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Secret spaces sit under Taos
District tries to ensure safety
Shops and restaurants near the town’s plaza hide now-decrepit tunnels. PAGE A-10
School Safety Summit keeps parents up-to-date on SFPS emergency protocols. EDUCATION, A-8
In a clean race, it’s a shame someone has to lose
Eruption toll rises Finally reaching the ash-covered summit of a still-erupting volcano in central Japan, rescue workers made a grim discovery Sunday: 31 apparently dead people, some reportedly buried in knee-deep ash. PAGE A-3
Galisteo residents plan bicentennial celebration
President acknowledges U.S. erred in its assessment
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clean political campaign is rarer than the Mexican wolf, and the sleek lobo that serves as a symbol of our state is an endangered subspecies. But we’ve found an exception to all the mud baths, a campaign that’s free Milan of venom, Simonich deception Ringside Seat and cheap shots. It’s also one of the most important elections of this cycle. We’re talking about the race for a seat on the New Mexico Court of Appeals. Judge J. Miles Hanisee, the incumbent by appointment, is being challenged by attorney Kerry Kiernan. Hanisee, 46, had a broad-based legal career before a fellow Republican, Gov. Susana Martinez, appointed him to the Court of Appeals three years ago. He had worked as a prosecutor, a defense lawyer and a law clerk for two federal judges. In 2008, Hanisee was one of the attorneys who represented former Democratic state senator Manny Aragon in a corruption case. Aragon pleaded guilty to three felonies for attempting to defraud the state of nearly $4.4 million. He served about five years in federal prison before being released last year. Many celebrated statesmen, such as John Adams, America’s
By Peter Baker and Brian Knowlton The New York Times
Volunteers hang a sign outside Galisteo’s La Sala de San José building Saturday, in preparation for the village’s upcoming bicentennial celebration. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN
Village to commemorate milestone with parade, food, music, dance, Mass By Dennis J. Carroll For The New Mexican
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s far as anyone can remember reading or hearing about, the village of Galisteo began as a fortress in the early 1800s to hold off the Comanches and other Indian raiders — a fortified plaza of sorts with a church at one end. It wasn’t until the 1850s, said resident Wayne King, a retired structural engineer from Wisconsin, that settlers began building adobe homes outside the fortifications of the plaza. “If a group of people came out here in 1814 to build a village, you can imagine how daunting that would have been,” King said. “Just using adobe would have taken them years to build a village, and all that time they
Please see RINGSIDE, Page A-4
would have been defenseless.” This Saturday and Sunday, the community of about 300 people on the lip of the sprawling Galisteo Basin in southern Santa Fe County will celebrate the village’s 200th anniversary as a recognized place on the map. To the best that anyone can determine, King said, it was in 1814 that a group of about 20 families petitioned the Spanish governor of New Mexico for a land grant staking out 22,000 acres as a geographically defined community. King said the petitioners claimed the land area they wanted had been in great part abandoned by the Tano and other Indians and that the property had enough water, timber and grazing land to support the 20 families.
Please see GALISTEO, Page A-4
Tobacco companies’ new warnings confound critics
Today
tion, high blood pressure, or diabetes; or persons who are at risk for heart disease or are taking medicine for depression or asthma.” They appear on the packaging for the companies’ e-cigarettes, which are part of a fast-growing industry that the tobacco companies are maneuvering to dominate. The warnings, which are entirely voluntary and are seen by some as attempts to reduce legal liability or burnish corporate reputations, generally exceed what amounts to modest cautions, silence or even positive health claims from smaller e-cigarette makers. One on a pack of nicotine cartridges for MarkTen e-cigarettes, for instance, the brand Altria is introducing nationwide, runs more than 100 words. People with heart disease, high blood pressure and diabetes should not use the product, the label says. Neither should children. It goes on to say that nicotine can cause dizziness, nausea and stomach pains, and may worsen
PAGE A-6
E-cigarette makers quick to label products By Matt Richtel The New York Times
Tobacco companies, long considered public health enemy No. 1, have suddenly positioned themselves as protectors of consumer well-being in the digital age. They are putting out among the strongest health warnings in the fledgling e-cigarette industry, going further even than the familiar ones on actual cigarettes, a leading cause of death. It has left the industry’s critics scratching their heads and deeply skeptical. One warning, from Altria, maker of Marlboros, reads in part: “Nicotine is addictive and habit forming, and is very toxic by inhalation, in contact with the skin, or if swallowed.” Another, from Reynolds American, maker of Camels, says the product is not intended for persons “who have an unstable heart condi-
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Obama: U.S. didn’t fully grasp ISIS threat
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Clouds and sun; storms possible. High 69, low 42.
Obituaries Margaret A. Lucero, 86, Santa Fe, Sept. 24 Janey Myers Parrish, 94, Sept. 23
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What: Galisteo’s Bicentennial & Then Some Celebration When: Saturday, Oct. 4, and Sunday, Oct. 5 Where: Galisteo More information: Visit www.lasala degalisteo.org for event times and locations.
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Southwest Seminars lecture “Spanish Efforts to Reconquer New Mexico: Post-Revolt Puebloan Sites in Northern New Mexico,” by Joseph “Woody” Aguilar of San Ildefonso Pueblo, 6 p.m., Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta, $12 at the door, southwestseminars.org, 466-2775.
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Please see ISIS, Page A-4
Government weighs equality on the Web FCC tackling thorny issue of net neutrality By Anne Flaherty The Associated Press
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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama acknowledged in an interview broadcast Sunday that the United States had underestimated the rise of the Islamic State militant group, which has seized control of a broad swath of territory in the Middle East, and had placed too much trust in the Iraqi military, allowing the region to become “ground zero for jihadists around the world.” Reflecting on how a president who wanted to disentangle the United States from wars in the Middle East ended up redeploying to Iraq and last week expanding air operations into Syria, Obama pointed to assessments by the intelligence agencies that said they were surprised by the rapid advances made in both countries by the Islamic State, also known by the acronym ISIS. “Our head of the intelligence community, Jim Clapper, has acknowledged that, I think, they underestimated what had been taking place in Syria,” Obama said on 60 Minutes, the CBS News program, referring to James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence. Obama added that the agencies had overestimated the ability and will of the Iraqi army to fight such Sunni extremists. “That’s true. That’s absolutely true,” he said. In citing Clapper, Obama made no mention of any misjudgment he may have made himself. Critics have repeatedly pointed to his comment last winter characterizing groups like the Islamic State as a “JV team” compared with the original al-Qaida. But he rebutted critics who say his
WASHINGTON — Should the company that supplies your Internet access be allowed to cut deals with online services such as Netflix, Amazon or YouTube to move their content faster? The Federal Communications Commission is tackling that question this fall after the public submitted a record 3.7 million comments on the subject — more than double the number filed with the regulatory agency after Janet Jackson’s infamous wardrobe malfunction at the 2004 Super Bowl. The FCC’s chairman, former industry lobbyist and venture capitalist Tom Wheeler, says financial arrangements between broadband providers and content sites might be OK so long as the agreement
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is “commercially reasonable” and companies disclose publicly how they prioritize Internet traffic. But not everyone agrees, with Netflix and much of the public accusing the FCC of handing the Internet over to the highest bidders. “If Comcast and Time Warner — who already have a virtual monopoly on Internet service — have the ability to manage and manipulate Internet speeds and access to benefit their own bottom line, they will be able to filter content and alter the user experience,” said Barbara Ann Luttrell, 26, of Atlanta, in a recent submission to the FCC. The major cable and telecommunications companies that supply most of the nation’s broadband say blocking or discriminating against content would never be in their best interest commercially. But, some industry officials say, data hogs like Netflix might need to bear some of the cost of handling heavy traffic.
Please see WEB, Page A-5
Two sections, 24 pages 165th year, No. 272 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
NATION&WORLD IUDs or implants proposed for teens
By David Crary The Associated Press
By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press
CANDLELIGHT VIGIL FOR GIRLS KILLED IN CRASH From left, Doris Floyd, Sherry Smith, Wendy Perkins and Susan Decker attend at a candlelight vigil Sunday at North Central Texas College in Gainesville, Texas, for four members of the school softball team who were killed Friday in a highway collision while returning from a scrimmage game in Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol identified the four players killed as Meagan Richardson, Brooke Deckard, Katelynn Woodlee and Jaiden Pelton. All were from North Texas. REX C. CURRY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
In brief Police: Officer shooting not tied to protests FERGUSON, Mo. — Authorities searched Sunday for a suspect in the shooting of a police officer in Ferguson, the St. Louis suburb where there have been angry protests since a white officer fatally shot an unarmed 18-year-old black man last month. Although there were two protests about the Aug. 9 shooting of Michael Brown happening when the officer was shot Saturday night, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said at a news conference early Sunday that he didn’t think they were related to the wounding of the officer. St. Louis County Police Sgt. Brian Schellman, a police spokesman, said in an email that only one suspect was involved in the shooting, not two as earlier reported. The suspect was standing outside a closed community center when the officer approached Saturday night. The suspect fled and the officer gave chase. That’s when the man turned and shot him in the arm, police said. Belmar said the officer returned fire, but that police have no indication that anyone else was shot.
Survey: Checking account overdraft fees surge LOS ANGELES — Banks are reaping bigger fees whenever customers overdraw their checking accounts or use ATMs that are not affiliated with their lender, a new survey shows. The average fee for using an out-of-network ATM climbed 5 percent over the past year to a new high of $4.35 per transaction, according to a survey released Monday by Bankrate.com. Overdraft fees also surged, rising on average
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Jean Cocteau Cinema. Monthly variety show of local talent, 7 p.m., $7 admission includes a raffle ticket, jeancocteaucinema.com.
Fe Playhouse, 142 E. DeVargas St. Paul Zindel’s 1964 play, directed by Quinn Mander, 7:30 p.m., $20, discounts available, 505-988-4262, Thursdays-Sundays through Oct. 19.
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CANADENSIS, Pa. — The delicate search for a survivalist charged with killing a trooper more than two weeks ago shifted slightly over the weekend in the dense woods that authorities fear may be booby-trapped, state police said Sunday. Trooper Adam Reed said the search area in the Pocono Mountains largely remains the same as the past two days but has moved slightly to the southeast. Police are constantly following up on information they receive, Reed said. He declined to go into specifics about why the shift occurred or what new information police may have. The search for 31-year-old Eric Frein entered its 16th day Sunday. Authorities believe they have Frein contained within a 5-square-mile perimeter around his parents’ home in Canadensis. Frein is described by authorities as a survivalist, marksman and war re-enactment enthusiast who planned the attack for years, extensively researching how to avoid police manhunts and experimenting with explosives. Frein has held anti-law enforcement views for many years, police said.
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over the past 12 months to $32.74. That’s the 16th consecutive record high, the firm said. Checking account fees have been increasing as lenders adjust to federal banking laws and regulations enacted after the 2008 financial crisis. Among the changes: limits on when banks can charge overdraft fees on ATM and debit card transactions and a reduction in the fees that banks charge merchants for each customer who uses credit or debit cards for their purchases. Lenders have responded by hiking overdraft and ATM fees, as well as increasing how much money customers must maintain in the bank to avoid checking account fees.
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or gay men in the dozens of countries that criminalize their sex lives, social networking can be a blessing or a curse. High-tech dating apps and social media have enabled countless men to expand their circles of friends and lovers in settings that are hostile to any overt trace of homosexuality. Yet the same technology that they gratefully embrace can expose them to the risk of blackmail, arrest and violence. In one chilling case earlier this year in Pakistan, police arrested a paramedic on suspicion of killing three men he had met via the gay social network Manjam, which is based in London but has many users in Asia and the Middle East. The suspect told police he considered homosexuality to be evil. More recently, bloggers and activists raised concerns about how the popular dating app Grindr could be used to pinpoint a user’s exact location — even a user living where gay sex is outlawed. After complaints mounted, Grindr announced steps this month to reduce the risks for users in countries with a record of anti-gay violence — including Russia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Liberia, Sudan and Zimbabwe. And during the past week, Grindr posted a warning to its users in Egypt that police — as part of an ongoing crackdown on gays — “may be posing as LGBT to entrap you.” The warning urged users to be careful when arranging meetings with strangers. Grindr’s CEO, Joel Simkhai, says his Los Angelesbased company strives to maximize security and privacy for all its users, yet he cautions that governments hostile to gays can muster powerful surveillance resources. “They have a lot of control and smarts on their side,” he said. “We try to use the latest technologies on our end, but so do they, so this tension will continue. “If your security is a big issue for you,” he added, “a location-based service might not be the best option.” The potential perils of social networking have attracted the attention of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, a New Yorkbased watchdog group. Hossein Alizadeh, the commission’s program coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa, said he has tracked two main categories of cases in the region — some in which blackmailers connect with gay men and then threaten to expose them, others in which cyber police and morality police use dating apps and chatroom sites to entrap and arrest gay men. He cited one recent case in Saudi Arabia involving a man from Jordan who was jailed for eight months, then deported. “No lawyer was willing to defend this poor soul,” Alizadeh said. Another Saudi entrapment case was recounted recently on the blog of Scott Long, founder of the LGBT-rights program at Human Rights Watch who is now based in Cairo as a consultant. Long posted the account of an Egyptian man in his 30s, working as a pharmacist in Saudi Arabia, who said he was entrapped by Saudi police through use of a gay online chatroom and spent two years in a Jeddah prison cell along with dozens of other men convicted of homosexual acts. “A lot of them had been arrested on the Internet,” the Egyptian man wrote. “The religious police know all the apps and chatrooms. Some of them had got a phone call asking to meet, from someone they’d talked to before on WhatsApp, and that guy turned out to be police.” Grindr recently shared with The Associated Press some of the responses it received from an informal survey of users in countries where gay sex is outlawed. “Any user who connects to Grindr is these countries will have their distance hidden automatically by default,” the company said. A user from Ghana said some of his friends had been beaten and robbed by men they had met on Grindr who had claimed to be gay. Yet he also credited the app for helping him meet some “good guys.”
F
Pediatricians now recommend long-term birth control methods
CHICAGO — Teen girls who have sex should use IUDs or hormonal implants — longacting birth control methods that are effective, safe and easy to use, the nation’s most influential pediatricians’ group recommends. In an updated policy, the American Academy of Pediatrics says condoms should also be used every time teens have sex, to provide protection against sexually transmitted diseases that other forms of birth control don’t provide, and to boost chances of preventing pregnancy. Condoms alone are the most common birth control choice among teens, but with typical use they’re among the least effective methods at preventing pregnancy. Both long-acting methods are nearly 100 percent effective, with lower failure rates than birth control pills, patches and injections, the academy says. IUDs and hormonal implants cost more, usually hundreds of dollars, because inserting them involves a medical procedure typically done in doctors’ offices. But they’re less expensive in the long run than over-the-counter condoms or prescription birth control pills, said Dr. Mary Ott, an adolescent medicine specialist and associate pediatrics professor at Indiana University. Teens have to remember to use pills and condoms consistently. By contrast, IUDs typically work for three to 10 years after insertion, while implants typically last three years. The new guidance was published Monday in Pediatrics. It echoes 2012 recommendations from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The policy emphasizes that abstinence is 100 percent effective at preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases and says pediatricians should encourage teens to delay sexual activity “until they are ready.” But since many teens don’t heed that advice, the policy also says pediatricians need to provide birth control guidance. “All methods of hormonal birth control are safer than pregnancy,” Ott said.
For some gays abroad, social networking poses risk
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1501 Paseo de Peralta. “Spanish Efforts to Reconquer New Mexico: Post-Revolt Puebloan Sites in Northern New Mexico,” by Joseph “Woody” Aguilar of San Ildefonso Pueblo, 6 p.m., $12 at the door, southwestseminars.org, 466-2775.
SANTA FE SWING DANCE: Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Rd. Weekly all-ages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., dance $3, lesson and dance $8, santafeswing.com. Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2014
A DASH OF CELTIC, A HINT OF THE BLUES: Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Santa Fe, 107 W. Barcelona St. Chamber music of Susan Conant, 7:30 p.m., $10 at the door. KIM HARRISON: Jean Cocteau Cinema. The author reads from “The Witch With No Name,” 7 p.m., $10, $5 with paperback purchase, no charge with hardcover purchase.
NATIONAL ACROBATS OF CHINA: The Lensic. Awardwinning acrobatic troupe, 7 p.m., $15-$45, 505-9881234, ticketssantafe.org.
WILLIAM CATHER HOOK: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 505-9884226. The artist discusses his work and the book “William Cather Hook: A Retrospective,” 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2, 2014
EL GANCHO FITNESS SWIM & RACQUET CLUB: 104 Old Las Vegas Hwy., 505988-5000. In the Shadows II, photographs by Judy Naumburg, reception 5-7 p.m.
JOSHUA BREAKSTONE: Museum Hill Café, 710 Camino Lejo Jazz guitarist, 7 p.m., $25, presented by Santa Fe Music Collective, 505-983-6820.
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RENESAN INSTITUTE LECTURE: St. John’s United Methodist Church, 1200 Old Pecos Trail. “Through the Looking Glass: A Life in Photography,” by Lynne Bundesen, 1-3 p.m., $10, 505-982-9274, renesan. org.
NIGHTLIFE Monday, Sept. 29, 2014 EL FAROL: Mondays with Hilary Smith and Company, 8 p.m., call for cover. 7:30 p.m., call for cover. 808 Canyon Road.
LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Bill Hearne, pure country, 8 p.m.-close, no cover. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, 6:30-10:30 p.m., call for cover. 434 W. San Francisco St., 982-9966. Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2014
¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Argentine Tango Milonga, 7:30-11 p.m., call for cover. 213 Washington Ave., 983 6756. COWGIRL BBQ: All-star Americana band The Santa Fe Revue, noon-3 p.m.; Kodama
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. Jazz Trio, 8 p.m.; no cover. 19 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Jazz ensemble Body & Soul, 5-7 p.m., no cover. 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: Canyon Road Blues Jam, 8:30 p.m., call for cover. 808 Canyon Road.
LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Bill Hearne, pure country, 8 p.m.-close, no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. SKYLIGHT: The World Beat Party, reggae, Latin, and jazz, 9 p.m., call for cover. 139 W. San Francisco St., 982-0775 TINY’S: Singer/songwriter open mic, 7-11 p.m., no cover. 1005 S. St Francis Drive. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, 6:30-10:30 p.m., call for cover. 434 W. San Francisco St., 982-9966. For more events, see the Family Page in today’s edition, Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com.
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Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Protests expand 31 believed dead after eruption in Japan activity in Hong Kong Volcanic at Mount Ontake leader, promised for 2017. Authorities said some schools in areas near the main HONG KONG — Proprotest site would be closed, democracy protests expanded as Leung urged people to go in Hong Kong on Monday, a home, obey the law and avoid day after demonstrators, upset causing trouble. over Beijing’s decision to “We don’t want Hong Kong limit political reforms, defied to be messy,” Leung said as onslaughts of tear gas and he read a statement that was appeals from Hong Kong’s top broadcast early Monday. leader to go home. That came hours after police And with rumors swirling, lobbed canisters of tear gas Hong Kong’s Chief Executive into the crowd on Sunday eveLeung Chun-ying reassured ning. The searing fumes sent the public that speculation that demonstrators fleeing, though the Chinese army might intermany came right back to convene was untrue. tinue their protest. The gov“I hope the public will keep ernment said 26 people were calm. Don’t be misled by the taken to hospitals. rumors. Police will strive to The protests began with sitmaintain social order, includins over a week earlier by stuing ensuring smooth traffic and ensuring the public safety,” dents urging Beijing to grant said the Beijing-backed Leung, genuine democratic reforms to this former British colony. who is deeply unpopular. He “This is a long fight. I hope added, “When they carry out the blockade will continue their duties, they will use their tomorrow, so the whole thing maximum discretion.” will be meaningful,” said The city’s transport depart19-year-old Edward Yau, a ment said that besides road business and law student. “The closures in areas such as government has to underCauseway Bay, Wan Chai and stand that we have the ability Admiralty main roads have to undo it if they continue to also been blocked by demontreat us like we are terrorists.” strators in Mong Kok. When China took control of More than 200 bus routes have been canceled or diverted Hong Kong from the British in 1997, it agreed to a policy in a city dependent on public of “one country, two systems” transport. Subway exits have that allowed the city a high also been closed or blocked degree of control over its own near protest areas. The mass protest, which has affairs and kept in place liberties unseen on the mainland. It gathered support from high also promised the city’s leader school students to seniors, is would eventually be chosen the strongest challenge yet through “universal suffrage.” to Beijing’s decision to limit Hong Kong’s residents have democratic reforms for the long felt their city stood apart semi-autonomous city. The scenes of billowing tear from mainland China thanks to those civil liberties and separate gas and riot police outfitted legal and financial systems. with long-barreled weapons, Beijing’s insistence on using a rare for this affluent Asian committee to screen candidates financial hub, are highlighton the basis of their patriotism ing the authorities’ inability to China — similar to the one to assuage public discontent that currently hand-picks Hong over Beijing’s rejection last Kong’s leaders — has stoked month of open nominations for candidates under proposed fears among pro-democracy guidelines for the first-ever groups that Hong Kong will elections for Hong Kong’s never get genuine democracy. By Kelvin Chan
The Associated Press
Saturday night. About 40 people who were stranded overnight came down on Sunday. Many were injured, and some had to be rescued by helicopters or carried down on By Mari Yamaguchi stretchers. By nightfall, all the The Associated Press injured had been brought down, officials said. Japan’s Fire and TOKYO — Finally reaching the ash-covered summit of a still- Disaster Management Agency tallied 37 injured people and said erupting volcano in central Japan, it was trying to update the numrescue workers made a grim ber still missing. discovery Sunday: 31 seemingly Furukoshi said rescuers gave dead people, some reportedly priority to helping the survivors buried in knee-deep ash. come down, leaving behind Four victims were brought those who were obviously withdown and confirmed dead, one out hope. day after Mount Ontake’s big Survivors told Japanese media initial eruption, said Takehiko that they were pelted by rocks. Furukoshi, a Nagano prefecture One woman said she covered her crisis-management official. The head with a knapsack, and later 27 others were listed as having found a thermos inside had been heart and lung failure, the cusflattened. tomary way for Japanese authoriA man said he and others went ties to describe a body until into the basement of a lodge, police doctors can examine it. fearing that the rocks would penOfficials provided no details etrate the roof. He covered himon how they may have died. self with a futon, a thin Japanese It was the first fatal eruption mattress, for protection. in modern times at 10,062-foot “Even small eruptions can Mount Ontake, a popular climb- cause major damage if people ing destination about 130 miles are around, as they get hit by west of Tokyo on the main Japa- rocks that come flying,” Nagoya nese island of Honshu. University volcanologist Koshun A similar eruption occurred Yamaoka said at a news conferin 1979, but no one died. Rescue ence Sunday. “And the problem is helicopters hovered over ashthat catching signs of such small covered mountain lodges and eruptions is difficult.” vast landscapes that looked a Volcanoes can also kill by ghostly gray, like the surface of spewing toxic gases and lungthe moon, devoid of color but the choking ash. bright orange of rescue workers’ Military helicopters plucked jumpsuits. seven people off the mountainJapanese media reported that side earlier Sunday in three helisome of the bodies were found in copter trips, said Defense Minisa lodge near the summit and that try official Toshihiko Muraki. All others were buried in ash up to were conscious and could walk, 20 inches deep. Police said only he said. The Self-Defense Force, two of the four confirmed dead as Japan’s military is called, sent had been identified. Both were seven helicopters and 250 troops. men, ages 23 and 45. Police and fire departments also Mount Ontake erupted shortly joined the rescue effort. before noon at perhaps the worst A large white-and-gray plume possible time, with at least 250 continued to rise from Mount people taking advantage of a Ontake, visible from the nearby beautiful fall Saturday to go for village of Otaki. a hike. The blast spewed large Shinichi Shimohara, who white plumes of gas and ash high works at a shrine at the foot of into the sky, blotted out the mid- the mountain, said he was on day sun and blanketed the surhis way up Saturday morning rounding area in ash. when he heard a loud noise that Hundreds were initially sounded like strong winds foltrapped on the slopes, though lowed by “thunder” as the volmost made their way down by cano erupted.
strands 40, injures 37
Firefighters and members of the Japan Self-Defense Forces carry a person rescued Sunday from a cabin on Mount Ontake in central Japan. KYODO NEWS
“For a while I heard thunder pounding a number of times,” he said. “Soon after, some climbers started descending. They were all covered with ash, completely white. I thought to myself: This must be really serious.”
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Galisteo: Photos, documents welcome Continued from Page A-1
Kurdish refugees wait in line Sunday for food in Suruc, Turkey. As shelling intensifies in the Kobani, the Syrian town at the center of a region of Kurdish farming villages, new streams of Syrian refugees are fleeing toward the border of Turkey. BRYAN DENTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES
More refugees flood border as Islamic State group ramps up attacks By Karam Shoumali and Anne Barnard The New York Times
MURSITPINAR, Turkey — Shelling intensified Sunday on Kobani, the Syrian town at the center of a region of Kurdish farming villages that has been under a weeklong assault by Islamic State militants, setting fire to buildings and driving a stream of new refugees toward the fence at the border with Turkey. The extremist Sunni militants have been closing in on the town from the east and west after moving into villages with tanks and artillery, outgunning Kurdish fighters struggling to defend the area. The Kurds fear a massacre, especially after recent Islamic State attacks on Kurdish civilians in Iraq. More than 150,000 people have fled into Turkey over the past week. There were no sounds of jets overhead to indicate to the Kurds that help was coming from the U.S.led coalition, whose stated mission is to degrade and destroy the Islamic State. Two airstrikes on the eastern front hit Islamic State armored vehicles Saturday, but did not appear to halt the advance. “Where’s Obama?” one Turkish Kurd demanded, watching in anguish near the border fence as the headlights of cars could be seen streaming out of Kobani toward the border, although there was no way to cross it. “Does he care about the Kurds?” At least eight projectiles, pos-
sibly artillery shells, hit Kobani, also called Ayn al-Arab, during the afternoon and evening, appearing to have come from the east. One hit the main mosque, whose minaret can be seen just across the border from Turkey. As twilight fell, a shell streaked red through the sky and landed in the town. Dozens of cars were parked near the fence, as they have been over the past week as people have gathered against the chain-link border barrier, trying to get as close to safety as possible. The main border crossing, which crowds had rushed to and pressed against Saturday after the first shells hit the town, appeared to be closed, and workers were constructing an earthen berm around it. Even as it has accepted tens of thousands of refugees, Turkey has closed seven of nine crossing points in the area. Several times, the authorities have used tear gas to disperse crowds trying to cross, while also preventing Turkish and Syrian Kurds from crossing the border to fight the Islamic State militants. Kurds accuse Turkey, which has remained vague on how it will assist the U.S.-led coalition, of tacitly supporting the Islamic State to weaken Kurdish efforts to gain more autonomy in northern Syria. At least two people have been killed and 16 wounded while crossing minefields along the border in an attempt to escape the fighting, including five who lost limbs, according to Syrian Arab Red Crescent relief workers.
ISIS: Obama concedes effort in Syria is harder Continued from Page A-1 refusal to intervene more directly in the Syrian civil war and his decision to pull all American troops out of Iraq in 2011 had created conditions that allowed the rise of the Islamic State. Instead, he pointed a finger at Nouri al-Maliki, until recently the prime minister of Iraq. “When we left, we had left them a democracy that was intact, a military that was well-equipped and the ability then to chart their own course,” Obama said. “And that opportunity was squandered over the course of five years or so because the prime minister, Maliki, was much more interested in consolidating his Shia base.” By contrast, he praised al-Maliki’s newly installed successor, Haider al-Abadi, whom he met in New York last week, for assembling a more inclusive government that may undercut Sunni support for the Islamic State. Al-Abadi “so far at least has sent all the right signals,” Obama said. “We can’t do this for them.” But he was measured in that assessment, saying there had been “some progress” by the new Baghdad government. “I wouldn’t say great yet,” he said. Obama conceded that his strategy would be less likely to succeed in Syria, where he is working at odds with the government rather than in tandem. Obama has called for President Bashar Assad of Syria to step down, but now the two share an enemy in the Islamic State. The United States’ plan relies on trying to build up a separate rebel force that can take on both Assad’s government and the Islamic State, but Obama dismissed as “mythology” the notion that he should have done that two years ago. “We’ve got a campaign plan that has a strong chance for success in Iraq,” he said. “I think Syria is a more challenging situation.” The House speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, suggested Sunday that airstrikes might not be enough and that U.S. ground forces might
ultimately have to be deployed. “These are barbarians,” Boehner said on the ABC News program This Week. “They intend to kill us. And if we don’t destroy them first, we’re going to pay the price.” Asked if he would recommend sending U.S. ground troops if no other country would do it, Boehner said, “We have no choice.” Boehner also said that while he believes Obama has the authority to conduct airstrikes without additional permission from Congress, he would summon lawmakers back to Washington from a recess to vote if the president asked him to. “I’d bring the Congress back,” he said. Speaking on another news show, Face the Nation on CBS, Sen. Timothy Kaine, D-Va., pressed his opinion that the president needs congressional permission and accused Obama, a close ally, of inconsistency. “It really concerns me that the president would assert he has the ability to do this unilaterally when as a candidate for president he made very plain that the president cannot unilaterally start a war without Congress,” Kaine said. U.S. intelligence agencies were still trying to determine whether airstrikes in Syria had killed the leader of a separate network affiliated with al-Qaida called the Khorasan Group. The SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors extremist social media sites, reported on Sunday that a Qaida-associated Twitter account declared that Mohsin al-Fadhli, the Khorasan leader, had died. U.S. officials said they believed that a senior Khorasan figure had been killed but were not sure whether it was al-Fadhli or Abu Yusef al-Turki. They were hopeful that both had been killed, but added that it was unlikely. An intelligence report distributed at the White House on Sunday said that there were indications that al-Fadhli had been killed, but that they were not conclusive. Officials said they worried the Twitter reports were part of a disinformation campaign to throw off the Americans.
The grant was deeded in 1814 without anything in writing, King said. The paperwork finally showed up in 1822, after the territory had fallen under the governance of Mexico, which had declared its independence from Spain a year earlier, King said. Resident Eric Thomas said there are “many stories about that era, layers and layers of them.” But many of the records of that time can only be found in the government archives in Mexico City, leading to much speculation about what really happened and when. “Tourists know more about [this part of] New Mexico than we do,” Thomas said. After they acquired the land grant, and even into the late 19th century, raids by Tano and Comanche Indians became so frequent that many of the settlers left, not to return until the uprisings were finally quelled. Many of the Tano resettled in what is now Kewa Pueblo, King said. Some settlers returned to the area at the turn of the 19th century, and the community enjoyed its heyday with the population growing to about 1,000 from the 1890s until the Great Depression and World War II. Raising sheep and cattle — especially sheep — had always been a major livelihood in the area, but during that era, many residents worked out of or near their homes, making shoes and mattresses, or repairing wagons and blacksmithing, King said. There also were four or five saloons in town.
Author and Galisteo resident Lucy Lippard, whose work has focused on the history of the area from 1250 to 1782, also noted that the village was little more than a ghost town during World War II, followed by an influx of mostly Anglos in the 1950s and ’60s. The community has long attracted its share of luminaries, artists and performers, including balladeer Burl Ives during the 1970s. “He wrote a song where he said, ‘I’m going to live in Galisteo until I die,’ and then he didn’t,” Lippard said. At the center of the upcoming celebration is the ongoing $100,000 restoration of Galisteo’s La Sala de San José building. The structure, a once-bustling community center that dates to 1899, long ago fell into disrepair and began crumbling onto N.M. 41, which runs through the village. “It’s going to be a community arts center,” said Barbara King, president of the La Sala de Galisteo artist group, which is spearheading the restoration. She said the renovated facility will host live performances, art shows and other art-based events. Anna Cardenas, president of the Galisteo Community Association and a pottery artist, said the hope is to resurrect some of ways the hall was used in past decades, including community dances and musical performances. “Musicians would come in from all over the place to play,” Cardenas said. “The locals would play for a while, and when the real band came around it was,
‘OK, you’re done with,’ and the new band would start playing.” Restoration work has included stabilization of the front stairs, walls and foundation; electrical system upgrades; and repairs on interior wall plasters damaged by leaking canales. Cardenas cited the work of Cornerstone Community Partnerships in keeping the restoration efforts on track. Most village residents, from children to old-timers, have contributed in some way to the restoration. The celebratory events this weekend will include a parade, flamenco dancing, a tribute to veterans, exhibits, the debut of a bicentennial booklet by Lippard and a cookbook by Nellie Yolanda Ortiz y Pino (a descendant of prominent ranch families). At Phil Watts II Park, behind Nuestra Señora de los Remedios Catholic Church, there will be a classic car show; music; and free hamburgers, hot dogs, chips and soft drinks provided by members of the Galisteo volunteer fire department. On Saturday evening, La Sala de Galisteo will revive the “10-cent dance.” Traditionally, men would pay 10 cents a dance to cover the costs of opening the building to hold such an event. On Sunday, there will be an 11:30 a.m. Mass, followed by a community potluck at the Galisteo Community Center. “We want people to bring their old photos, documents, papers and whatever else they have that will help tell the story of Galisteo,” Barbara King said.
Anna Cardenas, a fifth-generation Galisteo resident, arranges artifacts Saturday that were found underneath Galisteo’s La Sala de San José building. The items will be on display during the village’s bicentennial celebration this weekend. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN
Ringside: Both are above name-calling Continued from Page A-1 second president, have worked as defense attorneys. But in these times, when candidates routinely distort and deceive to gain an advantage, Hanisee’s defense of a notorious character such as Aragon could have been manipulated into an attack ad. It might have said something like this: J. Miles Hanisee made money defending corrupt politician Manny Aragon. Now he wants to continue making decisions about criminals as a member of the Court of Appeals. Don’t let him. Kiernan, 60, a Democrat from Albuquerque, has not said a bad word about Hanisee. Any criticisms, he said, could violate his professional canon of ethics as a lawyer. “In judicial races, you try to stay away from negativity,” Kiernan said. More important, he said, it would be unfair to attack an attorney for doing his job by representing a defendant in a criminal case. He’s right. One of best parts of living in America is that everybody charged with a crime is entitled to a defense. And the more zealous the defense attorneys, the better for all of us. If the government has to work diligently to meet its burden of proof, wrongful convictions are less likely to happen. But the political reality is that, in Aragon’s case, plenty of people would have preferred to skip all the legal proceedings and constitutional protections in favor of putting him on the first bus to prison. Kiernan could have taken that low road in the campaign against Hanisee, but he never did. Discussing the Aragon case is not Hanisee’s favorite subject, but he never ducks questions about it. “Everyone on the worst day of his life should have an attorney,” Hanisee said in an interview. He also said there is honor in working either side of the courtroom in a criminal case. “Justice for all” are words most people recite from time to time. Actually seeking justice for all can be unpopular, especially when a judge is running for
election in this era of attack ads. Hanisee and Kiernan are above the all-too-typical name-calling. Judicial elections, though, are not always as congenial as this one. A 2010 race for the Court of Appeals was one of New Mexico’s nastiest elections. It saw Judge Linda Vanzi challenged by Dennis W. Montoya, then a practicing attorney. She had once reported Montoya to a disciplinary board, alleging misconduct. He accused Vanzi of racism. She won an ugly election. “As I get older, I cringe at all these negative ads,” Hanisee said. Fresh in his mind were the attacking commercials authorized last spring by John Wertheim, a Democrat who ran for state treasurer. Hanisee has known and liked Wertheim since they were young lawyers. All at once, Wertheim, a former chairman of the state Democratic Party, began firing campaign broadsides. In the typically sleepy treasurer’s race, Wertheim accused fellow Democrat Tim Eichenberg of being bigoted against gay people and Hispanics. All of it was true, Wertheim said in one of the most preposterous statements of the year. Trailing in polls, Wertheim quickly made up a lot of ground by going negative. Still, Eichenberg hung on to win the primary. Then both combatants stood together at an event purporting party unity for the fall election. They wanted us to believe that all the bad blood between them had evaporated overnight. Ah, politics. Isn’t it inspiring? We didn’t think so either. This year’s election is Hanisee’s second for the Court of Appeals. After Martinez appointed him, he lost the 2012 election to Democrat M. Monica Zamora. But he caught a break when another judge retired soon after. Martinez again appointed Hanisee to fill the vacancy, and his service on the Court of Appeals essentially continued without interruption. Hanisee said he had never so much
as shaken Martinez’s hand until she interviewed him when the first vacancy occurred in 2011. A Republican for all his adult life, he said he would prefer nonpartisan judicial elections. For Hanisee, campaigning is a grind, a necessary means to an end. “Between you and me, I’m very ready for this to be over,” he said. The law is what Hanisee likes. He has written more than 100 opinions since his appointment to the Court of Appeals, and he has been part of three-judge panels that have decided 700 cases. As such, he is making his campaign about his judicial experience. Kiernan has been a lawyer for 32 years and is one of eight boardcertified appellate specialists in the state. He said judicial campaigns offer a good and unusual opportunity. Judges typically are isolated from the general public. An election provides a chance for people to meet, question and evaluate them, he said. Kiernan also applied for appointment to the Court of Appeals in 2011. A nominating committee recommended him as a finalist, but Martinez chose Hanisee. Running for election, Kiernan said, is probably the only way he can achieve his 25-year professional goal of serving on the Court of Appeals. “The first time I applied, I didn’t know what to expect. Now I don’t think she [Martinez] would appoint me,” he said. The general public may not hear much more about this race. There won’t be any inflammatory attacks on television or shrill pamphlets in your mailbox from Kiernan or Hanisee. Each candidate is running on his record. Neither will run down the other guy. It’s the rarest of races, one where it’s a shame that somebody has to lose. Ringside Seat is a column about New Mexico’s people, politics and news. Follow the Ringside Seat blog at www. santafenewmexican.com. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com.
