87505 and had an inor proper response in surance policy writing with the Clerk through Gainsco Auto of this Court, accom- Insurance Company. panied by the neces- NOTICE IS HEREBY sary filing fee, within GIVEN That A lawsuit the time required, has been filed and you are to serve against you for the a copy of any Answer April 30, 2010 auto or response upon the collision which occurplainatiff’s attorney. red in Santa Fe New Mexico. 1.You must A copy of the Com- respond to this lawplaint can be ob- suit in writing. 2. You tained from: must file your written response with the CORONADO LAW Court no later than FIRM, P.L.L.C. thirty (30) days from Eduardo H. Coronado, the date you are Esq. served with this Sum4700 White Mountain mons. (The date you Blvd., Ste A are considered Lakeside, Arizona served with the Sum85929 mons is determined (928) 532-4529 by Rule 1-004 NMRA). Telephone 3. The Court’s ad(928) 532-0753 Fax dress is listed above. 4. You must file (in Legal #95711 person or by mail) Published in The San- your written reta Fe New Mexican on sponse with the October 9, 16, 23 and Court. 5. If you do not 30, 2013 respond in writing, the Court may enter SANTA FE judgment against you COMMUNITY COL- as requested in the LEGE lawsuit. 6. You are Invitation For Bid - entitled to a jury trial IFB #13/14-39 in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a juSanta Fe Community ry trial, you must reCollege (SFCC) seeks quest one in writing Sealed Bid Responses and pay a jury fee. 8 for P r o m o t i o n a l If you need an interProducts. SFCC preter, you must ask seeks responses from for one in writing. 8. interested and quali- When you file your fied vendors capable response you must of providing such send a copy to the products as outlined other attorneys in in the IFB to enable this case which are SFCC to select the listed below 9. You best qualified vendor. may wish to consult a lawyer. You may conIFB packets may be tact the State Bar of obtained online at New Mexico for help www.sfcc.edu/busine finding a lawyer at ss_services_and_pur www.nmbar.org; 1chasing/rfps or by 800-876-6657; or 1calling Patricia 505-797-6066. DefendMontes-Burks at 505- ant Gainsco’s Attor428-1858. ney: Paul Grand at the Law Office of Paul Sealed Responses S. Grand, P.A. 460 St. should be addressed Michael’s Drive, to, Santa Fe Commun- Suite 802 Santa Fe, ity College, Business New Mexico 87505 OfServices and Pur- fice: (505) 989-9980 chasing Office, 6401 Facsimile: (505) 989Richards Avenue, 9987 e-mail: Santa Fe, NM 87508, paul@grandlawfirm.n Attention: Bob et Plaintiffs’ attorney McWilliams and will Brent M. Ferrel 300 be accepted by said Central SW Ste. 1300 office until the fol- Albuquerque New lowing: Mexico 87102 Phone (505) 243-7200 Fax: DEADLINE: Thursday, (505) 242-2278 October 17, 2013 TIME: 12:00p.m. Noon Legal #95804 MDT Published in The Santa Fe new Mexican on Legal#95875 October 2, 9 and 16, Published in the San- 2013 ta Fe New Mexican on: October 9, 2013
OCWEN LOAN SERVICING, LLC,
v.
Plaintiff,
PAULA J. REGISTER SANDOVAL and CITIBANK FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK, Defendants. No. 00832
D101-CV-2010-
AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the aboveentitled Court, having appointed me as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property ("Property") situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, commonly known as 1032 Camino Vista Aurora, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87507, and more particularly described as follows: ALL OF LOT 21 AS SHOWN ON PLAT OF SURVEY ENTITLED VISTA AURORA SUBDIVSION, PHASE 1B, FILED FOR RECORD AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 632384, APPEARING IN PLAT BOOK 177 AT PAGE 027, RECORDS OF SANTA FE COUNTY, NEW MEXICO.
LEGALS p from the date of judgment until paid. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. s/Wayne G. Chew, Special Master P. O. Box X Albuquerque, NM 87103-1536 (505) 842-6363 Legal#95447 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican September 25, October 2, 9, 16, 2013
STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE The sale is to begin at COUNTY 10:00 a.m. on October 30, 2013 outside the IN THE MATTER OF front entrance of the THE ESTATE OF ELSanta Fe County VIRA LUJAN, Courthouse, 225 Mon- DECEASED. tezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, at No. 2013-0137 which time I will sell to the highest and NOTICE TO best bidder for cash CREDITORS in lawful currency of NOTICE IS HEREBY the United States of GIVEN that the underAmerica the Property signed has been apto pay any expenses pointed personal repof sale, and to satisfy resentative of this esthe in rem Judgment tate. All persons havgranted Plaintiff on ing claims against August 15, 2013 this estate are reagainst Defendant quired to present Paula J. Register their claims within Sandoval in the prin- two(2) months after cipal sum of the date of the first $131,754.02, plus out- publication of this nostanding interest due tice, or the claims will in the amount of be forever barred. $22,704.22 through Claims must be preApril 5, 2012, and ac- sented either to the cruing thereafter at undersigned personal the rate of 5.875% per representative at the annum ($20.00 per address listed below diem), plus late or filed with the Procharges in the bate Court of Santa amount of $662.56, Fe, County, New Mexiplus escrow advan- co, located at the folces due in the lowing address: 102 amount of $4,474.77, Grant Ave, Santa Fe plus property New Mexico 87501 preservation/inspecti Dated: October 2, on fees in the amount 2013 of $168.00, plus fees and cost advances in Mary Moreno the amount of Signature of Personal $995.30, less a sus- Representative pense balance of 727 Old Santa Fe Trail $585.40, plus attor- Santa Fe, NM 87505 ney’s fees and costs 505-983-0543 of $8,019.29, plus special master’s fees and Legal#95763 all other costs of Published in the Sanforeclosure sale, plus ta Fe New Mexican post-judgment inter- on: October 9, 16, est at the rate of 2013 5.8750% per annum
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