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Web: No deadline for FCC to pass new rule GOP cautions Continued from Page A-1 “Why should everyone subsidize fans of House of Cards?” asked Michael Powell of the National Cable and Telecommunications Association, a lobbying arm of the cable industry, referring to the popular Netflix series. The question is how far the government should go to protect “net neutrality” — the popular idea that Internet service providers shouldn’t manipulate or slow data moving across its networks. As long as content isn’t against the law, such as child pornography or pirated music, a file or video posted on one site will load generally at the same speed as a similarly sized file or video on another site. President Barack Obama in 2008 ran on a campaign pledge to protect net neutrality, and in 2010, the FCC issued a rule prohibiting providers from blocking or discriminating against content. But in January, a federal appeals court agreed with Verizon that the FCC did not technically have the authority to tell broadband providers how to manage their networks. The decision overturned important parts of the 2010 rule. By then, the FCC had a new chairman in Wheeler, who in the early 1980s led the National Cable and Telecommunications Association, and later the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association. Obama called him the “Bo Jackson of telecom.” Instead of appealing the court’s decision, regarded as a long shot, Wheeler proposed in May to prohibit Internet service providers from blocking content by applying the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
Tom Wheeler, the Federal Communications Commission chairman, listens to comments by a fellow panelist during a conference in Albuquerque on June 30. Wheeler spent many years as a lobbyist for the cable and wireless industries, an experience from which he has drawn when creating highly scrutinized guidelines for a policy giving people equal access to online content. MARK HOLM THE NEW YORK TIMES
But Wheeler’s plan also left open the possibility that broadband providers could charge Netflix and other content companies for faster, guaranteed access. Wheeler said he was trying to follow guidelines suggested by the court, and invited the public to comment on whether these paid arrangements should be banned altogether. The proposal received little attention until June when following a satire sketch by HBO comedian John Oliver, the FCC system temporarily shut down due to heavy traffic. Since then, public response continued to rise, with Netflix urging the public to fight against “paid prioritization.” The FCC comment period ended Sept. 15 with the record response. Wheeler has defended his approach as still upholding the basic principal of net neutrality because providers wouldn’t be allowed to slow down other content. He says the FCC could step in if broadband providers
act unreasonably, such as giving priority access to a subsidiary. “If someone acts to divide the Internet between ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots,’ we will use every power at our disposal to stop it,” he told industry officials at an annual convention this year sponsored by the NCTA. But doesn’t allowing Comcast, AT&T or Verizon to prioritize online content — essentially creating a “fast lane” — put the remaining Internet traffic in a “slow lane” by default? Many of the 3.7 million public comments filed with the FCC said it does, and suggested that the government regulate broadband providers just like phone companies. Some lawmakers, including Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., say Congress should settle the issue altogether by outright banning paid agreements between broadband providers and content providers. Broadband providers have been lobbying Congress aggres-
sively to avoid being designated as a “common carrier” under communications law. This would subject broadband services to tougher regulations. According to the Sunlight Foundation, the organizations most active in filing lobbying reports on net neutrality in recent years are Verizon, AT&T, Comcast and Wheeler’s former employer, the NCTA. The White House has said Obama backs Wheeler’s effort to uphold an open Internet, but hasn’t said how that should work, leaving a big question mark when it comes to whether the president has fulfilled that early campaign promise. In responding to an online petition on net neutrality, the White House noted that the FCC is an independent agency, making the point that Obama can’t direct the FCC to do anything, even if he wanted to. There is no deadline for the FCC to pass a new rule, and deliberations at the agency could continue into next year.
Warnings: Communication or protection? Stephanie Cordisco, said that her e-cigarette division aimed asthma. to make a break with the nega“When I saw it, I nearly fell tive reputation of the cigarette off my chair,” said Dr. Robert industry. “We’re here to make K. Jackler, a professor at the sure we can put this industry Stanford School of Medicine on the right side of history,” she where he leads research into said in the interview. Reynolds cigarette and e-cigarette adveris one of the companies that has tising. MarkTen also warns that sued, successfully, to stop more e-cigarettes are not a smoking graphic warnings on cigarette cessation product, a warning packages. that also appears on Vuse from The fact these companies Reynolds. are voluntarily warning about “Is this part of a noble effort e-cigarettes is “totally Orwellian,” for the betterment of public said Robert N. Proctor, a Stanford health, or a cynical business history professor who studies strategy? I suspect the latter,” the tobacco industry. He added, Jackler said. “They do everything for legal Experts with years studying reasons, otherwise they’d stop tobacco company behavior say making the world’s deadliest they strongly suspect several consumer products,” he said of motives, but, chiefly, that the tobacco companies. e-cigarette warnings are a very When it comes to e-cigalow-risk way for the companies rettes, public health experts and to insulate themselves from regulators are struggling with future lawsuits and, even more deep contradictions and quesbroadly, to appear responsible, tions, the most fundamental of open and frank. By doing so, which is whether e-cigarettes the experts said, Big Tobacco will lure thousands of cigarette curries favor with consumers smokers away from a deadly and regulators, earning a kind habit or actually lead to a new of legitimacy that they crave generation of nicotine addicts. and have sought for decades. In a report issued last month, Plus, they get to appear more the World Health Organizaresponsible than the smaller tion urged stronger restrice-cigarette companies that seek tions on e-cigarettes, including to unseat them. indoor smoking bans, and also The reason the strategy is low expressed “grave concern” at risk, experts said, is that many the growing role of tobacco people don’t read the warnings companies in the industry. anyway. Smaller e-cigarette companies are skeptical too. But the companies say their “To the uninitiated, it looks reasoning is straightforward. like they are responsible corWilliam Phelps, a spokesman porate citizens,” said Cynthia for Altria, said the warnings Cabrera, executive director on MarkTen, made by the subof the Smoke-Free Alternasidiary NuMark, reflect “a goal to openly and honestly commu- tives Trade Association, an e-cigarette industry group. She nicate about health effects” and that the warnings are based considers the warnings “disingenuous,” particularly the Markon “scientific research” and Ten claim that nicotine is “very “previously developed warntoxic” when inhaled, swallowed ings” on nicotine products. or brought into contact with As part of a new national rollthe skin. That is not true of the out, the MarkTen is in 60,000 doses in e-cigarettes, she said. stores in the western half of Cabrera said she believed that the United States and will be the big tobacco companies had nationwide by year’s end, the an ulterior motive, perhaps to company said. appear to regulators and lawThe R.J. Reynolds Vapor makers as more credible than Co., which makes Vuse, had the small e-cigarette companies. less to say about the origin of its e-cigarette warnings, which note, among other things, that nicotine is addictive and the product should not be used by people with heart conditions or high blood pressure. A company spokesman said the warning reflected the fact that Vuse did not contain tobacco leaf and did not undergo “combustion,” like tobacco in cigarettes. In a previous interview with The New York Times, the president of R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co.,
Continued from Page A-1
Elijah
She speculated that big tobacco companies would then be able to lobby for rules and laws that would favor them. She said some lobbyists were telling legislators that prepackaged, uniform e-cigarettes had lesser health risks than the ones sold, sometimes in made-to-order fashion, in independent vapor shops. In terms of warnings, Cabrera’s group has called for childproof packaging on e-liquids, which are used to fill e-cigarettes, and they favor warnings calling nicotine addictive and listing other ingredients. For now, there are hundreds of smaller e-cigarette companies, many selling online, and their claims and warnings run the gamut. Some make health claims that Jackler said were wild and unsubstantiated, claiming to be sex stimulants, beneficial for insomniacs or even a way to promote weight loss. Jackler speculated that one motivation for Big Tobacco could be discouraging smokers from using a competing product. Phelps, from Altria, dismissed that idea. “We want that category to be successful, and NuMark has taken a number of steps to be a leader,” he said. The warnings on the MarkTen are far more elaborate than those on a pack of Marlboros, which note, for instance, that “smoking by pregnant women may result in fetal injury, premature birth and low birth weight.” The warning does not include other risks, like the addictive nature of cigarettes, which are known to cause cancer and other deadly diseases. Phelps said that Altria was putting out cigarette warnings mandated by the government. The government mandate does not, however, preclude stronger warnings from appearing on Marlboros. Jackler asked: “Why wouldn’t you warn about ‘very toxic’ nicotine on your cigarettes when you do so on e-cigarettes?” Whatever the warnings say, they are typically disregarded by consumers, according to
September 30th Los Alvarez
Allan M. Brandt, professor of the history of medicine and science at Harvard University and an expert in the tobacco industry. Big tobacco companies “know that even these types of very serious warnings have generally not put significant dents in their sales,” he said. But, he said, the warnings do appear to be part of an age-old practice by the industry: creating scientific gray areas. That tactic, he said, lets them forestall decisive action by consumers and regulators, as it did with cigarettes. “It’s an incredibly effective and duplicitous practice in inventing additional new uncertainties and, at the same time, appearing to be cooperative,” Brandt said. “They’ve done this before,” he added. “It buys them time. It bought them 40 years with traditional tobacco products.”
Senate control would have limits ton said, must be able to tell voters that “we did tax reform, we did welfare reform, we did WASHINGTON — How spending reform, or something much difference will it make that shows that there were if Republicans win the SenRepublican fingerprints” at ate majority on Nov. 4, joining government’s highest levels. the GOP-run House against a Obama probably would Democratic White House? veto such measures, Kingston Congress’ persistent gridacknowledged. lock is due largely, but not But making Obama do entirely, to the current power so will show the difference split in the two chambers. between the parties, Kingston But even if Republicans said, and “that helps build add Senate control to their the case why you need a safe House majority, big Republican president.” If nothlegislative roadblocks will ing else, Kingston said, Repubremain. licans must force Obama to President Barack Obama still sign or veto a bill to repeal can veto legislation. his 2010 health care overhaul, Should Democrats lose six a GOP priority that Senate or more Senate seats, cedDemocrats have blocked for ing the majority, they can use years. the power of the filibuster Obama certainly would veto to thwart dozens of GOP that effort, but he would be initiatives. Republicans have powerless to stop several other employed this tactic from the initiatives. minority side. Republicans say a GOP-led In the House, House RepubSenate would join the House in licans’ deep philosophical conducting investigations into divisions will remain. That will political matters such as the further complicate effort by killing of Americans in BengSpeaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, hazi, Libya, in 2012, the Internal to pass bills without help from Revenue Service’s scrutiny of Democrats, who generally conservative groups, and perdemand significant conceshaps a failed law enforcement sions. program called Operation Fast In short, conservatives who and Furious. see Republican control of both Also, a Republican Senate houses of Congress as the path could block many, if not all, of to repealing the health law, slashing regulations and other Obama’s nominations to fedpriorities probably will be dis- eral courts and administration jobs that require confirmation. appointed. One Republican goal calls “I think the country will face for packing spending bills with two more years of gridlock,” legislative maneuvers, known said Democrat Ted Strickland of Ohio, a former congressman as riders, to force various and governor who now is pres- policy changes. Kentucky Sen. Mitch McCoident of the Washington-based Center for American Progress nnell, poised to become majority leader if he wins re-election Action Fund. and his party takes over the At least three Republican Senate, outlined his thoughts senators — Marco Rubio of in a secretly recorded speech Florida, Ted Cruz of Texas to conservatives. and Rand Paul of Kentucky “No money can be spent to — are considering running do this or to do that,” McConfor president in 2016. If the nell told a June gathering sponGOP controls the Senate sored by the billionaire Koch after Election Day, Strickland brothers, Charles and David. said, it’s hard to imagine “We’re going to go after them “there not being a fight breakon health care, on financial ing out within the Republican services, on the Environmental family.” Some Republicans are more Protection Agency, across the board.” optimistic. But even they say The strategy would elevate that if Republicans are in long-running philosophical charge on Capitol Hill, they may have to play down conser- feuds between Republicans vatives’ expectations and settle and Democrats. Democrats could use a veto or filibuster for symbolic victories that highlight their differences with to block such bills, but that also might block spending Democrats. items popular with many “They have to have an Americans. agenda and have to perform,” said GOP Rep. Jack Kingston Some GOP goals, such as of Georgia, who is retiring approving the Keystone XL oil after 22 years in the House. pipeline or removing a tax on The party’s conservative base, medical devices, might gain he said, is tired of fiery rhetoric enough Democratic support to yielding scant results. make a presidential veto politiRepublican senators, Kings- cally difficult. By Charles Babington The Associated Press
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City of Santa Fe
MEETING LIST WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 29, 2014 THROUGH OCTOBER 3, 2014 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2014 5:00 PM FINANCE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue 6:00 PM CHILDREN AND YOUTH COMMISSION – Market Station Conference Room, 500 Market Street, Suite 200 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 NO MEETINGS SCHEDULED WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2014 8:30 AM LONG RANGE PLANNING SUBCOMMITTEE – Market Station, Round House Meeting Room, 500 Market Street, Suite 200 2:00 PM ART IN PUBLIC PLACES COMMITTEE – Santa Fe Community Convention Center, Tesuque Meeting Room, 201 West Marcy Street 5:00 PM PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 4:00 PM AIRPORT ADVISOR BOARD - – Santa Fe Municipal Airport, Building 3002 (Just North of Terminal Building), 121 Aviation Drive 4:30 PM ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 4:30 PM BUCKMAN DIRECT DIVERSION BOARD – City Council Chambers 6:00 PM PLANNING COMMISSION – City Council Chambers FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2014 3:00 PM SANTA FE RIVER COMMISSION FIELD TRIP – Tour of the City’s Reservoirs in the upper watershed of the Santa Fe River SUBJECT TO CHANGE For more information call the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
The weather
For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/
TECH
7-day forecast for Santa Fe Tonight
Today
Clouds and sun with a thunderstorm
Tuesday
Clear
69
Wednesday
Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
42
Thursday
Mostly sunny
71/42
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Friday
Saturday
Breezy with plenty of Plenty of sunshine sunshine
Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
Sunday
Plenty of sunshine
73/41
70/40
74/43
76/45
75/45
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
55%
57%
30%
28%
28%
22%
22%
29%
wind: SSW 8-16 mph
wind: NNW 6-12 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
wind: W 7-14 mph
wind: NW 10-20 mph
wind: SSW 6-12 mph
wind: WSW 6-12 mph
wind: WNW 3-6 mph
New Mexico weather
Almanac Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 79°/52° Normal high/low ............................ 75°/44° Record high ............................... 88° in 2010 Record low ................................. 28° in 1936 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/8.09” Normal month/year to date ... 1.50”/10.57” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 1.01”/8.56”
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
285
64
Farmington 68/40
Española 73/50 Los Alamos 64/42 40
Santa Fe 69/42 Pecos 63/39
25
Albuquerque 73/51
Area rainfall
64 87
Taos 65/36
84
666
Gallup 69/34
Raton 71/40
64
56 412
Clayton 74/52
Pollen index
Las Vegas 67/41
25
54
40
40
60
The following water statistics of September 25 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.756 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 2.434 City Wells: 2.532 Buckman Wells: 2.497 Total water produced by water system: 9.219 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.305 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 11.4 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.74 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
Source:
Today’s UV index
54 380
Roswell 81/59
Ruidoso 71/53
25
Truth or Consequences 82/55
380
380
Hobbs 79/60
285
Alamogordo 83/60
The New York Times
70
70
70
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.
70
180
Las Cruces 84/60
Carlsbad 82/62
54
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes Sun. High 84 ................................... Deming Sun. Low 35 ................................ Angel Fire
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 82/57 pc 81/61 pc 67/35 c 78/60 s 79/61 pc 60/49 c 74/46 pc 77/54 pc 63/43 pc 79/55 pc 66/53 c 84/60 s 80/60 pc 65/54 t 76/58 pc 67/53 t 75/54 t 75/59 pc 84/61 pc
Hi/Lo W 83/60 t 73/51 t 58/31 t 79/62 t 82/62 pc 58/31 t 70/38 t 74/52 t 65/46 t 78/56 t 67/39 pc 83/56 t 73/50 t 68/40 t 81/56 t 69/34 s 70/35 t 79/60 pc 84/60 t
Hi/Lo W 83/54 s 74/51 s 61/30 s 85/55 s 88/59 pc 63/33 s 73/38 s 75/50 s 64/43 pc 80/52 s 67/41 s 83/51 s 73/49 s 69/41 s 84/53 s 70/36 s 71/36 s 83/60 pc 82/56 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 69/53 81/61 70/50 82/57 84/61 75/52 60/39 80/59 78/56 68/46 79/57 77/57 82/58 72/43 82/61 82/59 85/64 77/54 65/53
W pc pc r c s r pc c pc pc pc t pc pc r pc pc r pc
Hi/Lo W 67/41 t 84/58 pc 64/42 t 78/49 t 80/56 t 71/40 t 56/31 t 74/46 t 81/59 t 71/53 t 79/50 t 76/51 pc 82/53 t 65/36 t 82/55 t 80/56 t 87/60 t 67/43 t 68/36 s
Hi/Lo W 71/40 s 84/58 s 67/43 s 78/48 s 83/53 s 72/39 s 60/31 s 75/46 s 83/52 s 70/48 s 80/50 s 76/49 s 81/51 s 66/33 s 82/53 s 82/53 s 85/57 s 70/44 s 68/38 s
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Sunrise today ............................... 6:58 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 6:51 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 12:03 p.m. Moonset today ........................... 10:36 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:58 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 6:50 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ...................... 12:59 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ....................... 11:30 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:59 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 6:48 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 1:53 p.m. Moonset Wednesday ........................... none First
Full
Last
New
Oct 1
Oct 8
Oct 15
Oct 23
The planets Rise 9:02 a.m. 6:26 a.m. 12:16 p.m. 2:52 a.m. 10:29 a.m. 7:10 p.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 7:39 p.m. 6:39 p.m. 9:57 p.m. 4:37 p.m. 9:01 p.m. 7:46 a.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities
Weather for September 29
Yesterday Today Tomorrow 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
Hi/Lo 55/37 74/66 81/54 49/46 63/52 64/54 87/60 80/71 76/60 78/53 83/56 75/51 89/66 75/50 78/55 46/25 60/42 90/77 89/72 83/59 83/57 79/60 79/64
W pc sh pc r c r s c c pc pc pc pc t pc pc pc sh c pc s pc pc
Hi/Lo 51/37 77/63 77/55 64/49 63/51 63/50 74/58 77/66 71/58 81/52 81/55 74/53 90/70 71/46 77/54 44/30 61/33 91/75 88/71 80/56 81/61 81/61 80/63
W s sh pc r sh r pc r sh s pc s s t s sf s sh pc pc s s pc
Hi/Lo 50/34 82/64 79/58 68/44 68/50 65/42 65/57 80/65 79/58 62/51 79/55 64/50 91/73 70/46 64/49 43/32 66/35 90/76 87/72 75/54 81/63 86/64 84/62
W s pc pc c r c pc c pc pc s pc s pc pc pc s sh pc s pc s pc
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 84/63 87/64 90/77 73/54 82/59 79/75 84/64 86/59 90/75 86/60 87/71 73/52 77/53 82/56 86/60 69/54 88/64 74/67 76/61 64/54 81/57 84/53 82/61
W r pc pc pc pc t pc pc c pc pc pc pc pc s c pc pc pc pc pc pc pc
Hi/Lo 84/59 86/64 88/76 77/47 64/45 85/73 79/63 86/61 87/73 79/62 87/66 77/52 67/54 79/58 85/62 63/50 89/71 77/66 74/62 64/54 75/58 80/58 79/62
W pc pc t s c pc pc s t pc s pc r sh s pc s pc pc r pc pc c
Hi/Lo 83/59 87/70 89/76 58/50 65/56 85/74 74/60 88/67 85/72 79/62 89/66 73/55 66/50 81/59 84/63 65/45 90/74 80/66 75/62 63/51 72/56 77/59 82/63
W s s t pc pc pc pc pc t pc s pc c c s sh s pc pc sh t pc pc
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 Stationary front
Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Warm front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 92 ................... Death Valley, CA Sun. Low: 27 ............. Bodie State Park, CA
Weather history
Weather trivia™
Algeria and Tunisia are typically dry, but on Sept. 29, 1969, severe flooding killed 600 people and left a quarter of a million homeless.
average, what is the windiest time Q: On of the day?
A: The afternoon
Newsmakers Snoop Dogg to visit Alaska if voters legalize pot
Snoop Dogg
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Rapper Snoop Dogg says he’ll do a concert in Alaska if voters in November approve an initiative legalizing recreational use of marijuana. Snoop Dogg is well known for his love of pot and said he would do a “wellness retreat concert” in Alaska if Ballot Measure 2 passes. KTUU reports the rapper made his comments during a webcast in which he interviewed former TV reporter Charlo Greene.
Jane Fonda gets personal at Rape Foundation brunch
Jane Fonda
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Jane Fonda told an audience of activists and philanthropists that her mother had been sexually abused and eventually committed suicide. Fonda made the personal revelation at an event celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Rape Treatment Center, which provides comprehensive free treatment for sexual assault victims. She hosted the Rape Foundation’s annual fundraising brunch Sunday at billionaire Ron Burkle’s Greenacres estate in Beverly Hills. The Assoicated Press
Chinese black market takes bite out of Apple By Paul Mozur and Shanshan Wang
285
180
A customer on Sept. 19 shows off the new Apple iPhone 6, 6 Plus at a store in Tokyo. SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
60
25
10
Water statistics
Clovis 78/56
54
60
As of 9/26/2014 Elm ...................................................... 1 Low Chenopod ............................................ 1 Low Grasses ................................................ 1 Low ...................................................................... Total.............................................................3
25
285
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.72”/6.78” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 1.95”/11.12” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.31”/7.87” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date ................ 0.77”/10.96” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.64”/5.54”
Sunday’s rating ................................... Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
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
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 70/52 pc 70/56 pc 72/59 pc 74/63 s 102/72 s 100/71 s 88/81 t 93/78 t 73/66 t 76/66 t 73/59 c 73/47 s 70/41 pc 72/57 pc 66/46 r 68/44 pc 64/59 t 73/57 s 86/76 pc 84/70 pc 91/78 pc 91/78 s 86/64 pc 88/67 pc 64/52 pc 63/53 pc 64/55 c 64/51 c 72/48 pc 70/58 c 73/60 c 75/60 t 91/73 pc 90/72 pc 91/80 pc 92/81 s 73/65 pc 71/57 s 67/59 pc 68/58 pc
Hi/Lo 67/55 77/61 97/71 91/78 74/65 62/49 68/55 69/45 70/53 85/71 90/78 86/62 60/55 66/53 67/56 74/60 89/72 93/80 73/58 67/58
W c s s t t s c pc pc s s pc c pc c t pc s s pc
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 75/59 75/59 70/61 73/58 77/59 59/39 96/76 75/52 66/41 77/72 77/59 72/46 76/58 90/81 61/52 75/48 76/65 63/52 68/45 70/48
W pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc s c s pc c pc pc s s pc s pc
Hi/Lo 75/61 69/56 75/54 73/55 61/48 55/49 97/74 71/56 70/51 87/74 77/58 67/51 72/55 89/78 61/38 84/59 80/68 60/51 69/49 72/55
W s c c t pc c s r pc t s s r t s s s r s pc
Hi/Lo 76/64 69/56 78/60 72/56 65/50 54/38 97/74 73/54 69/54 84/74 77/58 74/51 74/57 89/78 56/36 89/57 78/66 61/49 69/54 69/54
W pc pc pc t pc pc pc c c pc s s pc t pc s pc c s c
TV
top picks
7 p.m. on Fox Gotham The disenfranchised youths of Gotham — including the future Catwoman (Camren Bicondova) — are targeted by child traffickers in the new episode “Selina Kyle.” Gordon and Bullock (Ben McKenzie, Donal Logue) try to end the operation. After seemingly meeting his fate, Penguin-to-be Oswald Cobblepot (Robin Lord Taylor) heads back to the city with evil in mind. Guest stars include Carol Kane, Frank Whaley, Lili Taylor, Richard Kind and Kyle Massey. 7 p.m. on CW iHeartradio Music Festival Night 1 Recorded at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand earlier in the month, the showcase for numerous music acts becomes a new two-night television special that ends Tuesday. Taylor Swift, Coldplay, Usher, Ariana Grande, Nicki Minaj, Iggy Azalea, Lorde, One Direction, Ed Sheeran, Train, Paramore, Motley Crue, Bastille, Calvin Harris and Neon Trees are among the featured artists. The country genre also is represented thanks to Zac Brown Band, Eric Church and Kacey Musgraves.
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3
2
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8 p.m. on Fox Sleepy Hollow Benjamin Franklin (guest star Timothy Busfield) is drawn into Ichabod and Abbie’s (Tom Mison, Nicole Beharie) plan to save Katrina (Katia Winter) from the Headless Horseman in the new episode “The Kindred.” The scheme involves a being not unlike the Dr. Frankenstein-created synthetic man, this one created by Franklin. Jenny (Lyndie Greenwood) and the new local sheriff get off on the wrong foot with each other. 9 p.m. on PBS The Hispanic Heritage Awards Actress Zoe Saldana (“Star Trek”) and jazz guitarist and former New York Yankees center fielder Bernie Williams are among the recipients of the honors in this ceremony, taped earlier in the month at the Warner Theatre in Washington, D.C. This marks the first national telecast of the event, saluting achievers who have instilled cultural pride via a number of disciplines including sports and education. Singer-composer-actor Carlos Vives gets the Legend award.
HONG KONG — When Apple’s latest iPhones went on sale this month in Hong Kong, Singapore and New York, among the hip urbanites and tech-obsessed was another group clamoring for the devices: Chinese scalpers looking to make a premium by flipping the phones to smugglers. But the gray market for the new iPhones has already dried up, even though they will not officially go on sale in China for a few weeks, at the earliest. Wholesalers who helped orchestrate the smuggling of tens of thousands of the phones into the country are now slashing prices to move inventory. At an electronics market in central Beijing, one retailer was recently selling the low-end iPhone 6 and 6 Plus for $1,060 to $1,436, down from $1,960 to $2,450 just after the release. “Stocks of the iPhone 6 are way too high right now,” said one wholesaler of smuggled iPhones in Beijing’s northwestern tech hub Zhongguancun. The smugglers’ experience represents the new reality for Apple in China. Four years ago, the iPhone 4 was a status symbol, with the black market booming before the product was officially introduced. Today, the iPhone is simply one option among many, as local companies like Xiaomi and Meizu Technology rival Apple in terms of coolness while charging less than half the price. A spokeswoman for Apple declined to comment on the smuggling. The primary route the iPhones have taken into China is via Hong Kong, according to the wholesaler, who declined to be identified because of the illegality of some parts of the operations. Scalpers organize Hong Kong customers with local identity cards to preorder phones that the scalpers then collect outside the store, paying about $325 extra per phone. The phones are then smuggled to wholesalers in the southern Chinese city of Guangdong, across the border from Hong Kong, and from there are shipped to cities across China. When the prices were high, early last week, the wholesaler said he was making more than $163 per sale. But his profit margins have dissolved as prices have fallen. “This year, the scalpers’ losses will be big,” he said. China represents a major, fast-growing market for Apple, which competes with Samsung for control of the highend smartphone segment. In January, Apple brokered a long-delayed deal with the country’s largest telecom company, China Mobile, which has helped bolster sales. The largest smartphone market in the world, China accounted for 15.9 percent of Apple’s revenue in the last quarter. The new models will help Apple solidify its position in the country. In China there are about 50 million iPhone users, according to Kitty Fok, a managing director of the research firm IDC. She estimates that the company will sell about 4 million phones a month as customers swap their old iPhones for the new ones. But both Apple and Samsung face stiff competition from local brands, which have been offering cheaper phones with high-end features. As Sam-
sung’s sales slipped this year, the company was replaced by Xiaomi as the country’s largest smartphone maker, according to the market research firm Canalys. “The local players aren’t only playing the price game,” Fok said. “They have products that cater to the local market, big screen sizes, optimized connectivity for China and dual SIM cards.” The Chinese government is not making things any easier. An intensifying crackdown on corruption in the country has led officials, who in the past were known to spend big on luxury products like iPhones, to tamp down on lavish purchases. The government has also signaled that it would take measures to curb government reliance on electronics made by foreign companies after disclosures by the former National Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden about U.S. government surveillance. In a statement issued this month, Apple’s chief executive, Timothy D. Cook, said the company had never cooperated with the government of any country to provide access to customer data. Out of the gate, Apple is already a step behind with the iPhone 6. Last year, the company released the latest model in China at the same time it did in the United States, Japan and parts of Europe. This year, the release has been delayed as Apple awaits government approval, an often slow and unpredictable process. The iPhone 6 is likely to get the final license before China’s National Day celebrations Wednesday, according to a person with knowledge of the plans who works for one of China’s state-owned telecom providers. If that happens, the new models will most likely begin selling in China a few weeks later. The delay gives the smugglers a bit more time to get rid of their stock. The recent scene at the electronics market in Beijing — a multistory mall crowded with stalls of vendors selling everything from calculators and hard drives to surveillance cameras and smartphones — was not encouraging. Only a few customers browsed in the narrow walkways. No stalls openly displayed the new iPhones. On request, the vendors could procure the devices from a wholesaler. One vendor said the market for the phones was far worse than in past years but said he hoped a new crackdown on smuggling by customs officers would help push their price back up. A report from China’s staterun Xinhua news service said the government would auction off 2,000 iPhone 6s it had seized in the southern city of Shenzhen. The vendor at the electronics market said that one way smugglers skirted the stricter enforcement was to walk the phones across the border two at a time. Usually those crossing the border take the phones out of the packaging to convince customs officials that the phones are their own, he said. Tearing off the plastic on what appeared to be an unopened iPhone 6, he showed how the screen was already dotted with the fingerprints of whoever brought it into China. “Right now at our market you won’t find a phone that is actually in its original packaging,” he said.
Lunes, 29 de septiembre, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-7
EL NUEVO MEXICANO El mito del monolito “G
CHICAGO erardo Lamas, el portavoz oficial de todos los hispanos de Estados Unidos, renunció el jueves por la noche,” expresaba con toda seriedad el sitio de noticias satírico pocho.com este mes. ” ‘… Nunca podré complacer a nadie. … La verdad es que es ridículo esperar que una persona pueda hablar en nombre de millones [de individuos] de orígenes, situaciones geopolíticas, castas económicas y culturas regionales diversos,’ dijo.” No es de sorprender que los bufones de una cultura reiteren cómicamente que la idea de una “comunidad hispana” homogénea es sólo una ficción. Últimamente, parece que la idea principal del “poder de los números” se está resquebrajando. Están los que creen que el presidente Obama hizo lo correcto al retrasar una acción ejecutiva para los inmigrantes ilegales hasta Esther después de las elecciones Cepeda de mitad de período. Y Comentario hay otros que están enfurecidos porque el presidente se retractó de sus palabras, y ahora han perdido toda su fe en él. Están los que creen que la única manera en que los hispanos van a obtener el poder político que anhelan — el suficiente para que los líderes de los partidos no los ignoren cuando las cosas se ponen candentes — es participar en cifras históricas en cada elección, hasta que los candidatos los tomen en serio. Pero también están los que dicen que es necesario un boicot en los comicios, para castigar a los demócratas por no ser más valientes con respecto a los asuntos migratorios. Hasta los que están sólo ligeramente interesados en los detalles de la política, pero a quienes les importa el panorama general, deben quedar advertidos: Ya no se aprecian las opiniones matizadas en los asuntos de la inmigración. Según los miembros del movimiento de los “soñadores” — muchos de los cuales están pidiendo la legalización y ciudadanía final prácticamente de cuanto inmigrante ilegal está en el país, e incluso la de algunos que ya han sido deportados — uno está o bien “a favor” de los inmigrantes o si no, es un fanático, xenófobo, lleno de odio. De hecho, si uno es hispano y no está dispuesto a tirar la toalla con respecto a la idea de que habrá una reorganización de la inmigración, llevada a cabo por ambos partidos — o no está preparado para considerar la noción de abrir la frontera sur a todo el que necesite asilo económico — bueno, quizás, en realidad, ni es hispano. Aunque los íconos hispanos Dolores Huerta, co-fundadora de Campesinos Unidos de Estados Unidos, y el líder sindical Eliseo Medina han sido incluidos en un grupo de apologistas de Obama no muy admirados, nadie se ha enojado lo suficiente para denunciarlos públicamente diciendo que no son “verdaderamente” hispanos. Sin embargo, según el investigador de Latino Decisions, Gabriel Sánchez, el Fiscal General de Nuevo México, Gary King, que se presenta como candidato a la gobernación contra la gobernadora en ejercicio, Susana Martínez, parafraseó a Huerta y criticó a su adversaria al decir: ” ‘Ella [Huerta] dijo que no se puede salir y votar por alguien para gobernador sólo porque tenga apellido hispano, dijo que hay que mirarlos y descubrir si tienen un corazón latino.’ King declaró después, ‘Y sabemos que Susana Martínez no tiene un corazón latino,’ ” refiriéndose a su postura de línea dura en cuanto a la inmigración ilegal. En el artículo de su blog, “La política de la representación latina en Nuevo México,” Sánchez se maravillaba: “Un hombre blanco, no-hispano adoptó el papel de árbitro de la autenticidad hispana, y afirmó que la única gobernadora hispana en la historia de Estados Unidos no es suficientemente hispana de corazón.” Así son las cosas en la actualidad. Se puede ser uno de “nosotros” o uno de “ellos” — y es infinito el número de personas que lo calificarán a uno de esa manera sobre la base de la opinión que uno tenga con respecto a la inmigración. Sin embargo, toda esa premisa es una falacia. No hay una idea peculiar, unificada sobre la inmigración que pueda servir como prueba definitoria de la autenticidad hispana de un individuo. Una encuesta reciente del Pew Research Center halló que de los demócratas hispanos encuestados, el 52 por ciento pensaba que el partido estaba manejando incorrectamente la inmigración. Pero casi un 10 por ciento de los encuestados dijo que su insatisfacción surge de que el partido está demasiado dispuesto a permitir que los inmigrantes que viven ilegalmente en Estados Unidos obtengan categoría legal. No debe ser una sorpresa que los hispanos tengan opiniones diversas, y a veces en conflicto, sobre la inmigración; y no constituye una debilidad. La fuerza de los hispanos está en su diversidad, y les conviene más ser una realidad confusa que un mítico monolito.
Grampo, Canutito catch ‘un paisano’
U El tráfico circulando por Oshara Village el martes. El Condado de Santa Fe planea construir una carretera secundaria para aliviar el tráfico. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/EL NUEVO MEXICANO
Genera críticas vía auxiliar de Richards Ave. Por Robert Nott El Nuevo Mexicano
ada mañana, miles de conductores convergen en el angosto camino de dos carriles de la avenida Richards para llegar al Santa Fe Community College o a una docena de las escuelas alrededor de la creciente comunidad de Rancho Viejo. Las rotondas construidas a lo largo de la avenida, a través de los años suponían que ayudaría a aliviar la congestión vehicular. En cambio, ahora forman parte del problema, reduciendo la velocidad de los vehículos y retrasando el tráfico y creando embotellamientos en las áreas residenciales. Los embotellamientos “son tan malos como siempre,” dice Jerry Wells, residente de Rancho Viejo. Ahora el Condado de Santa Fe y el estado desean construir otro camino que lleve un poco del tráfico norte-sur de Richards a una nueva vía alterna que lo desembocará por un terreno desocupado de Rabbit Road a la Avenida del Sur lado este del colegio comunitario. Todo el mundo concuerda con la necesidad de una ruta alternativa para el tráfico. Pero los residentes de Rancho Viejo — así como la administración del colegio — dicen que el condado no ha sido claro con ellos acerca del plan de acción y ha provisto información confusa respecto al financiamiento y ubicación del camino. Dicen que el condado decidió una ruta inicial sin suficiente consulta. El proyecto está aún en fase de planeación, con proyección de comenzar en el 2017. El condado dice que es muy pronto para estimar el costo, pero la Comisionada del Condado Liz Stefanics, entre otros, ha mencionado un compromiso de aproximadamente $5 millones. Problemas concernientes al corredor han surgido después que el empleados del condado demarcaron el nuevo camino. Encargados de colegio comunitario se quedaron sorprendidos cuando vieron que pasaba directamente por el corazón de espacio a un no desarrollado de su campus y el centro su área atlética, utilizado para entrenar
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a muchas agencias a cargo de cumplimiento de la ley. Dice el colegio comunitario que costaría por lo menos $1 millón para mover esta área que fue desarrollado a mediados de los 1990. La Presidenta del Consejo de la Administración del Santa Fe Community College, Linda Siegle, dijo que la serie de demarcaciones puesta en terreno del colegio sugieren que el condado primero había planeado la ruta sin primero avisar a los encargados universitarios. El 1 de julio, Carlos Vigil, gestor de proyectos de caminos del Condado de Santa Fe, le escribió una carta al presidente del colegio comunitario, Randy Grissom, indicando en la ella la oposición del colegio pero declarando que no se podía cambiar la ruta y que se le recompensará al colegio por el costo de cambiar el sitio de campo de atletismo cuando la disputa llegara a términos legales. Se mandó esa carta un mes antes de una reunión comunitaria el 30 de julio, convocada por el condado para buscar opiniones públicas en lo que llamaban “alineación sugerida.” El condado no hizo pública la carta hasta que la solicitara un residente bajo el Acta de Inspección de Récords Públicos. Residentes dicen que los oficiales del condado les habían dicho en la reunión que quizá no habría suficientes fondos para terminar el proyecto del camino y si así fuere, el camino no llegaría hasta el colegio comunitario. Vecinos opinaron que podría empeorar la congestión vial en la avenida Richards. Desde entonces, algunos de los encargados del condado, incluyendo el Asistente Gestor del Condado, Tony Flores, han dicho que se ha completado solamente el 75 por ciento del estudio de demarcación y que ningún plan, incluyendo una vía sin salida en College Drive, se ha finalizado. Flores comentó que es difícil estimar un presupuesto del proyecto hasta ahora. “Depende totalmente de cuál ruta se escoge,” comentó Flores. “¿Se construirán puentes? ¿Tendremos que atravesar un arroyo? Es demasiado temprano saber el costo.” Podrían empezar a construir en el 2017, con un costo estimado de por lo menos $5 millones para la vía alterna, han dicho oficiales del condado.
O 10614 Crucigrama No.N10614 CRUCIGRAMA Horizontales 1. Unidad de tiempo astronómico equivalente a mil millones de años. 3. Allano una superficie. 8. Hermana del padre o madre. 10. Discreción, gracia. 11. Descantillas menudamente con los dientes. 14. En Asiria, dios de la guerra y del poder. 15. Patriarca hebreo, hijo de Abraham y padre de Jacob y de Esaú. 17. Composición lírica elevada. 18. Molécula gramo. 20. Labrador de tribus árabes de Marruecos. 22. Nombre gaélico de Irlanda. 23. Una de las lunas de Júpiter. 25. En algunas religiones, lo prohibido. 26. Lampuga. 27. Leal. 29. (... Bator) Capital de Mongolia. 30. Unidad monetaria de Gran Bretaña. 31. Porción de tierra rodeada de agua. 33. Partícula inseparable privativa. 35. Que no cree en Dios. 36. Sal o éster del ácido oleico. 38. Príncipe ruso. 39. De esta manera. 40. Echan sal a los manjares. 42. Planta rutácea, de hojas muy divididas, utilizada en medicina. 44. Desafía a duelo. 45. Sal del ácido ciánico. 47. Planta liliácea cuyos bulbos se usan como condimento. 48. Tejido grueso de lana parecido al fieltro. 49. Tipo de costa común en Galicia. Verticales 1. (El, 1099-1164) Geógrafo árabe español, descendiente de Mahoma. 2. Observar desde una altura. 3. Nieto de Cam. 4. Alaba. 5. Calidad de insoluble. 6. De Arabia Saudí, país de Oriente Medio.
www.angelfreire.com 7. Percibirá el sonido. 8. Insecto isóptero que vive en sociedades jerárquicas y se alimenta de papel y madera. 9. Arbusto ericáceo reptante, muy usado como planta de adorno. 12. Forma del pronombre de segunda persona del plural. 13. Sagitario. 16. En Amér., hoja que envuelve la mazorca del maíz. 19. Secreción líquida de los riñones. 21. Preposición inseparable que indica separación. 22. Meter una cosa en latas. 24. Roca compuesta de feldespato, piroxeno y nódulos calizos o cuarzosos. 26. Salas donde se dictan clases. 28. Ibero. 30. Nudo que se desata fácilmente tirando de uno de sus cabos. 32. Conozco. 34. Cosa de poca importancia. 36. Relativo al oso.
O 10614 SoluciónDEL del No. SOLUCION N10614
37. Administrar a un enfermo el sacramento de la extremaunción. 39. Mar interior del Asia, en el Turquestán. 41. A tempo. 43. Uní, lié. 46. Terminación de aumentativo.
na mañanita in the middle del autumn, grampo, grama y Canutito were out walking en las fields moving las vacas de una pasture para la otra. La mañana estaba un poco frosty y por eso they all had on their sweaters. As they walked through las Larry Torres tiras, waving their sticks and Growing up yelling atrás de Spanglish las cows, Canutito suddenly saw un pájaro grande fly up por donde las vacas were walking. “¡Grampo! ¡Grama!” the little boy exclaimed all asustão, “¿Qué es ese pájaro grande that just flew up? Es una eagle or it is un hawk? I’m sure que no es un vulture porque los chupilotes are black y este bird era como gold con una cola larga y un ring blanco around its neck.” “No es un ‘chupilote’, ” grama corrected him. “It is pronounced as un ‘zopilote’.” “Well I’ll be,” said Grampo Caralampio who wasn’t listening as he leaned on his garrote. “Hace muchos años que I haven’t seen a un paisano aquí en estas partes. “¿Qué es ‘un paisano,’ grampo?” Canutito asked. “¿Es un roadrunner?” “No,” grampo replied. “Un paisano es un pheasant. Cuando yo era little there used to be paisanos roosting por donde quiera. Mi papa los hacía hunt y mi mamá would fry them for breakfast. Pero yo pensé que ya los paisanos estaban todos extinct aquí en Nuevo México.” “El aroma de fresh paisano frying en la puela, made for un breakfast bien tasty,” grama exclaimed. “Look grampo,” the little boy said todo excitão as he pointed further on down the field. “Parece que el paisano is wounded porque nomás hizo fly un poquito and then se hizo hide allá en los bushes.” And sure enough; dicho y hecho, cuando grampo, grama and Canutito walked a little further they could clearly ver al paisano trying to esconderse en los bushes. Canutito exclaimed, “Maybe I should run back pa’la casa and get mi bibi gun so we get kill it and have Grama Cuca cook it para el almuerzo.” Just then grampo said to grama, “Oye Cuca, lend me tu sueta; your sweater is bigger que la mía. I’m going to usarla como un net to try to catch ese paisano.” Grama Cuca took off her sueta and gave it to grampo, shivering en el aire de la mañanita. “Aren’t you glad que grampo didn’t ask you to take off your ’naguas, grama?” Canutito teased her. “Entonces you would really be freezing aquí without your skirt.” They both watched as grampo hizo sneak over para donde el paisano estaba hiding en los bushes. Lo watcharon as he threw la sueta grande de la grama over the paisano and caught it. “Are we going to eat it?” Canutito asked todo excitão as he ran over para donde estaba su grampo. Pero when he got there, vio que el paisano tenía real pretty feathers. El pheasant tenía red feathers en sus cheeks y plumas greens en su cabeza y un white anillo around his neck. “¡Qué bonito pajarito!” Canutito said mientras que hacía stroke las feathers of the frightened bird. Ahora, close up, podía ver que el paisano had un color gold y que his tail feathers tenían stripes como Vs en ellas. “Mmm, I can almost taste fresh paisano en mi boca,” Grampo Caralampio remarked. “Yo lo puedo hacer cook for breakfast en la puela con papas fritas,” Grama Cuca said. “I don’t want you to kill este pajarito!” Canutito said de repente. “¡Pobrecito! He looks todo frightened. I could never comerme a esta creatura. Vamos a hacerlo let go.” Grampo let al paisano escaparse and they went back a las vacas. “Yo tenía mis taste buds todos ready para comer carne de paisano,” grampo remarcó sadly. “I’ll find otra cosa to prepare para el almuerzo,” Grama Cuca promised. That morning toda la familia comió papas fritas con spam pero they were contentos …
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
EDUCATION
Contribute on education: Send calendar and other school happening items to Robert Nott at rnott@sfnewmexican.com
Academic skills on Web tied to income level By Motoko Rich The New York Times
Wealthier students tend to perform better on tests of reading comprehension than their poorer peers, a long-standing trend that has been documented amply. But with the Internet having become an indispensable part of daily life, a new study shows that a separate gap has emerged, with lowerincome students again lagging more affluent students in their ability to find, evaluate, integrate and communicate the information they find online. The new research, led by Donald J. Leu at the University of Connecticut, is appearing this month in Reading Research Quarterly. Although the study is based on a small sample, it demonstrates a general lack of online literacy among all students, indicating that schools have not yet caught up to teach the skills needed to navigate digital information. Although youngsters are experts at texting, posting photographs on Instagram and upgrading to the newest social
media app while their parents are trying to decipher Facebook, children are still not adept at using the Web to find reliable information. The study, which focused on seventh-grade students from two middle schools in Connecticut, compared reading test scores from the federal exams often known as the Nation’s Report Card as well as results of assessments that required students to perform tasks such as researching the question “Are energy drinks heart healthy?” using multiple Web resources. The students were evaluated on such things as whether they could use keywords effectively in search engines, determine the credibility of a website, discern the bias of an Internet author and communicate their findings through email. Students from a school in a community where the median family income was more than $100,000 demonstrated slightly more than one extra school year’s worth of online reading ability compared with students from a community where the median family income
was close to $60,000. “This is more likely a comparison between a wealthier district and a middle-class district,” said Leu, who said the researchers did not receive permission to study schools in the poorest communities in the state. “So the gap that we found, we would expect it to be greater if the economic differences were greater.” Because an increasing number of life tasks and jobs depend on the ability to sift through boundless online information presented in various formats — text, videos, graphics and social media — the ability of a student to accurately search for and evaluate information on the Web is becoming crucial to success. Yet few teachers are incorporating digital literacy into their curriculum. Because so many people use the Internet during leisure time, they might not realize how useful it could be as an educational tool, some experts say. They also may not realize how much their students need assistance.
“Teachers have to expect and recognize that they can’t just say ‘Google something,’ because some of our students still don’t know what that means, believe it or not,” said Susan B. Neuman, a professor of early childhood and literacy education at New York University who is a co-editor of Reading Research Quarterly. In the study, the researchers polled the students about whether they used the Internet for schoolwork. They found that three-quarters of the students in the lower-income school had been required to use the Web for school assignments, compared with 97 percent in the more affluent school. “In schools that tend to be high need, high poverty and low scoring, curriculum focuses intensely on those skills that are tested,” said Sara Kajder, an assistant professor of English education at the University of Georgia who was not involved in the study. “We don’t test on media literacy even though those might be the most important skills that we can give kids right now.”
Keeping students safe School Safety Summit updates parents on SFPS emergency protocols By Robert Nott The New Mexican
W
hen Nava Elementary School mother Tintawi Kaigziabiher heard her children’s school was in lockdown because of reports of an armed shooter in the area last spring, her instinct was to rush to Nava to save her children. And while Maria-Lisa Dilda, the district’s emergency management specialist, understands that parental instinct to protect, embrace and save children in the face of danger, she wants parents to fight that instinct. On her list of “how to protect your children” tips is, “Do not call or show up at your child’s school” when you hear there is an emergency going on there. Kaigziabiher gets it. “I can understand how it can be totally chaotic and challenging for emergency personnel to respond to a school if all the parents were to show up,” she said after attending the disMaria-Lisa trict’s School Safety Summit at Dilda El Camino Real Academy last Santa Fe Pub- week. Dilda was one of several presenters Tuesday who lic Schools’ explained what the district is emergency doing to improve and ensure management safety in its roughly 30 facilispecialist ties. About 60 people attended the event. COURTESY DANIEL WILLIAMS The district has not faced the sort of serious threats — including school shootings — that have plagued other cities in the nation from Newtown, Conn., to Littleton, Colo., to Roswell. But there have been reports of people bearing weapons on or near Santa Fe campuses in the past. And bullying seemed to be on the minds of many of the parents at Tuesday’s event, with many saying that their reports of bullying behavior go unheard. “It is a challenge,” said Gabe Romero, safety and security director for the district, to the assembly. “It’s not simple. At times all sides claim to be the victim.” The district created a Rapid Response Emergency Management Guide for each classroom, with specific guidelines for educators to follow in the event of emergencies such as fire, gas leak, pandemic illness, a suicide threat or attempt, a bomb threat or an active shooter on campus. School- or district-imposed lockdown drills are scheduled to test these plans. Lockdown requires school leaders to keep everyone inside locked within, with doors secured, windows covered, and all cellphones, radios and technological equipment turned off. The district has added a “Beyond the Lock-
SmartBoard HARVEST TIME AT SALAZAR Salazar Elementary School invites the public to take part in its annual harvest celebration 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2, at its campus, 1231 Apache Ave. (off Osage Avenue). Food made from the school’s community garden offerings will be available, and there will be music. For more information, call the school at 467-3900. DESERT ACADEMY CELEBRATES 20 YEARS Desert Academy, a private interna-
Nava Elementary School students and administrators participate in a fire drill last year. Parents and neighbors are often alarmed by the many required drills — about 15 per school per year — to test staff and student responses, said Gabe Romero, safety and security director for the district. CLYDE MUELLER/NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
HOW TO PROTECT YOUR CHILD AT SCHOOL u Create and maintain a trusting dialogue with your children. Listen to them and stay involved in their school experience. Act on anything that sounds or appears dangerous to your child or others. u Keep emergency contact information up to date. u Check your child’s backpack regularly to make sure they don’t bring anything inappropriate to school. u Talk to school nurses about allergies or other medical conditions. u Report bullying to the teacher and principal of your school. u In the case of a lockdown, do not show up at or call your child’s school. Stay at home or work where district personnel can reach you. Call 467-2000 for updates on the situation. u Talk to your school principal about joining the school’s safety team. Parents are welcome. u Lock up prescription drugs so your children cannot access them.
down” measure that gives educators and students the option of evacuating, hiding and even fighting back if lockdown procedures fail. Such
Education news and events
tional baccalaureate school for grades 6-12, is celebrating its 20th anniversary from noon to 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 5, with a picnic for students, families and the public. A group of parents founded the school, first located in the community of Lamy, in 1994. Shortly thereafter, it relocated to Sunrise Springs south of Santa Fe, and then to a building on Camino Alire in 2001. Several years ago, it relocated again to its current home at 7300 Old Santa Fe Trail. The school’s current enrollment is 202 students.
procedures are becoming more popular on campuses in an effort to do whatever is necessary to save lives. Parents and neighbors are often alarmed by the many required drills — about 15 per school per year — to test staff and student responses, Romero said at the summit. But he said more likely than not, it probably is nothing more serious than a drill. Kaigziabiher said she appreciates the drills but wonders whether educators are spending any time after lockdowns to talk with younger students about how it impacts them. She said her two boys were frightened last year after the lockdown. Dilda said that is happening at the elementary school level during debriefings, but she’s not sure about the middle and high school system. The district has increased other safety measures, upgrading its video surveillance of schools, keeping exterior doors locked and requiring everyone — including Superintendent Joel Boyd — to sign in and out of each school site and wear a visitor badge. Romero and Dilda said that each school has a safety team made up of teachers, nurses, counselors and school leaders. Parents are invited to join these teams and thus learn more about their school’s specific emergency response plans. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com
Call 992-8284 for more information. COMMUNITY COLLEGE HOSTS COLLEGE NIGHT, OPEN HOUSE High school and prospective college students and their families can learn about both in-state and out-of-state colleges as representatives from more than 40 colleges take part in College Night at the Santa Fe Community College, 6401 Richards Ave. Participating colleges include Amherst College, Duke University, Fort Lewis College, Lawrence University, New Mexico State University, the University of Notre Dame, Santa Fe University of Art and Design, St. John’s College, The University of New Mexico and the community college itself. The event runs
If you would like to write articles or an education blog, contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com
the Dais
Viewpoints on education
Press ‘pause’ and provide support to our teachers
B
ravo to Superintendent Joel Boyd for publicly pointing out the flaws in our state’s new teacher evaluation system. His call to “press the pause button” on a system that rates teachers based on student test scores is wise. Given today’s highly politicized education climate, it’s also courageous. But I wonder when it will be time to press the “play button” again. Even if we wait another two years or another 10, it’s unclear how our state will find the funding and acumen to create a system that can work. It’s no easy task, after all, to convert hundreds of thousands of bubble sheets, filled out by MY VIEW sweaty-palmed 8-year-olds, into a sleek rating machine for SETH teachers. BIDERMAN The justification for a pointbased evaluation system is that teachers are the most important school factor in a child’s life, and we need a clear way of knowing which teachers are performing and which aren’t. There’s no arguing with this. But having taught for more than 10 years in private and public schools in two countries, I can share this secret from the field: We already know. With or without standardized tests, we teachers know when we’re “performing well,” and we know when we’re flopping. We know it about ourselves, and we know it about our colleagues. We become teachers because we are passionate about making a difference in the lives of children, and when we reach the kids, the world sings. When we fail — when we find ourselves at our desks at the end of a terrible day, or even a terrible month, knowing we did not live up to our own expectations — we feel it in our bones. The state’s efforts to create a numerical system for measuring these successes and failures may not only prove costly and impossible, then, but also unnecessary. Every school in this district already holds a deep understanding of who is teaching well and who is struggling, an understanding that is far more nuanced and complete than the information we could glean from any test-based evaluation system. The key to helping teachers achieve excellence, then, does not begin with our waiting for the state to get its numbers rights, but with our own district creating open, pressure-free, constructive ways for teachers and principals to reflect upon and share their own successes and failures. It begins with teacher-led conversations during which teachers have the time and tools to assess themselves and one another, and grow as professionals. Test scores and data might inform these talks, but the heart of the conversations will be teachers sharing what they know to be true. The school district’s initiative to provide some of its first-year teachers with non-evaluative, on-site mentors — expert teachers who work in the same schools and know the same kids — is a great step in this direction. Other districts, such as the Poway schools in California, have pioneered simple, non-judgmental teacher support programs that pay master teachers to step out of the classroom for a few years and give in-the-room support to new teachers and those who need help. Let’s not lose focus. The end goal of the state’s teacher evaluation effort is not a smoothrunning system for converting bubble sheets into usable data. As Dr. Boyd writes, the end goal is helping teachers become great. We don’t need a points-based evaluation system to reach this goal. With some refocusing and creativity — and plenty of encouragement from the parents and businesses to whom our school board is accountable — SFPS can hit the “stop button” on test-based teacher evaluation and begin fashioning ways for teachers to support teachers today. Seth Biderman is a graduate of Santa Fe Public Schools and the manager of the Institute for Teaching at the Academy for the Love of Learning. Contact him at sethbiderman@gmail.com.
from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, in the college’s William C. Witter Fitness Education Center on campus. The college also will give campus tours every halfhour, starting at 6:30 p.m. The event is free, and registration is not required. For more information, call Marcos Maez, student admissions counselor, at 428-1779, or visit www.sfcc.edu. WHAT’S A SEVENTH-GRADER TO DO? So it’s time for your son or daughter to go into the seventh grade, and you are not sure if you should choose a public school, a charter school or a private school — but you know you’re not going to let your youngster stop at the sixth grade! Rio Grande School, an independent, private elementary
school serving students starting at age 3, presents its annual 7th Grade Options Night from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 16. The school’s new head, Nigel Taplin, will host this informational event for families considering various middle school options. Rio Grande has no stake in how you choose, as the school stops educating students at the sixth grade. The school is located at 715 Camino Cabra. Call 983-1621 for more information. View more listings at www.santafe newmexican.com/education. Send education-related briefs or announcements to rnott@sfnew mexican.com.
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
LIFE&SCIENCE
Health Science Environment
Mosquito-borne virus hits Latin America Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which transmit chikungunya, stand in a cage Friday to be examined. ARNULFO FRANCO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Delimene Saint Lise holds her 3-month-old daughter Gisline, who was infected with chikungunya, inside their tent home June 30 in the Delmas section of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Haiti, where many people live without much protection from mosquitoes, has been hard hit by the excruciating mosquito-borne illness. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Suspected cases reach 30K in El Salvador, jumping from just 2,300 patients in August By Ezequiel Abiu Lopez and Ben Fox The Associated Press
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic n excruciating mosquito-borne illness that arrived less than a year ago in the Americas is raging across the region, leaping from the Caribbean to the Central and South American mainland, and infecting more than 1 million people. Some cases already have emerged in the United States. While the disease, called chikungunya, usually is not fatal, the epidemic has overwhelmed hospitals, cut economic productivity and caused its sufferers days of pain and misery. And the count of victims is soaring. In El Salvador, health officials report nearly 30,000 suspected cases, up from 2,300 at the beginning of August, and hospitals are filled with people with the telltale signs of the illness, including joint pain so severe it can be hard to walk. “The pain is unbelievable,” said Catalino Castillo, a 39-year-old seeking treatment at a San Salvador hospital. “It’s been 10 days and it won’t let up.” Venezuelan officials reported at least 1,700 cases as of Friday, and the number is expected to rise. Neighboring Colombia has around 4,800 cases but the health ministry projects there will be nearly 700,000 by early 2015. Brazil has now recorded its first locally transmitted cases, which are distinct from those involving people who contracted the virus while traveling in an infected area. Hardest hit has been the Dominican Republic, with half the cases reported in the Americas. According to the Pan American Health Organization, chikungunya has spread to at least two dozen countries and territories across the Western Hemisphere since the first case was registered in French St. Martin in late 2013. There have been a few locally transmitted cases in the U.S., all in Florida, and it has the potential to spread farther, experts say, but Central and South America are particularly vulnerable. The chief factors are the prevalence of the main vector for the virus, the aedes aegypti mosquito, and the lack of immunity in a population that hasn’t been hit with chikungunya in modern medical history, said Scott C. Weaver, director of the Institute for Human Infections and Immunity at the University of Texas Medical Branch. “There are going to be some very large
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Food-service inspections For the period ending Sept. 25. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 820-1840. WAL-MART SUPERCENTER (BAKERY AND DELI), 5701 Herrera Drive. No violations. BACK STREET BISTRO, 513 Camino de los Marques. No violations.
populations at risk down there, much larger than the Caribbean,” Weaver said. Chikungunya is a word that comes from the Makonde language of Tanzania in eastern Africa and translates roughly as “that which bends up,” in reference to the severe arthritislike ache in joints that causes sufferers to contort with pain. It’s usually accompanied by a spiking fever and headache. There have been only 113 deaths linked to the region’s outbreak, according to the most recent data, but chikungunya can be crippling. Herman Slater, a 60-year-old gardener in Jamaica’s capital of Kingston, said he was laid out for almost two weeks this month with unimaginable joint pain, hammer-pounding headaches and fevers that came in waves. “I tell you, I was surprised by how painful it was. It was taking me five minutes to get out of bed, and then I could hardly even walk,” Slater said. “My hands were so bad I couldn’t open a bottle, couldn’t comb my hair. Every night I was wet from sweat.” In acute cases, pain can last for months. Joanna Rivas, who works as a maid in the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo, said she has had joint pain since May, and her 12-year-old daughter’s case is so severe the girl can’t hold her pen at school. Both have been taking the pain reliever acetaminophen, the main treatment for chikungunya, which has no cure or vaccine. Besides the suffering, chikungunya has caused economic damage with the cost of providing treatment and controlling mosquitoes and by absenteeism from work. A study by the Universidad Eugenio Maria de Hostos in the Dominican Republic found nearly 13 percent of businesses said they had people miss work because of chikungunya in June. Authorities throughout the region have been spraying pesticide and encouraging people to remove water containers where mosquitoes can breed. Oxitec, a British com-
pany that has tested genetically modified aedys aegypti to combat dengue in Brazil, Cayman Islands and Panama, says it has received a surge of interest since the start of the outbreak. Chikungunya, which has been known for decades in parts of Africa and Asia, is transmitted when a mosquito bites an infected person and then feeds on someone else. It may have found fertile ground in Latin America and the Caribbean because many people are outside in the daytime, when aedes aegypti bite, or lack adequate screens on their windows. In an article in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Erin Staples of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said access to air conditioning to keep mosquitoes at bay might also be a factor. During an outbreak of mosquito-borne dengue in 1999 along the Texas-Mexico border, aedes aegypti were three times as abundant on the U.S. side but the number of people infected with dengue was twice as high on the Mexican side. Conditions vary widely in the region. Haiti, where many people live in flimsy shacks with little protection from mosquitoes, has been hit hard. In Venezuela, air conditioning is widespread but the country has a shortage of insect repellent and pesticide sprayers due to the country’s economic problems. Staples said past outbreaks have been known to affect around 30 percent of a population, so there is room for the epidemic to grow, although it’s too early to accurately project how many will get sick or whether chikungunya will become endemic to the region like dengue. The good news is that people seem to acquire immunity to all major strains. “We do believe currently that if someone is unfortunate enough to get infected, they should not be infected again,” Staples said.
A scientist from the Gorgas Memorial Institute for Health Studies counts male and female genetically modified aedes aegypti mosquito pupae Friday with a microscope at a laboratory in Panama City.
Organic labels require one to read fine print Not all healthful-sounding foods are created equally nutritious By Gabriella Boston The Washington Post
If it says it’s organic, gluten-free, vegan, kaleinfused, protein-rich and goji-laced, it’s got to be good for you, right? Not so fast. These buzzwords line grocery store shelves these days, and, yes, some of these products are good for you. But some are less so, says Cheryl Harris, an Alexandria, Va.-based dietitian. Take Annie’s Homegrown Berry Patch Organic Bunny Fruit Snacks, which are popular among the toddler set. They are vegan, gluten-free and fat-free, and contain 100 percent of the daily recommended amount of vitamin C per serving. That’s a lot of good stuff right there, no? Except when you look at the list of ingredients, there are three types of sugars listed first — and no berries. Let’s compare them with real berries: A serving of strawberries (147 grams) also maxes out your daily vitamin C, but it has a bit of fiber (about 3 grams) and less sugar (7 grams vs. 10). The calorie count is lower, too, at 47, vs. 70 for the gummies. But, then again, the strawberries are also much larger than gummies, which come in a 23-gram bag. The 147 grams of strawberries (about a cup) are going to be much more filling. (If you were to eat 138 grams worth of gummies — six bags — that would mean 420 calories and 60 grams of sugar.) And this is true for a lot of processed foods: Even if they are organic, allergy-free and all the other good stuff, they often lack fiber and water, which means there is less bulk and volume to fill us up, Harris says. Consequently, it’s easier to overeat. “This is why I think the question — whether you are eating gummies or kale chips — needs to be, what are you replacing?” Harris says. In other words, if you are replacing a candy bar with gummies, then you are moving in the right direction. But if you are replacing an apple with gummies, “that’s not as good a bet,” Harris says. Natosha Prolago, a client of Harris’ who has a 3-year-old son, says she thinks of gummies as candy or treats. “Gummies and fruit juice are in the same category. There is little or no nutritional value. They are just treats,” Prolago says. Kale juice, though packed with vitamins, can have as many calories as a soft drink. Take Bolthouse Farms Daily Greens, for example, which contains, among other things, kale, spinach and cucumbers. It has 90 calories for 8 ounces (one serving) and about 19 grams of sugar, a bunch of vitamins and potassium. Pretty good. But again, what are you replacing? If you are replacing a soda, then you are light-years ahead (though a Coke is roughly the same on calories), but if you are replacing water and a serving of kale salad, then maybe not so much. In the end, eating foods that are whole is the way to go, says Ebeth Johnson, a plant-based nutritionist, natural foods chef and owner of Breastfeeding Chef, a business that counsels pregnant and nursing women on nutrition. “Whether we’re talking about superfoods or regular foods, they are all their most super when consumed in the form as close to nature as possible without added sugars and refined fats,” Johnson says. But if we do go for the packaged foods, we need to look carefully at labels, because all healthful-sounding products are not created equal. For example, Brad’s Raw Crunchy Kale Chips are only lightly processed and loaded with vitamins (122 percent of your daily vitamin C) while Sensible Portions Garden Veggie Straws have about the same amount of calories (130 per serving) but no significant nutritional value in terms of vitamins. “It is important, as with any packaged food, to read ingredients carefully. Look for whole food ingredients that are not puffed, isolated, concentrated, hydrolyzed, crystalized,” Johnson says. “Make sure added sugars are not within the first two or three ingredients.” Except, says Harris, decoding a nutrition label can be tricky. Take Cascadian Farm Organic Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Granola Bars. There are at least seven different sugars included, and yet sugar is not listed as a top ingredient. “But if you combined all the sugar it might be the first ingredient,” Harris says. So, even when we are looking at the list of ingredients, we have to read between the lines. Harris concedes, though, that prepared foods are a part of modern life, whether we like it or not. She just hopes that whether we’re eating kale chips or fruit gummies, the processed foods will help us develop a taste for the real thing. “If you get a taste for kale chips, maybe eventually you might segue into eating kale salad?” Harris says. Even with healthy labels health officials recommend reading ingredients carefully. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
ARNULFO FRANCO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ESPRESSO DE ARTE, 66 E. San Francisco St. Cited for high-risk violation for cups and bowls in hand sink (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violations for unapproved microwave oven and slow cooker. LEAH’S COOKIES, 19 San Marcos Trail. Cited for high-risk violation for lack of well water test for bacteria. VFW POST, 307 Montezuma Ave. Cited for highrisk violations for unlabeled chemical bottle. Cited for moderate-risk violation for unsealed wood under bar counter. Cited for low-risk viola-
tions for cracked floor tiles, lack of base coving in bar area. ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE, 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca. Cited for high-risk violations for problems with food temperatures, no QUAT strips available for sanitizer buckets, dented cans mixed with good stock, metal shavings and grime buildup on can opener, employees’ drinks in walk-in refrigerator (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violation for unprotected pastries, door to trash can left open. Cited low-risk violations for cracked and disintegrating ceiling tiles. Facility ordered to
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Rachel Valerio, rvalerio@sfnewmexican.com
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hand over the Environment Department temperature and sanitation logs, proof of signage and/or written responses to high-risk violations by Oct. 2. WHOOS DONUTS, 851B Cerrillos Road. Cited for low-risk violations for aprons hanging from dry storage shelf, cracking wall, food permit not posted for Whoos Donuts Concessions. SHOHOKO CAFE, 321 Johnson St. Cited for moderate-risk violation for inaccurate thermometer. Cited for low-risk violations for cracked wall, standing water on floor, dirty vents.
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
COMMENTARY
Secret spaces lie beneath Taos madam. There were also several small shops along the street that sold liquor during Prohibition. Today, many businesses on the street are owned by women. “And so we call ourselves ‘The Ladies of Doña Luz,’ ” Serfling said.
Shops, restaurants near plaza sit on top of decrepit tunnels By Teresa Dovalpage The Taos News
TAOS oña Luz Lane is a whimsical street just a few steps off the Taos Plaza. Among the many shops that line the street is Red Cat Melissiana, a folk art and antique store housed in an old adobe. The front entrance is decorated with honey cups; an inviting turquoise stable door opens to the main room. Judging by its exterior, nobody would guess that the shop hides a secret inside — or, more appropriately, under it.
D
Spirits in the tunnels
Two tunnels in a cellar There are two tunnels that run under Red Cat Melissiana. One is supposed to go to the bandstand in the plaza — where the town jail used to be — and the other to the house of a friend of Padre Antonio José Martínez. Store owner Melissa Serfling said she has inspected carefully the space around the tunnels’ entrance. “I have seen the old pillars, supported on logs and big rocks,” she said. “They look like they are falling down, and it’s very likely that the walls have caved in between my shop and the plaza.” They don’t seem to be safe to explore, so Serfling hasn’t ventured in. “I am not too good underground,” she admitted. “If the tunnel collapses on me, then I would become another one of the many spirits in my cellars.”
The church connection Next door to her shop is the restaurant El Gamal, which is believed to have another tunnel that goes directly to the place where Our Lady of Guadalupe Church used to be. According to Serfling, the space where El Gamal is now was a speakeasy then. “Considering that there were also several brothels on this street, one can assume that all sorts of things went on here,” she said. At the time when the tun-
One of the tunnels below Doña Luz Lane. TINA LARKIN/THE TAOS NEWS
nels were in use, Our Lady of Guadalupe Church was located in what is today a parking lot, across Don Fernando Street from Doña Luz Lane. “The Church burned down in the ’60s, and they paved over the cemetery to build the parking lot,” Serfling said. “I imagine that the spirits of the people who were buried there didn’t like that at all.”
located. He said he has been in the cellar several times, but he has never seen the tunnels either.
Possible origins
The majority of the buildings on Doña Luz Lane were built in the 1880s, and the tunnels probably date back to around the same time. One of the most prevalent theories is that they were used as shelters, to proAn underground tect Taos residents from the network? Comanche raids. Serfling, however, doesn’t Serfling said there are likely many more tunnels in the area. agree with that. “I think they were a conve“Some old neighbors have nient way to go from one place told me that all downtown Taos to another without being seen, is a catacomb with passages whether people were visiting under the streets,” she said. their ‘nighttime friends’ or just Benina Roybal is the owner and manager of Bella’s Mexican going to the plaza,” she said. Grill, also located on Doña Luz Lane. A street with a past “I’ve heard that there are tunDoña Luz Lane has an internels under the restaurant,” she said. “But I haven’t seen them.” esting and somewhat tarnished Douglas Patterson, president history, as it was once the redof Living Designs Group, owns light district of Taos. Doña Luz the building where Bella’s is was the name of the brothel
According to Serfling, the tunnels and other places in the neighborhood are often visited, or even inhabited, by spirits. She also said her bloodline leads back to a witch from Salem, Mass., so she is used to dealing with otherworldly presences. “I greet the spirits in the morning,” she said. “Sometimes they are mischievous and like to tip things over, but in general, they keep quiet. However, they let their presence be known: I have been in the cellar at night and heard footsteps above, though there was no one there.” Fortunately, the spirits don’t bother Red Cat Melissiana’s patrons. Serfling has owned the store for five years and said she has never felt apprehensive when she has been alone at night in the shop. “On the contrary, I get a feeling of acceptance from the spirits,” she said. “But they have been hostile to some men, like a construction worker who found his tools inexplicably moved away from him.” Serfling said she believes some of the ghosts are the spirits of women who were prostitutes on Doña Luz Lane.
In the cellar This article wouldn’t be complete without a personal visit to Serfling’s cellar. Dionne De La Cruz, an employee at Red Cat Melissiana, leads me down a creaking wood staircase that ends in front of an enormous kiva fireplace. Then she shows me the tunnels. The entrances have been blocked and the whole place smells slightly damp. It is 90 degrees outside, but down here it feels cold. I’m happy to go back upstairs. Kat Pruitt, a writer and retired educator who also works at the store, tells me she is planning a mystery novel based on the tunnels and their resident ghosts. “Go for it,” I say. “I bet it will sell well.”
Wet weather endangers green chile crop The Associated Press
LAS CRUCES — Wet weather in recent weeks has left some of New Mexico’s green chile crop in danger. A hail storm on Thursday in the Garfield area was the latest in a spate of precipitation to plague chile fields in Doña Ana County, the Las Cruces Sun-News reported. “All that work all summer long, and then you sit there and watch your crop destroyed in 30 minutes,” said farmer Jerry Franzoy. “You can’t trust storms this time of year; they’ve always got ice in them.” Franzoy said that storms wiped out some of his chile plant fields in the Rincon and Las Uvas valleys. Other crops were damaged as well, he added. According to several farmers, the rain has delayed some harvests as well as increased the chances of a chile-plant disease. Jimmy Lytle, a green chile farmer in Salem, said he couldn’t pick any green chile out in the fields after 7 inches of rain fell in a 10-day period earlier this month. Farmers have a limited window of time to pick green chiles before they turn red, he added. Some fields are already dying from phytophera, a disease caused by moisture. “One field, just before the rain started, was beautiful,” Lytle said. “And after, it killed the whole field.” Other crops are suffering from chile “pod rot.” Stephanie Walker, a vegetable specialist at New Mexico State University, said the damage to a field depends on its location
Green and red chiles await transport from a Southern New Mexico farm Sept. 3. Wet weather in recent weeks has damaged some of New Mexico’s green chile crop. CARLOS JAVIER SANCHEZ/LAS CRUCES SUN-NEWS
and how much rain or precipitation it gets. “We definitely have had some disease incidence in the fields — nothing widespread or devastating right now,” Walker said. Lytle said spottier rain spared some of his other fields, which are not intended to
be harvested until late in the season. A U.S. Department of Agriculture report issued last week says about 75 percent of the state’s green chile crop has been harvested. About 92 percent of the crop had been harvested around the same time a year ago.
u Police arrested Krystal Holmes, 28, of Santa Fe after she allegedly attempted to leave The Santa Fe Police Depart- the Wal-Mart Supercenter on Herrera Drive without paying for ment took the following some Pampers and a car cover reports: u A resident in the 800 block worth $60.90 at about 8 p.m. Saturday. of Calle Anaya Street reported u Police arrested Theresa that someone tried to burglarApra, 19, of Santa Fe and ize her 2005 Nissan Altima charged her with shoplifting between 6 p.m. Friday and after she allegedly took an iPad 8:35 a.m. Saturday. worth $279 from Wal-Mart, u A thief stole $800 in 3251 Cerrillos Road, at about U.S. currency and a toolbox 3:30 p.m. Saturday. worth $400 from a 2004 Ford u A woman living in the Ranger parked in the 800 block 400 block of Acequia Madre of Columbia Street between discovered an unknown male 12:30 and 7:30 a.m. Saturday. u A burglar stole a Panasonic had used a shovel to break her bedroom window and enter her touch-screen stereo and DVD residence at 4:15 p.m. Saturday. player worth $700, as well as When she encountered him, he an Apple iPad worth $180, from fled and left the scene in a blue a 2005 Honda Pilot parked in 2011 Buick LaCrosse. Nothing the 7300 block of Roadrunner was reported stolen. Court between 11 p.m. Friday and 7:30 a.m. Saturday. u While investigating a shop- Help lines lifting report in the 1800 block Esperanza Shelter for of St. Michael’s Drive, police Battered Families hotline: arrested Angelo Tinoco, 29, of 800-473-5220 Santa Fe at 7:55 p.m. Friday and charged him with possession of St. Elizabeth Shelter for heroin, marijuana and drug para- men, women and children: 982-6611 phernalia. He also had an outstanding District Court warrant. Graffiti hotline: 955-2255
Police notes
Funeral services and memorials JANEY MYERS PARRISH
Janey Myers Parrish, 94, from Holly Hills, Florida, passed away on Tuesday, September 23, 2014. She was surrounded by her loving family and friends. Janey was the youngest of 10, born in Jackson, Michigan on December 20, 1919 to Frances Amelia Teeple and George Winton Myers. Janey was widowed twice, she was married for many years to Bill Parrish and they traveled extensively with his job enjoying fine dining and hotels. She loved that he would buy her cute hats and shoes. Later in life Janey was married briefly to Rocky Guyotte. The highlight of her years were her two trips each year to visit her family and friends in Santa Fe. She was treated like royalty with lunches and dinners and teas in her favorite restaurants. Janey is survived locally by her niece Robina Sandoval and nephews Max (Linda), Alan, and Vic (Nancy) Myers, their children Aubrey, Paul, Reese, Blake, Eric, Iliana, Doug, Erin and Megan. She also has nieces and nephews as well as great and great-great nieces and nephews across the country. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking that donations be sent to Capital City Lions Club c/o Don Martinez PO Box 373 Santa Fe NM 87504, in gratitude for the support the Jackson Michigan Club provided during Janey’s early years. A memorial service will be held at St. John’s United Methodist Church, 1200 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM, Wednesday, October 1 at 10 o’clock am. 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 MARGARET A. LUCERO Margaret A. Lucero, 86, resident of Santa Fe, passed away September 24, 2014, surrounded by her family. Margaret was born on September 12, 1928, to Guadalupita Martinez and father Aniseto Rodriguez. She was proceeded in death by her husband Jose Lucero, son Kenneth Lucero, and her parents. Margaret is survived by her daughters, Yvonne Pacheco (Michael) and Elizabeth Lucero, and son Steve Lucero (Lisa), numerous grandchildren, great grandchildren, sisters, and brothers who cared for her deeply. She will be greatly missed. A rosary will be recited on Wednesday, October 1, 2014 at 10:30 a.m. at the Cathedral Basilica of St Francis of Assisi with the Mass of Christian burial to be celebrated immediately after at 11:30 a.m. Burial to follow at the National Cemetery. A reception will be held at Crispin Hall, St. Francis Cathedral. Serving the family as pallbearers are Micheal Lucero, Marcos Pacheco, Nick Guillen, Aaron Pacheco, Reyes Pacheco, and Ray John Gonzalez. Honorary pallbearers are Anita Lopez and Leo Gonzales.
CLEO ROYBAL 9-29-23 ~ 9-28-11 Happy Birthday Mom Missing you and loving you on this day. May you be in God’s heavenly peace, Momma. Pray for us and please continue to watch over us. We love you, Your children
Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican. Call 986-3000
PUBLIC NOTICE Santa Fe Memorial Gardens is currently updating our cemetery and cremation records. If your family owns cemetery or cremation arrangements please contact us at. 989-7032
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Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
COMMENTARY: PHILIP KENNICOTT
More White House security is bad idea
U
nder no circumstances should the Secret Service be allowed to encroach further on the public space of Washington. Ill-considered, unnecessary and undemocratic security measures have already stolen from the American people the West Terrace of the Capitol, the front doors of the Supreme Court and the free flow of traffic on Pennsylvania Avenue at Lafayette Square. Now there are reports that the Secret Service is considering new security measures around the White House, including bag searches in nearby blocks. These potential new intrusions on civil liberties and the free circulation of a democratic people are apparently in response to a security breach at the White House earlier this month. And yet all reports indicate that it was a failure of established Secret Service policies that allowed Omar J. Gonzalez, an Iraq War veteran, to jump the fence, traverse the lawn and briefly enter the White House. The Secret Service should examine its own failures before it further humiliates local citizens and tourists who circulate near the White House. It should not be rewarded with yet more control over public space. Nor should any further visual clutter around the White House perimeter be allowed, including any additions to the security fence or any loss of access to the fence itself. This is an institutional, organizational problem; it does not require an architectural solution. The closure of the front doors of the Supreme Court greatly confuses the architectural experience of the building, especially the short axis between the entrance and the courtroom itself — a powerful enactment of our right to appeal unjust laws to the judiciary. The closure of the West Terrace of the Capitol denies residents and visitors the most accessible and dramatic view of Pierre L’Enfant’s basic plan of the city, its axial relation between the legal and executive branch, the monumental dramatization of the Civil War and reunification, and the passion for civil rights embodied in the Mall. Now there may be plans to further
Paul Hibbert
Santa Fe
No short-term fix I applaud the excellent coverage of various educational issues Monday, Sept. 22. Kudos to Superintendent Joel
Ray Rivera Editor
T alienate the White House — which, as the People’s House, should relate to its neighborhood in a modest, democratic, neighborly way — from its urban context. Visitors who come from around the country to understand and celebrate the glory of self-governance will be asked to sacrifice yet more of their constitutional rights in its proximity. Residents, who already endure the agony of motorcades and the surly demeanor of all manner of police, Secret Service and other security personnel, will be forced to suffer more of this abuse. The loss of public space and the intrusion of the security apparatus into daily life are not merely inconveniences. Among the most cherished symbols of democracy is openness, including direct access to our leaders. Politicians, in a democracy, must understand that holding elected office means not only maintaining that direct connection to the people, but also incurring some inevitable measure of risk. If they do not wish to run the risk, they should not run for office. It is not reasonable to ask a free people to continually submit to police control; doing so becomes ingrained, and when we freely submit to unreasonable searches, we
lose the all-important, reflexive distrust of authority that helps keep us free. We must not allow the ever-increasing, ever-morepowerful security apparatus to train us in slavish behavior, or our deepest habits will conform to their darkest estimation of our worth. “We throw open our city to the world,” Pericles said in his Funeral Oration. We, alas, have become the descendants not of that fine and fundamental sentiment of democracy, but of the brutal imperial arrogance that corrupted the Athenian state in later years. Only weeks after events in Ferguson, Mo., revealed the extent to which we have militarized our police, we are asked to surrender yet more freedom of circulation in the national capital? This is fear-mongering, and worse, it is fear-mongering by a troubled federal agency that can’t seem to curb its own frat-boy culture of drunkenness and sexual license. Until the Secret Service has reformed itself, it should not be granted any further indulgence from the people. Philip Kennicott wrote this commentary for The Washington Post.
Boyd for questioning the teacher evaluation system and its limitations (“Boyd’s call to fix evals faces its own challenges,” Sept. 22). As a former Santa Fe Public Schools teacher, I agree with the superintendent. Testing is important; however, in my view, it should comprise a much smaller portion of a teacher’s evaluation. Years ago, I had to take the National Teacher Exam to be eligible for a New Mexico teaching license. Many professions (law, medicine, certified electrician, etc.) require testing. Let’s take a step back and look at the big picture. There is no short-term fix to answer: How do we effectively evaluate a teacher? Tina Barton
Santa Fe
Continue science support Staci Matlock’s article (“Institute gets $2.5M gift for education projects,” Sept. 4) prompted numerous congratulatory phone calls and emails. It’s important to note, however, that while this gift provides foundational support for
all of the Santa Fe Institute’s education programs, it does not guarantee annual support for individual programs like SFI’s Project GUTS (Growing Up Thinking Scientifically) after-school program. Project GUTS now reaches more than 800 students at 30 schools across the state. Young participants learn computational skills while investigating problems in their own communities. But there are many schools in New Mexico that don’t have Project GUTS clubs, and our waiting list gets longer every week. Establishing a club at a single new school costs around $5,000, with additional funding needed to prepare teachers to serve as club leaders. As science, technology, engineering, math and computing become increasingly important to our future, making sure our children grow up thinking scientifically is a critical priority for our communities, our state and our nation. We can’t help to meet this challenge without strong and continued public support.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Sept. 29, 1914: El Paso — It became known today that a shipment of $25,000 in currency from an El Paso bank to its New York correspondent through the El Paso post office by registered mail has disappeared. The money was shipped from El Paso about
Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Forest Service rules out of line
Uproot ‘politically correct’ curriculum
F
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001
OUR VIEW
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
or those who are wringing their hands and looking for causes for the low achievement of our schools, one need look only as far as the responses of students to the question, “What is your least and most favorite subject and why?” (“Speak Out,” Sept. 19) One student said, “ My favorite is science because the teacher gives everyone an A. I don’t like health because all we learn about is eating healthy instead of learning other healthy stuff.” Another student responded, “My least favorite is history, because the teacher decided to teach about climate change and global warming instead of history.” Isn’t there anyone in authority who can uproot this politically correct, doctrinaire ethos pervading our schools so that our children can actually succeed in life?
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Sept. 2 in $5 and $10 bills. It did not reach New York when it should have, and an inquiry was started to trace the missing registered package. Sept. 29, 1964: A 49-yearold State Game department employee was fired yesterday after he pleaded guilty to a charge of killing a bull elk in an area closed to hunting.
Irene Lee
director, Learning Lab Santa Fe Institute
SEND US YOUR LETTERS Sept. 29, 1989: Mayor Sam Pick wants the bronze buffalo to have a permanent home on the range atop its Paseo de Peralta median and will ask the City Council to rescind a decision requiring its removal by Oct. 1. At least until it is sold or purchased by the city and moved.
MALLARD FILLMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnewmexican. com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.
alk about bureaucracy run amok. The U.S. Forest Service wants to tighten restrictions on how filmmakers and photographers can cover events in wilderness areas — going so far as to require permits before companies can take a photograph or video. Originally, the Forest Service had said the rule would apply to all members of the media except in cases of breaking news, but facing criticism, officials announced late Thursday night that news organizations would be exempt. The notion that government — in the form of a lowlevel Forest Service employee — could essentially control access to public lands clearly would violate the First Amendment. Imagine the Forest Service turning down a photographer looking for evidence of bad land management practices. The costs are not cheap, either. Permits can cost up to $1,500, with those who don’t get a permit facing fines up to $1,000. In one of the lamest justifications we have heard for a dumb idea, the Forest Service’s acting wilderness director said restrictions are needed to preserve the character of the country’s wilderness. The rules, she said, are being implemented under the Wilderness Act of 1964 provisions to protect the wilderness from being exploited for commercial use. They’ve been on the books for 48 months, but now could be enforced. Comments are being accepted until December, and we hope some of the reactions come from our congressional delegation. This rule is unnecessary. Oh, in the meantime, the Forest Service is asking everyone to send in — what else? — photographs of their favorite fall colors. You can see this exploitation of nature at the Forest Service website, and participate by sending photos to fallcolors@fs.fed.us. No mention was made of needing a permit.
Santa Fe Prep: 50 years of impact
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n innovative fundraising campaign at Santa Fe Prep is celebrating the independent school’s 50 years in Santa Fe, while at the same time, building a foundation for future success and broader community impact. With the 50th Anniversary Strategic Impact Fund, leaders at Prep decided they could make a difference — now, not 10 years or 20 years in the future. Now. They are making that difference by increasing available financial aid so that more students who dream of a Prep education can afford it. With tuition close to $20,000 a year, even middleclass families can find attending Prep too much of a stretch. That’s despite already generous tuition assistance in place even before the campaign started. In 2013, the school was spending close to $800,000 to award tuition help, reaching some 80 students each year (out of a total enrollment of 316). That still left anywhere from 15 to 30 students on a waiting list, according to school leaders. These students had the motivation, ambition and credentials to succeed at the academically challenging school. What they lacked was the money. For Head of School Jim Leonard and his board, leaving those students behind was unacceptable. “The greatest impact we can have,” Leonard said, “is to get quality kids to Prep.” Now, with a $14 million campaign underway, the school is dedicating $10 million of that to tuition assistance to get kids off the waiting list, while using the remaining dollars for various projects at the school. Ambitious in its scope, the plan is to bring 40 to 45 additional students to Prep each year over the life of the Strategic Impact Fund campaign. As the campaign unfolds, its backers also plan to increase the school’s endowment to sustain their efforts. Already, Leonard said, the campaign is making a difference because of a more diverse student body: “Our classes are more dynamic. We have more kids who are more excited to be at Prep. The energy of the school is up.” Those kids will grow up to become adults — and it is then, as citizens of Santa Fe and the world, that the impact of dollars raised and spent years earlier will come to full realization.
LA CUCARACHA
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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TIME OUT
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
Horoscope 1 5 9 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 23
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25 27 30 31 32 36 37 38 39 42 44
ACROSS Flower stalk Secy., e.g. Blue Ribbon brewer Pledge drive bag Sport with mallets Mail carrier’s rounds Baja’s opposite Univ. instructor St. ___ fire Muzzle-loading firearm Sandwich with toasted bread, for short Surgical instrument holders Lipton alternative Lemon-peeling utensil All wound up Following behind, as a trailer Rec room feature Sch. in Lower Manhattan “Oops!” “All you can ___” TV news employee Topple Smiles proudly
45 New moon and full moon 46 Self-confidence 48 All-American Soap Box Derby city 50 “The dog ate my homework,” probably 51 Promotional ballpark giveaways 56 Site for washing instructions 58 Burden 59 Roof problem 60 Occupied, as a restroom 61 Riga resident 62 The “E” in HOMES 63 Wanderer 64 Rice-shaped pasta 65 Medicinal amount DOWN 1 Knife wound 2 Ring, as a bell in a steeple 3 “___, Brute?” 4 Had it in mind 5 Show up 6 “Oops!” 7 Unpopular roommates
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Sept. 29, 2014: This year you are likely to have a different outlook on life. As a result, you will want to make a lot of adjustments and changes.
8 Bean curd 9 Birthday party staple 10 “You’ve got mail!” company 11 Big pollinators 12 Embezzled, e.g. 13 Short-tempered 21 Took from a card deck 22 Jouster’s mount 26 Screener’s org. 27 ___ oxide (beachgoer’s protection) 28 New Age star from Ireland
29 Second-rate prizefighter 30 Federal tax enforcer, informally 32 “Y” facilities 33 Litigator’s org. 34 Lois at the Daily Planet 35 Gate expectations, for short? 37 Sensual ballroom dance 40 Fair-hiring inits. 41 Talked pointlessly 42 “I’m in trouble now!” 43 Like the walls of many dens
45 Magician’s cry 46 How a daring poker player goes 47 Instrument for Lady Gaga 48 Doubleday of baseball lore 49 One who might cry “Oops!” 52 Shoestring necktie 53 Prefix with dynamic 54 Locale for a speaker and honorees 55 ___-Ball 57 Spanish “that”
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Chess quiz BLACK TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. ... h5ch! 2. Kg5 Qg3ch 3. Bg4 Qxg4 mate. [Moiseenko-Nepomniachtchi ’14].
Hocus Focus
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: NATIONAL SYMBOLS OF THE U.S. (e.g., The national bird of the U.S. Answer: Bald eagle.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What is the official motto of the U.S.? Answer________ 2. Translate the motto E pluribus unum. Answer________ 3. The two-word nickname for the national flag. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Who wrote the lyrics to “The StarSpangled Banner”? Answer________ 5. Where is the Great Seal of the U.S. most commonly seen? Answer________ 6. What is the official floral emblem? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Name the official march. Answer________ 8. What national tenet was written in 1917 by William Tyler Page? Answer________ 9. Complete the last words of the creed: “... to obey its laws, to respect its flag and to ...” Answer________ ANSWERS: ANSWERS: 1. In God we trust. 2. Out of many, one. 3. “Old Glory.” 4. Francis Scott Key. 5. The reverse side of the one-dollar bill. 6. Rose. 7. “The Stars and Stripes Forever.” 8. The American’s Creed. 9. Defend it against all enemies.
Jumble
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) 2014 Ken Fisher
Today in history Today is Monday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day of 2014. There are 93 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Sept. 29, 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You’ll draw inspiration from others’ ideas. You might not agree with someone, so detach in order to keep the peace. Tonight: Accept a caring gesture for exactly what it is. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Relate directly to an individual who has a way of affecting you deeply. Leave nothing to serendipity. Tonight: Buy a favorite dessert on the way home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Others seem to make a big splash wherever they are. You could feel somewhat intimidated by them. Tonight: A friend could be full of surprises! CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Remain at the helm of the ship, even if you feel distracted. Eye a purchase for your home carefully. Tonight: As you like it. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might want to add more zest to your day. Others probably will thank you for your smile. Tonight: Ever playful. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You could be more in your own head than you realize. As a result, others might find it difficult to communicate with you. Tonight: Happy at home.
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Husband refuses to leave his home Dear Annie: I recently married a man who has never been married before, although he lived with a woman for 15 years. They never had children, and “Vic” cheated on her for years. He paid for everything, and she had a free ride. He essentially paid her off to leave. I have three grown children from a previous marriage. After our wedding two months ago, we planned on moving into my house until I can sell it. (Part of my divorce agreement is to split the proceeds of a sale when our youngest child turns 18.) Vic’s house is in a rather scary neighborhood. It has a structural defect and won’t sell for what he owes the bank. I arranged for reliable renters, but four days before they were to move in, Vic backed out of the deal. He said he needed more time and didn’t want to resent me for making him move and then move again once my house sells. Vic promised to move out of his place on August 1, but didn’t, so I’ve been living there in order to be with him. We both agreed to get a new place when my house sells, and he promised this arrangement would be temporary. I really hate his rundown neighborhood, and worse, his ex lives two blocks away. When we are together, he treats me very well, but I worry that he’ll never move out of his place. Could he have terminal bachelor disease? I am fantasizing about selling my place, taking the check and driving to Vegas to open my own business. I love Vic, but I didn’t bargain to live the rest of my life in this lousy neighborhood. — Unhappy in Rhode Island Dear Unhappy: Set a time limit on staying at Vic’s place — perhaps three months after your house is sold. But don’t wait until the sale to start looking at other neighborhoods — that way Vic can see the benefits of a nicer home in a better area. Help him pack up his stuff so that his house appears less comforting and more transitional. A new marriage and a new home can be traumatizing for some people, and you have to give Vic time to adjust. Dear Annie: I am the woman
who wrote the letter signed “Fluffy’s Competition,” about my husband’s fondness for his cat. You printed several responses from readers, one of whom said the cat was there first and another who thought it was perfectly OK for my husband to drop me at the hospital for a seven-hour surgery while he spent the day with Fluffy at the vet. I didn’t mention that the day I had my surgery, there were complications and I ended up in intensive care. My daughter couldn’t reach my husband because he wouldn’t return her phone calls. He didn’t show up at the hospital for two days. Aside from my severe allergies (for which I take medication), Fluffy currently has body mites, and my husband refuses to get her treated because vets are “too expensive.” I agree with you that his priorities are screwed up. — Still Fluffy’s Competition Dear Still: Whatever reservations we had about your husband are gone now that we know he didn’t turn up at the hospital until two days after your surgery. Is there a reason you cannot pay for Fluffy’s mite treatment yourself? It seems worth it. But only you can decide whether you love your husband enough to play second fiddle. Dear Annie: This is for “Cornered in New York,” whose boss makes them eat lunch together. The New York State Department of Labor has clear guidelines about work hours, including breaks for meals. If the employees must participate in a joint lunch as a team-building exercise, then they are not being given the required break for lunch that the law requires. She should contact the state Department of Labor (anonymously) and request that they investigate. — A. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
Sheinwold’s bridge
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might need to screen calls and readjust your schedule. On the other hand, you could decide to stay on course. Tonight: Out late. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Be aware of the costs of proceeding as you have been. You could be very tired and withdrawn. Tonight: Balance your checkbook first. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH What seems clear to you might be obscure to someone else. You are direct and forceful, and it would not be surprising if you were to lose your temper. Tonight: All smiles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You might want to step back and consider your options. Even if you have a busy schedule, you’ll need some thinking time. Tonight: Make it a personal night.
Cryptoquip
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH A friend will demonstrate an enormous amount of caring. A discussion will point you in a new direction. Tonight: Where the gang is. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Honor a change of pace. You will want to follow through on a project and get it done. You will not allow distraction to go on for too long. Tonight: A must appearance. Jacqueline Bigar
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. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-3 NFL B-4, B-5 Classifieds B-6 Comics B-12
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS BASEBALL
B
MLB: Zimmermann’s no-hitter for Nats ends on great grab. Page B-3
NFL DALLAS COWBOYS 38, NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 17
Cowboys trounce Saints The Yankees’ Derek Jeter hugs teammate Ichiro Suzuki after coming out of the game for a pinch-runner against the Boston Red Sox in a Sunday game at Fenway Park in Boston. It is the last baseball game of Jeter’s career. ELISE AMENDOLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Derek Jeter has RBI single in last at-bat By Howard Ulman The Associated Press
BOSTON — Derek Jeter tacked one last hit onto his remarkable career, then waved his helmet in a final farewell to the major leagues. Successful to the very end, the New York Yankees captain hit a high chop in the third inning that bounced off the right hand of leaping Red Sox third baseman Garin Cecchini. Jeter reached first without drawing a throw, and after a few seconds Brian McCann trotted from the dugout to pinch run. Jeter got a standing ovation as he slowly ran off the field to complete his 20th big league season, pointed to the Boston dugout and embraced pitcher Clay Buchholz. Approaching the Yankees dugout after the team’s last at-bat by a player with single-digit uniform number, the 40-year-old who has worn No. 2 since his rookie season lifted his helmet to recognize the cheers and was hugged on the warning track by Mark Teixeira and Brett Gardner. Boston players stood in their dugout and applauded. The ovation continued as others in his dugout congratulated their leader. Jeter’s parents watched from the stands. The final hit, Jeter’s 3,465th, left him with a .310 career batting average, raising it from .30945 to .30951. And it came at Fenway Park, the same field where Mickey Mantle played his finale exactly 46 years earlier.
Please see JETER, Page B-3
A’s, Tigers, Cards win playoff races By Ben Walker The Associated Press
Sonny Gray pitched Oakland into baseball’s last playoff spot, shutting out King Felix this October. David Price delivered the AL Central crown to Detroit, St. Louis scratched ace Adam Wainwright after wrapping up the NL Central. And on a final day that featured Derek Jeter’s farewell, Jordan Zimmermann injected even more drama by throwing a no-hitter preserved when Washington rookie Steven Souza Jr. made a catch for the ages. “Just an epic day for an epic season,” Nationals outfielder Denard Span said. Going into Sunday’s first pitch, not a single postseason matchup was set — plus the possibility of three tiebreakers loomed. Hours later, the brackets were all settled in Game 162. Gray blanked Texas 4-0, helping the shaky Athletics hold off Felix Hernandez and the Seattle Mariners for the second AL wild-card slot. The A’s will open this year’s postseason at Kansas City on Tuesday night, with Jon Lester facing the Royals’ James Shields. The Royals went 5-2 against the A’s this season — both losses were to Lester.
Please see PLAYOFFS, Page B-3
Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, right, hands the ball to DeMarco Murray during the first half of Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Saints in Arlington, Texas. TONY GUTIERREZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fully-healed Romo throws 3 TDs, in another 100-yard game
u Roundup of Sunday’s games. u Rodgers throws for 4 TDs, Packers beat Bears. PAGE B-4
By Schuyler Dixon
u WR Smith leads the way as Ravens beat Panthers. PAGE B-5
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas ony Romo wasn’t trying to look like DeMarco Murray. The 34-year-old Dallas quarterback instead showed everyone that his surgically repaired back is coming along just fine. Romo threw three touchdown passes and Mur-
T
INSIDE
ray ran for a pair of scores in another 100-yard game — one of them after the longest scramble of Romo’s career — in the Cowboys’ 38-17 victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday night. The Cowboys went up 31-3 when Romo broke free on third down and slid for the first down a
play before Murray ran loose in the secondary, juked Jairus Byrd at the 10 and was pushed across the goal line by Corey White. “It makes me feel old, and the fact that I haven’t gotten more than 21 yards is pretty pathetic,” said Romo, whose previous long run was 17 yards despite a career known for scrambles that keep plays alive. “But other than that, it feels pretty great.” The Cowboys kept Drew Brees and the Saints scoreless in the first half after giving up an NFLrecord 40 first downs in a 49-17 blowout loss in
Please see COWBOYS, Page B-4
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 26, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 21
Gore powers 49ers past Eagles to avoid 3-game skid By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — An offbalance Colin Kaepernick improvised, threw across his body and across the field, finding Frank Gore open near the opposite sideline more than 20 yards away. Gore bailed out a broken play and helped get the San Francisco 49ers back on track with a big day. He caught that career-best 55-yard touchdown and ran for 119 yards in his first 100-yard game of 2014, leading San Francisco past Philadelphia 26-21 on Sunday to hand the Eagles their first loss. “I don’t think I’ve ever had one quite like that,” Kaepernick said. “It was a great job by Frank.” “Great job by Kap,” Gore offered, standing next to his quarterback on the postgame podium.
Coach Jim Harbaugh didn’t see Gore open and had no idea where Kaepernick was going on that play. “Kap did a great job keeping his eyes up field. I had no idea. When he stopped, pulled it up and started to throw, I didn’t know where he was going with the ball,” Harbaugh said. “The speed, the angle, the way he got into the end zone was something. I didn’t think he was going to get it in.” Regardless, the 49ers got Gore involved in the offense again, and it returned them to their winning ways. Hard-nosed defense helped, too. At least for one Sunday, it seems the Niners reclaimed their offensive identity and defensive swagger. The 49ers (2-2) avoided their first three-game losing streak under Harbaugh, containing the league’s top passer.
Please see 49ERS, Page B-4
San Francisco 49ers running back Frank Gore, center, runs against the Philadelphia Eagles during the first quarter of Sunday’s game in Santa Clara, Calif. MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GOLF
Europe wins the Ryder Cup once again By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
GLENEAGLES, Scotland — The tone was set by Rory McIlroy, the best player in the world. The winning shot came from Jamie Donaldson, a Ryder Cup rookie. Europe added another layer to its Ryder Cup dominance on Sunday by leaving no doubt who had the best team, if not the best players. Behind two early comebacks that showed its resolve, Europe clinched the cup with four matches still on the course. With a 16½-11½ victory, Europe kept that gold trophy for the eighth time in the last 10 tries. McIlroy played some of his best golf this year — even for a guy
who won the last two majors — by trouncing Rickie Fowler to put the first point on the board. Donaldson finished off the Americans with a 9-iron that settled 18 inches from the cup on the 15th hole at Gleneagles and set off the celebration. “It came down to me to close it out,” Donaldson said. “But it’s all about the team.” That concept appeared lost on the Americans. Not long after the closing ceremony, Phil Mickelson said the Americans have strayed from the winning formula at Valhalla in 2008 under Paul Azinger — their only victory in these matches dating to 1999. Even with U.S. captain Tom Watson sitting six seats away, Mickelson said
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
that American team was invested in each other, which was different from Watson’s style of doing it his way. It was an awkward way to end another bad week for the Americans in the Ryder Cup. Watson defended his philosophy, though he conceded he might have erred in using some players who were too tired, leading to a 10-6 deficit going into Sunday singles. “The bottom line is they kicked our butts,” Watson said. “They were better players this week.” Watson said he had a pit in his stomach watching the Americans blow a 10-6 lead two years ago at Medinah. The PGA of America brought him back as captain — at age 65, the oldest in Ryder Cup history —
hopeful he could repeat some history. Watson was the last captain in 1993 to win on European soil. It might not have mattered where this was played. Graeme McDowell rallied from 3 down after five holes to close out his match against Jordan Spieth on the 17th hole. Justin Rose was 4 down after six holes when he won four straight holes with birdies against Hunter Mahan, and got up-and-down for birdie on the 18th to give Europe a half-point. Rose went unbeaten for the week at 3-0-2. That set the stage for Donaldson, a 38-year-old from Wales playing in
Please see RYDER, Page B-2
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
BASEBALL BASEBALL MLB American League East W L Pct GB x-Baltimore 96 66 .593 — New York 84 78 .519 12 Toronto 83 79 .512 13 Tampa Bay 77 85 .475 19 Boston 71 91 .438 25 Central W L Pct GB x-Detroit 90 72 .556 — y-Kansas City 89 73 .549 1 Cleveland 85 77 .525 5 Chicago 73 89 .451 17 Minnesota 70 92 .432 20 West W L Pct GB x-Los Angeles 98 64 .605 — y-Oakland 88 74 .543 10 Seattle 87 75 .537 11 Houston 70 92 .432 28 Texas 67 95 .414 31 x-clinched division y-clinched wild card Sunday’s Games Cleveland 7, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 1, Toronto 0 Detroit 3, Minnesota 0 N.Y. Mets 8, Houston 3 N.Y. Yankees 9, Boston 5 Kansas City 6, Chicago White Sox 4 Oakland 4, Texas 0 Seattle 4, L.A. Angels 1
National League East W L Pct x-Washington 96 66 .593 Atlanta 79 83 .488 New York 79 83 .488 Miami 77 85 .475 Philadelphia 73 89 .451 Central W L Pct x-St. Louis 90 72 .556 y-Pittsburgh 88 74 .543 Milwaukee 82 80 .506 Cincinnati 76 86 .469 Chicago 73 89 .451 West W L Pct x-Los Angeles 94 68 .580 y-San Francisco 88 74 .543 San Diego 77 85 .475 Colorado 66 96 .407 Arizona 64 98 .395 x-clinched division y-clinched wild card Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 8, Houston 3 Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 1 Atlanta 2, Philadelphia 1 Washington 1, Miami 0 Chicago Cubs 5, Milwaukee 2 San Francisco 9, San Diego 3 L.A. Dodgers 10, Colorado 5 St. Louis 1, Arizona 0
GB — 17 17 19 23 GB — 2 8 14 17 GB — 6 17 28 30
ab r 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 3 1
hbi 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
ab r Reyes ss 4 0 Bautist rf 4 0 Encrnc dh 4 0 Goins 2b 3 0 Lind 1b 3 0 Valenci ph 1 0 Pompy cf 4 0 Kawsk 3b 2 0 StTllsn 3b 1 0 Gose cf 2 0 Pillar lf 1 0 Thole c 2 0 Mayrry ph 1 0
Totals
31 1 5 1 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 0 6 0
Baltimore 000 010 000—1 Toronto 000 000 000—0 E—Flaherty (10). DP—Baltimore 1, Toronto 1. LOB—Baltimore 6, Toronto 5. 2B—Markakis (27), J.Hardy (28), Reyes (33), Gose (8). 3B—Goins (3). HR—Schoop (16). SB—Bautista (6). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO M.Gonzalez W,10-9 5 5 0 0 0 2 U.Jimenez H,1 1 0 0 0 0 3 A.Miller H,22 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Tom.Hunter H,12 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 O’Day H,25 1 0 0 0 0 0 Z.Britton S,37-41 1 1 0 0 0 1 Toronto Dickey L,14-13 6 2 1 1 3 2 Graveman 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cecil 1 2 0 0 0 2 Janssen 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:26. A—45,901 (49,282).
Indians 7, Rays 2 Tampa Bay ab r Guyer lf 3 1 Myers rf 4 0 Longori 3b 3 0 Forsyth 2b 3 0 SRdrgz 1b 4 1 Loney dh 4 0 Frnkln ss 3 0 JMolin c 3 0 Kiermr cf 3 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Cleveland ab r Shuck lf 5 1 JRmrz ss 4 1 Chsnhll 3b 4 1 CSantn dh 4 0 DvMrp rf 4 2 Aguilar 1b 4 0 Walters 2b 4 1 RPerez c 4 0 T.Holt cf 4 1
30 2 7 2 Totals
hbi 1 0 3 1 2 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 2 2 1 0 2 0
37 7 14 7
Tampa Bay 010 001 000—2 Cleveland 020 011 30x—7 E—Longoria (13), Franklin (3). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Cleveland 2. LOB— Tampa Bay 4, Cleveland 8. 2B—Guyer (15), J.Ramirez (10), Walters (2), R.Perez (5), T.Holt (2). HR—S.Rodriguez (12), Dav.Murphy (8), Walters (7). SB—Myers (6), J.Ramirez (10), Chisenhall (3). CS—S.Rodriguez (1). SF—Longoria, J.Ramirez. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Cobb L,10-9 6 10 4 4 0 5 Beliveau 1-3 3 3 3 1 1 B.Gomes 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Riefenhauser 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cleveland House W,5-3 5 5 1 1 0 2 C.Lee H,4 1 1 1 1 1 2 Crockett H,5 1 0 0 0 0 2 McAllister 2 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—by House (Guyer). WP—C.Lee. T—2:28. A—21,400 (42,487).
Nationals 1, Marlins 0 Miami ab r hbi
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Span cf 2 Schrhlt rf 2 Rendon 3b 2 Frndsn 3b 2 Zmrmn lf 4 Zmrmn p 3 LaRoch 1b 2 TMoore 1b 2 Dsmnd ss 2 Espinos ss 2 Harper cf 2 Hairstn rf 1 WRams c 3 ACarer 2b 2 Koerns 2b 1
27 0 0 0 Totals
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
1 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 1 11 1
Miami 000 000 000—0 Washington 010 000 00x—1 DP—Miami 2. LOB—Miami 1, Washington 7. 2B—Span (39), Harper (10). HR—Desmond (24). Miami IP H R ER BB SO H.Alvarez L,12-7 7 11 1 1 0 3 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 2 Washington Zimmermann W,14-59 0 0 0 1 10 WP—Zimmermann. T—2:01. A—35,085 (41,408).
Tigers 3, Twins 0 Minnesota ab r DaSntn ss 4 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 KVargs dh 3 0 Pinto c 2 0 KSuzuk ph 1 0 Arcia rf 4 0 EdEscr 3b 3 0 Hrmnn lf 3 0 A.Hicks cf 3 0 Totals
Detroit hbi 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
ab r Kinsler 2b 4 1 TrHntr rf 3 0 MiCarr 1b 4 0 VMrtnz dh 3 0 JMrtnz lf 3 0 Avila c 2 0 Cstllns 3b 2 0 D.Kelly 3b 1 0 AnRmn ss 2 1 Carrer cf 2 1
31 0 4 0 Totals
hbi 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
26 3 4 3
Minnesota 000 000 000—0 Detroit 001 000 02x—3 LOB—Minnesota 6, Detroit 3. 2B—A. Hicks (8). HR—Kinsler (17). SB—Da. Santana (20), An.Romine (12). SF— Tor.Hunter. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO Gibson L,13-12 7 1-3 4 3 3 3 6 Oliveros 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit D.Price W,15-12 7 1-3 4 0 0 2 8 Chmberlain H,29 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan S,35-42 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:41. A—40,501 (41,681).
Mets 8, Astros 3
Toronto
Markks rf De Aza lf A.Jones cf N.Cruz dh Pearce 1b JHardy ss Flahrty 3b Hundly c Schoop 2b
Totals
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Houston
Orioles 1, Blue Jays 0 Baltimore
Yelich cf 4 Solano 2b 3 McGeh 3b 3 GJones rf 3 RJhnsn lf 3 Bour 1b 2 Realmt c 3 Hchvrr ss 3 HAlvrz p 2 ARams p 0 Sltlmch ph 1
Washington ab r hbi
New York
ab r Grssmn lf 4 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 Presley rf 4 0 Singltn 1b 4 1 Mrsnck cf 4 1 Stassi c 4 0 G.Petit ss 4 1 Villar ss 2 0 MDmn 3b 1 0 DeLeon p 0 0 Hoes ph 1 0 Tropen p 1 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
dnDkkrcf BAreu rf EYong lf DnMrp 3b Duda 1b Grndrs rf Flores 2b Tejada ss Centen c B.Colon p Campll ph Tovar ph
33 3 8 3 Totals
ab r 4 1 2 0 1 1 2 2 4 1 4 0 4 1 4 1 3 1 1 0 1 0 1 0
hbi 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 4 0 0 2 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
31 8 10 8
Houston 010 011 000—3 New York 101 020 04x—8 DP—New York 1. LOB—Houston 5, New York 4. 2B—Altuve (47), Singleton (13), Marisnick (8), Stassi (2), G.Petit (8), den Dekker (11), Dan. Murphy (37), Duda (27), Flores (13). HR—Duda (30), Tejada (5). SB—den Dekker (7). CS—Tejada (2). S—B. Colon. SF—Dan.Murphy. Houston IP H R ER BB SO Tropeano L,1-3 5 6 4 4 3 1 Foltynewicz 2 1-3 3 3 3 0 0 De Leon 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 New York B.Colon W,15-13 6 8 3 3 2 4 C.Torres H,12 1 0 0 0 0 0 Familia H,23 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mejia 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:42. A—34,897 (41,922).
Braves 2, Phillies 1 Atlanta ab r Bonifac cf 4 1 Gosseln ss 3 1 FFrmn 1b 4 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 Gattis c 4 0 Doumit lf 3 0 Trdslvc rf 2 0 LaStell 2b 3 0 Russell p 2 0 Laird ph 1 0 Varvar p 0 0 Totals
hbi 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Philadelphia ab r Revere cf 4 0 Ruiz c 3 0 Utley 2b 3 0 Howard 1b 3 0 GSizmr ph 1 0 Byrd rf 4 0 DBrwn lf 4 0 Franco 3b 3 0 Asche ph 1 0 Galvis ss 3 1 Hamels p 2 0
30 2 3 2 Totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0
31 1 6 0
Atlanta 200 000 000—2 Philadelphia 000 000 010—1 DP—Atlanta 2. LOB—Atlanta 3, Philadelphia 6. HR—Bonifacio (3). SB—Gosselin (2), Revere (49), Utley (10), Gwynn Jr. (3). Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO Russell 4 2 0 0 1 4 Avilan W,4-1 2 1 0 0 0 2 Varvaro H,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 D.Carpenter H,19 1 2 1 1 1 0 Kimbrel S,47-51 1 1 0 0 0 3 Philadelphia Hamels L,9-9 8 3 2 2 1 7 Diekman 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—Utley, Terdoslavich. T—2:18. A—38,082 (43,651).
Reds 4, Pirates 1 Pittsburgh ab r JHrrsn 3b 4 0 Snider rf 4 0 Lambo ph 1 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 NWalkr 2b 4 1 SMarte lf 4 0 I.Davis 1b 1 0 GSnchz 1b 3 0 Mercer ss 4 0 CStwrt c 3 0 TSnchz c 1 0 Cole p 2 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
Cincinnati ab r Negron 3b 4 2 Phillips 2b 4 0 Frazier 1b 3 0 Mesorc c 3 0 Bruce rf 4 0 Heisey cf 3 0 Bourgs lf 3 1 Cozart ss 3 0 Cueto p 3 0 YRdrgz pr 0 1 AChpm p 0 0
34 1 7 1 Totals
hbi 3 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
30 4 7 4
Pittsburgh 000 100 000—1 Cincinnati 100 000 03x—4 LOB—Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 4. 2B—Snider (15), C.Stewart 2 (5). 3B—Bourgeois (1). HR—N.Walker (23), Negron (6). SB—S.Marte (30). CS—Bruce (3). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO Cole 7 4 1 1 0 12 Watson L,10-2 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Ju.Wilson 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 Cincinnati Cueto W,20-9 8 6 1 1 0 7 A.Chapman S,36-38 1 1 0 0 0 3 HBP—by Ju.Wilson (Mesoraco), by Cueto (A.McCutchen). WP—Cole, A.Chapman. T—2:46. A—34,424 (42,319).
Yankees 9, Red Sox 5 New York
Boston
ab r ISuzuki rf 3 1 EPerez rf 2 1 Jeter dh 2 0 BMcCn dh 0 1 JMrphy dh 3 1 Gardnr cf 3 0 AuRmn 1b 2 0 Teixeir 1b 3 0 Rchrds cf 1 0 Headly 3b 4 0 Drew ss 4 0 Cervelli c 3 2 CYoung lf 4 1 Pirela 2b 4 2 Totals
hbi 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 2
ab r Betts 2b 4 0 Nava rf 3 0 Lvrnwy 1b 1 0 Cespds dh 4 0 Craig 1b-rf 4 1 Cecchin 3b3 1 RCastll cf 3 1 Brentz lf 4 0 D.Ross c 2 0 DButlr c 2 1 JWeeks ss 2 1
38 9 12 9 Totals
hbi 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0
32 5 5 4
New York 004 000 500—9 Boston 000 000 500—5 E—E.Perez (3). LOB—New York 4, Boston 3. 2B—Gardner (25), Au.Romine (1), Pirela (1), Betts (12), D.Butler (3). 3B—I.Suzuki (2). SB—Betts (7). SF—Teixeira. New York IP H R ER BB SO Pineda W,5-5 6 1-3 3 1 1 0 10 E.Rogers 1-3 1 4 4 2 1 Warren 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 D.Phelps 1 0 0 0 0 2 Boston Buchholz L,8-11 6 5 4 4 1 4 Breslow 0 5 5 5 0 0 D.Britton 1 2 0 0 0 1 Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Breslow pitched to 5 batters in the 7th. HBP—by E.Rogers (R.Castillo). WP— Buchholz. T—3:14. A—36,879 (37,071).
Cubs 5, Brewers 2 Chicago hbi 0 1 1 0 3 2 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Milwaukee ab r GParra lf 4 0 Braun rf 3 0 Lucroy 1b 4 0 Overay ph 1 0 ArRmr 3b 2 0 HGomz 3b 2 0 Segura ss 3 1 Maldnd c 3 0 Gennett ph1 0 LSchfr cf 2 1 EHerrr 2b 3 0 Fiers p 1 0
Coghln lf J.Baez ss Rizzo 1b Soler rf Valuen 3b Alcantr cf Valaika 2b JoBakr c JaTrnr p Grimm p Lake ph NRmrz p
ab r 4 1 5 0 4 2 4 1 4 0 4 0 4 1 3 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Totals
35 5 7 5 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0
29 2 5 1
Chicago 200 002 001—5 Milwaukee 010 010 000—2 E—Valbuena (9), Lucroy (5). DP—Chicago 2. LOB—Chicago 7, Milwaukee 5. 2B—Alcantara (11). HR—Rizzo (32). SB—Coghlan (7), Rizzo (5), Soler (1), G.Parra (9), Segura (20), L.Schafer (2). S—Watkins, Fiers. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO Ja.Turner W,6-11 5 4 2 2 3 2 Grimm H,11 1 0 0 0 0 0 N.Ramirez H,17 1 0 0 0 1 1 Strop H,21 1 1 0 0 0 0 H.Rondon S,29-33 1 0 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee Fiers L,6-5 6 6 4 3 1 7 Duke 1 0 0 0 0 2 W.Smith 1 0 0 0 1 1 Jeffress 1 1 1 1 1 2 Ja.Turner pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. WP—Ja.Turner. T—3:09. A—33,837 (41,900).
Athletics 4, Rangers 0 Oakland
Texas
ab r Crisp cf 4 0 A.Dunn dh 3 0 Callasp ph 1 0 BBurns dh 0 1 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 Moss lf 3 1 Sogard 2b 3 0 Fuld lf 0 1 Reddck rf 4 1 Lowrie ss 4 0 Vogt 1b 4 0 G.Soto c 3 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 0
ab r LMartn cf 4 0 Andrus ss 4 0 Odor 2b 4 0 ABeltre 3b 4 0 Adduci pr 0 0 Smlnsk rf 4 0 Telis c 3 0 Rua lf 3 0 Sardins dh 2 0 Rosales 1b 3 0
33 4 7 4 Totals
hbi 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
31 0 6 0
Oakland 020 000 002—4 Texas 000 000 000—0 E—A.Beltre (12). DP—Oakland 2, Texas 2. LOB—Oakland 3, Texas 5. 2B—Moss (23), Odor (14), Telis (2). 3B—Reddick (7). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO Gray W,14-10 9 6 0 0 0 5 Texas N.Martinez L,5-125 2-3 4 2 2 0 2 D.Holland 2 2-3 3 2 1 1 1 Cotts 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Gray (Sardinas). Umpires—Home, Mark Carlson; First, Bill Welke; Second, Paul Emmel; Third, James Hoye. T—2:39. A—36,381 (48,114).
Royals 6, White Sox 4 Kansas City ab r AEscor ss 3 0 Nix ss 2 0 Aoki rf 3 0 CPegur rf 1 0 L.Cain cf 3 0 JDyson cf 1 0
Chicago hbi 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
ab r Eaton cf 3 1 Sierra cf 2 0 Semien 3b 4 1 AGarci rf 5 0 Konerk 1b 3 0 Wilkins 1b 2 0
hbi 3 0 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 0 2 0
C.Colon 3b 2 Hosmer 1b 3 LAdms lf-cf2 BButler dh 2 Wlngh dh 3 AGordn lf 2 Ibanez 1b 1 S.Perez c 1 Kratz c 3 Infante 2b 2 Giavtll 2b 2 Mostks 3b 2 Totals
1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0
2 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1
2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
Viciedo dh 2 MTaylr dh 2 JrDnks lf 4 Phegly c 4 CSnchz 2b 3 LeGarc ss 4
1 0 0 0 1 0
1 0 1 2 1 0
0 0 0 1 0 0
38 6 12 5 Totals
38 4 12 4
Cardinals 1, Diamondbacks 0 Arizona
ab r Wong 2b 3 0 Bourjos cf 3 0 Gonzals p 1 0 Scrggs 1b 2 0 Grichk rf 4 0 Tavers rf 3 0 Grenwd p 1 0 MAdms 1b 2 0 Kozma ss 3 1 GGarci 2b 1 0 Descals 3b 3 0 T.Cruz c 3 0 Totals
hbi 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
ab r Inciart lf 4 0 Pollock cf 3 0 DPerlt rf 4 0 Trumo 1b 3 0 Lamb 3b 3 0 Gswsch c 3 0 Pnngtn 2b 3 0 Gregrs ss 3 0 Cllmntr p 1 0 Pachec ph 0 0 Ahmed pr 0 0 EMrshl p 0 0
29 1 3 1 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 0 2 0
St. Louis 000 001 000—1 Arizona 000 000 000—0 DP—St. Louis 1. LOB—St. Louis 1, Arizona 3. 2B—Ma.Adams (34), Kozma (3). CS—Descalso (3), Ahmed (1). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO Greenwood 3 1 0 0 0 1 Masterson W,3-3 2 1 0 0 0 0 Siegrist H,16 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 Gonzales H,1 3 0 0 0 1 2 C.Martinez S,1-6 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona Collmenter L,11-9 8 3 1 1 0 3 E.Marshall 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:20. A—30,617 (48,633).
Mariners 4, Angels 1 Los Angeles ab r Calhon rf 2 0 GBckh 3b 2 0 Trout cf 2 0 Boesch cf 2 1 Pujols dh 2 0 LJimnz dh 2 0 HKndrc 2b 2 0 OMally 2b 2 0 Aybar ss 2 0 JMcDnl ss 2 0 Freese 3b 2 0 Conger c 2 0 Green lf 2 0 ENavrr rf 3 0 Cron 1b 3 0 Totals
Seattle hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
ab r AJcksn cf 4 0 J.Jones cf 0 0 Ackley lf 4 0 Romer lf 0 0 Cano 2b 3 0 BMiller 2b 1 0 KMorls dh 3 1 Seager 3b 4 0 Morrsn 1b 4 2 MSndrs rf 3 1 Zunino c 4 0 CTaylr ss 3 0
32 1 5 1 Totals
hbi 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 2 1 2 0 0
33 4 9 4
Los Angeles 000 000 001—1 Seattle 010 300 00x—4 LOB—Los Angeles 5, Seattle 7. 2B—Jo. McDonald (2), M.Saunders 2 (11). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO Cor.Rasmus L,3-2 3 3 2 2 1 3 Thatcher 1-3 2 2 2 0 1 Y.Herrera 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 H.Santiago 2 2 0 0 1 2 LeBlanc 2 0 0 0 0 3 Seattle F.Hernandez W 5 1-3 1 0 0 0 7 Maurer 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Beimel 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Medina 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Farquhar 1 2 1 1 0 2 Cor.Rasmus pitched to 1 batter in the 4th. WP—Maurer. T—2:50. A—40,823 (47,476).
Giants 9, Padres 3 San Diego ab r Venale lf 4 1 Spngnr 3b 4 2 Gyorko 2b 3 0 Grandl 1b 4 0 S.Smith lf 3 0 RLirian rf 0 0 Rivera c 4 0 Amarst ss 4 0 Maybin cf 3 0 Erlin p 1 0 Stauffr p 1 0 Medica ph 1 0 ATorrs p 0 0 Vincent p 0 0 Camps p 0 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 2 1 2 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 1 2
Dodgers 10, Rockies 5 Colorado
Kansas City 020 003 010—6 Chicago 002 200 000—4 DP—Kansas City 1. LOB—Kansas City 11, Chicago 10. 2B—A.Escobar (34), B.Butler (32), A.Gordon (34), Moustakas (21), C.Colon (5), Eaton (26), Wilkins (2), Phegley (2). HR—Semien (6). SB—A.Garcia (4). SF—S.Perez. Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO Ventura 4 8 4 4 1 6 C.Coleman W,1-0 1 1 0 0 1 0 Crow H,11 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hendriks H,1 1 2 0 0 0 1 Ti.Collins H,1 1 0 0 0 1 2 L.Coleman S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 3 Chicago Bassitt 5 8 3 3 1 5 D.Webb L,BS 1 3 2 2 0 2 Carroll 3 1 1 1 2 5 Bassitt pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. HBP—by Carroll (Giavotella, Gore). WP—Carroll. PB—Phegley. T—3:33. A—32,266 (40,615). St. Louis
Lincecum W,12-9 2 1 0 0 0 Kontos H,1 1 0 0 0 0 Cordier 1 0 0 0 0 Bochy 1 0 0 0 0 A.Torres pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP—Heston. T—3:03. A—41,077 (41,915).
San Francisco ab r GBlanc rf 3 2 Panik 2b 5 1 Posey c 2 1 Susac c 3 0 Pence rf 3 0 GBrwn cf 1 1 Sndovl 3b 2 0 Arias 3b 2 1 Belt 1b 2 1 J.Perez lf 2 0 MDuffy ph 1 0 BCrwfr ss 4 1 Ishikaw 1b 3 0 Heston p 1 0 Duvall ph 1 1
32 3 7 3 Totals
hbi 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
35 9 13 9
San Diego 201 000 000—3 San Francisco 220 100 40x—9 DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—San Diego 5, San Francisco 6. 2B—Susac (8), Arias (9), Belt (8). HR—Posey (22), Duvall (3). SF—S.Smith, G.Blanco. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO Erlin L,4-5 1 2-3 4 4 4 2 1 Stauffer 2 1-3 3 1 1 0 3 Boyer 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Garces 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 A.Torres 0 1 2 2 1 0 Vincent 1-3 3 2 2 0 1 Campos 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 San Francisco Heston 4 6 3 3 2 2
ab r Blckmn cf 4 1 KParkr rf 1 0 Ynoa 3b 4 0 Paulsn 1b 4 0 Rosario c 4 1 Stubbs cf 2 1 Scahill p 0 0 Masset p 0 0 Mornea ph 1 0 Brothrs p 0 0 BBarns cf 3 1 Rutledg ss 4 1 Culersn 2b 4 0 Brgmn p 2 0 McBrid lf 2 0 Totals
hbi 2 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Los Angeles ab r Barney 2b 5 2 Puig cf 3 1 Berndn rf 2 1 AdGnzl 1b 2 2 VnSlyk 1b 3 0 Kemp rf 2 1 Pedrsn cf 2 0 Crwfrd lf 3 0 Guerrr lf 2 0 A.Ellis c 3 0 YGarci p 1 0 Butera c 1 1 Greink p 2 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 Arrrrn ss 4 1 Rojas 3b 5 1
35 5 9 5 Totals
hbi 2 1 0 0 2 4 2 3 1 0 2 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0
41 101610
Colorado 010 000 310—5 10x—10 Los Angeles 203 004 E—B.Barnes (2), Rutledge 2 (13). LOB—Colorado 5, Los Angeles 9. 2B— Blackmon (27), Ynoa (6), Ad.Gonzalez (41), Ju.Turner (21), Greinke (6). HR—Rosario (13), Bernadina (1), Ad.Gonzalez (27), Kemp (25). SB— Stubbs (20). S—B.Barnes. Colorado IP H R ER BB SO Bergman L,3-5 5 1-3 11 8 7 0 4 Scahill 2-3 2 1 1 1 1 Masset 1 2 1 1 0 1 Brothers 1 1 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles Greinke W,17-8 5 4 1 1 1 6 Y.Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 3 P.Baez 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 Coulombe 1 1-3 3 2 2 0 2 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Masset (Butera). T—3:15. A—48,278 (56,000).
MLB PLAYOFFS X-IF NECESSARY Wild Card Tuesday, Sept. 30 Oakland (Lester 16-11) at Kansas City (Shields 14-8), 6:07 p.m. (TBS) Wednesday, Oct. 1 San Francisco (Bumgarner 18-10) at Pittsburgh (Volquez 13-7), 6:07 p.m. (ESPN)
Division Series (Best-of-5) American League All AL games televised by TBS Los Angeles vs. Oakland-Kansas City winner Thursday, Oct. 2 Oakland-Kansas City winner at Los Angeles Friday, Oct. 3 Oakland-Kansas City winner at Los Angeles Sunday, Oct. 5 Los Angeles at Oakland-Kansas City winner x-Monday, Oct. 6 Los Angeles at Oakland-Kansas City winner x-Wednesday, Oct. 8 Oakland-Kansas City winner at Los Angeles Baltimore vs. Detroit Thursday, Oct. 2 Detroit (Scherzer 18-5) at Baltimore (Tillman 13-6) Friday, Oct. 3 Detroit at Baltimore Sunday, Oct. 5 Baltimore at Detroit x-Monday, Oct. 6 Baltimore at Detroit x-Wednesday, Oct. 8 Detroit at Baltimore National League Washington vs. San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner Friday, Oct. 3 San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at Washington (FS1) Saturday, Oct. 4 San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at Washington (FS1 or MLBN) Monday, Oct. 6 Washington at San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner (FS1 or MLBN) x-Tuesday, Oct. 7 Washington at San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner (FS1) x-Thursday, Oct. 9 San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at Washington (FS1) Los Angeles vs. St. Louis Friday, Oct. 3 St. Louis (Wainwright 20-9) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 21-3) (FS1) Saturday, Oct. 4 St. Louis at Los Angeles (FS1 or MLBN) Monday, Oct. 6 Los Angeles at St. Louis (FS1 or MLBN) x-Tuesday, Oct. 7 Los Angeles at St. Louis (FS1) x-Thursday Oct. 9 St. Louis at Los Angeles (FS1)
League Championship Series (Best-of-7) American League All AL games televised by TBS Friday, Oct. 10 Detroit-Baltimore winner at Los Angeles OR Oakland-Kansas City winner at Detroit-Baltimore winner Saturday, Oct. 11 Detroit-Baltimore winner at Los Angeles OR Oakland-Kansas City winner at Detroit-Baltimore winner Monday, Oct. 13 Los Angeles at Detroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimore winner at Oakland-Kansas City winner
Tuesday, Oct. 14 Los Angeles at Detroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimore winner at Oakland-Kansas City winner x-Wednesday, Oct. 15 Los Angeles at Detroit-Baltimore winner OR Detroit-Baltimore winner at Oakland-Kansas City winner x-Friday, Oct. 17 Detroit-Baltimore winner at Los Angeles OR Oakland-Kansas City winner at Detroit-Baltimore winner x-Saturday, Oct. 18 Detroit-Baltimore winner at Los Angeles OR Oakland-Kansas City winner at Detroit-Baltimore winner National League Saturday, Oct. 11 St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at Washington OR San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner (Fox) Sunday, Oct. 12 St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at Washington OR San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner (FS1) Tuesday, Oct. 14 Washington at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner (FS1) Wednesday, Oct. 15 Washington at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner (FS1) x-Thursday, Oct. 16 Washington at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner OR St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner (FS1) x-Saturday, Oct. 18 St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at Washington OR San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner (Fox) x-Sunday, Oct. 19 St. Louis-Los Angeles winner at Washington OR San Francisco-Pittsburgh winner at St. Louis-Los Angeles winner (FS1)
World Series (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 21 at American League Wednesday, Oct. 22 at AL Friday, Oct. 24 at National League Saturday, Oct. 25 at NL x-Sunday, Oct. 26 at NL x-Tuesday, Oct. 28 at AL x-Wednesday, Oct. 29 at AL
FOOTBALL FOOTBALL NCAA The AP Top 25 Poll The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 27: Rec Pts Pv 1. Florida St. (27) 4-0 1,416 1 2. Oregon (13) 4-0 1,405 2 3. Alabama (13) 4-0 1,387 3 4. Oklahoma (7) 4-0 1,357 4 5. Auburn 4-0 1,272 5 6. Texas A&M 5-0 1,206 6 7. Baylor 4-0 1,149 7 8. UCLA 4-0 975 11 9. Notre Dame 4-0 972 8 10. Michigan St. 3-1 944 9 11. Mississippi 4-0 906 10 12. Mississippi St. 4-0 848 14 13. Georgia 3-1 788 12 14. Stanford 3-1 643 16 15. LSU 4-1 636 17 16. Southern Cal 3-1 560 18 17. Wisconsin 3-1 502 19 18. BYU 4-0 450 20 19. Nebraska 5-0 445 21 20. Ohio St. 3-1 298 22 21. Oklahoma St. 3-1 246 24 22. East Carolina 3-1 237 23 23. Kansas St. 3-1 216 25 24. Missouri 4-1 145 NR 25. TCU 3-0 109 NR Others receiving votes: Arizona St. 97, South Carolina 61, Clemson 52, Arizona 43, Marshall 40, Georgia Tech 37, West Virginia 24, Arkansas 18, Maryland 5, Louisville 4, N. Dakota St. 3, Washington 2, NC State 1, Virginia 1.
GOLF GOLF Ryder Cup At Gleneagles Resort (PGA Centenary Course) Gleneagles, Scotland Yardage: 7,243; Par: 72 EUROPE 161/2, UNITED STATES 111/2 Sunday Singles Europe 61/2, United States 51/2 Graeme McDowell, Europe, def. Jordan Spieth, United States, 2 and 1. Patrick Reed, United States, def. Henrik Stenson, Europe, 1 up. Rory McIlroy, Europe, def. Rickie Fowler, United States, 5 and 4. Justin Rose, Europe, halved with Hunter Mahan, United States Phil Mickelson, United States, def. Stephen Gallacher, Europe, 3 and 1. Martin Kaymer, Europe, def. Bubba Watson, United States, 4 and 2. Matt Kuchar, United States, def. Thomas Bjorn, Europe, 4 and 3. Sergio Garcia, Europe, def. Jim Furyk, United States, 1 up. Webb Simpson, United States, halved with Ian Poulter, Europe. Jamie Donaldson, Europe, def. Keegan Bradley, United States, 4 and 3. Jimmy Walker, United States, def. Lee Westwood, Europe, 3 and 2. Zach Johnson, United States, halved with Victor Dubuisson, Europe.
Ryder: 3 American rookies made nearly half of the points for U.S. Continued from Page B-1 his first Ryder Cup. He seized control over Keegan Bradley at the turn, and then it was a matter of when Europe could pop the champagne. Donaldson was so locked in on his task that he was unaware that he had retained the cup for Europe when he was 4 up with four holes to play. From 146 yards in fairway, he fired a 9-iron at the flag and let the club twirl through his hands. It was close to perfect. Watson walked over and shook his hand, and then put his arm around McGinley as they headed to the green. Bradley got onto the putting surface, and as soon as he saw Donaldson’s ball next to the cup, he removed his cap and shook hands. McGinley talked all week about a
template of European success. The message was to embrace their role as the favorites, and to be proud that they had earned it. And the final instruction was to avoid complacency. Europe won the Sunday singles session for the second straight Ryder Cup. “I didn’t execute the plan. All these guys sitting at this table did,” McGinley said with the 17-inch trophy on display. “I know how difficult it is to play in a Ryder Cup. I know when your heart is jumping out of your chest how incredibly excited and nervous you are. But we relish this challenge. We did it with a smile on our face, which is so important. And we did everybody proud.” The Americans had a few bright spots. Patrick Reed went unbeaten as a rookie. Reed and Spieth had to settle for a half-point Saturday afternoon, in part
because Reed missed a 2-foot putt. The gallery heckled him before he teed off against Henrik Stenson, and it inspired him. Reed rallied from an early deficit, putting his finger against his lips to hush the crowd, and he won the point on the 18th hole when Stenson missed a 4-foot putt. Reed went 3-0-1 and earned the most points for the Americans. The three American rookies — Spieth, Reed and Jimmy Walker — contributed nearly half of the points for the U.S. team. Going into the Ryder Cup, Watson had singled out Ian Poulter as the European with the best record and the man to beat. Poulter wound up playing only three matches and he didn’t win any of them, settling for two halves. It wasn’t about Poulter, though. It was about Europe, a formidable team.
Europe team captain Paul McGinley, center right, and his team hold the trophy Sunday after winning the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles, Scotland. MATT DUNHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPORTS
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
BASEBALL
No-hitter for Nats ends on great grab The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Jordan Zimmermann pitched the first no-hitter for the Washington Nationals, Nationals 1 the gem preserved Marlins 0 when defensive replacement Steven Souza Jr. made a diving catch in left field for the final out in a 1-0 victory over the Miami Marlins in a regular-season finale Sunday. Zimmermann (14-5) allowed only two baserunners, finishing with 10 strikeouts and one walk in the fifth no-hitter in the majors this year. Christian Yelich sent a long drive to left-center with two outs in the ninth. Souza, who made his big league debut this year and took over for Ryan Zimmerman to begin the ninth, ran hard into the gap, extended his glove and leaped for the sensational catch. YANKEES 9, RED SOX 5 In Boston, Derek Jeter went 1 for 2 with an RBI infield single in the final game of his 20-year big league career, raising his career batting average to .310. Three days after Jeter’s emotional farewell in New York, pinstripe-wearing fans filled Fenway Park for Jeter’s finale, chanting for him and the visiting Yankees and standing for each of his at-bats. After a hard linedrive out in the first inning, Jeter delivered career hit No. 3,465 as part of a four-run third inning, then left for a pinch runner. ATHLETICS 4, RANGERS 0 In Arlington, Texas, Oakland finally clinched its third consecutive playoff berth as Sonny Gray (14-10) pitched a six-hitter to win for the first time in five September starts and Josh Reddick had an RBI triple. The A’s lost 30 of their previous 45 games before winning game No. 162. They play the win-or-go-home wild-card game Tuesday night at Kansas City. MARINERS 4, ANGELS 1 In Seattle, the Mariners were eliminated in the fifth inning when Oakland’s game ended, and Felix Hernandez (15-6) pitched five shutout innings to secure the AL ERA title at 2.14, just beating Chris Sale of the White Sox (2.17).
run homer off Justin Wilson. Aroldis Chapman pitched the ninth for his 36th save in 38 chances. Pittsburgh hosts San Francisco in the NL wild-card game Wednesday, with the winner advacing to a division series against Washington.
Nationals starting pitcher Jordan Zimmermann throws during Sunday’s game against the Miami Marlins at Nationals Park in Washington. ALEX BRANDON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle’s 87 wins in the first season of All-Star second baseman Robinson Cano were its most since 2007. The Mariners had a 1½-game lead for the second wild card on the morning of Sept. 7 but lost 12 of their next 17 games. TIGERS 3, TWINS 0 In Detroit, David Price (15-12) allowed four hits in 7⅓ innings, clinching the Tigers’ fourth straight AL Central title. Ian Kinsler hit a solo homer in the third, and the Tigers added two more runs in the eighth off Kyle Gibson (13-12). Detroit entered with a postseason berth already wrapped up, but the Tigers led the division by only one game over Kansas City. The Tigers face Baltimore in the AL division series. ROYALS 6, WHITE SOX 4 In Chicago, right after Detroit secured its fourth straight division title, Kansas City manager Ned Yost started pulling some of his regulars from the lineup. Kansas City hosts Oakland on Tuesday night in their first playoff appearance since 1985. Chicago’s Paul Konerko went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts on the final day of his 18-year big league career. A six-time AllStar, Konerko finishes with a .279 average, 439 homers and 1,412 RBIs. ORIOLES 1, BLUE JAYS 0 In Toronto, Jonathan Schoop hit a fifth-inning homer off R.A. Dickey (14-13), and Miguel Gonzalez (10-9) allowed five hits in five innings to become the
fourth starter on Baltimore (96-66) to reach 10 wins. Toronto (83-79) finished out of the playoffs for the 21st straight season, the longest drought in baseball. The Blue Jays were 38-24 on the morning of June 7, six games ahead of Baltimore in the AL East, then went 45-55. INDIANS 7, RAYS 2 In Cleveland, rookie Zach Walters and David Murphy hit solo second-inning homers off Alex Cobb (10-9). T.J. House (5-3) gave up Sean Rodriguez’s leadoff homer in the second. Cleveland won 85 games for its first consecutive winning seasons since 2000-01. Tampa Bay went 77-84, its first losing season since 2007. NATIONAL LEAGUE CARDINALS 1, DIAMONDBACKS 0 In Phoenix, St. Louis clinched its second straight NL Central title before the first pitch when Pittsburgh lost to Cincinnati, then beat Arizona 1-0 on Kolten Wong’s RBI groundout in the sixth inning off Josh Collmenter (11-9). St. Louis finished 90-72 and opens their NL division series Friday at the Dodgers. REDS 4, PIRATES 1 In Cincinnati, Johnny Cueto (20-9) hit an RBI single off Tony Watson (10-2) in the eighth and gave up six hits in eight innings, including Neil Walker’s homer. Kristopher Negron added a two-
GIANTS 9, PADRES 3 In San Francisco, Buster Posey and Adam Duvall homered, and starter-turnedreliever Tim Lincecum (12-9) pitched two scoreless innings for the Giants (88-74). San Diego (77-85) lost its final three games and finished third in the NL West at 77-85. Robbie Erlin (4-5) allowed four runs and four hits in 1⅔ innings. DODGERS 10, ROCKIES 5 In Los Angeles, Adrian Gonzalez hit a three-run homer to finish with a major league-leading 116 RBIs. The Dodgers’ 94 wins were their most since going 95-67 in 2009 and they ended the regular season without a losing streak longer than three games. Zack Greinke (17-8) defeated rookie Christian Bergman (3-5), setting a career high for wins. METS 8, ASTROS 3 In New York, Jose Altuve talked his way into the lineup and went 2 for 4 to finish with a .341 average and become Houston’s first batting champion. Detroit’s Victor Martinez was 0 for 3 and wound up at .335. Bobby Abreu sparked the decisive rally with a base hit in his final big league at-bat. Lucas Duda homered and drove in four runs, and Bartolo Colon (15-13) reached 15 wins for the eighth time. BRAVES 2, PHILLIES 1 In Philadelphia, Emilio Bonifacio led off the game with homer off Cole Hamels (9-9), and Freddie Freeman added an RBI single in the first. Luis Avilan (4-1) pitched two scoreless innings, and Craig Kimbrel got his league-leading 47th save. CUBS 5, BREWERS 2 In Milwaukee, Anthony Rizzo had a two-run homer in the first off Mike Fiers (6-5), becoming the Cubs’ first Cubs left-handed hitter with 32 homers since Rick Monday in 1976. At 73-89, the Cubs improved from 66-96 last year and 61-101 in 2012 as they seek their first World Series title since 1908.
Jeter: Boston fans give him warm reception Continued from Page B-1 Jeter had lined out to shortstop Jemile Weeks in the first inning. The last active member of the Core Four that included Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera and Andy Pettitte, Jeter led the Yankees to 13 AL East titles, seven AL pennants and five World Series championships. He broke an ankle in the 2012 AL championship series opener and was limited to 17 games the following season. He dropped off this year to a .256 average with four homers and 50 RBIs. Before the game, Jeter was congratulated by former captains of local pro teams. During a half-hour ceremony, Carl Yastrzemski and Jason Varitek of the Red Sox, Bobby Orr of the Bruins, Troy Brown of the New England Patriots and Paul Pierce of the Celtics came out of the Boston dugout, one after the other. They shook hands with Jeter, standing on the grass just behind the dirt at shortstop. At the start of the ceremony, the date “SEPTEMBER 28 2014” was removed, one character at a time, from the hand-operated scoreboard on the left-field wall and replaced by “WITH RESPECT 2 DEREK
JETER.” Then the “S” in “RESPECT” was replaced by the No. 2. Jeter waved his cap as he left the dugout for his 153rd game at Fenway, including the playoffs, breaking a tie with Lou Gehrig and Mantle for most by a Yankee. Boston second baseman Dustin Pedroia presented a base with a No. 2 and blue pinstripes on it to Jeter. He also received a green sign with white characters like those on the Green Monster scoreboard saying “RE2PECT.” A video was shown of Jeter being doused in the Yankees clubhouse as part of the “Ice Bucket Challenge” inspired by former Boston College baseball captain Pete Frates to raise awareness for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a condition Frates is afflicted with. Then Frates rode onto the infield grass in his wheelchair and Jeter came in to greet him. Michelle Brooks Thompson, a Massachusetts native from the Voice TV show, sang “Respect” on the infield dirt then Jeter shook hands and hugged her. Jeter sat out Friday’s series opener to recover from his emotionally draining final home game when his single in the ninth inning gave the Yankees a 6-5 win over the Baltimore Orioles and unleashed a wild
celebration as teammates poured from the dugout to embrace him between first and second base. The 14-time All-Star returned to the lineup as designated hitter on Saturday and went 1 for 2. “The hard thing for me about this game is the relationships and how you get used to seeing people every day,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said, “and how abruptly it ends. “Since [he was] a young man signing, really a teenager, it’s really what he’s known. It’s what we’ve known him to be, the Yankees’ shortstop, and it’s hard to believe that it’s coming to an end.” Before the game, Boston manager John Farrell praised Jeter for “a grace and a dignity, an integrity that probably is unmatched by others.” Girardi had expected Jeter to receive a warm reception in enemy territory. “Boston understands what Derek has meant to the Yankees playing him all these times,” Girardi said. “I think it will be done right.” Jeter was cheered when he took batting practice and when he ran into his dugout when it was over.
Playoffs: AL starts Thursday; NL Friday Continued from Page B-1 For Oakland slugger Adam Dunn, it will be his first playoff appearance. He’s been in 2,001 games, the most by any active major leaguer without reaching the postseason. “I played scenarios of this day out in my head probably a thousand times,” Dunn said. On Wednesday night, Madison Bumgarner and San Francisco visit Edinson Volquez and Pittsburgh in the NL wildcard game. The Pirates lost their chance to catch the Cardinals with a 4-1 loss to Cincinnati. No matter, they’ll be back home at PNC Park, where they won the wild-card game last season. “I expect it to be like last
year: So loud you can’t hear the ball off the bat,” said Josh Harrison, who almost won the NL batting title. Both of the best-of-five AL division series begin Thursday. It’ll be the wild-card winner at the Los Angeles Angels and the Tigers at Baltimore. In NL openers Friday, the wild card plays at Washington and the Cardinals are at the Los Angeles Dodgers. Price, acquired by Detroit in late July to win big games, stopped Minnesota 3-0. The Tigers needed a victory to close out the Royals for the division title. “On a day where we needed an enormous outing after giving up 20-something runs over the previous two, he stepped
right up. He showed why he’s a true No. 1,” first-year Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. At Fenway Park, the World Series champion Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees were long gone from the playoff race. But the place was packed for Jeter’s goodbye. On his final swing, Jeter chopped an RBI single. He left to a rousing ovation, stopping to embrace Boston pitcher Clay Buchholz on the mound. The 40-year-old Jeter left after 20 years with 3,465 hits, five World Series rings and no regrets. “I felt like the time was right,” he said. “My emotions were so all over the place on Thursday in New York, and when I got here I was ready; I
was ready for my career to be over with.” The Nationals punctuated a season in which they had the NL’s best record with an exclamation point — the first no-hitter in team history. Zimmermann was in total control until two outs in the ninth, when Christian Yelich hit a deep drive. Souza, in left field as a defensive replacement, raced back into the gap and made a sensational diving grab. Zimmermann winced when the ball was hit, figuring it was bound to be a “no-doubt double.” “And then he comes out of nowhere and makes that catch,” Zimmermann said.
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. BOXING 8 p.m. on FS1 — Junior featherweights, Rene Alvarado (20-3-0) vs. Yoandris Salinas (20-1-2); featherweights, Joseph Diaz Jr. (11-0-0) vs. Raul Hidalgo (21-11-0); heavyweights, Antonio Tarver (30-6-0) vs. Jonathan Banks (29-2-1), in Hidalgo, Texas NFL 6:15 p.m. on ESPN — New England at Kansas City SOCCER 12:55 p.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Newcastle at Stoke City
LOCAL TV CHANNELS FOX — Ch. 2 (KASA) NBC — Ch. 4 (KOB) ABC — Ch. 7 (KOAT) CBS — Ch. 13 (KRQE) Univision — Ch. 41 (KLUZ) ESPN — Comcast: Ch. 9 (Digital, Ch. 252); DirecTV: Ch. 206; Dish Network: Ch. 140 ESPN2 — Comcast: Ch. 8 (Digital, Ch. 253); DirecTV: Ch. 209; Dish Network: Ch. 144
ESPNU — Comcast: Ch. 261 (Digital, Ch. 815); DirecTV: Ch. 208; Dish Network: Ch. 141 FOX Sports 1 — Comcast: Ch. 38 (Digital, Ch. 255); DirecTV: Ch. 219; Dish Network: Ch. 150 NBC Sports — Comcast: Ch. 27 (Digital, Ch. 837): DirecTV: Ch. 220; Dish Network: Ch. 159 CBS Sports — Comcast: Ch. 274; (Digital, Ch. 838); DirecTV: Ch. 221; Dish Network: Ch. 158 ROOT Sports — Comcast: Ch. 276 (Digital, 814); DirecTV: Ch. 683; Dish Network: Ch. 414
CROSS-COUNTRY — NICK MARTIN INVITATIONAL Mesa Vista results from the Nick Martin Invitational, held on Saturday at Sandia Park. Course distance is 3.1 miles.
Varsity Boys Mesa Vista results — James Espinoza, 4th, 18 minutes, 11 seconds; Brian Gollas, 39th, 21:25; Frankie Ortiz, 42nd, 21:48; Anthony Vigil, 65th, 23;38; Matthew Sandoval, 82nd, 25:28; Charles
Buezo, 86th, 26:04; Jaryk Jaramillo, 97th, 30:43 Girls Mesa Vista results — Sarah Espinoza, 39th, 27:30; Aubri Griego, 40th, 27:40; Jenai Espinoza, 61st, 33:23.
Middle school 7th grade Mesa Vista results — Alyssa Suazo, 28th; Catalina Vigil, 35th
PREP SCHEDULE This week’s high school varsity sports schedule. To make additions or corrections, contact us at sports@sfnewmexican.com.
Today Boys soccer — Questa at Las Vegas Robertson, 4 p.m. Monte del Sol at Desert Academy (at Alto Park), 5 p.m. Moreno Valley at Pojoaque Valley, 5 p.m. Taos at Bernalillo, 5 p.m. Girls soccer — Moreno Valley at Pojoaque Valley, 3 p.m. Monte del Sol at Desert Academy (at Alto Park), 3 p.m. East Mountain at Academy for Technology and The Classics (at MRC), 4 p.m. St. Michael’s at Santa Fe Preparatory, 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday Boys soccer — Capital at Abq. Del Norte, 3 p.m. St. Michael’s at Abq. Hope Christian, 3:30 p.m. Girls soccer — Los Alamos at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Taos at Bernalillo, 3 p.m. Capital at Abq. Del Norte, 5 p.m. Volleyball — Walatowa Charter at N.M. School for Deaf, 5 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Abq. Sandia Preparatory, 6:30 p.m. Mora at Santa Rosa, 6:30 p.m. Española Valley at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Santa Fe High at Rio Rancho, 7 p.m. St. Michael’s at Abq. St. Pius X, 7 p.m. East Mountain at Pecos, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Boys soccer — Santa Fe High at Los Alamos, 4 p.m. Girls soccer — Academy for Technology and The Classics at Santa Fe Preparatory, 4:30 p.m. Volleyball — Santa Fe Waldorf at N.M. School for Deaf, 5 p.m. Cuba at Monte del Sol (at GCCC), 6 p.m. Los Alamos at Capital, 7 p.m. Mora at McCurdy, 7 p.m.
Thursday Boys soccer — Moreno Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Questa at Taos, 4 p.m. St. Michael’s at Santa Fe Preparatory, 4:30 p.m. Farmington at Capital, 5 p.m. Girls soccer — Capital at Pojoaque Valley, 4 p.m. Abq. Bosque at Taos, 4 p.m. St. Michael’s at Santa Fe Indian School, 4:30 p.m. Moreno Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 5 p.m. N.M. School for Deaf at Graceway Christian, 5 p.m. Santa Rosa at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Football — Hondo at N.M. School for Deaf, 3 p.m. Volleyball — Escalante at Peñasco, 5 p.m. Los Alamos at Abq. Academy, 6 p.m. Abq. Hope Christian at Santa Fe Indian School, 6:30 p.m. Abq. Bosque at Las Vegas Robertson, 6:30 p.m. Rio Rancho Cleveland at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m.
Friday Boys soccer — Hatch Valley at Desert Academy (at Alto Park), 5 p.m. Girls soccer — Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol (at MRC), 11 a.m. Los Alamos at Abq. Highland, 3 p.m. Desert Academy at Hatch Valley, 3 p.m. Football — Santa Fe High at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Lovington at Capital, 7 p.m. Española Valley at Taos, 7 p.m. Escalante at Jal, 7 p.m. West Las Vegas at Raton, 7 p.m. Ruidoso at Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Portales at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. Volleyball — Santa Fe Waldorf at Abq. Evangel Christian, 5 p.m. Cimarron at Monte del Sol (at GCCC), 6 p.m. Lady Braves Invitational, 4 p.m. (Santa Fe Indian School, Taos, Desert Academy, Mora, Santa Fe Preparatory) Lady Rams Invitational hosted by Portales, times TBA (Pojoaque Valley) Cross-country — Desert Twilight Meet in Phoenix, 6 p.m. (St. Michael’s, Los Alamos)
Saturday Boys soccer — Santa Fe High at Abq. Volcano Vista (at APS), 11 a.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 11 a.m. Taos at Moreno Valley, 11 a.m. Pojoaque Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 11 a.m. Silver at St. Michael’s, 1 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol (at MRC), 1 p.m. Girls soccer — Abq. Volcano Vista at Santa Fe High, 11 a.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol, 11 a.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 1 p.m. Taos at Moreno Valley, 1 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 1 p.m. Football — Santa Fe Indian School at McCurdy, 1 p.m. Volleyball — Mesa Vista at Mora, 1 p.m. Corona at Santa Fe Waldorf (at Christian Life), 2 p.m. Lady Braves Invitational, 4 p.m. (Santa Fe Indian School, Taos, Desert Academy, Mora, Santa Fe Preparatory) Farmington at Los Alamos, 5 p.m. Capital at Bernalillo, 6:30 p.m. Abq. Academy at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Lady Rams Invitational hosted by Portales, times TBA (Pojoaque Valley) Cross-country — John Grimley Memorial hosted by Santa Fe Indian School, 9 a.m. (Santa Fe High, Santa Fe Preparatory, Española Valley, Mora, Academy for Technology and The Classics, Taos, Desert Academy, Pecos, SFIS) Albuquerque La Cueva Invitational, 9 a.m. (Pojoaque Valley, West Las Vegas, Las Vegas Robertson) Mesa Vista at Cuba Invitational, 9 a.m.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
B-4
NFL
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
Bucs rally late to stun Steelers The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Mike Glennon hit a diving Vincent Jackson for a 5-yard touchdown with Buccaneers 27 7 seconds remainSteelers 24 ing to lift Tampa Bay to a stunning win. The Buccaneers (1-3) lost to Atlanta by six touchdowns a week ago but bounced back. Glennon passed for 302 yards in his first start of the season, including a 41-yard catch-andrun by Louis Murphy that set up Jackson’s score. Ben Roethlisberger passed for 314 yards and three touchdowns, but Pittsburgh (2-2) couldn’t protect a seven-point lead in the fourth quarter. Antonio Brown caught seven passes for 131 yards and two scores, and Heath Miller added a career-high nine grabs. The Steelers committed 13 penalties for 125 yards. CHARGERS 33, JAGUARS 14 In San Diego, Philip Rivers threw for 377 yards and three touchdowns, two to Eddie Royal. Royal had scoring catches of 47 and 43 yards, his second straight two-touchdown game. The Chargers (3-1) extended their winning streak to three. Passing because the Chargers’ running game is nonexistent due to injuries to Ryan Mathews and Danny Woodhead, Rivers had his second three-touchdown game of the season. He went 29 of 39. Royal had five catches for 105 yards. Keenan Allen had 10 for 135, both career highs, and Malcom Floyd had a 24-yard touchdown catch. Rookie Blake Bortles made his first start for the Jaguars (0-4), threw one touchdown pass, was intercepted twice and twice had Jacksonville in the lead in the first half. VIKINGS 41, FALCONS 28 In Minneapolis, Teddy Bridgewater passed for 317 yards and a key 2-point conversion before leaving with an ankle injury. The rookie was 19 for 30 with no turnovers and ran five times for 27 yards and a score in his first career start, but his last carry was costly. His left foot rolled underneath him as he was sandwiched by two tacklers at the 1-yard line. Matt Asiata powered his way in on the next play for his third touchdown, and Bridgewater stayed in to zip a crisp pass to Rhett Ellison to push
Continued from Page B-1
Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Vincent Jackson, right, makes a catch in front of Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback William Gay for a touchdown with seven seconds left in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game in Pittsburgh. The score lifted the Buccaneers to a 27-24 win. GENE PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
the lead to 35-28. As Bridgewater was taken away on a cart for X-rays, Christian Ponder took over at quarterback for the Vikings (2-1). The Falcons (2-2) lost three starting offensive linemen to injuries and wound up sticking tight end Levine Toilolo at right tackle in the fourth quarter. TEXANS 23, BILLS 17 In Houston, J.J. Watt had another highlight-reel play to help the Texans overcome a tough day offensively. Houston (3-1) was down by three in the third quarter and Ryan Fitzpatrick had just thrown a second interception when the 6-foot-5, 289-pound Watt returned an interception 80 yards to put the Texans up 14-10. The defensive end caught a touchdown pass in Week 2, giving him more TDs this year than Arian Foster and Andre Johnson combined. Under heavy pressure all afternoon, EJ Manuel finished with 225 yards passing with two touchdowns and two interceptions for the Bills (2-2). Buffalo was driving late when Darryl Morris picked him off at the Houston 15 to secure the victory. LIONS 24, JETS 17 In East Rutherford, N.J.,
Matthew Stafford threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score as the Lions overcame Calvin Johnson being limited by an ankle injury. Jeremy Ross and Eric Ebron caught scoring passes for the Lions, who are 3-1 for the second straight season. Stafford finished 24 of 34 for 293 yards. Johnson, who was in and out of the game, was clearly impeded by his injured ankle. He had just two catches for 12 yards. Golden Tate had a big game, catching eight passes for 116 yards. A struggling Geno Smith had two more turnovers as chants of “We Want Vick!” echoed throughout MetLife Stadium at times. The Jets, who made it close on Chris Johnson’s 35-yard run with 6:58 left, fell to 1-3 for the first time in Rex Ryan’s six seasons as coach. DOLPHINS 38, RAIDERS 14 In London, Ryan Tannehill threw for 278 yards and two touchdowns in the latest international game. Tannehill, in the middle of a storm all week because his coach declined to confirm him as the starter, took advantage of a depleted Oakland defense to snap a two-game losing streak for the Dolphins (2-2). The Raiders (0-4) scored on their opening drive but
struggled after that. And starting quarterback Derek Carr was injured in the third quarter, replaced by third-stringer Matt McGloin. Tannehill threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Mike Wallace and an 18-yarder to Dion Sims. Lamar Miller rushed for two more TDs, and cornerback Cortland Finnegan ran back a fumble 50 yards for another. COLTS 41, TITANS 17 In Indianapolis, Andrew Luck threw four touchdown passes and Reggie Wayne scored for the first time this season. Indy (2-2) extended its league-leading streak of consecutive wins over division foes to nine. Luck was 29 of 41 for a season-best 393 yards. Wayne had seven catches for a seasonbest 119 yards and scored on a spectacular spinning 28-yard catch. Tennessee (1-3) has lost three straight since an impressive season-opening win over Kansas City, and this one wasn’t even close. Indy led 14-0 after one and made it 20-3 with two Adam Vinatieri field goals. Tennessee closed to 20-10 at halftime, but Luck’s two third-quarter TD passes made it 34-10 and the Titans never challenged again.
Rodgers throws for 4 TDs, Packers beat Bears By Andrew Seligman The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Aaron Rodgers urged Packers fans to relax. Maybe they will after this one — the 700th regular-season victory in Packers 38 team history. Bears 17 Rodgers threw for 302 yards and four touchdowns, and Green Bay shook off one of its worst offensive performances in years with a 38-17 victory over the Chicago Bears on Sunday afternoon. The Packers (2-2) scored on their first six possessions to build a 38-17 lead. They racked up 358 yards after being held to 223, their lowest total since 2008, a week earlier in a 19-7 loss at Detroit. They intercepted Jay Cutler twice in the third quarter to pull away from the Bears (2-2). That gave Green Bay five straight wins at Soldier Field, including the NFC title game four years ago and a playoffsor-bust finale for both teams last season. Rodgers called on Packers fans to take a deep breath during the week, and he gave them reason to exhale with this performance. “I just wanted to remind everybody that it’s a long season, and at some point, we’re going to get this thing figured out,” Rodgers said. He had all the answers in this one, which allowed Green Bay to join the Bears (732) as the only teams with at least 700 regular-season wins. Rodgers posted a 151.2 rating for the game, completing 22 of 28 passes, and had all the time he needed with five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Jared Allen sitting out because of an illness.
49ers: Gore has season-lead catch
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, right, celebrates a touchdown with quarterback Matt Flynn, left, in the second half of Sunday’s game against the Bears in Chicago. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
He threw two touchdown passes each to Randall Cobb and Jordy Nelson, and a fifth got called back by a penalty. That happened early in the third when a scrambling Rodgers got hit by at least one defender while unleashing an awkward, wobbly 34-yard pass that somehow connected with Davante Adams in the end zone. Cobb had seven catches for 113 yards. Nelson had 10 receptions for 108 yards, and the Packers came away with the win despite allowing 496 yards. The offenses were so effective — or the defenses struggled so badly — that neither team punted. That happened only once before in a regularseason NFL game, 22 years ago. “Interesting,” Nelson said. “Obviously, turnovers were a big thing. It’s fun, especially when you’re putting up points and having a good time.” The Bears basically matched Green Bay score for score
before Cutler threw those interceptions. He wound up passing for 256 yards and two TDs but fell to 1-10 lifetime against Green Bay, counting the postseason. Matt Forte ran for 122 yards on 23 carries. Martellus Bennett had nine catches for a career-high 134 yards, but Chicago came up short after backto-back wins at San Francisco and the New York Jets. “I thought we were playing well, I thought we were moving the ball well,” Cutler said. “We were changing it up. I thought [coach Marc Trestman] called a really good game. We just had some unfortunate things happen to us that kind of derailed us, and they didn’t.” Mason Crosby kicked a 53-yard field goal on the opening possession of the second half to extend the Packers’ lead to 24-17, and things unraveled for the Bears after that. Chicago had the ball on the Green Bay 24 when Cutler hit cornerback Tramon Williams
in the chest with a pass. The ball ricocheted to Clay Matthews, who returned it 45 yards. That led to an 11-yard scoring pass from Rodgers to Nelson, making it 31-17. Another interception set up another TD for the Packers. This time, Brandon Marshall went long when Cutler expected him to cut back toward the quarterback. The pass went right to Sam Shields, who crossed the field on a 62-yard return to put the ball at the 11. Chicago’s Jonathan Bostic got called for a hold, negating a field goal by Crosby to start the fourth quarter, and Rodgers hit Cobb from the 3 to make it 38-17. The Packers took a 21-17 lead to the locker room after the two teams combined for 508 yards. Chicago missed a touchdown by inches when Bennett got stopped just short of the end zone on an 8-yard catch. Cutler thought Bennett reached across the goal line before getting taken down, but the call was upheld after a review. Then, in the third quarter, Green Bay created some breathing room. “I don’t feel like I need to prove anything, but it sure is nice when people start doubting us to go out and have a performance like this,” Rodgers said. NOTES u The only other regularseason game without a punt was between Buffalo and San Francisco on Sept. 13, 1992. u Green Bay’s Julius Peppers was in on two tackles in his return to Soldier Field, and fans booed the former Bear when he stopped Forte on the game’s first play from scrimmage. u Forte eclipsed 10,000 total yards for his career. He has 10,037.
Nick Foles threw two incomplete passes from the 1 in the waning moments after gaining six first downs on a lengthy drive, more than the five the Eagles managed before that. “We just didn’t execute, it’s as simple as that,” Foles said. “I’m not going to break it down or anything.” Foles completed a 22-yard pass to Jeremy Maclin on the right sideline on that late drive. The 49ers challenged whether he had possession, but the play stood, costing the 49ers their final timeout. The Eagles couldn’t pull off the second-half magic that had carried them in their three wins. On a day the 49ers gave up big plays on special teams, Gore delivered. Kaepernick also threw a touchdown pass to Stevie Johnson and Phil Dawson kicked four field goals — two of at least 46 yards. Kaepernick finished 17 for 30 for 218 yards, two TDs and four sacks. Darren Sproles had a career-best 82-yard punt return for a touchdown, Malcolm Jenkins ran an interception 53 yards for a score for the Eagles (3-1). Brad Smith recovered Trey Burton’s blocked punt against Andy Lee for a TD. The 49ers produced in the second half for the first time this season to give Harbaugh a win against former Pac-10 foe Chip Kelly. Antoine Bethea intercepted his first pass with the 49ers and forced a fumble, then the secondary kept the pressure on in the red zone. Perrish Cox made an interception with 41 seconds left to seal it. Gore’s score on the first play of the second quarter was the longest TD catch by a running back this season. “It was an improvisational play, but that’s one of his strengths,” Eagles defensive
coordinator Bill Davis said of Kaepernick. “It’s the skill set that he possesses. He’s able to make plays like that happen.” But on San Francisco’s next series, Kaepernick threw right to Jenkins and he broke three tackles on the way to the end zone. The 49ers won their first game at new Levi’s Stadium, where thousands of fans skipped out at halftime. San Francisco outgained the Eagles 232-73 in the first half, but still trailed 21-13. Then Johnson tiptoed both feet inbounds inside the left pylon in the third quarter for a 12-yard catch, the first second-half TD of the season for San Francisco after it had been outscored 52-3 after halftime in the first three games. Dawson kicked a 51-yarder before halftime, but the NFL’s most-penalized team hurt itself with seven more flags for 60 yards in the first half and 10 total for 80 yards — but none on defense. The Eagles also had 10 penalties for 70. San Francisco right tackle Anthony Davis made his season debut but went down on the final play of the first quarter when Kaepernick took a sack right into the back of Davis’ left knee. Tight end Vernon Davis was sidelined with a back injury early in the third quarter and he was still experiencing spasms after the game, though an X-ray was negative. Davis missed last Sunday’s loss at Arizona with a hurting left ankle. Foles was 21 for 43 for 195 yards and two interceptions. NOTES u Foles missed a chance to join Peyton Manning, Steve Young, Kurt Warner and Drew Brees as the only QBs to open the season with four straight 300-yard passing games. u 49ers Anquan Boldin and Michael Crabtree had five catches each.
Cowboys: 3-1 for 1st time with Garrett Continued from Page B-1 New Orleans last year. Brees had touchdown passes to Josh Hill and Jimmy Graham early in the fourth quarter to get the Saints to 31-17 before the Cowboys regained control. The former Texas high school star threw for 340 yards, but had just 84 yards with an interception while Dallas was building a 24-0 halftime lead after he had 838 yards with seven touchdowns and no picks in his previous two games against Dallas, both wins. “I think we’re a different team than we were last year,” Romo said. “What you find is you forget it’s the Saints and Drew Brees and just go play.” Dallas reached 3-1 for the first time under coach Jason Garrett after also starting 2-1 the three previous seasons. The Cowboys are tied with Philadelphia for the NFC East lead. The Saints (1-3) couldn’t sustain the momentum from their win over Minnesota and lost to the Cowboys in Texas for the first time since 1991. “There’s not going to be too much good to see in this film,” New Orleans coach Sean Payton said. “We’re 1-3 right now, and that’s about how we’re playing.” The Cowboys had 445 yards against former Cowboys defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, who directed the scheme that led to one of the franchise’s worst offensive performances in years last season, about 10 months after they fired him. Romo was 22 of 29 for 262 yards without an interception. He finished an 80-yard drive to open the game with a 6-yard pass to a leaping Terrance Williams in the end zone and found him again for 23 yards to put Dallas up 24-0 with 19 seconds left in the first half. Williams led Dallas with
77 yards receiving, and Bryant had an 18-yard scoring catch late in the fourth quarter to secure the second win for Dallas in the past 10 games against New Orleans. Murray’s first touchdown, a 15-yard run virtually untouched around right end, was set up when Bruce Carter tipped Brees’ pass and Justin Durant intercepted it at the New Orleans 39. The NFL’s leading rusher joined Emmitt Smith as the only Dallas running backs with 100 yards in the first four games of a season, and he didn’t fumble in the first quarter for the first time this season. He had 149 yards to push his season total to 534. “DeMarco is inspirational,” owner Jerry Jones said. “Glad to see him have a game that he didn’t turn the ball over. About the time New Orleans was thinking about getting some life, he’d go out and make those yards.” Brees had 256 yards passing after halftime. “We had our chances in the second half,” Brees said. “But at the end of the day when you look at this game, the entire game, we got beat. We got beat in every facet of it.” After pulling to 31-17 early in the fourth quarter, the Saints had a chance to get closer, but a drive stalled and punter Thomas Morstead was tackled for a 2-yard loss while trying to throw a pass on a fake punt. That set up Bryant’s clinching touchdown. “Hindsight’s probably 20-20,” Payton said. “It was on the hash mark that we wanted, and they covered it pretty well.” NOTES u Cowboys K Dan Bailey’s 51-yard field goal in the second quarter was 29th in a row. He broke Chris Boniol’s franchise record of 27 last week at St. Louis.
NFL
FOOTBALL FOOTBALL NFL American Conference East New England Buffalo Miami N.Y. Jets South Houston Indianapolis Tennessee Jacksonville North Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland West San Diego Denver Kansas City Oakland
W 2 2 2 1 W 3 2 1 0 W 3 3 2 1 W 3 2 1 0
L 1 2 2 3 L 1 2 3 4 L 0 1 2 2 L 1 1 2 4
T Pct PF PA 0 .667 66 49 0 .500 79 75 0 .500 96 97 0 .250 79 96 T Pct PF PA 0 .750 87 67 0 .500 136 95 0 .250 60 110 0 .000 58 152 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 80 33 0 .750 103 60 0 .500 97 99 0 .333 74 77 T Pct PF PA 0 .750 102 63 0 .667 75 67 0 .333 61 65 0 .000 51 103
National Conference East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 122 104 Dallas 3 1 0 .750 115 86 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 103 91 Washington 1 3 0 .250 95 109 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 2 2 0 .500 131 113 Carolina 2 2 0 .500 73 96 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 95 110 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 72 119 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 3 1 0 .750 85 62 Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 92 96 Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 91 84 Chicago 2 2 0 .500 92 100 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 3 0 0 1.000 66 45 Seattle 2 1 0 .667 83 66 San Francisco 2 2 0 .500 88 89 St. Louis 1 2 0 .333 56 85 Sunday’s Games Green Bay 38, Chicago 17 Houston 23, Buffalo 17 Indianapolis 41, Tennessee 17 Baltimore 38, Carolina 10 Detroit 24, N.Y. Jets 17 Tampa Bay 27, Pittsburgh 24 Miami 38, Oakland 14 San Diego 33, Jacksonville 14 San Francisco 26, Philadelphia 21 Minnesota 41, Atlanta 28 Dallas 38, New Orleans 17 Thursday’s Game N.Y. Giants 45, Washington 14 Monday’s Game New England at Kansas City, 6:30 p.m. Open: Arizona, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Denver, Seattle, St. Louis Thursday, Oct. 2 Minnesota at Green Bay, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 5 Cleveland at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 11 a.m. Houston at Dallas, 11 a.m. Chicago at Carolina, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Detroit, 11 a.m. Baltimore at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Arizona at Denver, 2:05 p.m. Kansas City at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m. N.Y. Jets at San Diego, 2:25 p.m. Cincinnati at New England, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6 Seattle at Washington, 6:30 p.m. Open: Miami, Oakland
Ravens 38, Panthers 10 Carolina 0 7 3 0—10 Baltimore 0 21 7 10—38 Second Quarter Bal—Smith Sr. 61 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 13:12. Car—Benjamin 28 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 8:35. Bal—Forsett 11 run (Tucker kick), 5:22. Bal—Smith Sr. 21 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 1:53. Third Quarter Bal—T.Smith 24 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 9:51. Car—FG Gano 37, 3:30. Fourth Quarter Bal—Taliaferro 1 run (Tucker kick), 11:34. Bal—FG Tucker 30, 3:33. A—71,218. Car Bal First downs 20 25 Total Net Yards 315 454 Rushes-yards 26-67 30-127 Passing 248 327 Punt Returns 0-0 1-18 Kickoff Returns 1-23 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 20-34-0 22-31-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-20 0-0 Punts 4-48.5 1-39.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-59 4-40 Time of Possession 29:36 30:24 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Carolina, D.Williams 11-34, Reaves 12-26, Newton 2-7, Poole 1-0. Baltimore, Forsett 14-66, Taliaferro 15-58, Flacco 1-3. PASSING—Carolina, Newton 14-250-197, Anderson 6-9-0-71. Baltimore, Flacco 22-31-0-327. RECEIVING—Carolina, Cotchery 5-80, Benjamin 5-76, Reaves 3-11, Brown 2-35, Olsen 2-30, Avant 2-24, Bersin 1-12. Baltimore, Smith Sr. 7-139, Daniels 4-43, M.Brown 3-31, Forsett 3-31, T.Smith 2-53, Juszczyk 2-8, Aiken 1-22. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Baltimore, Tucker 57 (WL).
Packers 38, Bears 17 Green Bay 7 14 10 7—38 Chicago 7 10 0 0—17 First Quarter Chi—Marshall 6 pass from Cutler
(Gould kick), 6:30. GB—Lacy 2 run (Crosby kick), 4:08. Second Quarter Chi—FG Gould 23, 13:58. GB—Nelson 3 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 10:11. Chi—Jeffery 8 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 3:50. GB—Cobb 22 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 1:03. Third Quarter GB—FG Crosby 53, 10:57. GB—Nelson 11 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 4:28. Fourth Quarter GB—Cobb 3 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 14:52. A—61,736. GB Chi First downs 21 33 Total Net Yards 358 496 Rushes-yards 18-56 41-235 Passing 302 261 Punt Returns 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns 3-67 2-43 Interceptions Ret. 2-102 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-28-0 23-35-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-0 1-4 Punts 0-0.0 0-0.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-0 Penalties-Yards 9-70 6-46 Time of Possession 23:38 36:22 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Green Bay, Lacy 17-48, A.Rodgers 1-8. Chicago, Forte 23-122, Carey 14-72, Cutler 3-29, Jeffery 1-12. PASSING—Green Bay, A.Rodgers 2228-0-302. Chicago, Cutler 22-34-2-256, Clausen 1-1-0-9. RECEIVING—Green Bay, Nelson 10-108, Cobb 7-113, R.Rodgers 2-52, D.Adams 2-18, Lacy 1-11. Chicago, Bennett 9-134, Forte 5-49, Jeffery 4-39, Morgan 3-24, Marshall 2-19. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Green Bay, Crosby 38 (BK).
Dolphins 38, Raiders 14 Miami 3 21 14 0—38 Oakland 7 0 0 7—14 First Quarter Oak—Leonhardt 3 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 9:38. Mia—FG Sturgis 41, 6:25. Second Quarter Mia—M.Wallace 13 pass from Tannehill (Sturgis kick), 14:17. Mia—Miller 9 run (Sturgis kick), 9:15. Mia—Sims 18 pass from Tannehill (Sturgis kick), 1:53. Third Quarter Mia—Miller 1 run (Sturgis kick), 8:13. Mia—Finnegan 50 fumble return (Sturgis kick), 3:59. Fourth Quarter Oak—Holmes 22 pass from McGloin (Janikowski kick), 8:36. A—83,436. Mia Oak First downs 24 17 Total Net Yards 435 317 Rushes-yards 35-157 18-53 Passing 278 264 Punt Returns 1-9 1-17 Kickoff Returns 2-61 5-112 Interceptions Ret. 3-106 1-28 Comp-Att-Int 23-31-1 28-44-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-11 Punts 2-40.5 6-48.7 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 1-1 Penalties-Yards 5-35 9-80 Time of Possession 30:54 29:06 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Miami, Miller 12-64, Tannehill 5-35, Dan.Thomas 5-35, Williams 6-23, Darkwa 4-2, M.Wallace 1-0, Moore 2-(minus 2). Oakland, McFadden 11-40, Carr 2-9, McGloin 2-3, Jones-Drew 2-1, Olawale 1-0. PASSING—Miami, Tannehill 23-311-278. Oakland, Carr 16-25-1-146, McGloin 12-19-2-129. RECEIVING—Miami, Hartline 6-74, Landry 4-38, M.Wallace 3-35, Clay 2-32, Matthews 2-27, Gibson 2-26, Miller 2-3, Dan.Thomas 1-25, Sims 1-18. Oakland, J.Jones 6-83, Holmes 5-74, McFadden 4-32, V.Brown 3-22, Butler 2-30, Ausberry 2-14, Rivera 2-10, Jones-Drew 2-2, Reece 1-5, Leonhardt 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Lions 24, Jets 17 Detroit 3 14 0 7—24 N.Y. Jets 3 0 7 7—17 First Quarter NYJ—FG Folk 27, 8:36. Det—FG Henery 51, 5:04. Second Quarter Det—Ross 59 pass from Stafford (Henery kick), 6:19. Det—Ebron 16 pass from Stafford (Henery kick), :22. Third Quarter NYJ—Decker 11 pass from Smith (Folk kick), 7:26. Fourth Quarter Det—Stafford 1 run (Henery kick), 14:54. NYJ—Johnson 35 run (Folk kick), 6:58. A—78,160. Det NYJ First downs 17 17 Total Net Yards 360 336 Rushes-yards 27-88 27-132 Passing 272 204 Punt Returns 1-14 4-17 Kickoff Returns 2-35 1-32 Interceptions Ret. 1-40 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 24-34-0 17-33-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-21 2-5 Punts 6-51.0 6-51.7 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 5-33 6-32 Time of Possession 34:53 25:07 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Detroit, Bush 12-46, Bell 8-32, Stafford 6-8, Riddick 1-2. N.Y. Jets, Ivory 17-84, Johnson 6-44, Smith 4-4. PASSING—Detroit, Stafford 24-34-0293. N.Y. Jets, Smith 17-33-1-209.
RECEIVING—Detroit, Tate 8-116, Bush 4-19, Ebron 3-34, Ross 2-65, Pettigrew 2-19, C.Johnson 2-12, Bell 2-7, Broyles 1-21. N.Y. Jets, Amaro 5-58, Decker 4-48, Salas 2-60, Johnson 2-17, Ivory 2-16, Nelson 1-7, Kerley 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Detroit, Henery 52 (WR).
Colts 41, Titans 17 Tennessee 0 10 7 0—17 Indianapolis 14 6 14 7—41 First Quarter Ind—Richardson 1 run (Vinatieri kick), 7:06. Ind—Allen 7 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), :52. Second Quarter Ind—FG Vinatieri 31, 10:25. Ten—FG Succop 36, 6:24. Ind—FG Vinatieri 30, 1:53. Ten—Walker 7 pass from Whitehurst (Succop kick), :13. Third Quarter Ind—Wayne 28 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 8:15. Ind—Fleener 2 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 4:02. Ten—Sankey 2 run (Succop kick), :35. Fourth Quarter Ind—Bradshaw 15 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 9:56. A—64,757. Ten Ind First downs 16 31 Total Net Yards 261 498 Rushes-yards 16-85 41-105 Passing 176 393 Punt Returns 1-7 4-14 Kickoff Returns 0-0 2-61 Interceptions Ret. 1-7 2-14 Comp-Att-Int 14-28-2 29-41-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-18 0-0 Punts 6-44.2 4-42.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-68 11-88 Time of Possession 17:39 42:21 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Tennessee, Whitehurst 5-40, Sankey 6-34, Greene 3-10, McCluster 2-1. Indianapolis, Richardson 20-47, Bradshaw 9-32, Herron 7-24, Hilton 1-5, Luck 1-(minus 1), Hasselbeck 3-(minus 2). PASSING—Tennessee, Whitehurst 12-23-1-177, Mettenberger 2-5-1-17. Indianapolis, Luck 29-41-1-393. RECEIVING—Tennessee, Walker 5-84, Wright 5-55, Sankey 2-23, N.Washington 1-20, Hunter 1-12. Indianapolis, Wayne 7-119, Hilton 6-105, Richardson 4-52, Allen 3-38, Fleener 2-26, Bradshaw 2-20, Moncrief 2-14, Nicks 2-12, Doyle 1-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Texans 23, Bills 17 Buffalo 0 10 0 7—17 Houston 0 7 10 6—23 Second Quarter Buf—FG Carpenter 31, 11:37. Buf—Watkins 5 pass from Manuel (Carpenter kick), 5:54. Hou—Hopkins 35 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bullock kick), :57. Third Quarter Hou—Watt 80 interception return (Bullock kick), 13:28. Hou—FG Bullock 41, 6:14. Fourth Quarter Hou—FG Bullock 55, 9:21. Buf—Mi.Williams 80 pass from Manuel (Carpenter kick), 9:08. Hou—FG Bullock 50, 4:49. A—71,756. Buf Hou First downs 17 19 Total Net Yards 316 301 Rushes-yards 23-96 24-37 Passing 220 264 Punt Returns 1-11 5-24 Kickoff Returns 3-82 1-41 Interceptions Ret. 2-0 2-80 Comp-Att-Int 21-44-2 25-37-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-5 2-4 Punts 9-45.9 6-41.7 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 8-40 8-90 Time of Possession 29:04 30:56 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Buffalo, Spiller 15-60, Jackson 7-33, Manuel 1-3. Houston, Fitzpatrick 6-14, Blue 9-9, D.Johnson 1-8, Foster 8-6. PASSING—Buffalo, Manuel 21-44-2225. Houston, Fitzpatrick 25-37-2-268. RECEIVING—Buffalo, Jackson 6-52, Watkins 4-30, Spiller 3-24, Woods 3-17, Mi.Williams 2-84, Chandler 2-15, Summers 1-3. Houston, Foster 7-55, A.Johnson 6-71, Hopkins 5-64, Graham 3-28, Blue 2-16, Prosch 1-24, D.Johnson 1-10. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Buccaneers 27, Steelers 24 Tampa Bay 10 0 7 10—27 Pittsburgh 10 7 7 0—24 First Quarter TB—Evans 7 pass from Glennon (Murray kick), 13:01. TB—FG Murray 50, 10:01. Pit—FG Suisham 25, 6:19. Pit—A.Brown 11 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), :15. Second Quarter Pit—A.Brown 27 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), 4:58. Third Quarter TB—Martin 3 run (Murray kick), 12:27. Pit—Miller 5 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), 7:50. Fourth Quarter TB—FG Murray 27, 11:37. TB—Jackson 5 pass from Glennon (Murray kick), :07. A—62,910. TB Pit First downs 21 27 Total Net Yards 350 390 Rushes-yards 20-63 27-85 Passing 287 305 Punt Returns 2-29 0-0
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Kickoff Returns 2-45 1-25 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-27 Comp-Att-Int 21-43-1 30-41-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-15 5-26 Punts 3-35.3 4-37.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 9-50 13-125 Time of Possession 25:45 34:15 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Tampa Bay, Martin 14-40, Patton 1-19, Rainey 4-2, Lane 1-2. Pittsburgh, Bell 19-63, Blount 4-25, Roethlisberger 2-4, Wi.Johnson 1-0, Wheaton 1-(minus 7). PASSING—Tampa Bay, Glennon 2142-1-302, Rainey 0-1-0-0. Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 29-40-0-314, A.Brown 1-1-0-17. RECEIVING—Tampa Bay, Murphy Jr. 6-99, Evans 4-65, Seferian-Jenkins 3-44, Jackson 3-32, Shepard 2-30, Martin 2-16, Rainey 1-16. Pittsburgh, Miller 10-85, A.Brown 7-131, Bell 6-46, Wheaton 4-57, Moore 1-12, J.Brown 1-5, Archer 1-1, Roethlisberger 0-(minus 6). MISSED FIELD GOALS—Pittsburgh, Suisham 50 (WR).
Chargers 33, Jaguars 14 Jacksonville 0 14 0 0—14 San Diego 3 14 10 6—33 First Quarter SD—FG Novak 33, 3:44. Second Quarter Jax—Gerhart 1 run (Scobee kick), 14:06. SD—Royal 47 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 11:24. Jax—Jacobs 2 pass from Bortles (Scobee kick), 7:17. SD—Royal 43 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), :59. Third Quarter SD—Floyd 24 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 11:09. SD—FG Novak 34, 6:10. Fourth Quarter SD—FG Novak 23, 13:35. SD—FG Novak 37, 1:09. A—56,553. Jax SD First downs 21 19 Total Net Yards 319 407 Rushes-yards 25-85 20-42 Passing 234 365 Punt Returns 0-0 1-2 Kickoff Returns 7-189 1-22 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-25 Comp-Att-Int 29-37-2 29-39-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-19 2-12 Punts 2-56.0 3-42.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-32 7-57 Time of Possession 30:34 29:26 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Gerhart 10-32, D.Robinson 9-25, Bortles 5-24, Todman 1-4. San Diego, Oliver 9-23, Brown 10-19, Rivers 1-0. PASSING—Jacksonville, Bortles 29-372-253. San Diego, Rivers 29-39-0-377. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, Harbor 8-69, Hurns 5-68, A.Robinson 5-38, D.Robinson 3-7, Shorts III 2-25, Todman 2-20, Brown 1-12, Gerhart 1-8, Ta’ufo’ou 1-4, Jacobs 1-2. San Diego, Allen 10-135, Royal 5-105, Brown 4-35, Oliver 4-33, Floyd 3-39, Gates 3-30. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
49ers 26, Eagles 21 Philadelphia 7 14 0 0—21 San Francisco 3 10 10 3—26 First Quarter Phi—B.Smith blocked punt recovery in end zone (Parkey kick), 12:19. SF—FG Dawson 29, 3:32. Second Quarter SF—Gore 55 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 14:45. Phi—Jenkins 53 interception return (Parkey kick), 12:02. Phi—Sproles 82 punt return (Parkey kick), 8:49. SF—FG Dawson 51, :59. Third Quarter SF—S.Johnson 12 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 8:06. SF—FG Dawson 46, 3:33. Fourth Quarter SF—FG Dawson 31, 6:35. A—70,799. Phi SF First downs 11 20 Total Net Yards 213 407 Rushes-yards 12-22 42-218 Passing 191 189 Punt Returns 3-86 4-27 Kickoff Returns 3-65 2-45 Interceptions Ret. 1-53 2-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-43-2 17-30-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-4 4-29 Punts 6-48.5 6-39.2 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 0-0 Penalties-Yards 10-70 10-80 Time of Possession 17:43 42:17 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Philadelphia, McCoy 10-17, Sproles 1-4, Foles 1-1. San Francisco, Gore 24-119, Kaepernick 7-58, Hyde 10-26, Ellington 1-15. PASSING—Philadelphia, Foles 2143-2-195. San Francisco, Kaepernick 17-30-1-218. RECEIVING—Philadelphia, Cooper 6-54, Maclin 5-68, Ertz 4-43, J.Matthews 4-28, Sproles 2-2. San Francisco, Boldin 5-62, Crabtree 5-43, Lloyd 2-28, V.Davis 2-8, Gore 1-55, S.Johnson 1-12, Carrier 1-10. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Vikings 41, Falcons 28 Atlanta 7 7 14 0—28 Minnesota 14 10 3 14—41 First Quarter Min—Asiata 3 run (Walsh kick), 9:27. Atl—White 24 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 3:56. Min—Asiata 6 run (Walsh kick), 1:31. Second Quarter Atl—DiMarco 1 pass from Ryan (Bry-
ant kick), 5:56. Min—Bridgewater 13 run (Walsh kick), 1:59. Min—FG Walsh 18, :02. Third Quarter Min—FG Walsh 41, 10:40. Atl—Hester 36 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 7:19. Atl—Smith 48 run (Bryant kick), 1:31. Fourth Quarter Min—Asiata 1 run (Ellison pass from Bridgewater), 10:50. Min—FG Walsh 55, 3:38. Min—FG Walsh 33, 1:14. A—52,173. Atl Min First downs 23 26 Total Net Yards 411 558 Rushes-yards 22-123 44-241 Passing 288 317 Punt Returns 1-16 2-39 Kickoff Returns 3-62 2-86 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-41-2 19-30-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-10 0-0 Punts 5-50.0 2-43.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5-50 6-40 Time of Possession 27:08 32:52 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Atlanta, Smith 4-62, S.Jackson 13-49, Freeman 2-8, Ryan 2-2, Rodgers 1-2. Minnesota, McKinnon 18-135, Asiata 20-78, Bridgewater 5-27, Ponder 1-1. PASSING—Atlanta, Ryan 25-41-2-298. Minnesota, Bridgewater 19-30-0-317. RECEIVING—Atlanta, Jones 6-82, Hester 5-70, White 4-73, Rodgers 4-35, S.Jackson 2-13, Freeman 2-12, Toilolo 1-12, DiMarco 1-1. Minnesota, Wright 8-132, Jennings 3-72, Asiata 3-22, Patterson 2-38, Ellison 1-19, Ford 1-17, McKinnon 1-17. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Minnesota, Walsh 49 (WR).
Cowboys 38, Saints 17 New Orleans 0 0 3 14—17 Dallas 7 17 7 7—38 First Quarter Dal—Williams 6 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 7:50. Second Quarter Dal—FG Bailey 51, 5:38. Dal—Murray 15 run (Bailey kick), 4:03. Dal—Williams 23 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), :19. Third Quarter NO—FG S.Graham 30, 11:10. Dal—Murray 28 run (Bailey kick), 6:42. Fourth Quarter NO—Hill 12 pass from Brees (S.Graham kick), 13:35. NO—J.Graham 13 pass from Brees (S.Graham kick), 9:49. Dal—Bryant 18 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 3:34. A—91,176. NO Dal First downs 20 24 Total Net Yards 438 445 Rushes-yards 13-104 35-190 Passing 334 255 Punt Returns 2-15 0-0 Kickoff Returns 0-0 1-30 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-1 Comp-Att-Int 32-44-1 22-29-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-6 1-7 Punts 2-41.5 4-41.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 2-0 Penalties-Yards 3-20 6-50 Time of Possession 25:15 34:45 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, K.Robinson 8-87, Thomas 2-8, Brees 1-6, Johnson 1-2, Cadet 1-1. Dallas, Murray 24149, Randle 4-22, Romo 6-20, Harris 1-(minus 1). PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 32-441-340. Dallas, Romo 22-29-0-262. RECEIVING—New Orleans, J.Graham 8-86, Cadet 6-59, Colston 5-50, Cooks 5-31, Stills 2-62, K.Robinson 2-18, Thomas 2-15, Hill 1-12, Watson 1-7. Dallas, Williams 6-77, Witten 5-61, Bryant 3-44, Dunbar 2-36, Harris 2-18, Beasley 2-14, Escobar 1-6, Murray 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS—New Orleans, S.Graham 41 (WR).
NFC Leaders (Sunday games not included) Week 4 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD R. Wilson, SEA 87 60 651 6 M. Ryan, ATL 111 76 965 7 C. Newton, CAR 69 46 531 2 Brees, NOR 117 83 863 5 Cutler, CHI 121 80 750 8 Foles, PHL 123 75 978 6 A. Rdgers, GBY 102 64 697 5 E. Mnning, NYG 139 93 974 9 Au. Davis, STL 94 68 754 3 Kaepernick, SNF94 66 694 4 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG D. Murray, DAL 75 385 5.13 44 R. Jnnings, NYG 81 341 4.21 18 A. Morris, WAS 71 316 4.45 23 M. Lynch, SEA 52 234 4.50 21 A. Ellington, ARI 46 206 4.48 22 Rainey, TAM 37 197 5.32 31 Stacy, STL 42 181 4.31 16 L. McCoy, PHL 60 175 2.92 21 S. Jackson, ATL 37 152 4.11 17 Ingram, NOR 24 143 5.96 26 Receivers No Yds Avg LG Donnell, NYG 25 236 9.4 23 Garcon, WAS 24 255 10.6 43 J. Graham, NOR 24 254 10.6 23 Ju. Jones, ATL 23 365 15.9 40t J. Nelson, GBY 23 351 15.3 80t Paul, WAS 21 313 14.9 48 D. Bryant, DAL 20 247 12.4 68t Ma. Bnntt, CHI 20 161 8.1 17 Cal. Johnsn, DET19 329 17.3 67t Olsen, CAR 19 224 11.8 37t Punters No Yds LG Way, WAS 16 848 77 C. Jones, DAL 8 405 62 Sa. Martin, DET 9 446 64 J. Ryan, SEA 12 580 66
Int 1 3 0 2 2 2 1 5 3 3 TD 3 2 3 3 0 0 1 1 1 3 TD 4 1 2 3 1 1 2 4 2 2 Avg 53.0 50.6 49.6 48.3
Dr. Butler, ARI 9 431 61 Nortman, CAR 16 761 65 Bosher, ATL 11 507 66 Locke, MIN 14 646 57 A. Lee, SNF 9 411 56 Morstead, NOR 11 494 58 Punt Returners No Yds Avg LG Hester, ATL 5 76 15.2 62t Sproles, PHL 10 114 11.4 22 S. Patton, TAM 6 65 10.8 33 Roberts, WAS 10 101 10.1 37 J. Ross, DET 8 79 9.9 26 B. Ellington, SNF 6 51 8.5 19 Walters, SEA 5 36 7.2 11 P. Parker, NYG 8 53 6.6 18 Ph. Brown, CAR 6 34 5.7 23 Sherels, MIN 6 28 4.7 13 Kickoff ReturnersNoYds Avg LG Hester, ATL 6 168 28.0 36 C. Pattrson, MIN 7 191 27.3 43 Dw. Harris, DAL 5 132 26.4 30 Du. Harris, GBY 6 149 24.8 41 S. Patton, TAM 9 201 22.3 27 Demps, NYG 8 174 21.8 29 Roberts, WAS 6 125 20.8 28 Givens, STL 5 101 20.2 29 Harvin, SEA 7 141 20.1 31 Ginn Jr., ARI 5 77 15.4 21 Scoring Touchdowns TD RushRec Ret M. Lynch, SEA 5 3 2 0 Ma. Bennett, CHI4 0 4 0 Donnell, NYG 4 0 4 0 B. Marshall, CHI 4 0 4 0 Cobb, GBY 3 0 3 0 Joh. Brown, ARI 3 0 3 0 Dan. Fells, NYG 3 0 3 0 Ingram, NOR 3 3 0 0 Ju. Jones, ATL 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 Maclin, PHL Kicking PAT FG LG Parkey, PHL 11-11 8-9 51 Catanzaro, ARI 3-3 9-9 51 D. Bailey, DAL 8-8 7-7 51 Zuerlein, STL 5-5 7-8 56 Jo. Brown, NYG 13-13 4-4 39 Mt. Bryant, ATL 13-13 4-5 52 Gano, CAR 4-4 7-8 53 Forbath, WAS 11-12 4-5 49 Gould, CHI 9-9 4-4 45 Hauschka, SEA 9-9 4-5 35
B-5 47.9 47.6 46.1 46.1 45.7 44.9 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 30 24 24 24 20 18 18 18 18 18 Pts 35 30 29 26 25 25 25 23 21 21
AFC Leaders Week 4 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD Int P. Manning, DEN111 74 814 8 1 P. Rivers, SND 98 67 778 6 1 Luck, IND 126 86 912 9 3 Hoyer, CLE 95 61 716 3 0 Dalton, CIN 84 55 722 2 1 Fitzptrick, HOU 75 48 634 4 3 Rothlisbrgr, PIT 101 67 778 3 2 Manuel, BUF 87 55 613 3 1 Brady, NWE 114 67 632 3 0 Flacco, BAL 122 75 728 4 2 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TD L. Bell, PIT 53 315 5.94 81 1 A. Foster, HOU 55 241 4.38 40 1 K. Davis, KAN 55 214 3.89 25 3 L. Miller, MIA 37 213 5.76 24 0 West, CLE 47 204 4.34 29 2 Ivory, NYJ 33 190 5.76 71t 2 Forsett, BAL 30 189 6.30 41 1 Bernard, CIN 55 185 3.36 16 3 Ridley, NWE 52 176 3.38 16 1 Mo. Ball, DEN 49 165 3.37 23 1 Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD Sanders, DEN 25 334 13.4 48 0 An. Brown, PIT 22 296 13.5 41 3 Edelman, NWE 22 260 11.8 44 1 A. Hawkins, CLE 21 244 11.6 29 0 Smith Sr., BAL 18 290 16.1 80t 1 D. Walker, TEN 17 233 13.7 61t 2 M. Wallace, MIA 17 211 12.4 30 2 An. Jhnsn, HOU 16 191 11.9 23 0 Wayne, IND 16 188 11.8 23 0 Hilton, IND 16 186 11.6 39 0 Punters No Yds LG Avg McAfee, IND 10 527 61 52.7 Lechler, HOU 12 611 65 50.9 Koch, BAL 9 431 58 47.9 Anger, JAX 21 987 61 47.0 B. Colquitt, DEN 16 744 58 46.5 R. Allen, NWE 15 692 63 46.1 Quigley, NYJ 13 599 56 46.1 D. Colquitt, KAN 12 548 64 45.7 Wing, PIT 13 583 59 44.8 Fields, MIA 14 626 60 44.7 Punt Returners No Yds Avg LG TD Ad. Jones, CIN 4 71 17.8 45 0 Hmmnd Jr., KAN 11 149 13.5 47 0 Edelman, NWE 7 88 12.6 34 0 Jac. Jones, BAL 4 49 12.3 33 0 An. Brown, PIT 7 76 10.9 36 0 Carrie, OAK 6 46 7.7 21 0 Whalen, IND 9 68 7.6 22 0 McKelvin, BUF 4 30 7.5 14 0 Mi. Brown, JAX 5 37 7.4 13 0 D. Johnson, HOU 7 40 5.7 12 0 Kickoff ReturnersNoYds Avg LG TD Spiller, BUF 4 169 42.3 102t 1 J. Landry, MIA 10 287 28.7 74 0 Jac. Jones, BAL 4 109 27.3 47 0 Todman, JAX 8 199 24.9 40 0 L. Murray, OAK 7 170 24.3 38 0 D. Johnson, HOU 4 94 23.5 31 0 T. Benjmin, CLE 4 85 21.3 28 0 Hakim, NYJ 7 143 20.4 44 0 0 L. Wshingtn, TEN 7 125 17.9 29 Scoring Touchdowns TD RushRec Ret Pts Ju. Thomas, DEN 5 0 5 0 30 Bernard, CIN 3 3 0 0 18 Bradshaw, IND 3 0 3 0 18 An. Brown, PIT 3 0 3 0 18 Crowell, CLE 3 3 0 0 18 K. Davis, KAN 3 3 0 0 18 Gates, SND 3 0 3 0 18 Hurns, JAX 3 0 3 0 18 D. Allen, IND 2 0 2 0 12Mi. Austin, CLE 2 0 2 0 12 Kicking PAT FG LG Pts D. Carpenter, BUF5-5 9-10 50 32 Suisham, PIT 7-7 8-8 45 31 Gostkowski, NWE6-6 8-8 48 30 Tucker, BAL 5-5 8-9 38 29 Vinatieri, IND 11-11 6-6 48 29 Nugent, CIN 7-7 7-11 49 28 Folk, NYJ 5-5 7-7 52 26 Sturgis, MIA 5-5 7-8 51 26 Novak, SND 7-7 6-6 50 25 Bullock, HOU 7-7 5-6 46 22
WR Smith leads the way as Ravens beat Panthers By David Ginsburg The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — The most surprising aspect of Steve Smith’s performance against the Carolina Panthers was that it didn’t Ravens 38 include taunts or bluster. Panthers 10 Smith opted to punish the Panthers through his play on the field, and by the end of the afternoon the 35-year-old receiver had made a definitive statement. Smith burned his former team with seven catches for 139 yards and two touchdowns, leading the Baltimore Ravens to a 38-10 victory Sunday. Smith spent 13 seasons with Carolina before he was released during the offseason in a cost-cutting move. Proving he’s still got a knack for making
the big play, Smith scored twice in the second quarter to help put Baltimore (3-1) in front 21-7 at halftime. And he didn’t get in the face of the defender on either occasion. “I didn’t have anything good, bad or indifferent to say. I just played. At the end of the day, honestly they didn’t deserve anything I had to say that would be derogatory — and I didn’t need to,” Smith said. “They didn’t even deserve me to spin the ball on them. I just caught it and put it down and went about my business.” His first touchdown came on a pass that deflected off the right hand of teammate Owen Daniels. Smith caught the ball in stride and took it into the end zone to complete a 61-yard play. Nothing the Panthers haven’t seen before.
“He did some really good things,” Carolina coach Ron Rivera said. “And that’s who Steve is.” Smith also scored from 21 yards out with a diving reception. He celebrated in dignified fashion, taking the ball with him to the sideline for safekeeping. Before the game, it was evident to Ravens coach John Harbaugh that Smith was going to keep his yapping to a minimum. “He recognized the gravity of the situation,” Harbaugh said, “the need to get control of those emotions.” It was also a huge day for Joe Flacco, went 22 of 31 for 327 yards and three touchdowns. Carolina (2-2) has lost two straight, both in lopsided fashion against AFC North foes. Cam Newton completed 14 of 25
passes for 197 yards. Under duress for much of the afternoon, he was sacked twice. Newton received little help from a running game that was without leading rusher Jonathan Stewart (knee), and DeAngelo Williams left in the second quarter with an ankle injury. Carolina’s defense was also spotty. One week after yielding 264 yards rushing in a loss to Pittsburgh, the Panthers gave up 454 yards of offense and 25 first downs. Worse, the Panthers lost a fumble, didn’t force a turnover and were penalized seven times — twice for having 12 men on the field. “Apparently we’ve got to look at what we’re doing and make sure it gets corrected,” Rivera said. “We’ve got to find answers and we’ve got to do it quickly.”
Flacco led four drives of 80 yards, all of them resulting in touchdowns. Justin Forsett ran for 68 yards, backup Lorenzo Taliaferro gained 58, and each scored. The Panthers held the ball for nearly eight minutes on the opening possession and drove to the Baltimore 17 before a penalty and sack took them out of field goal range. After that, neither team got close to scoring until Smith caught the deflection to put the Ravens up 7-0 early in the second quarter. After the score, he took a bow in the end zone, ran off the field and heaved the ball into the stands. Afterward, someone asked the veteran receiver how he planned to mark the occasion. “Watch a few highlights, eat a little apple pie, move on,” he replied.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 »real estate«
SANTA FE
SANTA FE
MANUFACTURED HOMES RE
LOTS & ACREAGE
»rentals«
FOR SALE NEW 2014 16X80 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH MOBILE HOMES
Las Campanas
CANYON ROAD REMODELED UPDATED
Bedrooms, 4 Baths, Office, Chefs Kitchen, 3 Car Garage 3,504 sq.ft. Fantastic views. Like new. MLS#201403470 $1,140,000. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
3 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, 3309 sq.ft guest house, garage, chefs kitchen, wood floors, vigas, 4 kivas, great views. MLS#201402480. $1,375,000.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
SANTA FE
5 Acre Lot, 11 Roy Crawford at Old Santa Fe Trail, $195,000. (2) 2.5 acre lots, Senda Artemisia at Old Galisteo, $119-124,000. Rural setting near town. Equity RE. 505-690-8503
(3) TO CHOOSE FROM #26 RANCHO ZIA MHP #109 RANCHO ZIA MHP #88 HACIENDA MHP
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
$56,062+TAX NAMBE LAND, SPECTACULAR VIEWS
Sell Your Stuff!
EASY FINANCING AVAILABLE HOMES ARE MOVE-IN READY CALL TIM FOR AN APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955
2 BEDROOM, $800. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today! 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, GARAGE. Rancho Viejo. Great Views. Hardwood floors. Evaporative cooling, radiant heat. Walled-in backyard. 1600 sq.ft. $295,000. 505-603-0733
BUSINESS MAN Looking for an office? See this great 2 story, 3 office suite plus sec. office unit at 1225 S. St. Francis. Own your own bldg. $ 170,000.
CALL 986-3000
986-3000 Trees, views, partial water rights.. 2.27 acres. $188,000. George J. Chavez Realty. 505-250-3883.
DOS SANTOS
1 bedroom, 1 bath. Fireplace, upgraded unit with granite countertops. End-unit. Low foot traffic. $95,000. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
Excellent Vista Primera PRICE REDUCED!
COMMERCIAL
PRIVATE EASTSIDE ADOBE GEM! Santa Fe style, 1/2 acre, mature trees, secluded, organic gardens, 3-2, casita, studio, 3015 ft2. Judith 206954-7800, $815,000.
2 units on 2 separate lots on St. Francis Dr. Needs work but what a perfect business location.
Add a pic and sell it quick!
Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
RANCHO VIEJO FSBO 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2,700 sq.ft. home in the College Heights. Fully landscaped large backyard on halfacre lot, radiant heat, kiva fireplace, dog run, 2-car garage. Walk to SFCC, Amy Biehl, Santa Maria, $429,000, brokers welcome. 505-424-3932 or email sumac3b@comcast.net
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $209,900.
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818 SANTA FE Private Real Estate Loans.
Commercial and Residential Investment properties, from $50k. 505-670-0051
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
986-3000 OUT OF TOWN
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
988-5585
CHARMING, FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid. Wood, Saltillo floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard, Plaza. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839 FURNISHED 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH GEM. Yard. Clean. Washer dryer. BB heat, fans, storage. 2 parking: 3 miles to Plaza. $1000 plus utilities, $500 deposit, year lease. No pets, nonsmoking. 714-309-7272, polaclark@aol.com
FOR SALE 5.4 ACRE FEET, City of Santa Fe Certified Water Credits, below market. Call Mike, 505-603-2327.
1 BEDROOM Camino Capitan, in small complex. Kiva fireplace, carpet. Clean, quiet. No Pets. Water & Sewer paid. $670 monthly, $670 Deposit. 505-982-0798.
2 BEDROOM $860 PLUS UTILITIES
LOTS & ACREAGE
Tile floors, washer dryer hook-up. Quiet & private, fenced yard. Pet negotiable. 505-471-1270, make appointment.
2.5 ACRES at Rabbit Road on Calle Cantando. Water well plus all utilities. Good Views! 505-603-4429 3.3 ACRES WITH SHARED WELL IN PLACE. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenants. $149,000. Owner finance, 20% down. 505-470-5877
LAS PALOMAS APARTMENTS is the best choice for all your apartment needs. We offer beautiful studios & 2 bedrooms at an unbeatable location. Discover the wonders of our community by calling 888482-8216 to set up a tour today!!! ¿Mencionamos, hablamos español!
986-3000
RATON NM. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2,040 sq.ft. Totally remodeled. 602 North 1st. $75,000. $3,550 down payment. $650 monthly payment. Owner financed. 480-392-8550.
business & service exploresantafetcom BUSINESS
Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!
CONSTRUCTION
OUR BEAUTIFUL, made in Santa Fe FIBERSPAN CONCRETE VIGAS are the permanent solution to rotting wood. Visit ConcreteVigas.com or call 505278-0464.
CLEANING
LANDSCAPING
BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS
Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, plumbing, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-3107552.
Homes, Office, Move-ins- Move-outs. Also, House and Pet sitting. Dependable, Experienced. $18 hourly. Julia, 505-204-1677.
MOVERS
ROOFING
A A R D V A R K DISCOUNT M O V E R S Most moving services; old-fashioned respect and care since 1976. Jo h n , 505-473-4881.
ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Gravel Driveway. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182.
PAINTING
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Clean Houses Inside and out. Windows, carpets. $18 per hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.
HOUSE SITTING for activists rally Immigrants,
and Locally owned
to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,
independent
rights at Capitol
Tuesday,
February
8, 2011
Local news,
www.santafenew
Larger Type
ROOFING- ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Maintenance. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.
STORAGE A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. FIRST MONTH FREE! 505455-2815.
GREENCARD LANDSCAPING
Get it done right the first time! Have a woman do it. FULL SERVICE landscape design and installation. 505-310-0045, 505-995-0318. Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock. www.greencardlandscaping.com.
ASPHALT REPAIR & SEAL COATING Hot Rubber Crack Sealing. Striping. Commercial, Residential. Licensed, Bonded. References if needed. FREE estimate. 505-350-7709
PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
will help your ad get noticed
TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. Large load firewood branches, $100 delivered. 473-4129
YARD MAINTENANCE TRASH, BRUSH and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-316-2936, 505-204-3186.
Call Classifieds For Details Today!
A-8
50¢
mexican.com
for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove
Using
HOMECRAFT PAINTING
PAVING
Gorgeous gardens thru autumn! Prep for next year. Mulching, pruning, clean-up, planting.
Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062.
Berry Clean - 505-501-3395
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
Fall into Fall!
MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE
YARD MAINTENANCE
Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile, Roofing. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877
YARD MAINTENANCE
ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
HANDYMAN
A+ Professional Cleaning Service
directory«
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems ticketed their fines. people Redflex paid alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street of Galisteo on Police Department’s mph stretcht ry School early h n a 25
The New
SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010
HOUSE SITTING JOB WANTED: Musiscian & Weaver. Santa Fe & North. October-May (flexible). Can care for animal large, small. 716-3613618
JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
PLASTERING RESTORATIONS Re-Stuccos, Parapet Repairs, Patching Interior & Exterior. Call for estimates, 505-310-7552.
YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. We Move Furniture. Any work you need done I can do! Call George, 505-316-1599.
986-3000
Look for these businesses on exploresantafetcom Call us today for your FREE BUSINESS CARDS!*
986-3000
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Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds COMMERCIAL SPACE OFFICE SPACE WITH HIGH VISIBILITY, HIGH EXPOSURE on Cerrillos Road. Retail space. Central location in Kiva Center. 505438-8166
CONDOSTOWNHOMES FURNISHED, $1,400 plus utilities. Six month lease minimum. 950 sq.ft. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Fireplace. 814 Camino de Monte Rey, "La Remuda". 505-795-1024
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
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»announcements«
EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths. 1200 sq.ft. East Alameda, pueblo style. Vigas. Refrigerator, washer, dryer. Radiant heating. No pets, non-smoking. $1700 monthly. 505-982-3907
WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! We always get results! 986-3000
FURNISHED. $1500 includes utilities. South Capitol. Near Trader Joe’s and Railrunner. 3-story. 1 or 2 bedroom. 1 1/2 Bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoker. Off-street parking. 505-780-0428. Near Trader Joe’s, 2 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 story Townhouse, wood floors, all appliances, no pets. $950, W ESTERN EQUITIES, 505-982-4201.
FOUND
OUR CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS LASSIE CAME HOME!
PARK PLAZA CONDO. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. 2 car garage. Currently being refurbished. New paint, carpet, tile. Available 11/1. $1400 monthly. 505-603-9053 PARK PLAZAS- Available 10/1. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH TOWNHOUSE. Fireplace, tile, fridge, dishwasher, washer dryer, 2 car garage. $1250 monthly plus utiltities. 505-983-3594
Recently widowed James McDow promised his late wife Kathryn he would take great care of her beloved Shetland Sheepdog, McKenzie Gold. So when the 4-year-old Lassie - look - alike disappeared from McDow’s Eldorado home in August, he was devastated. Three and a half weeks later, after nearly giving up hope, "Kenzie" was found after a rancher spotted her on his property near the Eldorado hills. McDow credits Kenzie’s return to countless friends, neighbors and strangers throughout Eldorado and the Santa Fe community who never gave up looking for her, as well as the ad he placed in the Santa Fe New Mexican Classifieds that ran from the day she went missing until the day she was found.
RANCHO VIEJO Townhouse; Two story, 2 BedRoom, 1.5 Bath, 2-car garage, with washer, dryer, 12 month lease; $1,275 monthly. & deposit. Call 920-3233.
GUESTHOUSES 6 MONTHS FURNISHED GUESTHOUSE. $1400 monthly. Walk to Canyon Road. Near hiking trails. Visit thegardencompound.com or call 505603-8831. EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936.
HOUSES FURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on 12.5 ACRES, near Lamy. Spacious, modern, antiques, french doors high ceilings. 1600 sq.ft. with 2,500 sq.ft. portal. Private, gated. $2,300, references. 505231-4747
2 BEDROOM HOME ON nearly 2 Acres. 180 degree views, 1 mile from Museum Hill. Available 3-6 months beginning in November. $2,595 monthly includes utilities, cable, internet. 505-310-0309.
ELDORADO- LOVELY 2 bedroom solar home, all appliances, fireplace, wood stoves, extra large patio. $1,000 monthly. 505-699-4144.
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 NEARLY NEW 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH, 1 car garage home. Turquoise Trail Subdivision. Corner lot; views. $1,275 plus utilities. Lease. Call Jill, 505-9910562. NEWLY REMODELED 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Las Acequias Subdivision. $1200 monthly. Plus utilities. Non smoker. 505-438-8142. By appointment only. PECOS PALATIAL PALACE. RUSTIC AFRAME HOUSE on 1 1/2 acre, 1250 SQ FT, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, FIREPLACE, ETC, PETS, HORSES OK, MONTHLYYEARLY $957. MEL 505-228-2533. RODEO ROAD, $950 MONTHLY. 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, washer, dryer, storage, carport. Non-smoking, no pets. Quiet. First, last and deposit. 505-699-3222.
2 MASTER Bedrooms, 2 1/2 Baths. Fireplace, vigas. Private patio, Washer, dryer. Garage, blocks to Plaza; Year lease. 505 250 2501.
LIVE IN STUDIOS
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
GREAT LOCATION. WALK TO Trader Joes. PARTIALLY FURNISHED STUDIO. Light, clean. Kitchen, laundry, offstreet parking. $850 utilities included. 602-481-2979
$1200 PLUS utilities and deposit. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH home near Golf Course; washer, dryer; non-smoking, no pets. Call 505-395-8589 or 210-8506540.
MANUFACTURED HOMES
2500 SQUARE FEET 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fireplace. Big yard. No smoking, no pets. $1500 monthly. $1200 deposit. 505-577-2910 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. $900 plus utilities, $600 deposit. 2259 Rumbo al Sur, Agua Fria Village. 505-473-2988, 505221-9395.
2 BEDROOM, LAMY, Rustic Small yard. Wood heat. Washer dryer hook-up. $700 plus deposit. Nonsmoking, no cats. 505-466-3022
2 BEDROOM MID-CENTURY SANTA FE CLASSIC 1 acre, Museum Hill. 2.5 bath, A/C, fireplace, hardwood floors, laundry. 2 car garage, portal to private courtyard. $2300 monthly. Pets negotiable. 505-629-7619
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME on 1 acre. in Pojoaque Valley. Lots of extras. 1 pet negotiable. Non-smoker. $1200 monthly plus deposit. Available now. 505-690-4428 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH very nice home on edge of Canyon overlook in southwest Santa Fe. 15 minutes to Plaza. Portal with view of mountains and backing, walking, bike trails. A/C, radiant heat, skylights, kiva fireplace, 2-car garage. $1450 monthly. 505-6034262 ALL UTILITIES PAID. $1400 3 BEDROOM, open concept. Very large living room, kitchen, and dining. Ample parking. No dogs. 5 minutes to new Walmart. 505-2046160
$625, 2 BEDROOM mobile home. On quiet, private land off Agua Fria. Gas heating, AC, all utilities paid, no pets. 505-473-0278. FURNISHED: 2 BEDROOM. Quiet, private lot, views. $775, $600 deposit. References required. No pets, nonsmoking. 12 miles Santa Fe. 505-6709433 MOBILE HOME for rent in La Cienega, private property. Very Clean. $800 monthly. Call 505-6705858.
OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $275 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE
Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266
SECOND STREET STUDIOS
675 squ.ft. Reception area with 2 private offices, or one large. Handicap bath. $750. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
ROOMMATE WANTED PRIVATE BATH, SHARED KITCHEN. Washer, dryer. $525. Clean, safe, quiet. No Pets. Month-to-month. Deposit. 2 miles north of Plaza. 505-4705877
STORAGE SPACE
BEAUTIFUL 3,000 s q . f t CUSTOM HOME, unfurnished. Open living- dining with chef’s kitchen. TWO MASTER SUITES PLUS 2 GUEST BEDROOMS- office. Sangre Mountain views, Portal with fire pit. 2.5 acres. NW quadrant. $3,200 monthly. WesternSage, 505-690-3067. Beautiful floor plan. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 1500 sq.ft., all tile, private patio, 2 car garage. AVAILABLE NOW! $1,575 monthly. Call 505-989-8860. CUTE ADOBE near De Vargas Mall & Plaza. 750 sq. ft. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Courtyard. Garage. Washer, dryer. Dishwasher. $1100 monthly plus $1400 deposit. Tenant pays utilities. One-year lease. No smoking or pets. Call Liz at 505-670-3312.
ESPANOLA 2 BEDROOM ADOBE on 1 acre. Large home with walk-in closet, jacuzzi tub, hardwood floors, vigas. $850 monthly. 505-927-2935
10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com
WAREHOUSES WAREHOUSE- OFFICE ST. MICHAEL’S AREA. Office front, large space, high ceilings in back. Ideal for dance groups, art studio. 505-989-7266
WORK STUDIOS ARTIST STUDIO with separate office space. 600 Sq.Ft. 8 foot overhead door, easy access to I-25. $550 monthly with year lease plus utilities. South Santa Fe. 505-474-9188.
"People tell me it’s a miracle she made it back," smiles McDow. "But this miracle might not have happened if not for the support of so many people, walking the fields, calling her name, posting signs along the roads and highways while looking for her. I am so grateful."
Classified Testimonial LASSIE COME HOME! $1000 REWARD
986-3000
ACROSS 1 Headliners 6 Prefix with final or trailer 10 Ward of “CSI: NY” 14 “Wowie!” 15 Frau’s home 16 Medicine cabinet swab 17 Boil out of the pot 19 Sch. near the Rio Grande 20 Old Testament twin 21 Leaves 22 Goethe classic 23 Sun. message 25 Shortening for pie-making 27 Present in lieu of cash 35 Genetics lab subject 36 Mix with a spoon 37 Hard to lift 38 Where serveand-volley tennis players win a lot of points 40 Dict. entry 42 Sturm und __ 43 Attacks 45 Gin flavoring 47 Neither here __ there 48 Doctors doing reconstructive work 51 Verdi opera 52 Turkish bigwig 53 Where to find Houston St. and Penn Sta. 56 Hammer or saw 59 Stadium cheers 63 Hawaii’s “Valley Isle” 64 Director’s “We’re done,” and hint to the starts of 17-, 27- and 48Across 66 Requests 67 Frau’s mate 68 Backyard barbecue site 69 Newsman Huntley 70 Celestial bear 71 Wield DOWN 1 Tea brand with a lizard logo
LOST IN ELDORADO AUGUST 12. Late wife’s Sheltie, "Kenzie." Looks like Lassie.
Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
986-3000
B-7
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
By Matt Skoczen
2 Consequently 3 “Dancing Queen” band 4 Strong and healthy 5 Word segment: Abbr. 6 “Scram, fly!” 7 Roof overhang 8 Rolled oats cereal 9 Jerusalem’s land: Abbr. 10 Cop show wheels 11 Caesar’s disbelieving words 12 Golfers’ concerns 13 Date bk. entry 18 “Snowy” heron 22 Breakfast sandwich item 24 Deliriously happy 26 CIO partner 27 Clutch tightly 28 “__ inside”: chipmaker’s slogan 29 Classic orange soda 30 Get __ of: throw out 31 Rapunzel feature 32 Hersey’s “A Bell for __”
9/29/14 Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
33 Mortise insert 34 Some MIT grads 39 Charles Lamb, notably 41 Winter ailment 44 Three times daily, on an Rx 46 Tough tests 49 Novelist Willa 50 Auditory canal blocker 53 Colorful old Apple
9/29/14
54 “Parsley is gharsley” poet Ogden 55 Microwave 57 Paddles, e.g. 58 Mexican’s “other” 60 Comic Johnson 61 Word with spray or style 62 Laundry challenge 64 Day before Fri. 65 Swinger in the jungle
Get your headlines on the go! Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter!
LOST LOST: SMALL ORANGE AND WHITE FEMALE TABBY- Balsa Drive area in Eldorado on July 19. "Gracie". 505920-3708 or 466-6244 POMERANIAN, (CHUCHU), Black with white markings, 7 lbs. Lost on Old Santa Fe Trail, Friday 9/26. Much Loved Pet! 505-983-9582.
http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
sfnm«classifieds LOST
EDUCATION
REWARD $1000 NO QUESTIONS ASKED
Administrative Assistant
Please help bring Teo home. Long hair Chihuahua. Black with white. Seen Saturday, August 30, in beatup maroon van. CA license starting: 7CT. Call 505-699-9222.
PERSONALS IN HOME CARE NEEDED. Parttime caregiver. 2 days a week. Must be able to lift, transfer. Light cooking. Mature woman. Must speak english. Please call 505-6297978.
Add a pic and sell it quick!
A private middle school for girls in grades 6, 7 and 8, has an immediate part-time, 20-hour per week position for an experienced Administrative Assistant. Must be a team player; will work closely with Administrative Director and Development Director. Strong skills in: Communications (fluency in social media, mailing coordination, oral and written); Office management (systems creation, maintenance, scheduling, public interfacing, phone etiquette); Data management (data collection, entry & maintenance); Event Coordination (in-office contact person, assist with event planning & volunteer coordination). Required: 3-5 years experience, Associate’s degree. Preferred: Bachelor’s degree. Send cover letter and resume to: Santa Fe Girls’ School, 310 W. Zia Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505 or email: sfgirlsschool@ outlook.com No calls, please.
to place your ad, call MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN for a busy community complex needed. We offer competitive pay and benefits after 90 days. Must pass a drug and background screening. Please apply in person at 1801 Espinacitas, Santa Fe, NM 87505 or fax resume to 505-983-1816. We are an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer.
TRADES
COMPUTERS
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
»animals«
NAUTALUS NX300X home gym. In very good condition. With user manual and dvd. $150. Call Margie 505986-9260.
VERY KNOWLEDGEABLE HEATING & COOLING SERVICE PLUMBER. Must have valid drivers license. Pass drug test. Call 505-438-7326.
FOOD FRUIT
»jobs«
ACCOUNTING
EMERGENCY SERVICES Manager - Los Alamos County. Range is $75,746 to $117,237 annually. Full application and required application are available at www.losalamosnm.us or by calling 505-662-8040. Deadline to apply is October 10, 2014 at 5 p.m. MDT. EOE. NATIVE AMERICAN non-profit organization in search of a H e a d Start Administrator to plan, organize and maintain program activities and services in accordance with Federal Early Childhood Head Start Standards. Bachelor’s Degree in Early Childhood Education, Administration, Human Services, or related field, plus 3 years experience in Head Start program or related field. Two years of supervisory experience preferred or equivalent combination of education and exp. Salary negotiable (DOE). Position located at Five Sandoval Indian Pueblos, Inc. Mail resume with cover letter to: Five Sandoval Indian Pueblos, Inc., Human Resources Office, 1043 Highway 313, Bernalillo, NM 87004. Open until filled. For more information go to: www.fsipinc.org or call 505867-3351.
HORSE TRAILER EQUIPMENT
FINAL CHANCE FOR CHILE! BERRIDGE FARMS HATCH GREEN CHILE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Green chile and limited red . Folks are lovin’ our chile. Come early to get the last! (Located behind Taco Bell on Cerrillos Road.)
APPLIANCES
UL Bread making Machine, Model FAB-100-3 with cookbook, $75. Used only 3 times. Daily. 505-983-1016.
BASINS: DOUBLE $75. Single with chipped corner $50. Call 7:30-8:30 a.m. Daily. 505-983-1016.
and other positions all located in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Go to the NM State Personnel Office www.spo.state.nm.us Job Opportunities Page, look for Human Services Dept, Medical Assistance Division (MAD). Contact Patsy Martinez (505) 8273132 for specific questions regarding postings or upcoming vacancies. EARN WHILE you learn. Tax Preparer for upcoming tax season. Must be bilingual in Spanish and have basic computer skills. No prior experience necessary. 505-473-4700
ADMINISTRATIVE PRODUCTION/DESIGN ASSISTANT La Puerta Originals, a high-end custom design & manufacturing company in Santa Fe seeks motivated selfstarter in our Production/Design department. Must be a team player; strong office/clerical & communication skills; data entry & management; assist with sales & showroom display. Required: Associates Degree or higher, 3-5 years experience in clerical/ofice administration; Excellent computer skills, including Outlook, MS Office. Some sales & marketing experience. Interior Design or AutoCAD experience a plus. Email cover letter and resume to: info@lapuertaoriginals.com No calls, please.
The Santa Fe Magistrate Court
in Santa Fe, New Mexico is recruiting for 2 full-time permanent
Court Clerk Positions
For more information please go to the Judicial Branch web page at www.nmcourts.gov under Job Opportunities. Equal Opportunity Employer
FURNITURE
4-DRAWER TECHLINE antique-white dresser; great condition. Individual or in set of 3 dressers. $60 OBO. 720300-9808
BASIN WITH Faucets, $75. Call 7:308:30 a.m. Daily. 505-983-1016.
5 BAR STOOLS for sale. $450 or best offer. Irene, 505-670-0955.
KENMORE DISHWASHER, oven, microwave and Jen Air Grill top $225.00 Please call Max 505-699-2311
ANTIQUE-WHITE TECHLINE brand 3drawer dresser. Part of 3-dresser set, but available separate; $55, great condition! 720-300-9808.
ART
BED: OAK EXPRESS TWIN BOOKCASE BED. 3-drawer, excellent condition. 45"Wx72"L. $350 OBO. 505-466-6205
Conduct field work as required at the Cunningham Hill closed mine site near Santa Fe, NM. Duties include: sampling, monitoring, operating and maintaining monitor wells and water treatment systems. Maintain buildings, equipment, tools and supplies. Apply now online at www.barrick.com/careers
The Administrative Office of the Courts is recruiting for a full-time
Coordinator for the Santa Fe Magistrate DWI Drug Court. For more information please go to the Judicial Branch web page at www.nmcourts.gov under Job Opportunities. Equal Opportunity Employer
MEDICAL DENTAL ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC PART-TIME POSITION!
Established busy office non-smoking environment. CERTIFIED DENTAL A S S I S T A N T . Two days per week, Monday & Thursday. Fax resume: 505995-0388.
Front Desk Position
Needed for busy dental practice. Dental Experience A Must! Some Saturday’s and later hours. Excellent pay. Fax resume to 505424-8535.
TILE ARTWORK by Pedro Romero Sedeno of Santa Fe. Created to show City of Santa Fe the design for what is now artwork at Torreon Park. 38 inches high by 42 inches wide. Call 505-577-6893.
Chairs & Sofas Galore!!! 20% Off!! Friday, September 26 through Friday, October 3. All Donations and Purchases Support Santa Fe Habitat! Open Monday - Saturday 9 to 5.
1984 HESSTON RODEO JR. BUCKLE & BELT, size 26" waist. $95 for set. REDMAN BELT BUCKLE, solid brass, $30. 505-466-6205 2 BOONES FARM BUCKLES: Strawberry Hill, $25; Apple Wine, $20. 505-4666205
santafenewmexican.com
Part-time to Full-time Machine Attendant
Automotive Technicians
PLEASE APPLY AT www.onwardcareer.com or call Todd Moore at 505-438-0605 or Robert Sandoval at 505-9840124. Join the largest tire and automotive service company in the US today!
CHILDCARE CAREGIVER WANTED for my 2 kids, Free Estimate, Professional and hardworking to take care of them, $720 weeks. Contact me at d.alvarez39@aol.com, or 205-9283575 for more details. This is a preschool aftercare position. The hours are from 12:30-5:30. Please call 474-8080 or email Bernadette at bernadettes@sfchristianacademy if you are interested. A background check will be required upon hire.
No Prior Machine Experience Required Home Health Aide Part-time position 20 hours per week with Community Home Health Care and The Hospice Center. Must be graduate of Nurse Aide program or have exper in direct patient care in institutional setting or with home health or hospice agency. Benefits eligible. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook.
ATTENTION DOG OWNERS!
BLUE-NOSE PITBULL puppies. 3 males, 1 female. 3 fawn-colored, 1 blue and white. Both parents on site. More information, 505-310-0773. CHIHUAHUAS T-CUP and TOY. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained. $500-650. 575-910-1818 cingard1@hotmail.com txt4more pics. GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. Now accepting CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL too. USDA license/ FREE delivery. ENGLISH BULLDOG Puppies. AKC, 15 weeks. 3 males. $2000. 505-918-0641. www.honeymoonbulldogs.com VS/MC accepted. Serious inquiries only please. FREE 1 year old chihuaha mix. Very healthy and very playful. Male, not neutered. Outside dog. 505-986-9260.
FREE SPAYING & NEUTERING FOR DOGS Sunday, Sept. 28 & Sunday, Oct. 5, 8 a.m.
END OF SUMMER SALE. COMPLETE GARAGES. 24’x24’ garage $9500. 24’ x 30’ $10,500. Complete with concrete. Call for details. 505-332-9902. FLORESTONE UTILITY, Laundry Tub in good condition. $20.00 505-989-4845. MARCREST BROWN POTTERY STONEWARE MUGS. Daisy Dot Pattern. 6 for $25. 505-466-6205 SCREEN PARTITION. 69"Hx17.625"W. Hobby Lobby with tags. $145 OBO. 505-316-1829 WHEEL CHAIR CARRIER. Serial #066455. US 208P Power Chair Carrier or 210 lift & go. WCC scooter carrier. $600. 505-913-9936.
BABY GRAND piano, circa 1940’s. Refinished, all ivories, excellent condition, just checked and tuned. Arthritis forces the sale. Call 575-756-1845.
New Mexican Printing Press parking lot, 1 New Mexican Plaza. Santa Fe Animal Shelter Mobile Clinic. Vaccinations, microchipping included. 983-2755 GRAND CHAMPION Sired Standard Parti Poodles. Black & Whites. Ready 9/20! Parents OFA Health tested, extremely Loving and Intelligent. Litter box trained, 1st shots, Vet checked, Health Guarantee. $1,500 AKC. Delivering to New Mexico/Colorado area or ship. Jeanette, 214-392-2569, earthmomjll@gmail.com, Facebook site Rockstar Standard Parti Poodles. PUREBRED ENGLISH bulldog puppies For sell, all registered AKC, shots, brindle markings, 8 weeks old. $550 each. Call or text 575-322-8051.
1977 HESSTON NFR RODEO BUCKLE with Tony Lama matching belt, size 34 waist, $125. More COLLECTIBLE BUCKLES from 1976-1984. 505-4666205
AUTOMOTIVE Firestone Complete Auto in Santa Fe is now accepting applications for
AAA T-CUP & TOY pups 4 SALE! 575910-1818 or txt4more pics. $300-$1800 Hypo-allergenic,non-shedding. Reg, shots, guarantee, POTTYPAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN. MC/Visa/ Disc/Am Ex accepted. Debit/Credit/PAYPAL. YORKIES, YORKIE-POOS, CHIHUAHUAS, SHIHTZUS, MORKIES, RAT TERRIER, WHITE MALTESE, MALTYPOOS, RED MINI DACHSHUNDS and POODLES. Quality puppies. USDA licensed. cingard1@hotmail.com AKC STANDARD Poodle Puppies. Black and Apricot. All shots - health guarantee. Home raised, doggie door trained. 11 weeks. $800. Call 505-5730918. AKC STANDARD POODLE PUPPIES. Black and Apricot. All shots - health guarantee. Home raised, doggie door trained. 11 weeks. $800. Call 505-5730918
2 CEMETERY PLOTS FOR SALE at Memorial Gardens in Santa Fe. Near tree, side-by-side. Priced to sell! 505690-4589 COOKING DISCO, Discadas for Sale. 17" to 32" diameter. Starting at $60. Seen at Aldona’s Restaurant. 3875 Cerrillos Road. 505-469-3355
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
CLOTHING
COLLECTIBLES
PETS SUPPLIES
First-come, first-serve,
BRAND NEW Tempur-Pedic bed still in box. King. Model: Rhapsody Breeze. Includes Tempur-Pedic foundation and frame. Paid $4,600. Asking $4000. 505-919-9907.
TEXAS COWBOY HAT, Large. Black. $50. 505-310-4179
MISCELLANEOUS 100 YEAR OLD RELIGIOUS CHURCH STATUE COLLECTION!!! Victorian religious prints, ICONS!!! 2 SANTO NINO’S, 25" & 31". "Our Lady of Grace," 31". 3 Virgin Mary Statues. MORE!! Very Beautiful and Rare - MOVING. MUST SELL!! $65 to $650. OBO. 505-508-2626
TUBS: REMOVABLE Rust Stains. A: $100, has all 4 Paw feet (chipped end) B: $90. Call 7:30-8:30 a.m. Daily. 505-983-1016.
2006 2-horse, bumper pull trailer. Excellent condition. Recently serviced. New tires. $2,950. 505-986-1570.
Paws Plaza has $40 haircuts, dogs under 30 pounds. Full Service with teeth brushing. Fourth Street. 505820-7529.
Lopper, Pitch Fork, Axes (splitter, splitter/hatchet), Pick Axe, Hedge Shears, Pruning Stick, Leaf Rake, Gallon Sprayer. $5-10 each. 505-603-0535.
FLORESTONE LAUNDRY UTILITY SINK. Good condition. $20. 505-989-4845 JENNAIR GAS Downdraft Cook top. 4 burner, very good condition. $200. 505-989-4409.
2012 HOTSPRING JETSETTER. Excellent condition. 3 person spaassist, cover, stairs. 115 OR 230 wiring. $4,500 by owner. Craig’s list for details. 505-954-1178.
LAWN & GARDEN
FISHER & Paykel, single self-clean convection oven with accessories. Very good condition. $300. 505-9894409
ANTIQUE HALL TREE for sale. Very old best offer. Call 505-4730329 or 505-603-2122.
Part-Time Environmental Maintenance Coordinator
FUTON, MONET cover, Cherry frame, excellent overall. $225. Call Ken, 4706462. KING SIZE MATTRESS & box spring. Almost new. $95. 505-986-1191 OAK CORNER COMPUTER desk. $50. 505-471-1086. SEASONED FIREWOOD: P ONDEROSA, $100 PER LOAD. J u niper, $120 per load. CALL: 508444-0087. Delivery FREE TO ALBUQUERQUE & SANTA FE ! SOUTHWESTERN STYLE DINING ROOM SET including 6 foot table with two leaves that open it to 9 feet. The set has 6 matching chairs including 2 Captain’s chairs. It also has a matching custom made hutch. Call 505-6031779. $2000. SPANISH-STYLE ARMOIRE. Green with gold metal trim, delicate flower trim. 3 shelves, top rolls out. 45"Hx23.5"Dx35"W. $200. 505-3161829 THREE ANTIQUE-WHITE Techline dressers -- 3, 4, 5-drawers-- plus cabinet; $50 to $75 apiece, $250 for set. Fair offers entertained. 720-300-9808.
12-PIECE LIVING ROOM SET. Couches, end tables, ottomans, coffee table. Excellent condition, (retails $7000). $2000. ANTIQUE DINING ROOM SET & BUFFET, walnut. 505-927-2935
Come work for the stimulating and exciting New Mexico Medicaid program and join our hard-working, dedicated team. There are currently openings for:
Administrative Operations Manager, Medicaid Bureau Chief for the Financial Management Bureau
COMPUTER DESK. Dimensions are 34" H x 20" D & 47" H. $40. Please call Max, 505-699-2311. DRESSER. MAPLE veneer. Well constructed with dove-tail joints. Blonde. 48"Hx18"Wx17.5"D. $300. 505316-1829
»merchandise«
PCM’S HIRING home health RN-Case Managers & Nurses at $25-$34.50 per hour, & PCAs at $11 hourly. Apply at www.procasemangement.com/care ers. EOE.
MANAGEMENT
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
FURNITURE
THULE BIKE RACK for a 2" hitch. Holds four bikes. $110. 505-986-8552
IN HOME CARE
986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
WIRELESS LOGTECH keyboard. Very little use. Excellent condition. $40. I can deliver. 505-753-3164.
WATERROWER ROWING machine . Model A1. New $900. Selling for $500. 505-466-8803.
HOSPITALITY TORTILLA FLATS FULL-TIME SERVERS PART-TIME BARTENDER BREAKFAST LINE COOKS APPLY IN PERSON
986-3000
Attendant duties include; gathering, stacking down and palletizing of press, bindery, and inserted papers. Responsible for keeping all production equipment stacked with the correct materials to keep machine running at maximum efficiency. Perform cleaning of production equipment and basic maintenance. Must be able to communicate well with coworkers and stand for prolonged periods with repetitive bending and lifting of 20 pounds and the ability to occasionally lift up to 75 pounds. This is an entry level position with opportunities to advance to full time employment with benefits, as well as advancing to other positions in the production department. Shift times will vary based on availability, but open shifts include evening or night positions. Other full-time positions include a Machine Operator and Supervisor position available in the department for qualified candidates with a supervisory, mechanical or manufacturing background.
PIANO STEINWAY, Baby Grand, Model M Ebony. Excellent condition. $19,000. 505-881-2711 YAMAHA ACCOUSTIC STEEL STRING GUITAR. Barely used. $200. 505-3161829
SMALL DOG RESCUE OF SANTA FE has many small dogs ready for adoption, pure breeds and mixes. For information call 505-438-3749. TRAVEL AIRE dog Kennel. 18.75"Hx18.5"Wx24"D. $50 OBO. 505316-1829
Hi, my name is: Hi I’m Lucky! Why?
Because even though in the past I was hit by a car and had my ear chewed off, now I have great foster parents who are going to find me a great forever home! I am an 8 y.o. spayed female shepherd mix, good with dogs, people, good in the house, good off-leash hiker. Call for adoption info, 505 670-2197, $60 adoption fee.
Submit application or email resume to: Brenda Shaffer Bshaffer@sfnewmexican.com 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. Or you may apply online at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No Phone Calls please. Successful completion of a drug test will be required prior to employment offer. EOE
Call Los Alamos Friends 660-1648 adoption fee $60.
of
the
Shelter
at:
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES
to place your ad, call AUTOS WANTED
»garage sale«
986-3000
CLASSIC CARS
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! DOMESTIC
DOMESTIC
Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS
ESTATE SALES Meet Adoptable Animals Wednesday, Oct. 1 Back Road Pizza
WE WILL BUY YOUR USED CAR REGARDLESS IF YOU BUY A CAR FROM US! COME SEE US TODAY! 505-216-3800
Friday, Oct. 3 PetSmart Santa Fe 3561 Zafarano Drive Noon to 4 p.m.
SATURDAY, Oct. 4 Santa Fe Animal Shelter
GET NOTICED!
1988 BUICK Regal. $2000. Good condition. 505-982-4949, 505-983-7376.
E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle & Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
»cars & trucks«
Pet Blessing, Raphael Memorial 1-3 p.m.
2013 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, QUEEN OF THE BLVD. $19,700. #T1468 Call 505-473-1234.
Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-smoker,Rear Entertainment, Navigation, W/Loaded, Pristine, SOOOO DESIRABLE $15,950
DOMESTIC
4401 PERSHING Ave SE. The ESTATE OF HELEN COWART, a fabulous Estate Sale in Albuquerque by Sharon’s Sales in Ridgecrest (Pershing & Graceland). Friday, October 3, Saturday, October 4, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. And Friday, October 10, Saturday, October 11, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. www.sharonsales.com for photos.
1807 Second St., No. 1 Pitchers, Pies and Pits, 4-7 pm
2007 FORD EDGE-SEL-AWD
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
505-983-4945
CALL 986-3000
SUNDAY, Oct. 5 PetSmart Santa Fe
CLASSIC CARS
3561 Zafarano Drive 1-4 p.m. sfhumanesociety.org
2008 CHRYSLER-TOWNCOUNTRY TOURING-FWD
To place a Legal Notice Call 986-3000 SHIHTZUS - RARE WHITE, CREAM. Black, white. Gray, white. Show Coat. Papers, shots.Health Guarantee, POTTYPAD trained. Great PAYMENT plan. PAYPAL, DEBIT, CREDIT card.. Non-Shedding Hypo-Allergenic. $650. $100 will hold 575-910-1818 cingard1@hotmail.com TXT4PICS
T-CUP AND TOY Yorkie pups. Papers, Shots and Health Guarantee. POTTY PAD trained & GREAT PAYMENT Plan. PAYPAL, DEBIT, CREDIT cards. Nonshedding. Hypo-allergenic. $100. Deposit will hold. $1000-$1800. 575-9101818. TXT4PICS cingard1@hotmail.com T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding. Hypoallergenic. $800 and up. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT, DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed. FREE delivery.
AUTOS WANTED $$WANTED JUNK CAR$ & TRUCK$$ Wrecked or Not Running, with or without title or keys. We will haul away for Free! 505-699-4424
Another Local Owner, Records, Double Rear Entertainments,7Passenger, Loaded, Pristine Soooo FAMILY ORIENTED $12,250 1963 FALCON F U T U R A , classic show car, red with black top, great condition. Engine: 170 flat. $25,000, negotiable. Call 505-577-6893. Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
986-3000
4X4s
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
986-3000
View vehicle & Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
2007 DODGE NITRO 4X4, WON’T GET STUCK THIS WINTER, MTN READY, $11,300. CALL 505-4731234.
Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
Sell Your Stuff!
2006 TOYOTA Corolla Great Car! 74,900 miles Single Owner. Salsa Red with beige interior. Yakima Roof Rack included. $8,550. 505-780-5009
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
SELL YOUR PROPERTY!
2011 Jeep Patriot Latitude edition, auto, locks, windows, low miles. 1 owner. $16,881. 505-216-3800.
with a classified ad. Get Results!
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B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
986-3000
4X4s
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
SPORTS CARS
2013 JEEP Wrangler 4x4 rare 5-speed, single owner clean CarFax only $23,981 505-913-2900
2010 LEXUS RX350 AWD Fully loaded, navigation, xenons, heated/cooled leather, pristine single owner clean CarFax, don’t miss it! $28,961. 505-913-2900
2012 Nissan Juke SL AWD only 14k miles, fully loaded navigation & leather, single owner clean CarFax $21,831. Call 505-216-3800.
2013 TOYOTA Avalon XLE Premium another Mercedes trade! Low miles, leather, local one owner clean CarFax $26,721 505-913-2900
2007 Toyota 4 runner Limited Sport 4wd..auto, dual pwr seats,prem sound, very nice. $20,881. Call 505216-3800.
2002 CAMARO Z-28. 11,000 miles. Black with light grey leather, automatic. T-top. Loaded and very nice. $12,500. Call 505-204-4848.
.
.
IMPORTS
1990 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE. All original except new stereo. Too many items to list. $16,500. Call James, 505-930-0063. 2011 NISSAN Juke AWD-SV..auto,VDC, prem sound, XM. real clean. $19,821. Call 505-216-3800. 2007 LEXUS RX350 80k $20,871. 505-216-3800.
2004 AUDI-A6S QUATRO AWD
2013 TOYOTA Avalon XLE Touring WOW just 3k miles, orig MSRP over $36k, loaded w/ navigation, clean CarFax $29,831. CALL 505-216-3800.
2001 Toyota Camry LE new tires, auto, very well maintianed and low miles $6,981 Call 505-216-3800.
Sell Your Stuff!
Another Local Owner, All Service Records, Non-Smoker, Garaged Manuals, X-Tires, Pristine Soooo WELL KEPT $9,950
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
View vehicle & Carfax:
986-3000
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
2001 PORSCHE 911 CARRERA 4 CABRIOLET. Arctic silver with black top and interior. 6-speed manual. 18" alloy wheels, 6 CD, NAV and hardtop. 48,500 miles. $27,750 OBO 505-6902497.
SUVs 2013 TOYOTA Camry SE..NEW BODY...auto, bluetooth, moon roof, loaded and 1 owner. $19,797. Call 505-2163800.
2006 LEXUS IS-250 Another Caring Owner, Records,Garaged,Non-Smoker, New Tires, 45,559 Miles, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo FRESH $18,950
2001 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID-FWD Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, Garaged, NonSmoker, 44 MPG, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo ECONOMICAL $7,450
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle & Carfax:
W E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2011 NISSAN Maxima S. Local trade! New tires, single owner clean CarFax. NICE! $17,821. Call 505-2163800.
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
View vehicle & CarFax: santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
2013 ACURA MDX for $34,500 with 23,165 miles. One owner, all scheduled maintenance. Call 505-670-8897
NEEDED. APPRECIATIVE NEW OWNER for an immaculate midnight metallic-blue 2007 HUMMER H3. Custom car cover and dash mat included. $14,500. 575-375-2420. 2001 TOYOTA RAV4. 4-wheel drive. One-owner vehicle. Nonsmoker 82K miles. 4-cylinder engine. Good gas mileage. Silver and grey. $3900. Call, text, 240-397-6806.
VANS & BUSES 2012 TOYOTA Corolla S with navigation,auto, bluetooth, rear spoiler, low miles. $15,981 . Call 505216-3800.
2011 FORD F150 Crew Cab Lariat 4x4 EcoBoost only 30k miles! fully loaded Lariat, pristine, single owner clean CarFax, turbo V6 $34,821 505913-2900 .
2010 NISSAN ALTIMA-SLFWD Another Caring Owner, Records, Garaged, NonSmoker, Leather, Moonroof, Pristine S o o o o DEPENDABLE $14,750
1998 LEXUS SC 300 Lotta years left in this ride, 2DR, Very Clean, $6900. Call 505-473-1234. ,
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2007 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN with Braun Entervan II wheelchair ramp. Keychain operation, self-ratcheting restraints, lowered floor modification. 77.6K miles, auto, good condition. $24,900. 505-660-2200 2011 TOYOTA Camry LE just 33k miles, local one owner clean CarFax, pristine condition $15,871. Call 505-216-3800.
2013VOLKSWAGEN Jetta SportWagen good miles, excellent condition, fully serviced, one owner clean CarFax $15,841 505-913-2900 .
View vehicle & Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945 2013 HONDA FIT SPORT. 5-speed. 32,000 miles. 1 owner. White with black interior. Super nice! New tires. $14,500. OBO. 505-204-4848
2011 HYUNDAI SONATA, THIS CAR IS VERY SHARP $13,800. CALL 505473-1234.
LIKE THE TITANIC: 1997 CAMRY LE- ORIGINAL & ONLY OWNER. ALL MAINTENANCE DONE. ALL SEASON MICHELINS. VERY RELIABLE! PERFECT FOR TEENAGER, ERRANDS, COMMUTING. NADA: $3,150. Call 505-2313555.
2010 TOYOTA 4Runner Limited 4wd fully loaded navigation leather 4x4 gold package immaculate clean CarFax $29,921 505-913-2900 .
2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505-216-3800.
It’s that easy!
986-3000 2014 RAV4 Limited only 3k and 1 owner. loaded and PRICE way below new...COME SEE IT!. CALL 505-2163800.
»recreational«
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ GLK350 4matic recent trade! AWD, fully loaded, navigation, panoramic roof, heated leather, clean CarFax $22,781 505-913-2900 .
2010 TOYOTA Prius II 34k $18,841. Call 505-216-3800. KIA SPORTAGE EX 2011 Fully loaded, AWD, keyless start & entry, sun & panorama roof, navigation, heated leather seats. 19,100 miles. $20,400. 505-490-2236
Add a pic and sell it quick!
SUBARU OUTBACK 3.6R Limited 2011. 32,500 miles, 6 cylinder, fully loaded, leather, navigation, moon roof, with extras. $24,500. Call 505-603-4942
2013 VW CC Panorama pwr tilting sunroof, Leatherette seat trim Heated 12-way pwr front sport bucket seats, $25,871. Call 505-216-3800.
VW TOUAREG TDI 2011. $36,000. Excellent condition, 25,000 miles. Metallic gray with tan leather interior. AWD, 20/30 mpg, Bluetooth. 505-9306149.
CAMPERS & RVs AL’S RV CENTER Need someone to work on your RV? Call Al, over 42 years of experience. 505-203-6313, 505-5771938.
2012 LEXUS RX 350 AWD LUXURY WOW! Just 29k miles, Head-Up Display, EVERY option, immaculate single owner clean CarFax $37,731 505-913-2900
2011 MINI COOPER Countryman-S. WOW- Just 24k miles! Turbocharged,, single owner, clean CarFax. Perfect! Don’t miss it! $23,871. Call 505-2163800.
2005 Motor Home (31ft), 2012 SUBARU Outback 2.5i Premium only 20k miles, heated seats, AWD, great fuel economy, one owner clean CarFax $22,871 505-9132900
2010 TOYOTA Prius II, •ELECTRONIC THROTTLE control system w/intelligence (ETCS-i) -inc: Eco, EV & power driving modes $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.
PICKUP TRUCKS
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CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2004. 4 X 4. One owner. 81,450 miles, Bed liner. Needs tires. Mechanically sound. $10,500. Call 505-501-1794.
43,000 miles. new tires, new batteries, awning, stove, refrigerator. Asking $30,000. 505-690-163 5.
MOTORCYCLES 2011 MINI CountryMan auto, prem pkg, roof, prem sound, super fun. $23,871. Call 505-216-3800.
2009 TOYOTA Land Cruiser. $42,000. Excellent condition, 88,000 miles. White with gray leather interior. DVD player, 3rd row seat, sunroof. 505-699-0563.
2006 TOYOTA CAMRY. Automatic. 78,000 miles. Gold color. New tires. Good condition. $7,500 OBO. 505-3630718
1997 SUBARU Legacy GT AWD. 5speed manual. $127,563 miles. New struts, timing belt, water pump, idler pulley, and lots more. $2,800. 505412-1509.
2009 Toyota Venza AWD V6 fully loaded, leather, JBL sound, single owner clean CarFax $23,851 . Call 505-216-3800. 2008 FORD F-150, 4X4 XLT 5.4 Triton. Great truck! Fully loaded. New tires. 72,000 miles. Pampered. $20,000. 505670-2014
HARLEY-DAVIDSON ITEMS for sale: Kuryakin slip-on mufflers for 19952009 Touring models (used for one year): $150. New Sundowner seat for Road King: $75. Original Road King Classic seat: $25. Two H-D helmets: $25 and $20. Touring saddlebag liners: $40. Contact David Huntley 505795-2268.
Monday, September 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS LEGAL # 97420 The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is accepting proposal for Endangered Species Legal Services The Department is accepting proposals (RFP #15 516 2101 00001) from qualified lawyers and law firms to provide professional legal services, specifically in the role as endangered species counsel, in matters pertaining to endangered species law. The Department seeks a lawyer or law firm with substantial background with Endangered Species Act (ESA) issues; Commenting on Federal Rules pertaining to the ESA; and other issues related to candidate, threatened, or endangered species. The selected Offeror/s would be expected to provide specialized nonlitigation and litigation expertise and have the requisite ability to perform assignments and act as Department counsel in connection with complex contractual and transactional matters; the ESA; and related laws and regulations pertaining to candidate, threatened or endangered species. To obtain a copy of this Request for Proposal please v i s i t http://wildlife.state.n m.us/ or contact Joseph Miano at (505) 476-8086 or joseph.miano@state. nm.us. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 15-19, 2226, 29-30, October 1-3, 6-10, 13-17, 20-24, 2731, November 3-7, and 10-14, 2014. LEGAL # 97534 SANTA FE COUNTY INVITATION FOR BIDS IFB# 2015-0102PW/PL PURCHASE AND DELIVERY RED SCORIA CINDER MATERIAL FOR SNOW & ICE REMOVAL Santa Fe County is requesting bids from qualified companies for the purchase and delivery of red scoria cinder material to be used county-wide during snow and ice removal operations. Bids may be held for ninety (90) days subject to all action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all bids in part or in whole. A completed bid package shall be submitted in a sealed container indicating the IFB title and number along with the bidder’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All bids must be received by 3:00 PM (MDT) on Friday, October 17, 2 0 1 4 , at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501 . By submitting a bid for the requested services/items each bidder certifies that its bid complies with the requirements stated within this Invitation for Bid.
LEGALS
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYMENT: All qualified bidders will receive consideration of contract(s) without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, physical ANY BID PACKAGE and mental handicap, RECEIVED BY THE serious mental condiPURCHASING DIVI- tion, disability, spousSION AFTER THE al affiliation, sexual DATE AND TIME orientation or gender SPECIFIED ABOVE identity. WILL NOT BE CONInformation on Invita-
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SIDERED AND WILL tion for Bid packages BE REJECTED BY is available by conSANTA FE COUNTY. tacting Iris Cordova, Senior Procurement EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Specialist, by teleEMPLOYMENT: All phone at (505) 986qualified bidders will 6337 or by email at receive consideration icordova@santafecou of contract(s) with- ntynm.gov . A copy of out regard to race, the advertisement incolor, religion, sex, formation will also be national origin, an- located on the Santa cestry, age, physical Fe County website at and mental handicap, http://www.santafec serious mental condi- ountynm.gov/asd/cu tion, disability, spous- rrent_bid_solicitation al affiliation, sexual s. orientation or gender BIDS RECEIVED AFidentity. TER THE DATE AND SPECIFIED Invitation for Bid TIME packages will be ABOVE WILL NOT BE available by contact- ACCEPTED. ing Pamela Lindstam, Santa Fe County Pur- Santa Fe County Departchasing Division, 142 Purchasing W. Palace Avenue ment (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501, or by Published in The Santelephone at (505) ta Fe New Mexican on 992-6759, or by email September 29, 2014. a t plindsta@santafecou LEGAL # 97539 ntynm.gov or on our website at NOTICE PUBLIC http://www.santafec MEETING ountynm.gov/service s / c u r r e n t Notice is hereby givsolicitations en of the New Mexico Public Schools InsurSanta Fe County ance Authority’s BenPurchasing Division efits Advisory ComPublished: Septem- mittee Meeting on ber 29, 2014 Wednesday, October 1, 2014, at 1:00 p.m. at Published in The San- the Cooperative Eduta Fe New Mexican on cational Services, September 29, 2014. 4216 Balloon Park Road N.E, AlbuquerLEGAL # 97538 que, NM 87109, and the Risk Advisory INVITATION FOR Committee Meeting BIDS on Wednesday, OctoDRAINAGE SYSTEM ber 1 2014, at 1:00 AT THE ADULT p.m. at Poms & AssoDETENTION ciates, 320 Osuna Rd. FACILITY N.E., Suite C-1, Albu2015-0056-CORR/IC querque, NM 87107. These meetings are The Santa Fe County called pursuant to Corrections Depart- Rule 93-2, Paragraph ment is requesting 2.5 of the Board’s bids for the purpose Rules and Regulaof procuring a li- tions and as provided censed construction by the Open Meetings company to remove Act Resolution 1999-1. and replace the exist- If you are an individuing nonfunctional al with a disability storm water drainage who is in need of a system with a new, reader, amplifier, properly sized sys- qualified sign lantem at the adult de- guage interpreter, or tention facility (ADF). any other form of Bids may be held for auxiliary aid or servninety (90) days sub- ice to attend or parject to all action by ticipate in the hearthe County. Santa Fe ing or meeting, County reserves the please contact the ofright to reject any fice of the Executive and all bids in part or Director of the New in whole. A complet- Mexico Public ed bid package must Schools Insurance be submitted in a Authority at 1-800sealed container indi- 548-3724 prior to the cating the bid title meeting, or as soon and number along as possible. Public with the bidding Documents, including firm’s name and ad- the agenda and midress clearly marked nutes, can be providon the outside of the ed in various accessicontainer. All bids ble formats. Please must be received contact the office of by 2:00 pm on Octo- the Executive Direcber 17, 2014 at the tor of the New Mexico Santa Fe County Public Schools InsurPurchasing Divi- ance Authority at 1sion, 142 W. Palace 800-548-3724 if a sumAvenue (Second mary or other type of Floor), Santa Fe, NM accessible format is 87501. By submitting needed. a bid for the requested materials and/or Attest: services each firm is certifying that their Sammy Quintana bid is in compliance Executive Director with regulations and requirements stated Published in The Sanwithin the IFB pack- ta Fe New Mexican on age. September 29, 2014 A Pre-Bid Conference & Site Visit will be held on October 8 at 2:30 pm at the Adult Detention Facility located at 28 Camino Justica, Santa Fe, N.M. 87505. The Pre-Bid Conference & Site Visit is MANDATORY.
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986-3000
to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362
LEGAL # 97540 NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING Notice is hereby given of the New Mexico Public Schools Insurance Authority’s Board Meeting on Thursday, October 2, 2014, at Cooperative Educational Services, 4216 Balloon Park Rd., NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109 This meeting is called pursuant to Rule 93-2, Paragraph 2.5 of the Board’s Rules and Regulations and as provided by the Open Meetings Act Resolution 1999-1. If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or
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g g p any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact the office of the Executive Director of the New Mexico Public Schools Insurance Authority at 1-800548-3724 prior to the meeting, or as soon as possible. Public Documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. Please contact the office of the Executive Director of the New Mexico Public Schools Insurance Authority at 1800-548-3724 if a summary or other type of accessible format is needed.
p the capacity or reliability of the City’s water supply. All reasonable alternatives were addressed in the EID, and the public identified no additional reasonable alternatives during the public involvement process. The following alternatives are outlined in the EID prepared by URS: "Alternative A - No Action: The No Action Alternative would not provide a means for improving the reliability of the Las Vegas water system; the community would continue to contend with uncertain water supplies. "Alternative B - Increase Bradner Reservoir Capacity to 2,300 Acre Feet (AF): Alternative B consists of relocating and expanding Bradner Reservoir to the south, as well as constructing new e a r t h - f i l l e d embankments and replacing associated infrastructure components. The existing reservoir, dam, and appurtenant structures would be decommissioned, and the following activities would take place: replace the existing emergency spillway and spillway chute; construct a new stilling basin; replace a culvert under New Mexico Highway (NM) 65; construct a diversion conduit to divert flood flows to the stilling basin; and construct access roads around the perimeter of the reservoir. The new reservoir would have a capacity of 2,300 AF, which is a 2,000-AF increase from the existing structure. Gravel and other construction materials would be quarried from a hillside west of the existing reservoir. Approximately 44.2 acres (ac) of land would be inundated by the expanded reservoir pool.
Attest: Sammy J. Quintana Executive Director Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 29, 2014. LEGAL # 97541 FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT BRADNER RESERVOIR ENLARGEMENT PROJECT In accordance with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) procedures for complying with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 40 CFR Part 6 implementing the Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Fund (DWSRLF), an environmental review has been performed by the New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA) for the proposed project: Project: Bradner Reservoir Enlargement Project Project No: 3142-DW Location: Las Vegas, San Miguel County, New Mexico DWRLF Loan Amount: $20,200,000 1.0 PURPOSE AND NEED The City of Las Vegas (City) proposes to relocate and expand the Bradner Reservoir, construct new e a r t h - f i l l e d embankments, and replace the existing reservoir infrastructure. The purpose of the proposed project is to allow the City to improve the reliability and yield of its water supply and more effectively meet its growing water demands. Currently, water volume in the reservoir is sufficient to meet the City’s needs for only 3 months, whereas the proposed larger reservoir would have a 12month supply. The larger reservoir would provide approximately 90 percent of the City’s raw water storage capacity, thereby increasing the availability of water to customers, particularly during periods of drought. The proposed project would enable the City to provide safe, economical, and reliable water for customers. 2.0 PROPOSED ACTION AND ALTERNATIVES Alternatives were identified and described in full in the Preliminary Engineering Report prepared by URS in 2014. The range of alternatives presented in the PER, and subsequently the Environmental Information Document (EID) prepared by URS, were appropriate to meet the needs of the water system. The No Action Alternative was described, but not considered viable because it would not improve
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3.0 POTENTIAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS AND MITIGATION MEASURES The proposed project would provide a reliable water system for current and future water needs. The construction and operation of the proposed enlarged reservoir would likely result in the following low to moderate impacts: "Vegetation - Approximately 35.1 ac of ponderosa pine woodland located within the footprint of the enlarged reservoir would be inundated and permanently lost. In addition, construction of access roads and excavation of the proposed quarry sites would result in the permanent loss of 25.6 ac of vegetation. "Wildlife - Impacts to fish in the existing reservoir, including injury or death, may result when it is decommissioned. Excavation for borrow materials in the existing reservoir bed would cause permanent impacts to macroinvertebrates. Construction noise and activity would likely cause wildlife to avoid the area. "Floodplains/Wetland s - The proposed project would change the location of floodplains. San Miguel County has stated that the proposed project meets or is designed to meet the requirements for community floodplain management. Once project construction has concluded, a Let-
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email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS ter of Map Revision would be prepared to officially modify the Flood Insurance Rate Map for San Miguel County, reflecting reservoir improvements. Approximately 0.80 ac of wetlands would be lost due to the proposed project. "Groundwater - Minor releases of contaminants from malfunctioning equipment are possible, but unlikely. "Soils Projectrelated construction activities would involve disturbance of approximately 44.2 ac of soil that would be inundated by the enlarged reservoir, and approximately 25.6 ac for access road and quarry construction. "Noise - There would be temporary and localized increases in noise during construction activities, including the noise produced by blasting as quarries are excavated. "Transportation Short-term, minimal increases in traffic along NM 65 during project construction are likely. Flaggers may be present on roadways to facilitate access of large construction vehicles to construction sites. "Air quality - On-road exhaust, construction equipment exhaust, particulate emissions from material crushing and screening, excavation and earthmoving, fugitive dust, and other emissions are likely to cause a temporary and localized reduction in air quality during construction. "Visual aesthetics The larger embankment structure would be more visible from NM 65 than the existing embankment. The proposed reservoir access road also may be visible from areas along NM 65. "Public health and safety - The new embankment for the enlarged reservoir would be designed to withstand the probable maximum flood, thereby improving the safety of downstream persons and property. "Cumulative impacts - There would be a cumulative net loss of vegetation and wildlife habitat as a result of project construction. However, the project would also result in an increase in the reliability and yield of the City’s water system. These impacts would be mitigated by implementation of the following measures: " Vegetation Upon project completion, areas temporarily affected by the proposed project would be revegetated to approximate pre-disturbance plant communities. " Wildlife The nearby Peterson and Storrie Reservoirs would provide foraging and nesting habitat for wetlanddependent wildlife that may be displaced by project activities. In order to minimize impacts to wildlife, escape ramps would be provided for wildlife that may become trapped in open trenches. The quarry sites may be partially or completely refilled after construction is complete, and may provide additional denning habitat for small mammals and reptiles. "Wetlands - A draft plan has been proposed for an on-site, in-kind mitigation area to compensate
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LEGALS p for the loss of wetlands. "Groundwater - Mitigation measures recommended by the New Mexico Environment Department would be implemented, and standard best management practices (BMPs) would be incorporated into the project design plans, including employing secondary containment for all hazardous materials and implementing a Spill Control and Containment Plan prior to initiating construction activities. "Soils - BMPs, including re-seeding temporarily affected areas, would be implemented to reduce soil erosion. "Noise - Construction activities and blasting at the quarry sites would take place during daylight hours when noise is more tolerable. "Transportation Traffic control measures, such as warning signs, cones, and traffic control personnel, would be utilized as needed. "Air quality - Wet suppression systems would be utilized on the project site to reduce the occurrence of fugitive dust and other emissions during construction. All asphalt, concrete, quarrying, crushing, and screening facilities must have current and proper air quality permits, in accordance with New Mexico Environment Department Air quality Bureau regulations. "Visual aesthetics Changes to the area’s viewscape due to the visibility of an access road and the new embankment structure would be minor and not substantially different from existing conditions. "Public health and safety - Construction of a new embankment at the enlarged reservoir would increase the safety of downstream areas. Traffic control devices would be utilized as necessary to protect workers and the public. Unauthorized personnel would be excluded from areas where blasting is occurring, and blasts would be designed to limit impacts to a very small area. Workers using Ammonium Nitrate Fuel Oil for blasting would wear personal protective equipment. "Cumulative impacts - Where possible, disturbed areas would be re-seeded to encourage revegetation and reduce the loss of wildlife habitat caused by the project. Most resources used for the project, such as fuel, materials, public funds, and labor, are irretrievable. 4.0 CONCLUSIONS The conclusions presented here are based on the findings of the EID, Preliminary Engineering Report, and communications with federal, state, and local agencies. The proposed action would not cause any significant impacts to human health or the natural environment. Therefore, a Finding of No Significant Impact is warranted and an Environmental Impact Statement is not required for this action.
LEGALS
Copies Available: The documents that support this FONSI are available for public review at the following locations: 1.New Mexico Finance Authority, Attn: Robert P. Coalter, CEO, 207 Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. 2.City of Las Vegas, Attn: Ken Garcia, Utilities Director, 905 12th Street, Las Vegas, New Mexico 87701. Public Comments: Comments supporting or disagreeing with this decision may be submitted for consideration. All comments should be addressed to: 1.New Mexico Finance Authority, Attn: Robert P. Coalter, CEO, 207 Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. All comments must be postmarked or delivered on or before October 29, 2014, 5:00 PM.
LEGALS p ment is requesting bids for the purpose of procuring licensed and qualified contractors for the installation of roadway guardrails, barrier cable and components. Bids may be held for ninety (90) days subject to all action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all bids in part or in whole. A completed bid package shall be submitted in a sealed container indicating the IFB title and number along with the Offeror’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All bids must be received by 3:00 PM (MDT) on Wednesday October 22, 2014 at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501 . By submitting a bid for the requested services/items each Bidder is certifying that its bid complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Invitation for Bid.
Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 29,2014. A Pre-Bid Conference will be held on Monday, October 6, LEGAL # 97542 2014 at 10:30 AM (MDT) at the Santa Public Notice Fe County Public The Santa Fe County Works Department Housing Authority, in located at 424 NM (Frontage accordance with the 599 Santa Fe, Department of Hous- Road), N.M. 87506. Ating and Urban Develtendance at the opment (HUD) requirements, is mak- Pre-Bid Conference ing available for pub- is not mandatory is lic review the Admis- but attendance encoursions and Continued strongly Occupancy Policy aged . (ACOP). The Admissions and Continued ANY BID PACKAGE BY THE Occupancy Policy RECEIVED DIVIgoverns how the PURCHASING AFTER THE Housing Authority SION AND TIME will administer the DATE ABOVE Public Housing Pro- SPECIFIED gram in addressing WILL NOT BE CONselection and admis- SIDERED AND WILL REJECTED BY sion of applicants BE from the PHA waiting SANTA FE COUNTY. list, screening of applicants for tenancy, EQUAL OPPORTUNITY All occupancy stand- EMPLOYMENT: ards, occupancy poli- qualified bidders will cies, assisting fami- receive consideration lies claiming illegal of contract(s) withdiscrimination, infor- out regard to race, mal review/grievance color, religion, sex, hearing procedures, national origin, anrent determinations, cestry, age, physical procedural guidelines and mental handicap, on conducting in- serious mental condispections, Violence tion, disability, spousAgainst Women Act, al affiliation, sexual and changes to the orientation or gender HUD Flat Rent Sched- identity. ule. The Admissions for Bid and Continued Occu- Invitation will be pancy Policy will be packages available for review available by contactat the Santa Fe Coun- ing Pamela Lindstam, ty Housing Authority Santa Fe County, PurOffices located at, 52 chasing Division, 142 Camino de Jacobo, W. Palace Avenue Santa Fe New Mexico (Second Floor), Santa between the hours of Fe, NM 87501, or by 8:00am and 5:00pm or telephone at (505) online at 992-6759, or by email t www.santafecountyn a m.gov A copy can al- plindsta@santafecou ntynm.gov or on our so be provided upon at request. For more in- website formation regarding http://www.santafec this notice please call ountynm.gov/service s / c u r r e n t 505-992-3060. solicitations During the Santa Fe County Housing Published in The SanBoard on October 28, ta Fe New Mexican on 2014, a public hearing September 29, 2014. will be held to receive public comment on the Housing Authori- LEGAL # 97545 ty’s Admissions and Notice of Santa Fe Continued Occupancy County Meetings Policy. Published in The San- Santa Fe County Fair ta Fe New Mexican on Board Meeting Tuesday, October 14, September 29, 2014. 2014 at 6pm - Santa Fe County Fair LEGAL # 97543 Grounds, 3229 Rodeo Road, Santa Fe, NM SANTA FE COUNTY 87505 IFB# 2015-0129PW/PL INSTALLATION OF ROADWAY GUARDRAILS, BARRIER CABLE & COMPONENTS
For more information, copies of the agenda, or for auxiliary aids or services, contact (505) 986-6200
Approved: Robert P. Coalter Chief Executive Officer New Mexico Finance Published in The SanAuthority ta Fe New Mexican on The Santa Fe County Date September 29, 2014. Public Works Depart-
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To place a Legal Notice Call 986-3000
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 29, 2014
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER